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FT201 Screen Language // Professor Kate Brown Sound Recording Workshop The task of your partnership is to record the following sounds and string them out in a timeline. Requirements: Equipment: Micro SD Card, Tascam Audio Recorder, Hard Drive, Premiere Pro CC Be sure to do an “audio slate” at the start of each recording. For example: “rain effect, take 3.” Take turns operating the recording equipment. In every case you should strive to get a solid recording signal that is free of distortion. Be economical; no take should be more than 45 seconds. Workshop Sounds to Record: A person reciting the lyrics to a favorite song. Be economical. An excerpt is fine. A sound with a lot of reverb. This could be voices, footsteps, handclaps, etc. Whatever the case, there should be plenty of reverb. A mystery sound. This should be a common sound, but one that the uninformed listener might not immediately recognize. Don’t reveal what the sound is— let us guess! The sound of wind or rain. The goal here is to record a sound that accurately represents the way we perceive wind and rain. You will also want to isolate the sound, so that we hear minimal other background noise. Premiere Pro CC Stringout Create a new folder for this project on your hard drive “sound workshop”; create a new Premiere Pro CC project and save it in your new folder; copy the audio files from your memory card to your folder ; import the audio files from your folder into your Premiere project. Edit together the sounds from each category above—one from each; place the best sounds on timeline in order lyric, reverb, mystery, wind/rain; cut out your slates; string them all out in order, back-to-back; create a title for your stringout with both student’s name on it; have the title play over the entire length of your video. Export your final video with sound and title— present: H.264 format: High Quality 1080p HD rename the file: soundworkshop-bothfirstnames.mov Submit by copying the final MOV onto the instructor’s flash drive.

bu-10-workshop-sound-handoutiamkatebrown.weebly.com/.../bu-10-workshop-sound-handout.pdf · 2019. 2. 22. · Title: bu-10-workshop-sound-handout Created Date: 2/22/2019 6:09:44 PM

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Page 1: bu-10-workshop-sound-handoutiamkatebrown.weebly.com/.../bu-10-workshop-sound-handout.pdf · 2019. 2. 22. · Title: bu-10-workshop-sound-handout Created Date: 2/22/2019 6:09:44 PM

FT201 Screen Language // Professor Kate Brown

Sound Recording Workshop

 The task of your partnership is to record the following sounds and string them out in a timeline.

• Requirements:

• Equipment: Micro SD Card, Tascam Audio Recorder, Hard Drive, Premiere Pro CC

• Be sure to do an “audio slate” at the start of each recording. For example: “rain effect, take 3.”

• Take turns operating the recording equipment. In every case you should strive to get a solid recording signal that is free of distortion. Be economical; no take should be more than 45 seconds.

• Workshop Sounds to Record:

• A person reciting the lyrics to a favorite song. Be economical. An excerpt is fine.

• A sound with a lot of reverb. This could be voices, footsteps, handclaps, etc. Whatever the case, there should be plenty of reverb.

• A mystery sound. This should be a common sound, but one that the uninformed listener might not immediately recognize. Don’t reveal what the sound is— let us guess!

• The sound of wind or rain. The goal here is to record a sound that accurately represents the way we perceive wind and rain. You will also want to isolate the sound, so that we hear minimal other background noise.

• Premiere Pro CC Stringout

• Create a new folder for this project on your hard drive “sound workshop”; • create a new Premiere Pro CC project and save it in your new folder; • copy the audio files from your memory card to your folder ; • import the audio files from your folder into your Premiere project.

• Edit together the sounds from each category above—one from each; • place the best sounds on timeline in order

• lyric, reverb, mystery, wind/rain; • cut out your slates; • string them all out in order, back-to-back; • create a title for your stringout with both student’s name on it; • have the title play over the entire length of your video.

• Export your final video with sound and title— • present: H.264 • format: High Quality 1080p HD • rename the file: soundworkshop-bothfirstnames.mov

• Submit by copying the final MOV onto the instructor’s flash drive.

Page 2: bu-10-workshop-sound-handoutiamkatebrown.weebly.com/.../bu-10-workshop-sound-handout.pdf · 2019. 2. 22. · Title: bu-10-workshop-sound-handout Created Date: 2/22/2019 6:09:44 PM

FT201 Screen Language // Professor Kate Brown

How to Use the Tascam DR-05 Audio Recorder

Powering On • Pickup your audio recorder (Tascam DR-05) and turn it on by pressing the power button in the

middle, off to the left-hand side. Press and hold this until the screen lights up.

Always wear headphones when you’re recording sound! • Plug in your headphones (1/8”) to the headphone jack (1/8”).

Format (Erase) your Micro SD Card *Only format (erase) your card if you want to delete all of your media from the card! Press Menu > System > Others > Quick Format: Execute

Check Record Settings • Press Menu > Rec Setting… (make sure your settings match these below)

• Bit Rate: 24 • Sample Rate: 48k • Format: WAV • Type: Stereo

Recording Audio • Press the record button once to pre-record. • Press record a second time to officially begin recording. (Be careful, this will get you!) • If you press record a third time…it will pause the recording. • To adjust your record levels—how loud your recording will be when editing:

• Press the backward or forward buttons before (and also while live) recording. • To adjust your headphone volume, press the +/- buttons. • To stop the recording, press the stop button (white square/power button) to end the recording. Note: The next time you hit record the recorder will start a new file.

Recording Level: Optimum recording level is -12dB (peaking around -6dB); check the LCD screen—there is a number off to the right side “-12dB” (see picture below).

Capturing your Media & Stringing-Out Clips • Plug your memory card into the card reader (using the SD card adapter); • Go through the file structure to find your audio clips; • Make a new project folder on your hard drive (“Sound Recording Workshop”); • Copy the audio clips you want into this new folder; • Make a new Premiere project and save it in your new project folder; • Import your audio clips into the project window; • Add your audio clips to the timeline/sequence in the order desired; cut out the slate each clip. • Export your timeline/sequence with your title as (H.264 > High Quality 1080p HD) • Put your clip on the instructor’s flash drive when done.