Lang Elliott didn鈥檛 realize the birdsong he was missing until the Worm-eating Warbler incident. In the 1970s, a professor noted the bird, but even standing beneath it, Elliott couldn鈥檛 pick out its lusty, high trills. 鈥淚鈥檓 watching it throw its head back and open its beak and sing its heart out. And I still don鈥檛 hear that bird,鈥 he recalls. This 鈥渆ar-opener鈥 led to an experiment: Elliott slowed the speed鈥攁nd lowered the pitch鈥攐f a recording he took in a forest. He was shocked at the birds he heard.
A test revealed Elliott, then 27, had high-frequency hearing loss, a condition caused by loud sounds or aging that one study found may affect nearly a third of U.S. adults under 70. 鈥淚 was missing this huge part of the world of birdsong, not to mention insects,鈥 he says, a crushing realization for the budding wildlife ecologist. The severity of his hearing loss above a certain frequency鈥攄ue to a childhood accident with firecrackers, he realized鈥攎eant conventional hearing aids, which amplify sounds, wouldn鈥檛 help. Frustrated by his options, Elliott turned his dismay into of developing tools that help birders reclaim avian soundscapes.
First Elliott and electronic music pioneer Harald Bode adapted a commercial pitch-shifting machine from the music industry. Paired with a handmade headset outfitted with microphones and headphones to transmit 3D sound, he could sense the location and distance of a bird鈥檚 vocals. But after lugging the setup鈥攄esigned for studios, not forests鈥around for a while, he wanted a more portable device. By this time, he had taken up an unexpected career traveling the world to capture sounds of birds and other wildlife, which he would eventually license for field guides, museums, and movies. He also thought others might benefit from his efforts.
Enter the SongFinder, a boxy but mobile machine and double-mic headset, which Elliott and electrical engineer Herb Susmann debuted in 1991 for $750. By 2018, when production ended, it was pocket-sized and had garnered a small but devoted user base. Laura Erickson, 71, a user for more than a decade, found it 鈥渁 game changer鈥 for helping her enjoy her beloved LeConte鈥檚 Sparrows. A recent user, Jody Enck, 63, says the device 鈥渋mproved my quality of life and my income鈥 because it allowed the environmental consultant to continue performing avian surveys.
Now Elliott, 74, is releasing his latest iteration of the technology: , a labor of love developed with programmer Harold Mills. Like SongFinder, its algorithms instantly shift higher-pitched wildlife into frequencies low enough to be detected by people who still hear most human speech and some birdsong, such as a robin鈥檚, but who struggle above roughly 3 kilohertz. App users can tune settings to suit their needs鈥攍owering the pitch by different intervals to hear, say, a Brown Creeper, Blackburnian Warbler, or Northern Parula as necessary. To help birders truly experience the immersive 鈥渘irvana鈥 of birdsong in stereo, Elliott designed , fitted with microphones that connect to an iPhone and headphones that deliver high-quality, spatially oriented sound without interfering with other hearing.
鈥淟ooks a little geeky, but it works,鈥 he says. The headset costs about $170 with shipping, through a partnership between his nonprofit and a U.K. online retailer. There鈥檚 some assembly required, or users can build their own DIY setup.
Of course, pitch-shifted birdsong doesn鈥檛 exactly sound the same, but the pattern remains. 鈥淎 Parula Warbler that goes zee-UP still goes zee-UP,鈥 says Elliott. He hopes that, with practice, users can relearn how to bird by ear, which can be transformational. Erickson, for example, has found success using SongFinder along with the pricey digital hearing aids that her audiologist programmed to augment birds, voices, and other sounds above a certain frequency. 鈥淭hese birds become old friends, and losing their voices is so sad,鈥 she says. 鈥淲hen you get them back again, even if they sound a little different鈥攚ell, I look way different than I did in my 20s.鈥
The world of birdsong could soon open further. In August, the FDA legalized over-the-counter hearing aids, a move anticipated to accelerate lower-cost devices for those with mild to moderate hearing loss and spur innovation opportunities, for birders and many others. And with the Hear Birds Again release this month, Elliott is ready to pass the baton. Its open-source code, , allows for programmers to create an Android version鈥攐r take advantage of whatever technologies emerge next.
This story originally ran in the Winter 2022 issue as 鈥淪ongs from Silence.鈥 To receive our print magazine, become a member by .