Designing Sound kindly reviewed our Recording Workshops course. This course comprises video taken from the workshops we ran in 2012 and 2013 on recording sounds. They were a lot of fun to run and we got great feedback from our attendees, so we decided to put all the video we'd collected into a course so those who couldn't make it to Melbourne could see what we got up to. As a bonus, we have made over 6 gig of sound recordings from different mics available as well. These are not edited, to allow our students to compare the different mic perspectives and practice editing this kind of sound themselves.
Read their review here.
1 Comment
11/26/2014 11:31:56 pm
In case it may not have been thought of or considered.Out of the sheer frustration of not always having a musical keyboard present when inspiration comes and because of the necessities of earning a living and other intrusions that interrupt the creative process, I Have trained my brain to recognize all things musical that I want and need to remember, through the mental visualization of the musical keyboard for example with the note C in your head you can sing or hum all the musical intervals and learn to recognize them when you hear them in melodies and through practice internalizing the singing of the intervals in your head they will then be recognizable in melodies the same way you can recognize the G chord on a guitar when you hear it you learnt it through repeatedly hearing it. Also when you remember the intervals in a melody (a 4th ,5th 6th or 7th) through association you will remember the note values and the rhythm aspects of your musical ideas.Hope this is of some use in beating those computer crashes and memory loses. Bob Snelling
Reply
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorThe Sound Librarian team has collectively over 15 years of experience working in games, music and sound design. Archives
October 2014
Categories
All
|