Hold Music

The notion of sonic intimacy has received increasing scholarly attention in recent years, but less well-established has been what it means for a sonic encounter to be non-intimate. This essay proposes an opposite to sonic intimacy, namely sonic estrangement, and argues that hold music—music played...

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Main Author: Max Blansjaar
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Extreme Anthropology Research Network 2024-10-01
Series:Journal of Extreme Anthropology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.uio.no/JEA/article/view/11783
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author Max Blansjaar
author_facet Max Blansjaar
author_sort Max Blansjaar
collection DOAJ
description The notion of sonic intimacy has received increasing scholarly attention in recent years, but less well-established has been what it means for a sonic encounter to be non-intimate. This essay proposes an opposite to sonic intimacy, namely sonic estrangement, and argues that hold music—music played to callers when they have been placed ‘on hold’—effects sonic estrangement in three ways. First, through its timbral quality, which in its lack of fullness and the fragility of signal creates a sense of distance and disjuncture. Second, through its function, which is to address the caller as an anonymous consumer, thus setting up a depersonalised relationship between caller and receiver. Third, in the way it shuts out the caller from their desired point of contact, thus symbolising an excess of demand, exclusion, and a lack of care. These three forms of estrangement counteract sonic intimacy—and can therefore be considered oppositional to it—in that they undermine three components of intimate sonic encounters: the proximate, the personal, and the attentive.
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spelling doaj-art-8fd1bb5dd3a04c168cdf672e4de93bd42025-08-20T02:12:23ZengExtreme Anthropology Research NetworkJournal of Extreme Anthropology2535-32412024-10-017210.5617/jea.11783Hold MusicMax Blansjaar0https://orcid.org/0009-0006-3401-2351St Catherine's College, University of Oxford The notion of sonic intimacy has received increasing scholarly attention in recent years, but less well-established has been what it means for a sonic encounter to be non-intimate. This essay proposes an opposite to sonic intimacy, namely sonic estrangement, and argues that hold music—music played to callers when they have been placed ‘on hold’—effects sonic estrangement in three ways. First, through its timbral quality, which in its lack of fullness and the fragility of signal creates a sense of distance and disjuncture. Second, through its function, which is to address the caller as an anonymous consumer, thus setting up a depersonalised relationship between caller and receiver. Third, in the way it shuts out the caller from their desired point of contact, thus symbolising an excess of demand, exclusion, and a lack of care. These three forms of estrangement counteract sonic intimacy—and can therefore be considered oppositional to it—in that they undermine three components of intimate sonic encounters: the proximate, the personal, and the attentive. https://journals.uio.no/JEA/article/view/11783Soundhold musicMuzaksonic intimacysonic estrangementcapitalism
spellingShingle Max Blansjaar
Hold Music
Journal of Extreme Anthropology
Sound
hold music
Muzak
sonic intimacy
sonic estrangement
capitalism
title Hold Music
title_full Hold Music
title_fullStr Hold Music
title_full_unstemmed Hold Music
title_short Hold Music
title_sort hold music
topic Sound
hold music
Muzak
sonic intimacy
sonic estrangement
capitalism
url https://journals.uio.no/JEA/article/view/11783
work_keys_str_mv AT maxblansjaar holdmusic