the foghorn
Posted: Wed Aug 04, 2021 10:06 am
Well, it's definitely 'other music'!
It's marvellous to know one is not alone in one's eccentricities. We have a foghorn on the coast here, not used for navigation since the mid 90's. Even imagining the sound of the foghorn makes me smile. And now musicologist Jennifer Lucy Allan has written a book about it that has just come into my possession: The Foghorn's Lament. She says, "I had thought of the foghorn as a lonely sound, a big melancholic beast echoing into the vastness of the open sea, often to nobody at all. But it isn’t. This heaving machine is the sound of somebody else…” Just like Mr Cohen said, "Leave to the foghorns our lonesome story". Laurie Anderson, who covered Leonard Cohen at the Hal Wilner Dublin tribute, enthuses on the back cover that this has become one of her favourite books.
Naturally a video clip cannot convey the depth, volume or reach of the sound, but here is the Sumburgh foghorn on Shetland, with a nice lead-in showing the measured mechanical preparations:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iHCmzvzCmhI
And here's a review of the aforementioned book:
https://www.theguardian.com/books/2021/ ... in-a-sound
It's marvellous to know one is not alone in one's eccentricities. We have a foghorn on the coast here, not used for navigation since the mid 90's. Even imagining the sound of the foghorn makes me smile. And now musicologist Jennifer Lucy Allan has written a book about it that has just come into my possession: The Foghorn's Lament. She says, "I had thought of the foghorn as a lonely sound, a big melancholic beast echoing into the vastness of the open sea, often to nobody at all. But it isn’t. This heaving machine is the sound of somebody else…” Just like Mr Cohen said, "Leave to the foghorns our lonesome story". Laurie Anderson, who covered Leonard Cohen at the Hal Wilner Dublin tribute, enthuses on the back cover that this has become one of her favourite books.
Naturally a video clip cannot convey the depth, volume or reach of the sound, but here is the Sumburgh foghorn on Shetland, with a nice lead-in showing the measured mechanical preparations:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iHCmzvzCmhI
And here's a review of the aforementioned book:
https://www.theguardian.com/books/2021/ ... in-a-sound