Sounds
of the Subway
New York City is famous for the broad diversity of its cultural offerings,
particularly world-class performance halls like Carnegie Hall and Lincoln
Center. But the city’s most popular performance space can be found
in any number of its vast underground network of subway stations.
“Ask any New Yorker and you’ll get an earful of recommendations
on the best stations, the best players, and how much to tip,” says
Alex Case, director of Fermata Audio + Acoustics, Portsmouth, NH, and
a professor at Berklee College of Music in Boston. Case himself is something
of a connoisseur when it comes to subway acoustics. He’s done extensive
studies of local musicians who regularly play in subway stations, using
portable digital recorders to capture these on-the-fly performances.
Not all subway stations are created equal. Subway buskers choose their
locations carefully, avoiding stations with a steady stream of announcements,
or major hubs with more than one line running through them. Delays might
be irritating for commuters, but for the performers they are godsends,
giving them an extended performance period in between trains. And Case
has found that the buskers instinctively seek out locations near hard
walls and under low ceilings, so their
music is amplified above the
din of the station.
He doesn’t find this at all surprising. Subway walls are typically
made of rigid heavy materials like tile, stone, steel and concrete. These
sorts of materials are better at reflecting sound waves, allowing sound
pressure (volume) levels to build up naturally, with no need for microphones
or loudspeakers. As a result, subway listeners are immersed in a
bath of echoed sound known as reverberation.
The same sound, heard up close, has much less
reverberation.
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| Traditional Chinese pipa played in Grand Central |
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Reverberation is the critical element in the design of all performance
spaces, whether mainstream opera houses or alternative spaces like
the subway. It’s the same reason why so many people enjoy singing in
the shower. “It just so happens that the sort of space that is
durable, easy to clean, and graffiti resistant also happens to be sound
reflective,” says Case. “The musicians wallow in it.
The passengers variously savor, ignore or avoid it.”
So if subway stations are such terrific acoustical environments, how
come it’s so hard to understand the announcements over the public
address system? Case says that’s because amplifying speech requires
far less reverberation than music. The same phenomenon that sustains
musical notes by building up sound reflections causes speech to become
mushy and unintelligible. The reflections all mix together, so that individual
words can’t be deciphered. Add in the electronic amplification,
and the reverberation is so strong that the announcer might as well be
speaking with a mouthful of marbles.
That’s why acousticians like Case tailor their designs to the
specific needs of performance spaces. Large opera houses like Boston
Symphony Hall or Carnegie Hall have different acoustical needs than,
say, Broadway theaters. For the latter, says Case, he designs spaces
with more sound absorption, lowering the amount of sustaining reverberation
the space adds to a speaking voice. “This makes it easier for listeners
to follow the spoken word, syllable by syllable,” he says.
Concert hall design isn’t just about the strategic conservation
of sound energy inside the performance space. A great deal of effort
is also spent on suppressing the noise and vibration of the surrounding
city, not to mention noise from modern amenities -- the heating system,
air conditioning equipment, elevators and plumbing — all of which
can seriously detract from the pleasure of a performance. No one wants
to hear a subway rumbling or a toilet flushing in the middle of Wagner’s “Ring” cycle.
For Case, the most appealing feature of alternative performance spaces
like the subway is their broad accessibility, compared with conventional
opera houses, which tend to be somewhat elitist. He estimates that some
7 million passengers ride the New York subway system every day. Even
if only 1 in 10 passengers pay attention to the music, it still adds
up to about 700,000 listeners per day, from every conceivable social
demographic. Carnegie Hall and Lincoln Center would have to sell out
54 shows every day, on all six main stages, just to compete. The subway
is the opera house of the people.
Contacts:
Alex Case
Fermata Audio + Acoustics
603-964-4488
www.fermata.biz
Martha Heil
American Institute of Physics
301-209-3088
www.aip.org
Photos used by permission of fermata audio+acoustics.
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