A quick Google search will produce countless articles
trying to understand the popularity of 'ringtones'; hundreds
of bloggers waxing lyrical on the benefits of personalising
their cell phones. Interviews with “experts” profering
sexy theories about ringtones and identity construction lend
an academic seriousness to the Crazy Frog phenomena. The
figures are pretty serious too, in the U.S.A. alone, the
Yankee Group predicts, ringtones will be worth $500 million.
That’s roughly the GDP of Fiji.
Obviously our cell phones needs a voice, but does that
voice need to be a polyphonic adaptation of 'Living on a
Prayer'?
The latest figures indicate that young people are the
greatest consumers of mobile music. According to one UK
survey, 15-24 year olds account for 80% of ringtone
spending. Studies by Nick Anderson of Sussex University show
that young people are far more aware of the "brand
personalty" (the particular identity affiliated with
certain brands) than older generations. Anderson suggests
that teenagers can deduce a person's character, likes and
dislikes, by their branded possessions. Considering the
amount of branding in the music industry, it's not
unreasonable to say that popular musicians have their own
“brand personality”. So, your 50 Cent ringtone, for
example, communicates not only a your taste in music, but
also your compliance to the whole ‘Fiddy’ meme.
Ultimately, for brand savvy youth, this says something about
your personality, which, you hope, everybody within earshot
understands.
If a cell phone rings in the woods but nobody is around
to hear it, are you still down with 50 Cent? Ringtones are
about personalization, and about public performance. The
publicness of the ringtone is an integral part of its
appeal. It's unlikely that anyone would have a ringtone on
their landline. In a noisy urban soundscape like the city,
silence is an anomaly. Personalised ringtones are simply
another irritating sound in the hullabaloo. Most of us
manage tune out the sounds imposed on us: muzak, hawkers,
traffic, the O'Reily factor, so why try and impose yet
another squawk? Perhaps the ringtone is the audio equivalent
of territorial pissing; thirty seconds in which YOU pick the
soundtrack. For a few moments when your cell phone rings the
50 Cent meme is the most powerful in the sonic environment.
Where “Fiddy” is relatively redundant as a social force,
certain ringtones allow citizens to demonstrate their
dissatisfaction or support of a cause. Independent radio
station WFMU have created a variety of anti- George W. Bush
ringtones available for download, while engadget.com
allows users to choose their preferred presidential
candidate ringtone. Condemning other commuters to several
cycles of 50 Cent, the theme from 'Star Wars' or a Dubya
quote demonstrates your individual tastes and allows others
distinguish you as either nemesis or brethren.
In our efforts to relieve poverty, impede environmental
disaster or cure the global AIDs epidemic, ringtones are
totally and utterly useless. When it comes to enforcing the
myth that every individual is special, the artificial
uniqueness of a personalized ringtone is just the ticket.
Paradoxically, this demonstration of individualism is only
really effective in a crowd. As far as this writer's
concerned the real purpose of ringtones lies in their
ridiculousness. A recent gathering of sensible adults turned
to hilarity thanks to an improvised game of "Name that
tune". Using Foovely's ringtone preview function, those
gathered took turns choosing snippets of songs for the party
to guess. Recognising a song in 30 seconds is SO much harder
in monophone!
This article was posted on December 08, 2005