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Working with Sound
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Melanie Hubbard
04c18d7b5dab5c358ce6b6181037461683c156a2
Russian Hacking Storify
1 2020-08-28T12:49:47-07:00 Melanie Hubbard 04c18d7b5dab5c358ce6b6181037461683c156a2 37785 1 This audio sample is from a Storify project I made on Russian Hacking. I created it by accident when multiple videos started playing at once. All I did was record it and put fades at the beginning and end, the rest happened organically. https://storify.com/MRH/russian-hacking plain 2020-08-28T12:49:47-07:00 Melanie Hubbard 04c18d7b5dab5c358ce6b6181037461683c156a2This page is referenced by:
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2020-08-26T16:44:11-07:00
Thinking About Sound
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plain
2020-09-10T05:22:45-07:00
Many of us, maybe most of us, take sound for granted. Like air, it surrounds us and unless there is some kind of disruption, we don't tend to pay that much attention to it. This of course has to do with the fact that we grow accustom to certain sounds and how sounds "behave" in certain spaces, meaning acoustics. (I suspect we would go mad if we didn't do this.) More often we are aware of the extremes and the unique. We notice beautiful bird songs or screeching breaks and spaces that loudly echo. We tend to be less aware of what we consider to be background noise and the degree to which everyday spaces like our offices and bedrooms reverberate.
When working with sound, however, we need to be more consciously aware of the range of sounds and acoustics around us, however pedestrain or subtle they may seem, so that we can make better sound recording decisions.Learning to Listen
So let's get strated by learning to listen better with this basic exercise:
Wherever you are right now, be still:
What do you hear?
Maybe a light woosh or buzz from your computer...
A barely audable high pitch ring or low pitch rumble...
The hum of a fan or refrigerator...
The rush or roar of distant traffic...
Something ticking or clicking, a clock or a radiator perhaps...
Now clap your hands:
Does the sound reflect (slap or bounce) off the walls?
Does it sound sharp or does it have a duller quality?
Does the sound seem to fade or suddenly die?
Through this simple exercise you should have a greater understanding of the soundscape of your space. With this information you can make decisions that will improve the quality of your recording--maybe you need to reduce reflection by padding the walls with blankets and maybe you need to turn off the air conditioner--and whether you want to record in the space at all--maybe the traffic noise is louder than you realized.
The Power of Sound
While the focus of this workshop is on recording and editing vocals, it is important to acknowledge how compelling and meaningful combinations of different types of sounds can be. When creating audio oriented projects or working with sound in a video project, there are a number of different types of sounds one might work with be it music, atmosphere, sound effects, people's voices, be they narrations, interviews, dialogues, the vocals from a crowed, and the like.
This particular sound clips speaks to this point. In 2017, I created a Storify project (now defunct) on Russian hacking and the 2016 election. If you don't know, Storify was an arragator of media, one could embed news articles, Tweets, YouTube videos, etc. My project had a number of videos of interviews, press confornaces, and new reports. One evening when working on it I refreshed the page and, for some reason all of the videos started playing at once. What I got was this sound clip to which I have done nothing other than record it and add fades at the beginning and end.