It is one thing to hear a birthday song drifting through an open window. It is quite another to have it looping through loudspeakers for most of the night. For residents of a quiet Spanish town, a familiar tune turned into an unforgettable ordeal that tested patience and sleep in equal measure.
A Night Of Noise No One Asked For
The trouble began late on a Tuesday evening in Javalí Viejo, a small community in south eastern Spain. At around 11 pm, loudspeakers at a local school suddenly started blasting “Happy Birthday” on repeat. At first, some neighbours assumed it would stop after a song or two. It did not.
For the next five hours, the same cheerful melody echoed through the streets. Windows were shut, pillows pressed over ears, and phones buzzed as neighbours compared notes in bleary group chats. By the early hours of the morning, frustration had tipped into anger. This was no longer background noise, but full blown night time disturbance.
Anyone who has ever been kept awake by a faulty car alarm will recognise the creeping disbelief. Surely it will stop soon. Surely someone is fixing it. In this case, it took a call to emergency services to bring the music to an end.
Firefighters Step In To Stop The Song
Shortly before 4 am, firefighters from Murcia Firefighters were called in. Their mission was simple. Silence the speakers. Gaining access to the school, one of the crew climbed a ladder and unplugged the offending equipment.
The service later shared a short video of the intervention on social media, capturing the moment the sound finally cut out. In the caption, firefighters joked that they had no desire to spoil anyone’s celebration, but admitted that the timing could not have been worse. The humour landed. For exhausted residents, the sudden quiet felt like a small miracle.
Local authorities have not suggested any ill intent. The incident appears to have been caused by a technical error that left the system running unattended. Still, it was a sharp reminder of how quickly noise pollution can escalate from minor nuisance to major disruption.
No queríamos fastidiar el cumple a nadie, pero… ¡No eran horas!😅
— Bomberos Murcia (@BomberosMurcia) October 8, 2025
Martes 04:30 h, una dotación se desplazó a un cole de Javalí Viejo para desconectar el sistema de megafonía
La canción llevaba sonando desde las 23:00 horas 🤯
De tus amigos los Bomberos, feliz cumpleaños 🎂 pic.twitter.com/IaT8Ly1Lbm
Not An Isolated Case Of Noise Fatigue
While five hours of unwanted birthday music is extreme, it is not unique. Similar stories crop up regularly across Europe. Earlier this year, residents in Cannes endured an even longer ordeal when a mysterious alarm rang out day and night for nearly three weeks. Despite repeated visits, local police were unable to locate the source before it eventually stopped on its own.
Public health organisations such as the World Health Organization have long warned about the impact of prolonged noise on sleep and wellbeing. Studies link disrupted sleep to increased stress, irritability, and reduced concentration. In real terms, it means grumpy mornings, frazzled nerves, and communities pushed to their limits.
For the residents of Javalí Viejo, the episode has already entered local folklore. Some laugh about it now, others still wince at the memory. What everyone agrees on is this. A birthday song is best enjoyed briefly, preferably during the day.
As one neighbour put it the following morning, celebration is wonderful. But when it comes at the cost of sleep, even the happiest tune can become unbearable.


