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Pipedown (campaign)

Pipedown
Founded 1992
Focus Noise Pollution
Area served
United Kingdom
Method Political advocacy
Website www.pipedown.org.uk

The Pipedown Campaign for Freedom from Piped Music is a UK-based environmental campaign founded in 1992 by the author and environmentalist Nigel Rodgers. It has links with the sister group in Germany and other countries.

The campaign fights background music in public places such as hospitals, libraries, swimming pools, pubs, shops and restaurants. Its literature describes unwanted piped music, also often called elevator music, ‘muzak’ or canned music, as any music piped without pause through a room or building where people have gone for reasons other than to listen to it. It emphasizes that it does not distinguish between different types of music, saying that all music is debased by being used as a marketing tool or acoustic wallpaper.

Pipedown's literature accepts that music when freely chosen is one of life’s greatest pleasures. But it maintains that music when forced on people can too easily become the exact opposite. In support of this view, Pipedown makes the following additional points:

One of the campaign’s early successes was achieved by members protesting to Gatwick Airport about the piped music played throughout there. In April 1994 the managers carried out a survey of 68,077 people. Of these 43% said they disliked the piped music, 34% liked it, the rest were indifferent. Gatwick Airport then stopped background music in the main areas. Similar letter/email campaigns have subsequently persuaded supermarket chains such as Sainsbury not to install piped music. More recently, the booksellers Waterstones have agreed to phase it out. Pipedown members can post places – pubs, hotels, restaurants, bookshops – that are free of piped music on the Quiet Corners website. Its most recent success (June 2016) has been helping persuade Marks & Spencer, the 'flagship of the British High Street', to drop its music. This was achieved by concerted emails and letters. It has had no success persuading Morrisons or the Co-op chains, however, nor with banks such as the HSBC, which have all refused even to consider removing the music piped through almost all their branches despite protests by Pipedown members.

Generally, Pipedown prefers persuasion and protest to legislation but the problem of piped music has become acute in hospitals, where people lying immobilised in beds may have to endure hours of inescapable music or television. They are both a captive audience and an especially vulnerable one. Realizing that these were areas where consumer choice simply did not apply – people have to visit hospitals and health centres – Pipedown turned to seeking parliamentary legislation. On 15 March 2000 Robert Key, then MP for Salisbury, introduced a bill into the House of Commons ‘to prohibit the broadcasting of recorded music in certain public places’, principally hospitals. The bill did not pass but raised the issue of piped music in Parliament. On 16 June 2006 Lord Tim Beaumont, the only Green Party peer, introduced a bill to prohibit piped music and television in hospitals. The bill passed in the House of Lords but Beaumont died before he could find an MP to introduce it in the Commons. The campaign has recently renewed its attempts to find an MP or MPs willing to try to introduce a similar bill. There is another if less acute problem with unwanted piped music in the workplace. People working in music-filled environments also may have no choice about the music playing non-stop through the working day, but they may not like to protest.


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