A DIY video about DIY recording

For the benefit of Play With Your Music participants and anyone else we end up teaching basic audio production to, MusEDLab intern Robin Chakrabarti and I created this video on recording audio in less-than-ideal environments.

This video is itself quite a DIY production, shot and edited in less than twenty-four hours, with minimal discussion beforehand and zero rehearsal. Robin ran the camera, framed and planned shots and did the editing as well. We were operating from a loose script, but the details of the video ended being substantially improvised as we reacted to the room. For example, we discovered that the room opened onto a loud air conditioning unit that could be somewhat quieted by drawing a curtain. That became one of the more informative parts of the video. Also, while we had planned to do a shot in the bathroom to talk about its natural reverb, we also discovered that the hallway had fairly interesting reverb of its own, and it inspired a useful segment about standing waves.

Maybe the best improv moment came when someone inadvertently burst into the room where we were shooting. It could have been a ruined take, but we salvaged it by using it to address the idea that it’s hard to cordon off non-studio spaces to get the isolation you need.

Improvisation is such a valuable life skill. We shouldn’t make every kid learn how to read music notation, with improvisation as an optional side topic. We should make sure that everyone knows how to improvise, and then if people want to go on and learn to read, great.

Published by

Ethan Hein

Ethan Hein teaches music technology and music education at NYU and Montclair State University. He maintains an influential and widely-followed music blog at http://www.ethanhein.com/ and has also recently written for NewMusicBox, Quartz, and Slate. He is an active producer and composer, and you can listen to his recent work here: http://soundcloud.com/ethanhein Recently, musicians in eight countries created twenty recordings of his laptop orchestra composition “Divergence/Convergence” as part of a project by the Disquiet Junto, an online electronic music collective. As a founding member of the NYU Music Experience Design Lab, Ethan designs and researches new interfaces for music learning and expression.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *