Transcript Document
Announcements
Thursday:
Sound and midterm
review
Mid-term next Tuesday --review
in sections
Sound Technology and
Sound and Film
Sound with Picture
Is sound secondary or supportive to vision in
cinema? It is less consciously perceived--yet
it is a very powerful factor.
Our ears do a great deal of selective filtering.
So sound in cinema must be consciously
controlled: recorded, edited and mixed in a
very intentional manner.
Functions of Sound
Another register of experience: complexity.
Affecting how we experience what we see.
Structuring or extend cinematic space.
Strengthen continuity, smoothing over edits.
As a cue—associated with a character, etc.
Information (voice, but also effects, ambient)
Spatial or temporal orientation (location,
environment, time of day, historical period)
Predictive (warning; off-screen or imminent)
Conveying mood or character’s emotions
Setting the pace of scene
Sound Stems
1. Sound effects
2. Voice
3. Music
4. Ambient sound
(5.) Silence
The Conversation, by Francis
Ford Coppola, 1974
Sound and space
The Graduate, Mike Nichols,
1961
M, Fritz Lang, 1931.
Selective use of sound and silence
Sound and the Story
DIEGETIC = from the world of the film: voices of
characters, sounds made by objects in the story, music
represented as coming from instruments in the story space (
= source music). May be on screen or off screen
INTERNAL DIAGETIC = thoughts of characters on screen
Non-Diegetic = outside of the film: narrator's commentary,
sound effects which is added for the dramatic effect, mood
music
Playing with relationship of
Sound to Image
Playtime, Jacques Tati,1967
Perception/confusion and the
representation of sound
Foley effects
Rhythm and Motion
Delicatessen, Jean-Pierre
Jeunet and Marc Caro, 1991
Hiroshima Mon Amour,
Alain Resnais,1959, 86 min.
Modern use of sound
Daughters of the Dust, Julie
Dash, 1991
Narration of unborn child
Dialogue spoken in the Gullah language
Qualities of Sound
Volume
Pitch
Timbre
Rhythm
Fidelity between sound and image
Frequency and Amplitude
Slow moving wave - low frequency, low
pitch
Fast moving wave - high frequency,
high pitch
Wave with great disturbance of
molecules - greater volume
Altman The Material
Heterogeneity of Recorded
Sound (its complex make up)
Altman and Sound
Sound is vibration in a medium over time.
Most of what we call sounds are complex events of
multiple sounds
The sound envelope
Attack
Sustain
Decay
What is / where is the medium?
Altman and Sound
Since sound reception differs from moment of sound production,
sounds is necessarily spatial nature.
Variables: space, distance, directionality, reverberance
Moment of creating sound (carries spatial signature)
Moment of recording sound (technical stamp)
Moment of playing sound (amplifying / reproducing)
Moment(s) of reception (subjectivity, cocktail party effect)
Altman (cont.)
Altman discusses the difference between audio as
representation vs. reproduction
Representations are never reproductions: they are
always symbols and things in themselves
Becoming more conscious of the resonance between
the two
We are already extremely attuned to this difference
and this is central to communication
Altman (cont.)
Communication is about patterning (signal and noise,
modulation, difference and sameness, identity and
difference)
You already are, if unconsciously, extremely engaged
and attuned to subtle variations in sound and the
ambiguity between representation and materiality—this
is fundamental to communication. By becoming more
conscious of this—more reflexive— you can be
productive in new ways.
Types of Audio Recording
Equipment
Analog
Digital
Audio Recording Techniques
Boom or Lavaliere
Audio Recording Choices
Digital
or analog
Pick up pattern for microphone
Type of microphone / transducer
Stereo, mono
Multi-channel recording
Field or studio
Microphone Choices
Hand held, Boom, Lavaliere Mic,
Pick up pattern for microphone:
Directional / cardiod
Super-cardioid or shotgun
Omni-directional
Type of microphone / transducer:
condenser or dynamic
Stereo, mono
Field or studio
Microphones
Directionality / Pick up pattern: Omni,
Uni, Cardiod, Hyper cardiod, shotgun
Microphones
Transducer: Convert molecular
disturbances into electrical energy.
Dynamic Mic
Magnet and coil of wire converts sound
waves into electrical energy.
Rugged, can tolerate high temperature
changes and humidity.
Condenser Microphone
Requires battery or
power from external
source.
Two plates with
voltage between
them.
One plate acts like a
diaphragm, vibrates
thus changing the
voltage.
Condenser Microphone
Output audio signal is weak - requires amplification
Power can come from a battery or through the cable
= Phantom Power
Can be very small - lavaliere microphones
Sensitive to high and low frequency sounds