How the Common Loon’s Eerie Call Took Over Pop Music

The beloved bird has wailed its way through decades of hits. It鈥檚 time we give the species its royalties.
A calling loon is silhouetted against rippling water reflecting the golden light of sunset.
Common Loon. Photo: Rolf Kopfle/Alamy

It鈥檚 hard to stay relevant in the music industry. But one vocalist has done it for decades鈥攃rossing genres, keeping up with trends, and collaborating with some of the biggest hitmakers in the field. 

We鈥檙e talking, of course, about the Common Loon. The red-eyed waterbird is known for giving off a range of eerie cries that echo across wild lakes throughout its breeding range in the northern United States and Canada. 鈥淎 loon has a pretty dynamic vocal repertoire that鈥檚 really uncharacteristic of a non-songbird,鈥 says Jay Mager, a loon researcher at Ohio Northern University. 

These calls aren鈥檛 just the soundtrack for lakeside summer nights; they鈥檙e also a staple for generations of popular music. From Michael Jackson to Nicki Minaj, from 鈥80s Eurodance DJs to modern EDM producers, a wide range of musicians have brought on the loon as a featured artist over the years鈥攖hough they haven鈥檛 always given the birds their credit. These days, the species has been back in the spotlight, partnering with Doja Cat on hits like 鈥淎ttention鈥 and 鈥淕et Into It (Yuh).鈥

(This song from Doja Cat features a classic loon wail in the intro. Scroll on for more videos and a custom Spotify playlist of loon hits,)

So how did the loon get its start in the music business? And why have its mournful cries echoed through popular culture for so long?

To answer that, we have to go back to an earlier era of music production, when synthesizers were starting to transform the way songs were made, says Charlie Harding, songwriter and co-host of the podcast 鈥.鈥 The 1970s and 鈥80s saw the rise of early samplers鈥攌eyboards designed so people could record their own sounds and play them back. But if they didn鈥檛 want to do that legwork, musicians could also choose from pre-recorded samples offered as keyboard presets or bundled together separately and sold on floppy disks.

Loons flew onto this scene with the 1984 release of a new synthesizer, the aptly named E-mu Emulator II.

As samplers spread, these default sounds started showing up over and over in different songs, sometimes defining entire genres, Harding says. It鈥檚 why the same sets the stage for scores of 鈥80s power ballads, and a from Stravinsky鈥檚 鈥淭he Firebird鈥 punctuates countless hip-hop tracks.

Loons flew onto this scene with the 1984 release of a new synthesizer, the aptly named E-mu Emulator II, which would go on to become a bestseller. A preset disk of nature sounds for the keyboard included the loon鈥檚 tremolo call, a repeated up-and-down pitch that sounds a bit like a maniacal laugh. Soon enough, that cackle made its way to the dance floor.

As music journalist Philip Sherburne in 2012, the sample really took off when two European groups looped it into the tracks 鈥淪ue帽o Latino鈥 and 鈥淧acific State,鈥 which became huge dance floor hits. Once people started hearing the call at DJ sets and clubs, the tremolo chuckled its way onto and until it became a signature for the house and electronic scene. 鈥淪omeone decided that a Stravinsky orchestral hit could be the sound of hip-hop,鈥 Harding says. 鈥淲hy can鈥檛 the loon be the sound of late-night dance music?鈥

Since then, the loon鈥檚 distinctive laugh has reverberated through decades of popular music. In recent years, it鈥檚 shown up in a from Calvin Harris; an from Lady Gaga; and a from Lana Del Rey. 

It even pops up among the raunchy jungle imagery of 鈥溾 by Nicki Minaj, which Harding says is 鈥渁n ecological disaster鈥攖hese biomes should not mix.鈥 In fact, a lot of songs use the loon鈥檚 tremolo to conjure up a tropical, far-off vibe, even though the bird spends much of the year in the cooler climates of the northern lakes and the rest wintering along the coasts. 

(The loon's tremolo loops throughout this 1989 dance hit.)

To put another damper on it, the tremolo that鈥檚 livened up decades of dance music is actually an alarm call, says Jim Paruk, a loon expert at Saint Joseph鈥檚 College of Maine who has spent decades studying the birds. A loon will often let out the sound if it鈥檚 feeling threatened, like if a predator is nearby or a human is getting too close to its nest. The more stressed out the bird is, the more repeated 鈥渓aughs鈥 it will add to the call: 鈥淚t goes from being alarmed and frightened, to being really frightened, to like, 鈥業鈥檓 about to lose it,鈥欌 Paruk says.

Beyond the tremolo, another of the loon鈥檚 signature sounds has also been making its way through the music charts lately after building a long career in film. It鈥檚 the wail: the classic, haunting woo-OO-oo that rings out across the bird鈥檚 habitat. 

This sound is thought to be a 鈥渃ontact call鈥 between loons when they鈥檙e out of sight of each other, Mager explains鈥攍ike a mate looking for its partner, or a parent trying to locate its chicks. One loon in a pair might use it to call its mate back to the nest when it鈥檚 out foraging, Paruk adds. 鈥淪o essentially, 鈥楥ome here.鈥 The mate will respond, 鈥楬ere I come,鈥欌 he says.

The wail has already been a popular for decades of movies and TV shows, from Harry Potter to Game of Thrones. It鈥檚 often used as a shorthand to evoke a sense of wilderness, or to just give audiences the creeps, says Natasha Bartolotta, stewardship and outreach manager for the National Loon Center in Minnesota. And much like in music, it doesn鈥檛 matter if the habitat is all wrong: Movie magic has conjured up loon wails in deserts, jungles, and even outer space. 鈥淚t鈥檚 Hollywood,鈥 Bartolotta says. 鈥淭hey want to set the scene and invoke a particular feeling.鈥

(Listen for the loon in the intro and around the 2:52 mark.)

Lately, though, this call has also been popping up in chart-topping hits like Doja Cat鈥檚 鈥淎ttention,鈥 where it floats in over sweeping strings in the intro, or 鈥済o dumb,鈥 where it weaves its way through rapper blackbear鈥檚 flow. Much of the wail鈥檚 current influence can be traced back to one person: Ari Starace, better known by his producer name, Y2K. The artist鈥攚ho has worked extensively with Doja Cat, along with other rappers like bbno$ and Yung Gravy鈥攗ses the loon鈥檚 wail as his beat tag, dropping it into all the songs he produces.

Much of the wail鈥檚 current influence can be traced back to one person: Ari Starace, better known by his producer name, Y2K.

Starace tells 爆料公社 that he doesn鈥檛 have any personal history with the birds or memories of hearing them in the wild; he lives in Los Angeles and grew up in Arizona, a far cry from loon territory. But when he found the wail in an online pack of nature samples, it made an instant impression. 鈥淚 stumbled on the loon call, and I just was immediately very attracted to it,鈥 Starace says. 鈥淚 think it鈥檚 a very tasteful sound.鈥

Since trying out the call in a few tracks, like a 鈥淲hat Is Love?鈥 around nine years ago, Starace says he naturally started using it more until eventually it became his signature sound. He likes that the loon call is distinctive without being distracting: 鈥淚t鈥檚 good in every situation,鈥 he says. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 think it changes the energy of any song you put it in.鈥 Now, whenever he works on a track, he takes the same sound file of the tremolo sample and works it into the mix鈥攕o as Starace鈥檚 footprint in the music industry has grown, the loon鈥檚 wail has been flying high along with him. 鈥淚f you鈥檙e listening to hip-hop today, it鈥檚 very likely you might hear loons crying out of cars driving down the highway,鈥 Harding says.

Not all of the loon鈥檚 various calls have gotten the same spotlight. Musicians have yet to pick up the bird鈥檚 yodel, a complex, long-distance call that鈥檚 only made by males. This territorial call contains a lot of valuable information for other loons, Mager says. Individual birds can use it to signal how big and strong they are, and how ready they are to fight for dominance. Another overlooked part of the loon鈥檚 vocal repertoire is the hoot, a soft and 鈥渒ind of a cute sound鈥 that is usually given within the family unit of a mated pair and their chicks, Bartolotta says.

(Y2K drops his loon "beat tag" around 30 seconds in.)

Still, the tremolo and the wail have shown impressive staying power in pop culture鈥攁 legacy that鈥檚 especially notable in today鈥檚 digital age, when music producers have an endless world of sounds at their fingertips. 鈥淓ven though we have all of these options available to us, we continue to reach back into the sounds that are familiar and known,鈥 Harding says.

Maybe that鈥檚 because of the way music works in a post-sampling world: By remixing the same sounds from the past, like that tremolo preset from the early keyboards, artists place themselves in a longer cultural conversation, Harding says. Maybe it鈥檚 something about the calls themselves, Paruk speculates: their repeated patterns, their moody chords, the way they sound distinct from anything else in nature.

Or maybe it goes deeper. For Mager, the loon鈥檚 call seems to have a unique power to transport us out of our everyday lives and evoke a sense of the unknown鈥攐f 鈥渨hat鈥檚 still wild out there.鈥 Though that feeling can be scary at first, it can also be a comfort, he says. In our human-centric world, the call of the loon can remind us of our connection with nature and the importance of protecting it. 

鈥淚magine a world without the loon call. Imagine a world that didn鈥檛 have the beauty, and the curiosity, and the intrigue that these calls have evoked,鈥 Mager says. 鈥淚t would be an empty place, at least for me.鈥