Monday, September 29, 2014

September Essay Prompt 1


            The ability to identify patterns in sound is, at its core, what allows life forms to communicate with each other. Humans in particular have developed many highly complex ways to exchange information. But sometimes, the patterns can be difficult to distinguish. The ambience of the world obscures them; “In a lo-fi soundscape, individual acoustic signals are obscured in an overdense population of sounds.” (Schaefer 43) When I hear this, I think of myself standing in Navy Pier in Chicago. I hear flashes of sound around me: a camera taking a picture, people conversing in a foreign language, the scream of a child on the swings. But they’re all faint. No single sound comes into the foreground.
            Meanwhile, hi-fi soundscapes are different entirely. The background ambience is low and in the distance, allowing individual sounds to take center stage. Schaefer says, “The country is more hi-fi than the city,” (Schaefer 43) meaning that the lower population of individual sounds allows you to focus on one with little interference.

            I picture a beach in South Carolina, where my family went on vacation two years ago. Early in the morning, before anyone else would come, I liked to go and sit there. I would just close my eyes and listen to the breaking waves, hearing the faint chirp of seagulls in the distance. It was incredibly peaceful. When I think of hi-fi sound, that is what comes to mind.

September Essay Prompt 2


Memory is a strange thing. You can remember all of an event, or your brain will only cough up snippets. For instance, all I remember from kindergarten is an incident where I got kicked in the face. I don’t remember any sound, or what happened after it. All I remember is seeing a foot contact my jaw.

However, Schaefer’s memory is a little different. He recalls sounds: “The ubiquitous cackling of geese, or the swoosh and bang of a screen door.” (Schaefer 48) These sounds not only represent his childhood, they define it. The sounds clearly mean a lot to him, and bring up happy memories.

When I think of childhood-defining auditory memories, the first thing that comes to mind would definitely be the soundtrack to The Lion King. I listened to that so many times when I was little that hearing it now gives me pangs of nostalgia. It’s like a key to my past, like the sounds of a farm to Murray Schaefer.

Tuesday, September 23, 2014

The Calm and the Storm

Here are the two copies of my sound edit, entitled The Calm and the Storm. I hope you enjoy!


Click here for WAV format
Click here for AIF/AIFF format