Difference between revisions of "220b-winter-2016/hw1"
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* milestone '''due 2016.1.19, Tuesday, in-class''' | * milestone '''due 2016.1.19, Tuesday, in-class''' | ||
− | * final composition '''due 2016.1. | + | * final composition '''due 2016.1.27, Wednesday, 11:59:59pm''' |
In this assignment, you are to record some "everyday" sounds, process/transform/arrange them, creating a composition that, in Paul Lansky's words, "views the mundane, everyday noise of daily life through a personal musical filter." | In this assignment, you are to record some "everyday" sounds, process/transform/arrange them, creating a composition that, in Paul Lansky's words, "views the mundane, everyday noise of daily life through a personal musical filter." | ||
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** important: they must be sounds from **EVERYDAY LIFE** | ** important: they must be sounds from **EVERYDAY LIFE** | ||
* 2) process/transform/arrange/compose. | * 2) process/transform/arrange/compose. | ||
− | ** check out the code examples from class | + | ** check out the code examples from class in Coursework |
** figure out what you want to do, experiment, try a lot of stuff, have fun | ** figure out what you want to do, experiment, try a lot of stuff, have fun | ||
** use ChucK to process/transform the sounds | ** use ChucK to process/transform the sounds |
Latest revision as of 21:16, 25 January 2016
Contents
Homework #1: "Homebrew"
- milestone due 2016.1.19, Tuesday, in-class
- final composition due 2016.1.27, Wednesday, 11:59:59pm
In this assignment, you are to record some "everyday" sounds, process/transform/arrange them, creating a composition that, in Paul Lansky's words, "views the mundane, everyday noise of daily life through a personal musical filter."
Tools at your disposal
(note: these are the only tools you are to use (but you don't have to use all of them) - you'll need to obtain permission to use other software or sound samples you didn't record)
- any microphone (phone, laptop, hydrophone, studio, etc.) | something to record into (e.g., laptop/desktop)
- EDIT: also can find usable recordings **of everyday sounds**, e.g., via FreeSound
- ChucK
- Audacity/Ardour (for intermediate + final recording/assembly)
SoX
Example of how to change snd file sample rate:
[cmn## lala] sox <inputfilename> -r 44000 <outputfilename>
Specification
What to do:
- 0) spend some time planning things out in terms of the sounds you want to record, the transformations to perform, and how to put it all together.
- As with everyday life, some things might not initially work out as planned/hoped: be resourceful (think MacGyver), and be willing to adapt.
- 1) record a number of sounds around you
- can be many different types of sounds, or many instances of a single type of sound (e.g., traffic)
- note the origin of the sounds in your README
- EDIT: also can find usable recordings, e.g., via FreeSound
- important: they must be sounds from **EVERYDAY LIFE**
- 2) process/transform/arrange/compose.
- check out the code examples from class in Coursework
- figure out what you want to do, experiment, try a lot of stuff, have fun
- use ChucK to process/transform the sounds
- the bulk of the arranging should be done in ChucK, with intermediate editing and late-stage assembly in Audacity
- if helpful, record and edit intermediate sound clips from ChucK into Audacity (via Jack)
Deliverables
As usual, turn in all files by putting them in your Library/Web/220b/hw1/ directory.
- 1) create a hw1/ directory, and put all the stuff below in there:
- 2) all related source/sound files (.wav/.ck)
- 3) a short README text (readme.txt) file that:
- specifies instructions on running your programs
- describes your process/adventure, and perhaps the ideas (technical/aesthetic) behind the composition
- gives credit, if needed, for the sounds you are using
- describe any difficulties you encountered in the process
- 4) submit to dropbox on coursework!
- 5) email Ge and Tim (ge@ccrma, tsob@ccrma) with the URL of the web page
Thanks and have fun!!!