I.D. the sound #001 – solution

Ok, maybe it was too hard… promise the next one will be easier!
people were close when they said sticky tape but it was in fact:

packing tape!
Not sticky packing tape, but the textured plastic kind people use to bind cardboard boxes closed. The characteristic sound was created by putting a contact mic on the tape as I split it, lengthwise..

one more listen:
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(the fact I used a contact mic rather than a ‘normal’ mic probably didnt help, but hey! more than a few of the msot interesting sounds in my library were captured via it)

capturing the wind (part 2)

On the top of Brooklyn Hill, here in Wellington, there is a huge wind turbine which apparently generates enough power to supply 300 homes (especially during a Southerly!) While there is much debate about the visual aesthetics of wind farms I have to confess I quite like the look of them, in fact IMHO they are more pleasant to the eye than many of the architectural abberations (aka suburban homes) in the immediate vicinity….. But even more so I love the sound of them! Where else can you go to hear the sound of air being sliced by a huge propellor? Its not like you can gaffer tape yourself to the front of an aeroplane….

To give you some idea of scale thats my record kit you can just see sitting on the ground at the base – have a listen, here is a recording from last Sunday, plus one from an earlier visit:
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Matt had the genius idea of recording the interior ambience as an element for one of the locations in our current project & so a number of phone calls later we gained access to it….

And wow, what a great drone!
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Not that either of us were keen, but we were told in no uncertain terms not to venture up the internal ladder – just this view gave me vertigo…

Beside the turbine there is also a tower with various aerials & wind measurement devices… the wind was fair whipping around it…

Of course I had my contact mic with me & after speculating as to what sound could be heard from attaching it to one of the guy wires, we just had to find out:
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And this is the sound from tapping the guy wires:
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Next I attached it to the actual base of the entire tower & wow!!!!!!!
sub bass rumbles galore!!!!
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here is the same sound pitched up an octave, so you can appreciate what the rumble consists of:
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I think this is the best criteria for a successful recording mission:
to record what you set out to, but to also find sounds that you didnt even know existed…
bliss!

backup

In this digital world you are only as good as your data & the difference between backup & archive slowly becomes crucial…. but if only we got paid by the file! I went to do a backup using Folder Syncronizer X on a third clone drive today (it hadnt been updated in two weeks) and after some number crunching & a few comparisons it concluded I had 51,087 files to backup! Ayekarumba – they can’t all be ProTools fade files!

sound, as art

‘Sound Art’ is literally sound as art, in its purest form… cinema with your eyes closed, sonic expressions of a creative mind, none of these descriptions go even half way to expressing the perceptual impact of walking into a gallery & encountering an artform which employs sound as its primary means of expression. The first time I visited London back in 2000, aside from seeing every relevant gig I could, I noticed an exhibition in the gig guide of sound art by someone called Carsten Nicolai… So after visiting the Tate Modern I wandered along to this gallery & witnessed something quite profound, incredibly beautiful & oddly resonant to some of what I had been working on in film sound, the LFE channel of 5.1…

These photos do not do justice to the experience & it is a fundamental issue with Sound Art; how to document it? Its even more ephemeral than Video Art and as experiential as it is experimental…
Sonically this installation involved a number of subwoofers emitting modulated subsonic sine waves, which were exciting the room tones of the gallery both visually & acoustically. Sitting on top of the subwoofers were trays of water which were physically vibrating to the soundwaves, and with spotlights angled to bounce light off the surface of the water the projections of the interference patterns played beautiful synchronised projections on to the walls of the gallery…
40 minutes went by in three slow deep breaths and two blinks….

& today via vvork i saw this (& wished i was where it is, or vice versa)

Sustainable a dynamic robotic sound installation; mp4 video

Metaphoric sound

“The metaphoric use of sound is one of the most fruitful, flexible and inexpensive means: by choosing carefully what to eliminate, and then adding back sounds that seem at first hearing to be somewhat at odds with the accompanying image, the filmmaker can open up a perceptual vacuum into which the mind of the audience must inevitably rush.
Every successful reassociation is a kind of metaphor, and every metaphor is seen momentarily as a mistake, but then suddenly as a deeper truth about the thing named and our relationship to it. The greater the stretch between the “thing” and the “name,” the deeper the potential truth.”

I’m quoting Walter Murch from a very interesting article called Stretching Sound to Help the Mind See – but exactly what is a metaphor & how are they created? According to the Merriam-Webster Dictionary a metaphor is “a figure of speech in which a word or phrase literally denoting one kind of object or idea is used in place of another to suggest a likeness or analogy between them…”

This article Pay attention to the world by Susan Sontag helps explain metaphors in reference to their most common application, in the fields of poetry & literature;
“The dimension of time is essential for prose fiction, but not, if I may invoke the old idea of the two-party system in literature, for poetry (that is, lyric poetry). Poetry is situated in the present. Poems, even when they tell stories, are not like stories. One difference lies in the role of metaphor, which, I would argue, is necessary in poetry. Indeed, in my view, it is the task – one of the tasks – of the poet to invent metaphors. One of the fundamental resources of human understanding is what could be called the “pictural” sense, which is secured by comparing one thing with another. Here are some venerable examples, familiar (and plausible) to everyone:
time as river flowing, life as dream, death as sleep, love as illness, life as play/stage, wisdom as light, eyes as stars, book as world, human being as tree, music as food etc, etc
A great poet is one who refines and elaborates the great historical store of metaphors and adds to our stock of metaphors. Metaphors offer a profound form of understanding…”

As applied to the use of sound in film, the concept is really about the psychology of an audience, as illustrated in this writing/storytelling guide: “a metaphor provides…a cue to what kind of thinking should be done…Metaphors act as shepherds to lead the audience onto the correct path of thought and mindset.”

food for thought…

I.D. the sound #001

ok, your mission should you choose to accept it is to identify the sound!

I am prepared to answer yes/no questions but I will try & avoid providing any clues… So the question is specifically how was the sound created? It was recorded in real time & hasnt been processed or manipulated at all:

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I remember when i was a kid they used to have something like this on the radio. (And yes there is a prize, although i haven’t decided what it is yet)