Difference between revisions of "Sound (Discussion)"
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− | #'''Group 3:''' What are the three main types of sound in TV production and how do digital audio workstations mirror those three types? ([http://tvcrit.com/files/ProTools.png See ''Ugly Betty'' ProTools layout for music editor.]) | + | #'''Group 3:''' What are the three main types of sound in TV production and how do digital audio workstations mirror those three types? ([http://tvcrit.com/tvcrit4/files/ProTools.png See ''Ugly Betty'' ProTools layout for music editor.]) |
#'''Group 4:''' What is "public domain" music? What are "master rights"? How do master rights apply to DVD releases of TV programs? | #'''Group 4:''' What is "public domain" music? What are "master rights"? How do master rights apply to DVD releases of TV programs? | ||
Revision as of 17:52, 4 October 2018
Purposes of sound on television
Television lists four "purposes of sound on television":
- Capturing viewer attention.
- Manipulating viewer understanding of the image.
- Maintaining televisual flow.
- Maintaining continuity within individual scenes.
Sound exercises In class, we'll view a Dodge commercial and examples of how sound can manipulate viewer understanding of the image--that is, can change its meaning.
- All groups: Choose a well-known song that, if laid over the commercial, would change its meaning. (No R-rated songs, please.) We'll find an excerpt of it online and lay it over the commercial. Be prepared to explain to the class how your song changes the commercial's meaning.
- All groups: Think back to the Chevrolet commercial that we broke down and the shot of Mother, salesman, Father, son in the car. As a group, pretend you're doing ADR (and what is ADR?) and sound mixing for this shot:
- Write dialogue that illustrates how sound editors can manipulate sound perspective to alter our understanding of a scene (somewhat like the sound editor of Ugly Betty did in the textbook example, but do not copy it).
- Illustrate how sound and time could be manipulated in this shot with new dialogue (as in the textbook's example from Damages).
- Finally, imagine audio that illustrates the difference between diegetic vs. nondiegetic sound.
http://www.tcf.ua.edu/Classes/Jbutler/T311/ChevCommFromTVCrit/images/PDVD_039.jpg
Types of sound
- Group 3: What are the three main types of sound in TV production and how do digital audio workstations mirror those three types? (See Ugly Betty ProTools layout for music editor.)
- Group 4: What is "public domain" music? What are "master rights"? How do master rights apply to DVD releases of TV programs?
Sound technology
- Group 5 & 1: Explain these terms in the context of digital audio: sampling, dynamic range, and frequency response.
- Groups 6 & 2: What are the different types of microphone pick-up patterns? How do they affect sound perspective? (Ugly Betty example.)
Bibliography
- Butler, Jeremy G. Television: Visual Storytelling and Screen Culture. New York: Routledge, 2018.