1 00:00:00,600 --> 00:00:02,800 Speaker 1: The Christian O'Connell show podcast. 2 00:00:03,000 --> 00:00:05,320 Speaker 2: Jack's moved into a new neighborhood and he's found a 3 00:00:05,360 --> 00:00:08,520 Speaker 2: new local character, A kind of noisy noisy neighbor. 4 00:00:08,920 --> 00:00:12,000 Speaker 3: Not a kind of noisy neighbor, the noises of the neighbors. 5 00:00:12,280 --> 00:00:15,360 Speaker 3: We have a bagpiper who practices outdoors. 6 00:00:16,200 --> 00:00:19,079 Speaker 4: Wow, when at least he's taken it outdoors, not. 7 00:00:19,239 --> 00:00:21,919 Speaker 3: To keep it indoors, keep it contained. 8 00:00:21,480 --> 00:00:23,919 Speaker 2: But surely with his indoors it's even loud. He's thinking 9 00:00:23,960 --> 00:00:25,720 Speaker 2: of his neighbors. So what does he go to and oval? 10 00:00:25,800 --> 00:00:28,000 Speaker 3: It sounds so loud that at first Bianka thought he 11 00:00:28,040 --> 00:00:30,760 Speaker 3: was next door. I said, no, the pipes. The pipes 12 00:00:30,760 --> 00:00:33,800 Speaker 3: are so annoying. They travel, they travel really far. I 13 00:00:33,840 --> 00:00:36,240 Speaker 3: think we think he's in the park, but we've never 14 00:00:36,280 --> 00:00:36,720 Speaker 3: seen him. 15 00:00:36,840 --> 00:00:38,800 Speaker 2: Are you need to follow the sounds like the pied 16 00:00:38,880 --> 00:00:40,080 Speaker 2: pipe we see where he is. 17 00:00:40,159 --> 00:00:43,800 Speaker 3: We tried. Bianca suggested that he might be in a tree, because. 18 00:00:43,520 --> 00:00:45,120 Speaker 4: We want to see a tree. 19 00:00:45,440 --> 00:00:47,440 Speaker 3: We couldn't see him anywhere, but we know the sound 20 00:00:47,560 --> 00:00:50,760 Speaker 3: is coming from the park. How often is it's not 21 00:00:50,800 --> 00:00:51,640 Speaker 3: a beautiful. 22 00:00:52,080 --> 00:00:54,080 Speaker 4: Like your baby's trying to sleep during the day. 23 00:00:54,480 --> 00:00:57,760 Speaker 3: It's not like is it's a very unique taste of 24 00:00:57,800 --> 00:00:58,280 Speaker 3: a sound. 25 00:00:58,480 --> 00:01:00,000 Speaker 4: Yeah, I think you really. 26 00:01:00,080 --> 00:01:02,360 Speaker 3: You are putting your foot down in the suburb and 27 00:01:02,440 --> 00:01:06,120 Speaker 3: saying like the noise of the suburbs. You're quite right practicing. 28 00:01:06,440 --> 00:01:08,360 Speaker 2: There's no getting away from it. Like I guess if 29 00:01:08,400 --> 00:01:11,240 Speaker 2: you're practicing your drums or something. It's a couple of houses. 30 00:01:11,240 --> 00:01:13,680 Speaker 2: You can hear that the bagpipes is everywhere. 31 00:01:13,720 --> 00:01:16,199 Speaker 3: Well, you just reminded me I came from I left 32 00:01:16,200 --> 00:01:19,399 Speaker 3: Coburg where I had that drumming teenager. You would wait 33 00:01:19,480 --> 00:01:23,360 Speaker 3: until after I got away from him. And now I'm 34 00:01:23,600 --> 00:01:24,360 Speaker 3: sitting with the bag. 35 00:01:24,640 --> 00:01:27,039 Speaker 4: What time of the day is he crank yesterday? 36 00:01:27,120 --> 00:01:31,880 Speaker 2: With mid day that big old wingze box, especially because 37 00:01:31,880 --> 00:01:34,039 Speaker 2: it takes a while to sort of get it kind of. 38 00:01:39,160 --> 00:01:42,000 Speaker 3: With bagpipes? Can you not practice at half volume or 39 00:01:42,160 --> 00:01:44,360 Speaker 3: lesser volume? Do you have to? He hasn't got a 40 00:01:44,400 --> 00:01:45,320 Speaker 3: volume switch on it? 41 00:01:45,800 --> 00:01:47,280 Speaker 4: You're right, headphones? 42 00:01:47,319 --> 00:01:48,800 Speaker 3: How did you do like a half blow? 43 00:01:48,880 --> 00:01:48,960 Speaker 4: Like? 44 00:01:49,720 --> 00:01:51,640 Speaker 5: You can just do the chanter, which is like the 45 00:01:51,760 --> 00:01:53,160 Speaker 5: record a bit of it and take the bag. 46 00:01:53,360 --> 00:01:56,600 Speaker 4: I forgot. We've got expert on the course. 47 00:01:56,680 --> 00:01:58,240 Speaker 3: I did learn the bagpipes. 48 00:01:58,880 --> 00:02:01,840 Speaker 4: It must it looks very hold alone impossible. 49 00:02:03,360 --> 00:02:05,680 Speaker 3: You play the bagpipes. No, I didn't get very far. 50 00:02:05,760 --> 00:02:07,080 Speaker 3: I did two lessons in Quinn. 51 00:02:08,360 --> 00:02:10,080 Speaker 4: So how many times a week is he cranking up 52 00:02:10,080 --> 00:02:10,680 Speaker 4: the old bag? 53 00:02:10,880 --> 00:02:12,720 Speaker 3: I've heard him three times in the last two weeks. 54 00:02:12,720 --> 00:02:16,480 Speaker 3: Oh my god. He loves the weekends. 55 00:02:16,520 --> 00:02:19,160 Speaker 2: Come the weekend, kill the pipes and he's out. How 56 00:02:19,200 --> 00:02:21,519 Speaker 2: long is he out there practicing Saturday? 57 00:02:21,840 --> 00:02:26,120 Speaker 3: Four hours? No way, it is constant. I thought it 58 00:02:26,200 --> 00:02:27,200 Speaker 3: might be a CD. 59 00:02:28,000 --> 00:02:30,960 Speaker 2: Jerry Springsteen and the e Street Man who requires four 60 00:02:31,000 --> 00:02:31,960 Speaker 2: hours of bag bite. 61 00:02:32,000 --> 00:02:34,440 Speaker 3: He's on his own. Yesterday was an hour for lunch. 62 00:02:34,800 --> 00:02:36,919 Speaker 3: But on the weekends he just goes Where. 63 00:02:36,800 --> 00:02:38,519 Speaker 2: Do I think you could go and practice that where 64 00:02:38,520 --> 00:02:42,720 Speaker 2: no one could hear you? Are the aquarium? Underwater? Rio? 65 00:02:42,200 --> 00:02:43,520 Speaker 2: Who have you got? 66 00:02:43,520 --> 00:02:43,720 Speaker 4: Then? 67 00:02:43,880 --> 00:02:46,519 Speaker 5: I live next door to an experimental and this is 68 00:02:46,560 --> 00:02:49,960 Speaker 5: what he's described himself to us as the sound artist. 69 00:02:50,080 --> 00:02:57,200 Speaker 5: So he's he makes like experimental scores from like weird Niche. 70 00:02:57,919 --> 00:02:59,919 Speaker 4: Your headphones into the keyboard. 71 00:03:00,080 --> 00:03:00,880 Speaker 1: It's so loud. 72 00:03:01,160 --> 00:03:08,880 Speaker 4: This is from Rio's bedroom. That's awful. This is like 73 00:03:09,000 --> 00:03:10,440 Speaker 4: some awful kind of a scaled role. 74 00:03:12,800 --> 00:03:13,679 Speaker 3: How long will this gone? 75 00:03:14,400 --> 00:03:17,760 Speaker 4: The aliens are landing on the road. That is too much? 76 00:03:18,720 --> 00:03:24,440 Speaker 4: What is this being scored? To as well. Saw nine. 77 00:03:26,919 --> 00:03:29,600 Speaker 3: That's hard to be. I think I'll actually take the 78 00:03:29,600 --> 00:03:30,440 Speaker 3: bagpipes over that. 79 00:03:31,880 --> 00:03:36,720 Speaker 4: Maybe they should joint up together. What t from the 80 00:03:36,800 --> 00:03:37,800 Speaker 4: days he cranking up? 81 00:03:37,840 --> 00:03:40,800 Speaker 5: That He normally does it around six pm after he 82 00:03:40,840 --> 00:03:43,000 Speaker 5: gets home from school, but he can go deep into 83 00:03:43,080 --> 00:03:43,440 Speaker 5: the night. 84 00:03:43,560 --> 00:03:44,800 Speaker 3: Normally cuts off about ten. 85 00:03:46,040 --> 00:03:47,640 Speaker 4: You ever had a noisy neighbor? 86 00:03:47,640 --> 00:03:50,600 Speaker 3: Pat just when he puts his bin out at eleven o'clock. Everything, 87 00:03:50,760 --> 00:03:53,240 Speaker 3: it's Thursday, he'll do it tonight. I'll set my clock 88 00:03:53,280 --> 00:03:55,280 Speaker 3: onto it. He'll put his bin out at eleven. 89 00:03:55,400 --> 00:04:03,760 Speaker 2: Make it's very a mild, right, it's all right if 90 00:04:03,800 --> 00:04:06,240 Speaker 2: you had a noisy neighbor. 91 00:04:06,760 --> 00:04:09,560 Speaker 1: The Christian O'Connell Show Podcast. 92 00:04:09,240 --> 00:04:11,000 Speaker 4: Christian, I have a noisy neighbor, and I have been 93 00:04:11,040 --> 00:04:15,280 Speaker 4: the noisy labor one apartment on my floor. 94 00:04:15,920 --> 00:04:20,520 Speaker 2: Some guy in there practice of the tuba. 95 00:04:20,640 --> 00:04:21,960 Speaker 3: A big old base, the tuber. 96 00:04:25,560 --> 00:04:29,600 Speaker 2: It's such a deep guttural sound, isn't it the tuba? 97 00:04:30,120 --> 00:04:32,040 Speaker 2: How would we make the sound of a tuber? Is that? 98 00:04:32,200 --> 00:04:32,800 Speaker 4: Is that that big? 99 00:04:34,920 --> 00:04:38,080 Speaker 2: Imagine that practicing that you can hear all the way 100 00:04:38,120 --> 00:04:41,239 Speaker 2: down the hallway. Then I was a noisy one, Christian. 101 00:04:41,279 --> 00:04:43,960 Speaker 2: I left the window open and a blind was knocking 102 00:04:44,000 --> 00:04:47,560 Speaker 2: against it. I got a phone call through the landlord. 103 00:04:47,600 --> 00:04:50,000 Speaker 2: A neighborhood called the that my neghb would called the 104 00:04:50,080 --> 00:04:53,479 Speaker 2: landlord because the blind was knocking against the window frame 105 00:04:53,640 --> 00:04:55,559 Speaker 2: and disturbing a neighbor next door. 106 00:04:56,000 --> 00:05:01,680 Speaker 3: And you got tuba guy down the hall. I would 107 00:05:01,720 --> 00:05:04,120 Speaker 3: love it as the tuba guy who put in nick complaint. 108 00:05:05,720 --> 00:05:06,000 Speaker 4: Question. 109 00:05:06,080 --> 00:05:08,160 Speaker 2: I know Jack sent about this guy. Now the pipe 110 00:05:08,160 --> 00:05:11,080 Speaker 2: mister piper in the park. If you're in Brunswick, there 111 00:05:11,120 --> 00:05:13,839 Speaker 2: is a piper who practices at least three times a 112 00:05:13,839 --> 00:05:16,800 Speaker 2: week in Clifton Park. Uses the stage there, which is 113 00:05:16,839 --> 00:05:22,680 Speaker 2: like a music bowl, so it travels. Christian, trust me 114 00:05:23,160 --> 00:05:26,159 Speaker 2: tell Jack outside. It is better than practicing indoors. My 115 00:05:26,279 --> 00:05:28,560 Speaker 2: dad used to have bagpipes used to practice in the garage. 116 00:05:28,600 --> 00:05:31,839 Speaker 2: The noise was even worse in there, all right, nine 117 00:05:31,960 --> 00:05:33,840 Speaker 2: four one four one oh four to three. 118 00:05:33,920 --> 00:05:35,159 Speaker 4: Nicole, good morning. 119 00:05:35,839 --> 00:05:40,920 Speaker 6: Good morning Christian, Pat and Jack, my neighbor is now 120 00:05:40,960 --> 00:05:43,120 Speaker 6: known as mister commodore redhead. 121 00:05:43,400 --> 00:05:46,000 Speaker 4: Oh no, what time did you start reving up the 122 00:05:46,000 --> 00:05:46,520 Speaker 4: old Beast? 123 00:05:47,560 --> 00:05:49,320 Speaker 6: Well, my partner and I look at each other and 124 00:05:49,320 --> 00:05:53,479 Speaker 6: go here we go, and usually starts around ten go 125 00:05:53,600 --> 00:05:54,760 Speaker 6: to eleven thirty on a. 126 00:05:54,680 --> 00:05:58,680 Speaker 2: Weekday and then he starts, and then. 127 00:05:58,560 --> 00:06:02,279 Speaker 6: The owner across the road he's got another commodore. He starts, 128 00:06:02,279 --> 00:06:03,120 Speaker 6: so they close. 129 00:06:03,080 --> 00:06:08,839 Speaker 2: In a band together, Jamjam, they get it on. 130 00:06:10,839 --> 00:06:13,760 Speaker 6: And I moved to the country. I moved to regional 131 00:06:13,839 --> 00:06:16,280 Speaker 6: Victoria for peace and quiet and. 132 00:06:17,960 --> 00:06:22,800 Speaker 4: Quiet, I can assure you just escape mister Redhead and 133 00:06:22,839 --> 00:06:23,479 Speaker 4: his commodorees. 134 00:06:24,680 --> 00:06:26,840 Speaker 6: Well, no, mister Redhead moved in a year and a 135 00:06:26,880 --> 00:06:27,680 Speaker 6: half ago, so. 136 00:06:29,200 --> 00:06:29,799 Speaker 2: Didn't happen. 137 00:06:29,960 --> 00:06:32,120 Speaker 4: Oh that's awful, Nicole, thank you very much to give 138 00:06:32,200 --> 00:06:35,960 Speaker 4: us a caol. Have a good day. Let's go to Niki. 139 00:06:36,560 --> 00:06:39,159 Speaker 4: Hello Nikki, So who have you got? Who is your 140 00:06:39,480 --> 00:06:40,120 Speaker 4: noisy neighbor? 141 00:06:40,880 --> 00:06:44,120 Speaker 6: Well, I know that this doesn't necessarily sound like it's 142 00:06:44,160 --> 00:06:46,000 Speaker 6: going to be a true story, but it really is. 143 00:06:46,080 --> 00:06:49,200 Speaker 6: I genuinely promise. We have got a gentleman. We live 144 00:06:49,200 --> 00:06:51,479 Speaker 6: in an apartment and we've got a gentleman that lives 145 00:06:51,520 --> 00:06:56,560 Speaker 6: across the way. And he is the loudest person I've 146 00:06:56,600 --> 00:07:01,599 Speaker 6: ever heard past wind. He lives alone, and sometimes we 147 00:07:01,640 --> 00:07:04,200 Speaker 6: can be in our apartment we can hear him and 148 00:07:04,240 --> 00:07:08,960 Speaker 6: then he does a little giggle afterwards. I am I 149 00:07:09,040 --> 00:07:11,760 Speaker 6: am dead set serious. My daughter and I have taken 150 00:07:11,800 --> 00:07:14,600 Speaker 6: to calling him mister Gassy. I don't know if he 151 00:07:14,680 --> 00:07:16,960 Speaker 6: knows we know, but when we see him in the 152 00:07:17,360 --> 00:07:20,440 Speaker 6: streets or in the common area, he's very sheepish. 153 00:07:21,520 --> 00:07:24,360 Speaker 4: He knows, he must know. 154 00:07:24,440 --> 00:07:26,840 Speaker 6: It is the loudest. I hate the F words, so 155 00:07:26,880 --> 00:07:29,280 Speaker 6: I won't use that, but he is the loudest person 156 00:07:29,840 --> 00:07:32,400 Speaker 6: passing wind. I don't know what his diet contains. 157 00:07:32,680 --> 00:07:37,320 Speaker 4: It must be serious if there's that much that noisy. 158 00:07:38,680 --> 00:07:40,560 Speaker 6: Apartment. These walls are solid. 159 00:07:40,600 --> 00:07:42,480 Speaker 4: Oh, it's not a new one of those flimsy ones. 160 00:07:42,520 --> 00:07:45,440 Speaker 6: No, no, no, no, old school built in the like 161 00:07:45,520 --> 00:07:46,960 Speaker 6: thirties forties. 162 00:07:46,600 --> 00:07:47,520 Speaker 1: Sold solid. 163 00:07:48,560 --> 00:07:50,960 Speaker 6: Yep. And it's not a shed corridor. It's actually I've 164 00:07:50,960 --> 00:07:52,360 Speaker 6: got a door. There's like a. 165 00:07:53,920 --> 00:07:54,240 Speaker 1: Terrace. 166 00:07:54,440 --> 00:07:58,240 Speaker 6: And then he is placed. It is so interesting, and 167 00:07:58,280 --> 00:07:58,720 Speaker 6: then he has. 168 00:08:00,080 --> 00:08:01,120 Speaker 4: Old sort of rippers. 169 00:08:01,200 --> 00:08:01,360 Speaker 1: Yeah. 170 00:08:01,440 --> 00:08:05,560 Speaker 6: Yeah, he really gets into it, leaning into it. 171 00:08:06,200 --> 00:08:06,400 Speaker 4: Yep. 172 00:08:06,560 --> 00:08:09,040 Speaker 6: Oh big time. Because you think he's alone. I think 173 00:08:09,040 --> 00:08:09,840 Speaker 6: it's a little giggle. 174 00:08:09,880 --> 00:08:12,000 Speaker 4: I don't know, giggle. 175 00:08:12,240 --> 00:08:16,400 Speaker 6: Well, my daughter and I have to stifle our giggles 176 00:08:16,800 --> 00:08:19,400 Speaker 6: because it's just like if he hears up back, then 177 00:08:19,440 --> 00:08:22,680 Speaker 6: that's even worse. Yeah, mister Gassi. 178 00:08:23,360 --> 00:08:25,560 Speaker 1: The Christian O'Connell Show podcast