Synchs

September 13, 2010 9:38 pm  /  New York, Radio

Occasionally radio producers in other parts of the country hire me to do “tape synch” recordings. For any non-radio folks reading this, a tape synch is a way producers can interview people remotely without having to rely on the scratchy sound of “phone tape” (recording the actual phone line).  Instead, they’ll hire a guy like me to go to the interviewee’s home or office.  They’ll conduct the interview over the phone while I sit unnaturally close to the interviewee getting a high-quality recording of our end of the conversation.  Afterward, I’ll upload the audio file so the producer can synchronize recordings of both sides of the conversion on a computer, as if the conversation had taken place in person. It’s the next best thing to recording an interviewee in a good studio and transmitting the audio feed via an ISDN connection.  So the next time you’re listening to All Things Considered (or whatever) and you hear, “Mr. X comes to us from his home in Brooklyn Heights,” that’s how it happened.

(In case it’s not obvious, these aren’t “live” conversations.  In fact, the majority of public radio is very highly edited. Most people don’t realize Car Talk isn’t live. True live shows usually rely on some combination of phone tape or a remote studio via ISDN connection.)

I’ve recorded dozens of interviews with authors, politicians, actors, musicians, and heads of corporations. Every now and then (twice so far this week) I’ll be listening to the radio and hear some of the same people on-air again. I don’t really know these people, of course, and most of them certainly wouldn’t remember me.  But I’ll hear their voices and remember the hour or so I spent with them, the small talk before and after the recording.

His grandfather clock was ticking loudly throughout the recording.

I biked to her apartment. It was raining and she offered me tea.

I was allergic to his cat and holding back a sneeze the whole interview.


New to You: The Wikimixes

September 3, 2010 8:57 pm  /  Music, Radio

It’s Friday night, so I’m going to make this one short.

Earlier this summer I put together a project that I called “Wikimixing” for the Megapolis Audio Festival. Here is a blurb I wrote about it at the time:

“Mixing on a computer is usually a solitary endeavor: one person controlling one mouse and keyboard making one decision at a time. We’re going to try to fix that.  Part workshop and part experiment in “crowd-sourced” audio art, this is like editing Wikipedia but with sound instead of text. We’ll … collectively mix and manipulate sounds as a group in real-time using a bunch of colorful customized keyboard controllers, all connected to a single computer. The idea is to get as many hands/ears/minds at once collaborating (and competing) on the same soundscape, so that whatever strange, beautiful, or frightening noises that emerge are the product of our group’s collective will. Everyone is in control at the same time and yet no one is!”

You can read more about the ideas and technical aspects of the project here. But for whatever reason, I never got around to posting the final mixes on my own site…until TODAY.  So unless you’ve been to the Megapolis 2010 Archive, they’re NEW TO YOU!

Saturday Mix A

Sunday Mix A

Sunday Mix B

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from explodingdog.com

from explodingdog.com

I got a brief mention on New Hampshire Public Radio’s program “Word of Mouth” for one of the production exercises I did last weekend at the Megapolis Festival.

It’s not exactly the most creative example of what I can do (or rather could have done)…but I’ll take the shout-out!

I’ll write more about Megapolis in an upcoming post (spoiler alert: I had a blast), but right now I’ve got to go cut and FTP some tape.

…and look at what she gave me.  And I have the proof on tape: listen!

The recording is for the radio program, Interfaith Voices.  I’ll post a link to their interview after they broadcast it.

UPDATE:

Here’s the interview.  Thanks Katie!


The New Yorker Out Loud: Escalation
Date: July 7, 2008
Description: Seymour M. Hersh talks about the Bush Administration’s secret campaign against Iran.
Role: Content and audio editing, working through Curtis Fox Productions