Nice day ruined by the rain

Testing testing
(sorry, in the process of trying to make my blog pretty I thought I had deleted the whole thing, good thing Prof. Levine reminded me that I probably just messed up the formatting) It’s true what they say, what you post on the internet, stays there forever!

Okay, so somehow between me freaking out, my blog going cray, and me reposting half of my post I don’t see the one about my sounds!

Don’t cry readers, I’ve come to fix it.

So my sound is basically about people enjoying their day at the beach and getting rained on.  We all hate those days at the beach! I hope you enjoy my sound!

I used Audicity to mash up all of my sounds, FreeSound to download the sounds, and SoundCloud to upload it so everyone can hear it.  It was a lot of hard work and a lot of youtube tutorial videos to get this thing going, so I hope you guys enjoy it!

P.S. I know I’m 12 seconds short :(

If a Tree Falls in a Forest…

Having completed the audio assignment to create an audio bumper for ds106 radio, the idea of trying to create a 5-sound story was no longer nearly so daunting. :)   The hardest part, really, was trying to decide what kind of story I wanted to tell.

I decided to tell a story about  nature, and ultimately settled on the story of a storm.  I’ve quickly come to love freesound.org.  Not only did I get all 5 of my sounds from this source, but I also got inspiration from it.  When I had a hard time narrowing down story ideas, I simply clicked on the ‘Browse tags’ link on the home page, and began checking those for ideas and to get a better picture of the kind of possibilities that were out there.  Very neat.

This story consists of the sound of water drips, wind, rain, thunder, and of course, the sound of the tree falling, for a climactic focal point of the story. :)

When creating the story within audacity, I started immediately by changing all the tracks to mono, just to simplify it and make it easier to view all 5 tracks at the same time.  I then got to work trimming the various sounds to the lengths I wanted them, and moving them around to make sure they were where I wanted them.

It’s far from perfect, but I had fun creating it.  Enjoy!

 

 

 

Of Babies and Creepy Things

This week, I took a dive into the big, fat, hairy, scary world of DIGITAAAAAAL AUDIO-DIO-DIO-dio-dio.

Seriously, having completed the assignments from this week, I’m starting to feel like there’s nothing I can’t do anymore. This was my Everest. This was my frozen-with-fear, never-gonna-make-it-over-this mountain.

But I totally did it. And believe it or not, I totally enjoyed this week, even though I didn’t get to play around with the class material nearly as much as I wanted to. (which still means I ended up listening to and reading way more than was required, but still…)

For starters, I’d like to give a shout out to some super-awesome, not-nearly-as-intimidating-as-I-thought resources that made all this work, and work awesomely.

I got to work with Soundcloud quite a bit more this week, and I really started to feel quite fluid with it.  Uploading files, joining groups for sharing daily creates, finding the html code to embed the widgets onto my blog, following along with others’ tracks and viewing their comments at specific times – I’ve come to feel like a pro at all of this.  Which is beyond amazing.

Also, I started an account with Freesound.org this week.  What an awesome resource!!  What in the world can’t you create with this at your fingertips?!  This was a super exciting way to find sounds to use in my creations, and I especially loved discovering how well organized the site was, and how easy to use it all was, both to listen to the bytes, and to download them if desired.  You will find no creativity blocks on this site.  And that’s a beautiful thing.

While This American Life is not in itself necessarily a resource, I found this week that it and its host Ira Glass are awesome sources of inspiration and an excellent example of how to use sound in a compelling, engaging manner.  I admit that I had not heard of this show before this week, but I am absolutely in love with it now.  Besides, if you want to learn to do something well, observing the work of the best is a great way to start!

The absolute scariest thing that I learned to use this week probably was Audacity.  I have been exposed to sound programs like this for years – YEARS, I tell you, and have never wanted to even try to understand them, much less to use them.

But this week, I did it.  All the way through to embedding my finished work onto my very own website.  Who in the world am I?? I don’t even know anymore! But honestly, I’m not sure I care too much – I absolutely love how empowered I feel with just the things I’ve learned to do already in the first month of being a part of ds106.

But now, down to the nitty gritty.  Here’s a breakdown of the things I’ve focused on this week.

The Experts on Storytelling

I really enjoyed listening to Ira Glass and Jad Abumrad had to say about the field of art through sound.

I shared my thoughts and my notes from these videos earlier in the week, but I will share the highlights here, as well.  The most helpful points in what Ira shared were the basic building blocks, and his big tip for beginners.  He shared that every story needs two basic building blocks – the first, being a sequence of events, pushing the story onward, like a train, and the second being the ‘why’, or the ‘why do we care’ part of the story.  His tip for beginners was to understand that the work you create in the early years is pretty much all going to be crap…and that that’s okay.  He encourages artists-to-be to just keep pushing through, and keep creating, to push through the crap and get to the good stuff.  As I’ve been feeling horrifically insecure about my own work this week, this advice was quite timely for me.  Jad’s biggest point for me was that, through the art of storytelling by audio only, we are empowered to share our ideas, but allow the listener to paint the picture for their own selves.  He encourages us to seek a connection between the sharer and the listener, so that such a transaction can take place, and alludes to what a powerful interaction this is, when done right.  The visual was touching for me, and I really felt like he got to the heart of the matter here with this.  What is art, after all, if you can’t share it? And what better way to make it meaningful to those you share it with than to give them the paint brush and let them create it based on their own experiences.

Of course, listening to Ira Glass lead me to discover This American Life.

The Pro In Action

Haven’t never heard of Ira Glass before this week, I was curious to explore some of his work, so I could better judge how to take his advice on the field.  So I found myself listening to Ira’s story from a couple of weeks ago, The Ghost of Bobby Dunbar. Wow, what a powerful, compelling story.  This story sparked some deep conversation between me and my son this week, and left me pondering the emotional stamp the story left on me as well, even up to now.  This story has it all – action, conflict, mothers fighting for their babies, confused identities, ruthless, obsessive searches for the truth by parties from various sides at different times, and living souls from various sides of the tracks, still around and able to share their sides of things.  From what I can tell, Ira used the simplest of sound techniques to compel the listener, but it would seem that perhaps he has learned that sometimes, less is more.  Or maybe, he has simply learned how to let the story highlight itself when it is compelling enough on its own.  Either way, I decided Ira’s was a job well-done in this story.

Owning Our Station

I had an absolute blast listening to ds106 radio this week, as I expressed in this post here.  Getting to know some of the regular participants, and getting to experience the playlist on AutoDJ was much more rewarding than I had counted on.  Once again, the work for this class did not feel like work.  It’s fun when my son asks me ‘you’re doing schoolwork??’  Priceless.  Yup, I sure am, buddy. :)   I think my favorite way to listen so far is through iTunes – simply by clicking on the link on the ds106 radio site, and opening the download there, takes me to a cool little bumper, and then a fade into the ‘now playing’ track on the station.  It’s been a lot of fun popping in and out of the station all week.

The Rubber Meets the Road

The dreaded Audio Assignment.  Not one, but TWO audio assignments for the first week, not to mention the audio needed for some of the daily creates I did.  But as I said above, I joined freesound.org, and I downloaded Audacity.  I learned to download sounds from freesound.org, and I learned how to import them into Audacity.  I even learned how to trim tracks, use a few effects, make the tracks mono rather than stereo, move them around as an entire track, or to just copy and place certain tracks or parts of tracks.  I learned how to export the files so that they can be listened to by others, and I successfully downloaded them onto Soundcloud.  From there, I successfully obtained the html code and embedded them into the appropriate places on my blog.  How exciting!!  Look Ma, no hands!! ;)

Just Make Art, Dangit!!

I’m really not too sure what happened with me this week.  I had thoughts and ideas for almost every single possible daily create that came up this week.  I even did most of them as they came up.  But I posted nothing the day of, and most of them I didn’t post at all until I had to for the assignment.  That’s not like me at all.  I enjoy sharing art with my classmates, no matter what the angle or approach.  It’s just fun to share.

But this week, I just got nervous.  I started to think that maybe all the college-aged students were getting annoyed with me always posting kid-based items.  I started to get annoyed that I couldn’t quite make the pictures in my head match reality.  I started to think that maybe my ideas weren’t worth creating.

And that’s a dangerous place.  As you can see, in the link above, I did finally post my ideas.  They’re not all I wanted them to be, but they are mine, and I am proud of myself for them.  And in retrospect, I still did more than I was required to this week, by doing 4 instead of 3, so I guess I’ll take it. :)   I do still need to go back and learn how to make a track play backwards, since I did that one a different way, but still, I’d like to just know that I can do it if I wish.

So Wait…What??

This has been a crazy-busy week.  I had my first paper due in one of my other classes, on top of all of my other usual work for my classes, and that scared the living crap out of me.  Then I got insecure, because I knew I was spewing crap, and I know I can do better than crap.  Surely I can do better, if I can recognize my own work to be crap when it is, right?  And then, I’ve got Ira Glass in my face telling me that creating crap is a good thing, and that I should create as much crap as I possibly can.  Which is confusing, yet inspiring and encouraging.

And then I’ve got my beautiful, brave, creative, independent daughter.  As I’m stressing out trying to figure out how I’m going to get everything done, and done to my standards, she comes out of her room, singing a half-made-up song to herself, wearing her Princess Peach costume dress, with a scarf she stole from one of her stuffed animals tied around her forehead, and a mini light-saber hanging from around her neck.  She is the fiercest, singin’-est princess you will ever meet.  If you threaten to smudge her nail polish before it’s dry, she will drop-kick you with her princess ninja kicks and you won’t know what hit you.  Because she wants to, and she doesn’t care.  Scared to death of heights, she’ll push herself up to the top of the jungle gym at the playground, just because she refuses to allow fear to keep her from doing something.  Terrified of speaking in front of our entire church, she’ll sit and force a smile and some deep breaths, and bravely take the mic and walk onstage to tell the entire adult church the story of Noah, in the insightful way that only she can, at her own pace, with grace and style.

And I wanna be like her.  So I post my crap proudly.  Because she told me she knew I could do it.  So I did. <3

Teh Awesome

Didn’t Know I Was That Creepy…

So, you want me to make noises?  With a computer?

Scary, scary stuffs.  But okay.

Actually, in all honesty, this was pretty fun.  I don’t know how my bumper ended up creepy, but that was the vibe I was getting, so I went with it. :)

In my class this week, as we focus on digital audio, we were instructed to create a short bumper for the class’s awesome radio station, ds106radio.  Admittedly, there is some eclectic material on there at times, and perhaps that is where my creepy vibe stems from.  Some tunes, this would make a great intro for.  Others, it would just be comical and off.  But whatever.  This is my bumper.  There are many like it, but this one is mine. :)

I have to say, I did have a hard time figuring out why at first I couldn’t get any files imported into Audacity to create this, but after much whining and kicking and screaming, I actually paid attention to the error messages’ instructions, and consulted my dear friend Google, and ultimately got it done by downloading the LAME mp3 encoder and the FFmpeg library.  Voila!  The buttons in Audacity can be kind of vague, but once I played around with them a bit (and stopped getting crazy with the cut and paste Word-like skillz), I found it to be rather user-friendly.

For this track, I used a guitar arpeggio sound clip from this guy as the main background, a cool crash reverse sound from this guy, and some awesome vocals made-to-order from Yours Truly, using the soundcloud app on my brand new iPhone 4 (I’ll get the old one and pay 99 cents over a brand new one for $400 plus any day), with a little bit of negative amplification and some extra echo effect just for fun, to see what it would do.  And here you see the result!  I hope you enjoy!

This process does seem a bit addicting. :)

DS106 Radio Bumper

D-D-D-D-DS106!

I think I just made a bumper… woot woot

AHHHHH! Okay, so I’m way excited!!

One of the most difficult assigments in week 4 for ds106 was to make a bumper. I know, I didn’t know what it was either but a little research goes a long way.  So basically a bumper is a small introduction that many radio stations have. It basically plays cool music and you say the name of the radio station.  I used SoundCloud and FreeSound to make my amazingness happen.

For my bumper I decided to use the introduction to a Buckcherry Broken Glass Song, and said “Y0u’re listening to ds106 radio.” It sounds kinda boring when you think about it BUTT my curiosity led me to something BEYOND COOLNESS.

SO I was clicking around and then somehow, don’t ask how cus I have no idea how I did it, I was able to make my voice echo/overshadow it? I don’t know but it’s pretty cool.

My bumper is about 6 seconds long, I think that might be too short, but I didn’t want to ruin it so I just left it how it was.

I hope you guys like it :)

Bumper Time

I managed to finish my first ds106 bumper woo woo. I didn’t really understand what a bumper was so Iooked it up here. My thought behind my bumper was to try and create something that was smooth but also kept the listener’s interest with the final whistle.  I played with a couple different sounds and ended up with this:

After making my sound story the bumper was a lot less intimidating. I found all my clips on freesound.org and mashed them together using audacity.I enjoyed playing with the different sounds and trying to think of a series of sounds that would be audibly interesting but also able to be a filler/transition for a radio show. 

Bump the Radio

I found this assignment quiet enjoyable, I completed my sound effects story first so I had a pretty good idea of how to use all of the tools need for this assignment. However, I must have redone my voice over at least 7 times. I worked on this bumper while I was listening to the radio station to kind of see what the radio needed, I went with short and sweet! Hope people here it on the waves!

 

Sound Story – A day in a life

So my sound story is supposed to convey the changing from evening to night, from the activity of the day to the quiet, sometimes tranquility of the night. I was inspired by what I hear on beautiful days with my windows open and the world going on outside. I’m keeping in mind what Ira Glass said about everyone’s work sucks at some point and I think I’m at that point with audio. I have some issues with transitioning sounds but overall I’m happy with my first encounter with audio. I didn’t quite kill it as Glass said to but I think I gave it a few bruises.

I found all 7 of my sound clips on freesound.org and mashed them together using audacity. I used separate sounds for the passing car, children playing, dogs barking, birds chirping, crickets, wind, and owl hooting. It was my first time using both and while at first audacity threw me I was able to figure it out and enjoyed using it. I accidentally deleted my audio workings a couple times but in the end I figured out not to do that and it all worked out well, I think.