Wildlife sound recordist Chris Watson accompanies Sami Joiker, And\xe9 Sombe, on a journey up a mountain on the Lofoten islands in Norway to explore the relationship between the sounds of the mountain, the people and the wildlife.\n \nAs Chris discovers, for many Norwegians the soundscape is part of the fascination and attraction of the mountains. The mountains offer an escape from urban and man-made noise to Nature\u2019s symphony which is composed amongst other things of the sounds of running water produced by the glacial streams, the whisper and roar of the wind, the chorus of song birds and the cry of soaring ravens high overhead.\n \nLooking around Chris is reminded that this is an Arctic landscape but in recent years the glacial ice has been melting in some of Norway\u2019s highest mountains and we learn how a team of archaeologists have been recovering thousands of artefacts, some of which date back 6,000 years.\n \nBut it is also the quality of the sounds here that intrigues Chris, and during the climb gradually he begins to understand something of the deeper more spiritual connection with the earth which is so intrinsic to the Sami culture.\n \nFor And\xe9 the mountain soundscape and his relationship to the wolves which were once so prevalent here, inspires a joik, a Sami chant, which he performs at the peak of their climb.
(Photo: Mountain lake and crater Lofotens Islands, Norway. Credit: Chris Watson)