Archive for the ‘AudioAssignments’ Category

 

My One-Woman Play Tutorial

Monday, June 25th, 2012

For this assignment you had to pick a play and read from it. However there is a catch, you have to play all the characters. To do this assignment, I recorded my self reading from Romeo and Juliet on my memo app on my iPhone. I talked in a feminine voice when I was saying Juliet’s lines and then I gave myself a deeper voice for when I said Romeo’s lines. This assignment  was a lot of fun, because this is something that I would never have done if people were around, because I would get too nervous. I enjoyed it because I was able to act, with no one watching. After I was finished I emailed it to myself, saved it on my computer and uploaded it onto here.

My One-Woman Play

Monday, June 25th, 2012

I had so mu fun creating My One-Woman Play. I think that this is my favorite assignment, thus far.

Horseback Riding in the Rain

Monday, June 25th, 2012

Making this sound effect story was a little more complicated than I initially expected, I am not at all familiar with editing audio on the computer. However, through the challenges of this task I feel as if my story turned out pretty well. Please take a listen to Horseback Riding in The Rain!

Jasmine’s Blog 2012-06-24 20:32:54

Monday, June 25th, 2012

 

My very first radio bumper!!!!!   ds 106 Radio Bumper

Taking Back Spam

Monday, June 25th, 2012
I Hate Spam
The Daily Crete 166 – Take a picture of something that makes you sick

I connected one of my Daily Creates with an audio assignment here. Partly to save time, but mostly because I had a hard time remembering something that makes me sick. Because I was working on Audio Assignment 351, I thought I could take a screenshot of the spam I was reading and post it as a photo. A good idea, except that the screenshot didn’t look very nice, so I decided to edit it using Pic Monkey. Then I got carried away a little.

And here is the recording:

Bonus track – Reverend Connor Strikes Again

Spamming is a sin
I couldn’t resist this. It only came yesterday, otherwise I would have used that one. It somehow tricked my Spam Guard. Maybe Google now thinks I love spam?

Ira Glass: an expert storyteller

Sunday, June 24th, 2012

Ira Glass has three things you need to be likeable on radio: firstly, a soft, intimate voice that makes you feel like he’s talking directly to you across your kitchen table; secondly, the humility to discuss his own work as something not innately brilliant, but as the culmination of many years of hard graft; and thirdly, a brilliant ear for wonderful, personal stories that make for compelling listening.

This American Life, which I’d never listened to before this week, is a kind of Reader’s Digest on the radio – that is, a sweetshop of tasty morsels, none of which you’d never planned on investigating, but which seem to fascinate nonetheless.

In the episode we were asked to listen to this week, about storytelling, or more specifically, reruns, the framing is classic Ira.  Act one is all about action and the Beaver trilogy, a film in which the film maker became obsessed with returning, over and over, to the same subject.  The story is gripping because we hear the journalist, the film and the film maker, Trent Harris, all narrating slightly different parts of the narrative.  I found the act slightly long-winded, but by the end the effect is that I really wanted a happy ending for hte beaver kid, just as Trent and the jounralist do.  I learned that good radio stories are involved, and take the reader on a journey, using the sequencing that Ira references in his video.

I enjoyed the second episode more, perhaps. about couples rerunning each others’ stories – what do relationships do to you and your stories?  Despite the journalist speaking to a number of spouses who claim to have heard their partner’s stories over and over again, we find that they don’t in fact tell authentic, accurate versions of their stories.  Hearing them realise this is entertaining, and the contrast between the voices is enough of a cue to the listener to expect different angles.  Of course there’s also a lot of work behind the scenes to uncover some wonderful stories – as Ira says, the art of good journalism is as much about knowing what to take out as much as to keep in.

Discussion in Act Three of how often the Rosa Parks story has been evoked to explain revolutionary behaviour in many different contexts is an example of ineffective storytelling – where the simile isn’t really apt.  But it’s a good example of how the collective subconscious that Jung talks about gathers experiences into each of our memories so we feel like Rosa Parks, for example, is an ancestor of ours when we make a stand.  Choosing a person that means something to people can help them find a hook for what you’re telling them.

Sound Effects Story: Fly Fishin’

Sunday, June 24th, 2012
"House fly" by YIM Hafiz, on Flickr

“House fly” by YIM Hafiz, on Flickr

The ds106 Digital Storytelling course Sound Effects Story Audio Assignment 70 gave me an opportunity to devote some time developing greater familiarity with Audacity and the sound source website, FreeSound.org. While I normally would turn directly to Apple’s GarageBand for something like this, I wanted to see how layering and track editing worked in the open source sound editor.

I was pleased to be able to sort out the various tools without turning to documentation — although I didn’t sort out how to effect a pan from one channel to the other (left to right, in this instance).  This will have to be a challenge for the next task. I also missed a simple way of naming the tracks to allow for their easy identification (although the waveforms do develop an identity after you’ve listened to them a few times). However, I did enjoy being able to toggle the interface for each track down to a very slim profile, as that made it easier to align two tracks that didn’t lie adjacent to one another in the stack. Cutting sections from one track was intuitive, and pasting sections into a newly created track worked just as expected.

The audio clips I used for this story are:
Fly 1.wav
Simulation of NASA (rocket) launch.wav
20061105Furnace.wav
rocket report and scream.wav
small_rocket_flybys_and_explosion.aif

While most were edited into the story pretty much in sequence, I did a fair amount of adjustments to the levels of each at various points using the envelope tool, and spent some time blending the Simulation of NASA (rocket) launch clip and the 20061105Furnace clip to get the rocket whine and engine launch. Each of the other three files was clipped, separated into sections, and in some instances (the fly) used multiple times to support the story.

The Andy Griffith Theme Song was sourced at: TelevisionTunes, with the intent of bracketing the story with an audio intro and outtro.

Image: House fly by YIM Hafiz on Flickr

Here

Sunday, June 24th, 2012

Poetry Reading — MISSION: DS106 Poetry is meant to be read aloud. Select a poem – it can be a personal favorite or one you find randomly – and read it aloud. Explain in your recording why you chose that poem.

Lots of S sounds I am afraid.

I am reading a poem by my daughter about hillwalking.
An Caisteal and Beinn a'Chroin

Fishing Trip with Sounds

Sunday, June 24th, 2012

Here is my Story with only sounds I did mine about a fishing trip I used http://www.findsounds.com/ to get the sounds and then used Audacity to put them together. This is the first time using any sort of sounds editing software and I am excited about learning more about it and figuring out more advanced ways to edit music and sounds.

Acouplabumpas

Sunday, June 24th, 2012

Here’s my shot at a couple of DS106 radio bumpers. Hai!

Bumpa1 by wwnorm

Bumpa2 by wwnorm

 

That’s my story. Any Questions.