New Palearctic bird sound recordings during 1971-72
Transcription
New Palearctic bird sound recordings during 1971-72
New Palearctic bird sound recordings during 1971-72 Patrick Sellar Through pressure of other commitments, Jeffery Boswall has regrettably had to relinquish the preparation of further additions to his well-known discography. The task of bringing this up to date is well overdue. The reference number system has proved convenient to readers and is therefore continued from the last review (Boswall 1971). Reference numbers from this and previous parts of the discography (listed on page 310) are printed in bold type. The last review of new discs covered those coming to the author's notice in 1970. It is evident from the output for 1971 and 1972 that the number of new issues is in considerable decline. This is hardly surprising, having in mind the number of sets of discs already on the market covering a wide range of European species. The prodigious output of Jean-Claude Roche alone has enabled the collector to possess recordings of 372 of the 469 species described in the main body of the 1966 edition of the Field Guide. These are still available in the three well-documented volumes of the Guide Sonore des Oiseaux d'Europe, to which may be added five further European species from his Maghreb set (see 68, 75,100,101,10a, 115 and 133). On a less ambitious scale and not well documented, one might have collected all 40 discs produced by Swedish Radio with the sounds of 292 species, mostly recorded by the indefatigable Sture Palmer (see 34 and 104). Or, for those interested primarily in British birds, Witherby's Sound-Guide (13a) is available on two discs featuring 194 species. The situation has all the symptoms of having reached a crossroads, and it will be interesting to see in what way future issues, whether in the form of disc, tape reel or cassette, will develop. But before speculating further, let us first examine the material at hand for the past two years. Without doubt the publication of a new set of Swedish Radio discs (see 15a below) is far and away the most ambitious compilation in the 60 years of bird voice publication, representing the culmination ofover 30 years' effort by Sture Palmer. The old set of 40 discs referred to above were 7-inch extended-play. The new issue runs to twelve full-size long-playing discs covering the main species and a further two (shortly to be published) covering the accidentals. All the recordings are well documented in a leaflet accompanying each 303 304 Pakarctic bird sound recordings during igyi-ys disc. The arrangement has been set out to complement the 1966 edition of the Field Guide, and this it does most effectively. For each species the page numbers are quoted for the text, map and illustrations. This degree of co-operation with the authors and publishers of the Field Guide is to be congratulated, more especially as it is understood that future editions of the book will carry references to the discs throughout, thus vastly simplifying the reader's task of organising the correct sound to accompany the field description. As it is, the phonetic transcriptions given in the leaflets are, wherever possible, the same as those printed in the Field Guide, thus further and most usefully integrating the two works. As would be expected in a work on this massive scale, there are many sounds to be heard which are not mentioned in the book at all and which represent new and original ornithological data. The work is not merely a re-issue of the old set of EP discs in a new format. Although some of the original recordings have been used again, there is a large amount of new material. Over 450 of the basic 469 species are featured, and discs 13 and 14 will cover 80 of the 114 vagrants. This is the largest number of species ever brought together in one set of bird discs. Mr Palmer has enlisted the help of other recordists: particularly welcome is the substantial contribution from Dr Claude Chappuis, whose recordings are very often characterised bv an excithw intimacv: and valuable too are the conversational calls between adults and chick in several species of waders, contributed by Dr Lorenz Ferdinand. There are also many superb recordings from William Gunn in Canada. Despite the many different sources of material, the work maintains a remarkable consistency of quality; the only obvious error is that the call of the Saker Falco cherrug has been copied on to the disc at half speed. Altogether this is a splendid achievement by any standards, but nevertheless there remains a great deal of important and interesting work still to do, as the authors readily admit. The intention is to produce a second edition filling many of the gaps. With the production based in Sweden, it comes as no great surprise that the skuas, gulls and terns fare badly while the owls are quite superb. One disappointing feature is the number of fairly widespread species for which the main and most useful identification calls are missing. We are given no flight call for the Ptarmigan Lagopus mutus, nor the characteristic call of the male Dotterel Eudromias morinellus. There is no call given for the Firecrest Regulus ignicapillus, to compare with that of the Goldcrest R. regulus. The omissions from the vocabulary of the skuas, gulls and terns are too numerous to list. Sabine's Gull Larus sabini can scarcely be heard above the din of Arctic Terns Sterna paradisaea, though the latter are not mentioned in the text. The piping of the Bullfinch Pyrrhula pyrrhula is that of the northern Palearctic bird sound recordings during 1Q71-J2 305 race: there is a marked difference in pitch between this and the call of more southern birds, but the opportunity to compare them has been missed. No attempt has been made to adopt a scientific approach to the vocabulary of the House Sparrow Passer domesticus, the recording fading out just as a different call is heard. Lastly, the diagnostic 'tek' flight call of the Tree Sparrow P. montanus is absent. It is hoped that these and many other omissions of lesser importance will be filled by active recordists whose help in producing a second edition is strongly commended. I have left to this point the highly debatable electronic stereo treatment of the sounds. The recordings were taken mono in the field but were subjected in the laboratory to processing by an electronic splitting circuit capable of apportioning variable sound levels to left- and right-hand channels. The stereo effect has thus been artificially achieved, though these discs may, of course, be played mono if desired. It contributes nothing to the scientific value of the recordings, but in some cases at least, adds a measure of presence and atmosphere for the listener. Where the idea runs into trouble is in the attempt to deal with background sounds, which in some instances are heard to move from left to right, keeping pace with the bird sounds. Although obviously artificial, this effect does not offend the ear. In many cases, however, particularly if the singer is stationary, an attempt to re-create a stereo effect has involved the use of a much less tolerable device: a sound rather like a heavy lorry in the background slowly moves from one channel to the other. The effect is quite damaging for some species and is especially evident among the owls and woodpeckers. Other kinds of artificially introduced backgrounds also call for criticism: for example, precisely the same babbling brook is to be heard throughout the entire series of recordings of Willow Tit Parus montanus obtained in France, Sweden, Austria and Germany. To Jeffery Boswall goes the credit for the presentation of the text. This is painstakingly clear and accurate, complete with timings in seconds so that exactly the right call can be reliably identified while playing the discs. The discs themselves are fairly clearly banded, with single blank scrolls between species and wider bands between groups of species. The system breaks down only in disc 11 where there is no scroll between Greenfinch Carduelis chloris and Siskin C. spinas, nor between Trumpeter Finch Rhodopechys githaginea and Scarlet Rosefinch Carpodacus erythrinus; while on side B of disc 9, band 3 runs into band 4 without visual spacing. It is also Jeffery Boswall who introduces each species throughout the set by announcing its scientific name. This he does loud and clear, if somewhat pontifically. Although claiming to have sought the best advice available at the time, his pronunciation nevertheless occasions surprise here and there: henceforth we are evidently to render Cisticola as 'kisticola'. 306 Palearctic bird sound recordings during 1971-72 These criticisms are small in comparison with the total achievement and are mentioned only in an attempt to help the listener and in the hope that they may be considered when the time comes to prepare the second edition. Meanwhile this first edition is strongly commended as the definitive work of reference on European bird sounds, and one of particular value to those who revere the Peterson Field Guide. None of the other sets of discs received and listed below calls for a full review, though brief notes are given on each. I am indebted to Jeffery Boswall for his appraisal of 148, a major part of which was compiled by myself. The two years under review have seen the issue of the most comprehensive European sound guide ever produced. This may well prove to represent not only the crowning achievement in this field, but also the last of its kind. It is hoped that additions and improvements to its repertoire will be a continuous process over the years, but it seems probable that other publishers will take a different line. For example, there appears to be a very real need for shorter sound guides aimed specifically to assist in field identification, especially in the range of migrant calls. For convenience these could well be in the form of tape cassettes, using a system of numbers announced on the tape for swift location of individual species. Cassettes have already been produced by the Laboratory of Ornithology, Cornell University, Ithaca, N.Y., for North American thrushes, nightjars and cuckoos, and by the Danish Ornithological Society for house and garden birds. It is hoped that before long someone will produce a cassette with the migration calls of Palearctic waders. It seems a pity that in Britain there is evidently no means of supplying small flexible discs with scientific journals, as has been done, for instance, in France (see 127). Examples of duetting in bird song would greatly benefit from publication in this form, as would sounds illustrated by spectrograms appearing with the text. So, although there has been a prolific output of material on disc, there is a conspicuous need for an inexpensive means of scientific publication of live sound. Looking to the future, it seems likely that more discs will be published in real stereo. Indeed, it is hoped that at least some of the electronic stereo recordings in the new Swedish Radio set will be replaced by real stereo in the next edition. This is, however, a painstaking process which contributes little to the recording other than enhancement of the pleasure in listening to it. Previous issues in real stereo reviewed to date are 63, 80, 85, 92, 136 and 137, contributed by recordists Wahlstrom and Aberg, Traber, Nakatsubo, Kabaya, Traber and Reisinger respectively. Pakarctic bird sound recordings during 1971-J2 307 Finally, another idea which could well blossom in the future is that of allowing birds to be heard singing with other species among the sounds of their natural environment, preferably in stereo and for an ample length of time uninterrupted by any announcements, and later of presenting the song of each species on its own in close-up with any necessary verbal introduction. Only by this means is the listener given a true impression of how a particular species sounds in the field. This idea was first attempted by Victor Lewis (129 and 141) and further explored by Jean-Claude Roche (134) and Hans Traber (I36)FURTHER ADDITIONS TO THE DISGOGRAPHY 145. KIRBY, JOHN. 1971. Listen . . .the Birds! Six 7-inch, 33.3 rpm, nos. 13 to 18, European Phono Club, Amsterdam. Obtainable from the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds, The Lodge, Sandy, Bedfordshire SGIO. 2DL, and the Dutch Society for Bird Protection, Reguliersgracht 9, Amsterdam, Netherlands. These six discs are successors to the same recordist's earlier sets (57 and 77). Some of the less often recorded species on these discs are Shore Lark Eremophila alpestris and Ptarmigan (no. 15); Sanderling Calidris alba and Dotterel (no. 16); and Waxwing Bombycilla garrulus, Fieldfare Turdus pilaris and Chough Pyrrhocorax pyrrhocorax (no. 17). No information is given on the localities or dates of recordings, but space is devoted instead to helpful explanations of the sounds, together with pleasing pen-and-ink sketches of each species. There are no verbal announcements. The surface noise is obtrusive and the reproduction rather lacking in bass, the latter especially noticeable in the recording of the Fulmar Fulmarus glacialis. 146. SIMMS, ERIC. 1971. Sea and Island Birds. One 12-inch, 33.3 rpm, RED IOOM, B.B.C. Wildlife Series 12. B.B.C. Radio Enterprises. Fifty-three species of seabirds, wildfowl and waders selected as a tribute to the late James Fisher. The recordings are mostly from the B.B.C. Sound Archives and date from the 1950's, though about one-third are from the early Swedish Radio discs. All contributing sources are acknowledged. Sounds from the birds are kept very short, while Eric Simms takes up much time introducing each species. The last band is devoted to the Grey Seal Halichoerus grypus and includes interesting sounds of cows singing and pups food-begging. 147. SIMMS, ERIC. 1972. A Year's Journey. One 12-inch 33.3 rpm, RED 135M, B.B.C. Wildlife Series 13. B.B.C. Radio Enterprises. Recordings from the B.B.C. television series for schools. The 14 bands are related to the different places visited in the first year's series of programmes. 308 Palearctic bird sound recordings during igji-j2 148. SELLAR, PATRICK, and LEWIS, VICTOR. 1972. Bird Song Adventure. One 12-inch, 33.3 rpm and four-page leaflet, GGL 0485, Golden Guinea series. Pye Records (Sales) Ltd, A.T.V. House, Great Cumberland Place, London W i . Exceptionally good value at £1, with a superb sleeve design by Robert Gillmor, this record presents the voices of 55 species, including the very rarely taped Barrow's Goldeneye Bucephala islandica, Pygmy Owl Glaucidium passerinum, Ural Owl Strix uralensis and Yellow-breasted Bunting Emberiza aureola. The eight species recorded in England are by Vic Lewis; the remainder, from Finland, Sweden, Shetland, Iceland and Greenland, are by Patrick Sellar. Very few bird voices from Greenland have previously been published. The technical quality is excellent. If the names of the species had been spoken on the disc, one would be able to locate them more easily than by trying to count the bands and sub-bands; neither can one be certain when one has moved to die next species. The birds would thereby have been deprived of only a fraction of needle time. The quick guide to the contents on the sleeve lacks six species, is inconsistent, and is misleading when used to direct die reader to the right sub-band on the disc. In the leaflet, the commentary to band 1 on side A gives the impression that there are ten sub-bands, whereas there are eight. J E F F E R Y BOSWALL 149. UNGER, OLDRICH. 1971. The Sound Atlas of Nature—i (Czech). One 1 o-cm tape spool recorded half-track at 9.5 cm/sec, Czechoslovak Radio. Obtainable (at the time of review) from Ceskoslovensky rozhlas, Vinohradska 12, Prague 2, for 120 Czech crowns. Twenty park and marsh bird species are covered on this tape, the first part of a plan to publish a complete atlas of Czechoslovak fauna. The tape comes in a strong box together with leaflets giving descriptions (in Czech) and rather indifferent coloured illustrations of the birds. Scientific names are announced on the tape, and the quality of recording is consistently good with plenty of time devoted to each species. There is one unfortunate error: items 1/2/5 a n ( ^ I / 2 /9 are both of River Warbler Locustellafluviatilis, and not Grasshopper Warbler L. naevia as stated. 150. HANZAK, JAN, and PELZ, PAVEL. 1971. Singers of our Forests (Czech). One 7-inch, 33.3 rpm, o 89 9864. National Museum of Prague. Twenty-six passerines, all common, widespread and frequently recorded except Nutcracker Nucifraga caryocatactes and Collared Flycatcher Ficedula albicollis. J E F F E R Y BOSWALL 151. VEPRINTSEV, BORIS. (Year unknown.) The Voices of Birds (Russian). One 7-inch, 33.3 rpm, 0009857/8. All-Union Studio of disc record- Patearctic bird sound recordings during igyi-j2 309 ing, Mezhdunarodnaja Kniga, 32-34 Smolensk Square, Moscow 200. Includes a recording of Great Snipe Gallinago media. J E F F E R Y BOSWALL 152. PALMER, STURE and BOSWALL, JEFFERY. 1969-72. A Field Guide to the Bird Songs of Britain and Europe. Twelve 12-inch, 33.3 rpm in electronic stereo, RFLP 5001-5012. Swedish Radio. Obtainable (at the time of review) from Svenska EMI, Tritonvagen 17, 172 39 Sundbyberg, Sweden, for 27 S.Kr. each disc, exclusive of freight. See detailed review on pages 304-306. Some 450 species span this first issue of twelve discs, and 80 accidentals are to be published on a further two. The species are arranged in the same order as in the revised and enlarged 1966 English-language edition of A Field Guide to the Birds of Britain and Europe, by R. T. Peterson, G. Mountfort and P.A.D. Hollom (Collins, London). An introductory selection of 37 species was published as RFLP 5020 in May 1969. The species are divided between the 14 records as follows: RFLP 5001 Red-throated Diver Gavia stellata to Bewick's Swan Cygnus bewickii RFLP 500a Ruddy Shelduck Tadomafirruginea to Kestrel Fako tinmmculus RFLP 5003 Willow (Red) Grouse Lagopus lagopus to Long-billed Dowitcher Limnodromus scohpaceus RFLP 5004 Spotted Redshank Tringa erythropus to Ivory Gull PagophUa ebumea RFLP 5005 Black Tern Chlidonias niger to Great Grey Owl Strix nebulosa RFLP 5006 Nightjar Caprimulgus europaeus to Skylark Alauda arvensis RFLP 5007 Sand Martin Riparia riparia to Lanceolated Warbler Locustdla lanceolata RFLP 5008 Moustached Warbler Lusciniola (—Acrocephalus) melanopogon to Greenish Warbler Phylloscopus trochiloides RFLP 5009 Goldcrest Regulus regulus to Red-flanked Bluetaii Tarsiger cyanurus RFLP 5010 Olive-backed Thrush Catharus ustulatus to Short-toed Treecreeper Certhia brachydactyla RFLP 5011 Corn Bunting Emberiza adtmdra to Scarlet Rosefinch Carpoiacus trythrinus RFLP 5012 Pine Grosbeak Pinicola enucleator to Raven Corvus corax RFLP 5013 Pied-billed Grebe PodUymbus podiceps to Nighthawk Chordiiles minor RFLP 5014 Needle-tailed Swift Hirundapus caudacutus to Daurian Jackdaw Corvus dawricus 153. DANISH ORNITHOLOGICAL SOGIETY. 1972. House and Garden Birds (Danish), vol i. One tape cassette. Obtainable from Dansk Ornithologisk Forening, Faelledvej 9, 2200 Copenhagen N, Denmark. Thirty-six common species on cassette. REFERENCES The bold figures are the reference numbers of the discs or sets reviewed in each part. Andr£ Tesson's two discs numbered 121 in Boswall (1970) are re-designated laiA, since the former number had already been used for Sten Wahlstrom's The Mysterious Calls in Boswall (1969b). 310 Palearctic bird sound recordings during igji-72 BOSWAIX, J . 1964. 'A discography of Palearctic bird sound recordings'. Brit. Birds, 57: special supplement. (1-69) 1966. 'New Palearctic bird sound recordings in 1964-65'. Brit, Birds, 59: 27-37. {70-81) 1969a. 'New Palearctic bird sound recordings during 1966-67'. Brit. Birds, 63:49-65.(82-104) 1969b. 'New Palearctic bird sound recordings during 1968'. Brit. Birds, 6 2 : 371-281. (105-121) 1970. 'New Palearctic bird sound recordings during 1969'. Brit. Birds, 63: 324-332- (KiA-133) -—— 1971. 'New Palearctic bird sound recordings during 1970'. Brit. Birds, 64: 431-434- ( I 33-*44) Patrick Sellar, 8g Riddlesdown Road, Purley, Surrey GR2 IDH