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craigsmith - archive vintage sound effects from film and TV - Freesound - 0 views

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    Craig Smith, has digitized and shared a 27GB collection of vintage sound effects. The sounds form three collections. They consist of high-quality, first generation copies of original nitrate optical sound effects from the 1930s & '40s created for Hollywood studios. They were collected by a prominent sound editor who worked in the industry for 44 years. The fragile optical elements were donated to USC, and transferred to tape by USC Cinema students in the early 1970s. There are three collections: The Gold and Red Libraries (Gold effects start with "G", Red with "R") consist of high-quality, first generation copies of original nitrate optical sound effects from the 1930s & '40s created for Hollywood studios. They were collected by a prominent sound editor who worked in the industry for 44 years. The fragile optical elements were donated to USC, and transferred to tape by USC Cinema students in the early 1970s. The Sunset Editorial (SSE) Library was also donated to USC around 1990. It includes classic effects from the 1930s into the '80s. These effects are from 35mm magnetic film. They were often several generations removed from the originals, and not as clean, so some careful restoration was done to make them more useful. SSE effects start with "S" About Craig Smith: "I have been recording, editing, & mixing sound since 1964, and teaching sound design and technology at California Institute of the Arts since 1986. In my spare time, I experiment with implied narrative and accidental sound design -- putting together sounds & images that have nothing to do with each other to create unexpected stories."
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((audience)) | new contexts for sound art - 0 views

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    "LISTEN, my heart takes place in a cinema-a room with no windows, a room dedicated to a magic screen. Tonight, these screens are dark, and we bring to you the sounds of the world outside. This is a cinema for the ear. "
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Expedition Content - The Cinema Guild - 0 views

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    "An immersive marvel of sonic ethnography, Expedition Content draws on audio recordings made by recent college graduate and Standard Oil heir Michael Rockefeller as part of the 1961 Harvard-Peabody Expedition to Netherlands New Guinea that set up tents among the indigenous Hubula (also known as Dani) people. "
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Samson Young - Frames and variations - Viewing Room - Petzel Gallery - 0 views

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    "Frames and variations, an experiential exhibition, encompassing sound, film and performance, by Hong Kong-based artist Samson Young. The show marks Young's debut solo exhibition with the gallery and will be on view from January 20th to March 4th, 2023, at Petzel's new Chelsea location at 520 W 25th Street. Inspired by the perception of sound and how it is distorted and concealed in cinema, this exhibition is comprised of two new immersive installations that center on the effects of situated listening. Young examines the spatial relationships between the aural source and the viewer's vision, adding to an illusion of sound that encircles the viewer sonically and visually."
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Sonic Ethnographer: An Interview with Ernst Karel | Institute of Contemporary Arts - 0 views

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    " Ernst Karel is Lecturer on Anthropology, Assistant Director of the Film Study Center, and Lab Manager for the renowned Sensory Ethnography Lab at Harvard University. In his audio projects, he works with analog electronics and location recordings, sometimes separately, sometimes in combination, to create pieces that move between the abstract and the documentary. Karel collaborates with filmmakers as a sound recordist, mixer, and sound designer. Notably, Karel has worked on key films produced at the Sensory Ethnography Lab including Sweetgrass (2009) and Leviathan (2012), both of which were released in UK cinemas via Dogwoof."
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Handbook for Acoustic Ecology - Barry Truax - 0 views

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    "No field of study based on sensory experience seems to be overburdened by terminology to the same extent as that dealing with sound and hearing. The visual sense, of course, has received as much attention as the auditory from physics, psychology, neurophysiology, and the visual arts, which have all contributed terminology and jargon alike, but a great deal of it seems to have entered the common vocabulary already, and at least the general notions involved are seldom foreign to the average citizen or student. Terms such as perspective, foreground, background, colour, spectrum, shadow, focus, image, reflection, transparent, translucent and the wealth of descriptive visual terms, not to mention common visual impairments and the complexity of visual language found in contemporary cinema and photography - all of these have found public familiarity in a way that it is hard to imagine their sonic counterparts ever matching. Almost every school child knows what white light is, and how it is composed, but would he know what white noise is, even though the likelihood of it having an adverse effect on him is far greater? The ability to perceive three-dimensional visual perspective when projected onto a two-dimensional surface, by no means a simple achievement given the lateness of its appearance in our civilization, is irrevocably ingrained in the child's perceptual habits at an early age, and yet the ability to distinguish acoustic parameters, or experience subtle nuances of timbre (supposing he knows what timbre, the sonic equivalent of colour, is) may never be among his perceptual skills."
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The Secret World of Foley on Vimeo - 1 views

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    great short about foley artists creating sounds for a fishing village
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The Secret World of Foley on Vimeo - 0 views

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    great short about foley artists creating sounds for a fishing village
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A Thousand Words - Twenty Thousand Hertz - 0 views

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    "Audio description allows you to enjoy a movie or TV show without the need for any visuals. But how do these narrators strike the right tone for a scene? How do the writers decide what needs to be described? And what's in store for the future of described audio? In honor of Blindness Awareness Month, this is a brand new story about the world of Audio Description. Featuring AD Narrator Roy Samuleson and AD experts Thomas Reid and Melody Goodspeed."
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Apichatpong Weerasethakul: The Unknown Sound | Sabzian - 0 views

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    Article about the sound design of Apichatpong Weerasethakul (Memoria) and also the sound of the body and mind.
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How CODA and Sound of Metal Misrepresent Deaf Culture - 0 views

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    "Two recent films about Deaf culture have been lauded by hearing audiences, but set deafness and music at odds in superficial ways."
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Learning to Listen with Annea Lockwood | Broadcast | Pioneer Works - 0 views

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    "Sam Green on the friendship that inspired his films about sound."
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'1899' Composer Ben Frost on Recording the Soundtrack Inside of a Ship - Netflix Tudum - 0 views

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    "I'm in there with a recording of violins - there's also some guy using an arc welder in the next cabin."
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Score For HBO's 'Chernobyl' Was Recorded Using Sounds From Inside A Nuclear Power Plant... - 0 views

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    "Icelandic composer/cellist/choral arranger Hildur Guðnadóttir's was brought onto the show's production team in hopes of creating a score haunting enough to make viewers really feel the danger behind the spring 1986 catastrophe.... she used field recordings captured at a now-decommissioned power plant in Lithuania (where the series was filmed) to build the show's eerie and ominous soundtrack."
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CRYPTOFORM-POLYTICS-NOISE - Noise_WalterMurch - 1 views

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    " Sound Doctrine: An Interview with Walter Murch"
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The Self-Destructing Modules Behind Revolutionary 1956 Soundtrack of Forbidden Planet |... - 1 views

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    "The Self-Destructing Modules Behind Revolutionary 1956 Soundtrack of Forbidden Planet"
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The Foley Artist: Los Angeles Times - YouTube - 0 views

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    "The art of Foley for motion pictures, using everyday objects to mimic sound effects to enhance the action on screen. SHOW MORE "
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Interview with Robert Dudzic - 0 views

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    "Interview with Robert Dudzic August 9, 2018 by Jim Stout Leave a Comment I recently had the privilege to speak with Robert Dudzic and, during the course of our casual discussion, we touched on topics such as his thoughts on the creative process, how to gain access to sites and the power of inspiration."
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FOLEY Rated R (for Vegetable Violence) - Cook's Science - 0 views

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    "Crack-k-squutch! A zombie's head explodes in a loud, disgusting gush of decaying brain matter, and the audience gleefully recoils. When it comes to Hollywood, in an era of digital special effects and computer-generated monsters, one of the last provinces of traditional analog elements is Foley art: the sounds that are added to movie scenes to give extra vividness to a head thwack, a creaking chair, or just the ever-present sounds of walking. These sounds are still created using physical props-and very often, those props come from the kitchen."
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| RENCONTRES INTERNATIONALES PARIS/BERLIN | new cinema and contemporary art | - 0 views

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    "Van Dam and de Boer have developed the following idea from these different interests. In several recordings of Dam filmed (and sound is recorded) when he performs Sequenza VIII . Emphasizing first half total, the body and the intimacy with the instrument. Then abstract details filmed, like his hands, his ear, details of the violin, strings and the like. In the editing is from the portrait / body of the violinist a more fragmented, abstract image created a physical, gives spatial experience in the tension between the music and the image rhythm. If the body and the violin in abstract details and solve dancing away in the (sound) space."
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