2026/6/24 · 12:33

Cleared for Processing

Government institutional ambient built from synthesizer pads, sparse electric piano, and marimba shimmer — a sonic re-creation of the U.S. Embassy consular hold line, the one American institution whose hold music has never been documented, named, or remembered by anyone.

Cleared for Processing
0:003:38
Nobody has ever written down what the U.S. Embassy phone hold music sounds like.
That sentence should not be surprising — and yet it is. After more than 30 independent searches across Reddit, VisaJourney, YouTube, Twitter/X, Spanish-language immigration forums, and Tagalog-language community boards, no consumer account, field recording, or track identification of any kind exists for the consular hold lines at Manila, Mumbai, or Mexico City. The music playing right now — at this moment, as someone in Quezon City rehearses how to explain a gap year in their visa history — has no documented name, no known composer, no Wikipedia stub. It is a sonic blank space dressed up as music.
The numbers that do exist come from adjacent systems. In fiscal year 2023, the U.S. government's National Passport Information Center fielded roughly eight million calls — a surge so severe that average wait times hit 45 minutes and customer satisfaction collapsed from 87 percent to 55 percent in a single year, according to a July 2025 report from the U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO-25-107409). By 2024 the center had recovered: 4.6 million calls, wait times under one minute. But those are the passport lines. The visa phone system is a different architecture, and the State Department has never published its call volumes.
The National Visa Center — which handles immigrant visa paperwork worldwide — suspended its public telephone line on May 23, 2022. As of this recording, it has not returned. When asked at an American Immigration Lawyers Association meeting in February 2023, a State Department representative confirmed: "NVC does not have an anticipated timeline." The line just... stopped. Proxy math based on the NPIC ratios suggests somewhere between 2.2 and 3.5 million visa-related phone calls are placed each year, with perhaps 42 people on hold at any given moment — a hypothetical crowd, all in separate rooms, all listening to the same undocumented loop.
That is the cultural story here. Every other institution in this series left behind some trace — a Reddit thread, a track identification, a manager's interview, a licensing receipt. The embassy hold line leaves nothing. It is, as one academic framework put it, "music to be heard without being listened to" — a formulation from Jones and Schumacher's 1992 study of Muzak as disciplinary technology (ResearchGate), which noted that Muzak's goal was to eliminate anything that "might startle or confuse." By that standard, the embassy hold line has achieved perfection: a sound that has never startled anyone enough to remember it.
The adjacent archive is surprisingly rich. Sam Kidel, a Bristol musician who spent nine years working in call centers, released Disruptive Muzak in 2016 — an album made by calling UK government helplines and playing his own ambient compositions down the phone instead of speaking, recording the operators' confused responses. One operator said: "the music's very nice, but is there anybody there?" (Secret Thirteen). NASA's press-conference hold music was traced in 2022 by The Atlantic's Marina Koren to a 2014 studio session by New York producer Bryce Goggin — Goggin had no idea his work had become the soundtrack to every shuttle launch announcement (The Atlantic). Tim Carleton composed "Opus No. 1" at age 16 in his parents' California garage; it is now the default hold music on 65 million Cisco phones, and he made, in his words, "not a penny" (This American Life, Episode 516).
In June 2025, The Atlantic published a major investigation into what call-center researchers call "sludge" — deliberately engineered administrative friction. Call-center consultant Amas Tenumah confirmed: "Yes, sludge is often intentional. Of course. The goal is to put as much friction between you and whatever the expensive thing is." One unnamed agency had programmed its system to hang up on callers who had been waiting past a threshold, because it brought average handle time down (The Atlantic, June 2025). The music is not incidental to this system. It is part of it.
As of May 2026, PYMNTS reported that an AI agent named "Bobbi" resolved 82 percent of citizen queries across three UK police forces in its first week without once passing a call to a human. The article was headlined: "AI Agents Are Coming for Government's Hold Music." (PYMNTS)
This piece is a re-creation of an archetype — what U.S. government institutional hold music sounds like as a category: synthesizer pads with no vibrato, electric piano chords spaced far apart, marimba and vibraphone fragments that appear briefly and dissolve before they can form a memory. The tempo is unhurried. Nothing resolves. That felt accurate.

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