For city apartment dweller audiophiles. Have you ever had neighbors banging on your walls?


I try to be considerate when I play my music but recently I put footers under the spikes of my speakers very highly recommended here. People claiming improvements in sound and a godsend when you need to move them to get behind certain components. I was listening to music and in the middle of a cut I paused my cd transport placed the new footers under the spikes and then I started the player without changing the volume. The music was noticeably louder and I had to turn it down.

Well two days after I was playing music at 8AM no louder than I've been playing it for years and I get banging on my bedroom wall. I listen in my living room so next to it is my bedroom and then the bedroom of my neighbor. The last time it happened was many many years ago and it wasn't music it was a man talking on FM radio. I sensed there was a change in the presence of the music with the new footers but that big of a difference? We have very good sound proofing here and there was a time when I could play Wagner at 5am before work and nobody complained.

Could footers make that much of a difference? I did notice an improvement in presence as well. I do not know this neighbor and she's been living here a few years.

Anybody else have a similar situation when they changed something in their system or maybe you were just playing music too loudly without realizing it?

 

roxy1927

 

I go up banging his door...

I only make the sign of cutting a throat...He close the door.

I live in the Bronx, we will shoot your ass through the peep hole.

This is reality, not a movie, you come to my door and threaten me?

how about I put a guitar amplifier in my bedroom closet next to your bedroom turn it on 10 and lean the guitar against it so it feeds back all night and leave.

Works every time.

The police do not respond to noise complaints 99% of the time
Street parties with boomboxes still exist here and go onto five in the morning. If I want to get some peace and quiet, I have to shut the windows and turn my stereo up !

Yes - so I moved to a detached house. To be fair, it was mostly when I was jamming to Rory Gallagher :))

I had a condo on the beach and played music often. I asked 3 different couples who rented the condo next door if they could hear my music and they all said no they couldn't. Then one day I was walking out my door and there was a note on my door saying my music was to loud and some people had to work the next day. I immediately bought headphones with bluetooth connection which did well. It took all the fun out of having the condo and I sold it not to long after that. Headphones will work fine for you but it changes the way you think about where you are staying.

I live in the Bronx, we will shoot your ass through the peep hole.

 

We dont live on the same planet happily for me . 😊

And 50 years ago people were not transformed into savages yet ...

Noise annoying the neighbours was considered impolite at best and an agression at worst ...

And here where i lived police was answering these calls 50 years ago... But i am old and i spoke about a time where citizen existed and had right not only written but respected ... Not passive zombies yet ...

 

Noise is one of the most efficient attack on the health and psyche at the same time. Then noise is not an expression of freedom coming from our neighbours who then take the right to make extreme noise and then take the right to shoot you if you come... This right never existed here.. 😁

In this article they spoke about passive environmental noise merely. Not about deliberate use of noise as an arm by a neighbour which is tenfold worst.

https://www.nature.com/articles/s41370-024-00642-5

«The recognition of noise exposure as a prominent environmental determinant of public health has grown substantially. While recent years have yielded a wealth of evidence linking environmental noise exposure primarily to cardiovascular ailments, our understanding of the detrimental effects of noise on the brain and mental health outcomes remains limited. Despite being a nascent research area, an increasing body of compelling research and conclusive findings confirms that exposure to noise, particularly from sources such as traffic, can potentially impact the central nervous system. These harms of noise increase the susceptibility to mental health conditions such as depression, anxiety, suicide, and behavioral problems in children and adolescents. »

 

 

When we spoke to our neighbour as if he could be God it could be dangerous because some people take anything to the letter :