Working with Sound

Learning to Listen

Many of us, maybe most of us, take sound for granted. We notice beautiful bird songs and breaks screeching as well as spaces that echo loudly but we tend to be less aware of what we consider to be ambient or background noise and the degree to which everyday spaces like our offices and bedrooms reverberate.

When working with sound, especially during the recording process, we need to be more conscious of the range of sounds around us, however pedestrian or subtle they may seem, and the reflective nature of the spaces we are in.

Exercise Two:

Take just a minute to answer the following question to yourself.

Wherever you are right now, be still and focus on the subtle ambient sounds you can hear. Is there...
Now clap your hands and listen. Does it...
Stopping to listen and asking questions like these will help make you more sound aware and lead to better decision making when recording. They might, for example, help you to decide what appliances need to be turned off to avoid hums and which room has the least reflection.

 

This page has paths: