Every city has a sound. It's more than just a noise, and certainly greater than the sum of its parts. Cities are different; Dublin sounded like buskers and rain, a lazy, happy sort of sound, but Rome sounds like people, talking, singing, selling you something, greeting each other. Perhaps it is better to describe it as a song, or a symphony, since it has tempo and rhythm, and every once in a while, a long solo.
Rome's song starts early. This morning, it began as my alarm clock, which is never a good sound for a symphony, but it quickly moved past this jarring intro to the gentle
swish-swish-splash sound of the man cleaning the courtyard outside my window. While more soothing, this sound was nonetheless
louder than the alarm clock, and the quick brushing sounds got me out of bed.
The movement of the morning is a
larghissimo, absolutely, especially at 7am. It is not until the thick silence of the apartment is replaced by the sound of the espresso machine that this piece begins to move into the
allegro phase, a transition that takes a long time, but is marked by the traffic solo and characterized by the heavy application of one of my least favorite instruments, the bus horn. The traffic solo is punctuated by cobblestones, which alert the listener that this part of the symphony (in Rome, at least) is
prestissimo, the fastest part of the day. Actually, any bus ride is a reprise of the prestissimo traffic solo, and it is strong enough to induce actual fear on the tiny side roads. Despite having tiny roads, Rome sees no need for tiny buses.
Off the bus and into the Forum, we move to the
adagio, my slow and stately tour route. It takes 2.5 hours to go through the Forum and Colosseum, so this is a long movement, and its main instrument is my voice, which thankfully gets the rest of the day off. I think some of my tourists might prefer if this movement were
andante, at a walking pace, but I love the Forum, so it stays an adagio. Lunch is slow again; meals are always slow here, and the afternoon is much the same. Here there is actual music, not just the sounds of the city: one of my neighbors has a baby, whom she sings to sleep every day for his afternoon nap. She has a very nice voice, although her musical selection is... eclectic. Sometimes baby hears the Beatles, sometimes he hears Italian pop songs, sometimes he hears O Sole Mio, the unofficial National Anthem of Italy. Mostly, though, she sings 'My Heart Will Go On.'
The evening is my favorite part of this song, because it is the
allegro grazioso; a bit fast, but graceful, full of the sounds of wine glasses and people talking, with the occasional ragazzi solo (the ragazzi are louder than anything else I have heard in Rome, including the building equipment and the Metro). This lasts long into the night, and seems to suit Rome best, because it includes almost all of the instruments except for the traffic.
It is easy to see Rome as a living, breathing thing, because nothing in it ever seems to stop. My apartment is quiet, with a little courtyard, but I can hear seagulls and someone's washing machine and the faint hum of Italian television coming from the second floor, punctuated by the occasional un-muffled Vespa speeding past the building, or one of the metal shutters being opened or closed. Every city has traffic, and birds, and washing machines and inhabitants, but in Rome these noises aren't just noises, they're the soundtrack of the city.