Thursday 28 February 2008

Entry 4

On Tuesday of this week, Myself, Greg, Ryan and Paul met up to record more Foley. We were to record the sound of rain. Throughout the majority of the clip there is torrential downpour, so recreating this, without ruining a lot of equipment was the challenge. We hired out a HHB MDP-500 mini disc recorder, and took it off site to Paul's house. We then recorded the shower running into the bath at a variety of intensities. The the results we got were good, and with some EQ and layering should sound a lot like rain. We also tried filling the bath up a few inches, and running the shower into that which gave some variation to the sound. We also Recorded the sound of splashing in the sink as there is a lot of footsteps and falling about in water in our chosen clip.

Today, Myself Chris, Greg, Ryan and Paul, were present for a two hour slot in production booth 1. We were planning to record thunder. We had encountered an issue with sound, and were finding it hard to recreate. Initially we had planned on sampling the 'Thunder box' Ryan had discovered in a music shop in town, however on second listen it wasn't quite what we were looking for as it didn't produce a crack of thunder and more of a low rumble. So we were back to square one. We hired out a Rode NT2A mic and a pop shield. Then decided to try general objects we had amongst us to see if they produced and suitable sound, or at least something we could pitch down to sound more like thunder. We recorded crisp packets being crunched, but when pitched down the sound was 'wet' and not like thunder. Before scrapping the audio put it through a low pass filter, which sounded a lot like thunder, with the addition of reverb and other EQ the audio we recorded will be our thunder.

Wednesday 27 February 2008

Entry 3

On Friday (22nd) Me, Greg, Chris, James And Ryan were -present for the recording of some sound effects. We purchased bamboo rods, celery sticks and carrots in an attempt to create authentic sound of wood snapping, as well as debris falling. For this session we were in studio 4, we hired out two Rode NT2A condenser microphones and positioned them, initially, approximately two feet apart facing each other, very close to the ground. We dropped the bamboo very carefully in between the microphones (onto coats to not damage the floor) to capture the sound of falling wood/debris. We then raised the microphones and attached pop shields, keeping them at the same distance apart to snap the bamboo, which made a good wood breaking sound. finally for this sessions recording we brought the microphones in closer to snap carrots and celery, which was a great success as it sounded a lot like wood snapping and splintering on playback.

Monday 18 February 2008

Entry 2

After intense planning, recording of Foley will begin this week. Me Greg and Ryan today devised a schedule for. This week we will be concentrating on smaller sounds such as 'swooshes', knuckle cracks and breaking wood. We have obtained some bamboo to help achieve swooshes and wood breaking. We have also discovered a Thunderbox which should help produce a realistic Thunder sound, without having to use a sample. I feel things are going well so far, we are up to date with all our paperwork, and handled our presentation well.