8 Stars of Audio Assignments

Character Emotion: Dreaming: Radio Bumper:

Story with Sounds

Sound Effect Story (3.5pts)

This is a story about my character, Shadow. He is out for the night hunting for things to take, he finds a jewelry store a runs around to make sure the coast is clear. He notices the doorknob is old and jiggles it open. The alarm goes off, he starts to break the showcases. Not knowing the police station is close by he hears the police cars approach. He tries to get a few more things before they arrive. Before he knows it the cops have him surrounded, he is a goner. Shadow now gets to spend another night in the slammer, its like his second home at this point.

NoirCatcalling

For this assignment (worth 3.5 stars), I had to create a story about my character, Ami, using only sound effects. To create this, I compiled sounds from soundboard.com in Garageband. In the story, Folami is leaving her club for the night. She is walking down the street, cars passing by, when a man walks past her and wolf-whistles. Without hesitation, she pulls out her gun and shoots him, then continuing to walk. Mysterious jazz music plays as she leaves the scene at a cool pace.

Audio Assignments – Sound Story (3.5 points)

I made a sound story based on my character Ava. The sounds tell the story of her life as a diner waitress, the decision to pursue her dreams as a writer/actress and move to Hollywood where she eventually becomes a huge star. I used audacity to layer the sounds and played with their volumes. The cheering sounds are overlapped with a bunch of camera sounds and the cheering sound was originally much shorter than I needed it to be so I took random sections and added it to others to lengthen it without messing with the pitch. I wish I had found a looping crowd sound but I couldn’t find one with the desired effect.

http://assignments.ds106.us/assignments/sound-effects-story/

Come and get me

This the cops coming after me and trying to get me, but then an explosion happens

Story through sound

So for my story through sound assignment I created a fictional scene involving my noir character Jack Sadler. In the scene, Jack and his partner have driven out to meet someone involved in a case that he had been recently hired for. Jack doesn’t usually take a partner along with him, especially during a routine questioning such as this, but word around town was this guy was rough and didn’t take kindly to strangers. Word was he didn’t like talking to people and liked questions about his missing ex-wife even less. Jack had considered not going at all and dropping the case all together but it had been quite a while since he had been hired for a case. The scene begins with Jack and his associate arriving at the small house in the woods where they were meeting the man. Jack sits in the idling car while his partner walks up to the door and knocks. Its slightly raining out and Jack can hear the storm in the distance. Jack’s partner waits on the doorstep and continues to knock. Eventually, footsteps are heard and the door is answered. Jack turns off the car and walks into the house and the door is closed behind him.

Sound Effect Story

My sound effect story is about the character I created a couple of weeks ago: Billy “Saw” Steel. Check it out!

My short story begins with a young girl being tormented by a local gang. You hear the cruel gang members laughing at the pain they are putting her through, and then you hear the footsteps of Saw approaching. Saw opens fire with his shotgun and guns down two gang members over the course of the next 30 seconds. All the while the little girl, scared to death, is crying on the street.

Tom’s Files: A Night’s Work

Admin Note: This is a required audio assignment involving the character Tom Blair for the week of 2/1 to 2/8.

How the heck are ya?

It’s your ole’ pal Tom again.

Just thought maybe you’d be curious as to what a day (I should say night) of work for me sounds like, given that you’re inside my mind and all.

You should be able to hear me leaving my office, locking my door, stepping out into the city, lighting my pipe, standing in an alley, and taking a few pictures.

Why not give it a listen while I hit the hay?

 

Sound Fx Story

For this a required Audio Assignment this week, we were instructed to tell a story using only audio and sound fx.  I did use some music for added effect, so hopefully I don’t get any points taken off for that! When trying to come up with ideas for this sound Fx story, I browsed around on the noir106 page looking at some examples from other students.  I also browsed Youtube and the web to see if there were any other stories like this out there.  I found this awesome sound Fx story online and tried my best to imitate it, because it seemed challenged.  Might I add, it was pretty challenging!  Took me awhile to really find the right layering of the tracks to get it to sound right.  See if you can tell me what is going on here in this story!

 

Donnie Rawlen Goes to the Docks to Write

First off, I had a terrible time coming up with ideas for this Sound Effects Story assignment. I didn’t know how I wanted Donnie’s character to develop quite yet, so I didn’t want to make much official. I started off thinking that I would just try to put the audio track down from my short story, “Six Slingers and a Singer”, but decided that wouldn’t fit in a minute in a half, so I would try something different.  Then I realized I should work off of what I already have down for him, specifically his career as a writer, and his location of San Francisco.  I thought to myself for a while about how to incorporate those both into an audio story, and how it could work. I immediately thought of the sounds of pen on paper, and the sounds of the waves under a dock in San Francisco–“Sittin’ on the Dock of the Bay” by Otis Redding being my inspiration–and began to work with that song in mind.  But, that song is a bit too jovial sounding, so I needed to noir-ify it.

Queue the rainfall.  But I also wanted to have some sort of dramatic opening, so I searched for and found a clip of a lightning crash.  Mentally, my mind was still present at the location of my bumper, so I wanted Donnie to walk a bit.  I decided he’d be sitting in a shack to do his writing, considering the rain, so I found a nice door creaking sound.  I then thought of specifically how he would sit down, so I found a clip of a wooden chair being dragged across a wooden floor, and cut it down so it sounded like a chair just scooting out.  I couldn’t find a good clip of a pen writing on paper, but I did have the leather-bound journal and pen I photographed for Donnie’s bag contents, and had picked up an audio recording device from the store for use in taking notes (this class was the final tipping point that sent me to the store, finally). So, I went to my desk, put the recorder on my desk, pressed record while the journal and pen were in-hand, placed the journal on the table, flipped to a new page, and started writing random things.

I uploaded that recording, and moved it to end at the 1:30 mark.  Then I pressed play on my project and noticed there was a lot missing. No one wants to listen to something as simple as someone walking into a shack to write, or at least I wouldn’t.  So I found the recording of an older car starting up and cutting the engine. “Sweet,” I thought. But I only had the lightning crash at the beginning, which faded into an awkward silence of a car ride. I then picked out a few more sounds I thought I might use–continuous rainfall, rainfall on a windshield, seagulls for the bay, and a car door opening and closing.  I plugged those in, focused on a section of the car engine, and copied and pasted it a few times to make it sound like a car ride.  I still had “Sittin’ on the Dock of the Bay” running through my head, but I’ve got a knack for some jazz saxophone, so I found a jazz sax recording to use for the car ride.

Then I realized that the car doors didn’t have a key component (heh, no pun intended) so I found some key jingle and put that in around the car door/engine starting area.  I felt pretty accomplished at that point but realized the audio levels were all wrong, so I futzed with them a bit.  I really wanted to add some tires squealing to the mix, but I’d already done that for my bumper, so I tossed that idea out. Plus, the engine sound wasn’t too heavy duty, so I didn’t want that to sound weird.

For aesthetics, I changed the levels of the ambient noises (rainfall, seagulls, dock waves) and lowered their levels for when Donnie was riding in the car and when he entered his writing shack.

I played it back in full again, multiple times and realized “going down to write” wasn’t the most thrilling idea, so I wanted to throw in a little noir mystery.  After I got a police car siren, I set a fade on it so it would sound like it was moving away from Donnie.  (Was he the reason for the police presence?) But, he needed to write (Why?). Enough chit-chat, I’ve said too much. Here you go: