This subject is an introduction to the basic concepts and production procedures involved in professional audio across a range of media. Students work in digital formats, focusing on idea development, composition, experimentation, and questions of aesthetics, poetics and politics. Conceptual and technical skills include listening, location recording, recording voices, interviewing, editing and mixing.
Students who successfully complete this subject will:
At the completion of this subject, students are expected to be able to:
Objectives | a, b |
Value | 10% |
Due | Week 4 |
Task | Record an interview of 3 minutes on the subject of an affect. |
Assessment criteria |
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Objectives | a, b, c, d |
Value | 15% |
Due | Week 5 |
Task | Two edits of the recording from Assessment item 1, edited in two different ways, to a maximum length of one minute for each edit. You will edit the same source in two different ways, using only one track on Protools for this and using no effects or music. For example, one edit may be fast paced and cut up and the other more 'narrative'. This assignment may be discussed and conceptualised in groups but carried out individually. Students should be prepared to discuss in class the conceptual thinking behind their choice of editing styles. |
Assessment criteria |
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Objectives | a, b, c, d |
Value | 25% |
Due | Week 6 |
Task | Mix several sounds together to make one single sound, which constructs an affect, ie a feeling or emotion. You may work with the affect you used in a previous exercise or a new one. Do not use music or spoken word, though you may work with vocal sounds. |
Assessment criteria |
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Objectives | a, b, c, d |
Value | 50% |
Due | Week 14 |
Task | A major piece of work, such as a Feature/Mini-documentary, comprising pre-recorded piece of no more than 5 minutes duration must be completed and handed in. Work in groups of 2-3. This may be in one of the more formal, traditional radio modes (documentary, drama, magazine, etc) or may challenge the accepted radio formats with something quite different. It should include all elements of sound design - music, voice, sound, and 'silence' - and have a central theme or idea. |
Assessment criteria |
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Students are expected to read the subject outline to ensure they are familiar with the subject requirements. Since class discussion and participation in activities form an integral part of this subject, you are expected to attend, arrive punctually and actively participate in classes. If you experience difficulties meeting this requirement, please contact your lecturer. Students who have a reason for extended absence (e.g., illness) may be required to complete additional work to ensure they achieve the subject objectives.
Attendance is particularly important in this subject because it is based on a collaborative approach which involves essential workshopping and interchange of ideas. Students who attend fewer than ten classes are advised that their final work will not be assessed and that they are likely to fail the subject.
Michel Chion, Audio-Vision: Sound on Screen, Columbia University Press, New York, 1994.
David Miles Huber, Modern Recording Techniques (5th Edition), Butterworth-Heinenann, London, 2001.
Douglas Kahn, Noise/Water/Meat : A History of Voice, Sound and Aurality in The Arts, MIT Press, 1999.
R. Murray Schafer, The Tuning of the World (Philadelphia: University of Penn. Press, 1977.
Robert McLeish, The Technique of Radio Production, A Manual for Broadcasters, Focal Press, London, 1988.
Stanley R Alten, Audio In Media, Belmont CA: Wadsworth, 1981.
Donald McWhinnie, The Art of Radio, London, Faber&Faber.
David Toop, Ocean of Sound (5th edition), Consortium, 2001.
Essays in Sound, Volumes 1-4, Sydney.
Periodicals:
Sound On Sound
Mix
Audio Technology