Archive for the 'Audio Philosophy' Category

Living in Video

Monday, October 30th, 2006

An earlier post on my MakeShift Mixes blog sited how great the Red Bull Music Academy was for all they offered not only in terms of on-site instruction and curriculum but on-line as well.

After listening to a few podcasts though, I admit, I was slightly miffed to find out that musical examples given throughout the lecture series’ were edited out for “copyright reasons”.

When will big (and small) music learn that we now live in a digital age? If someone wants to rip that song out of a lecture series by grabbing the video and taking out the audio, they will!

Then again, is this perhaps one of the better ways to lure people back to your site? What do you think? Marketing touchdown or fumble?

Pre-produce or lose your “juice”

Friday, June 23rd, 2006

When will the standard of podcasts begin to be as well produced as the best T.V. or radio shows we’ve all grown to love? In listening to my weekly dosage of ATS it occurred to me that the lengthly format with seeming lack of pre-production just made me angry; especially for a guru of new marketing. A 30 second spot may be old but at least you get the point and can move on.

If podcasting is to become the radio of the future, it’s content producers must strive to do a better job of producing. Let’s begin to raise the bar now. Why not become an innovator?

By the way, cheers to all the podcasters who are doing the pre-production needed to put together a nice tight show. Personally I’m going to credit Paul Figgiani here because I know how hard he works at it. He is the consummate professional.

Table of Content(s)

Monday, June 12th, 2006

A reference manual is only as good as it’s index or table of contents. If what you’re looking for is clearly laid out for you, you can access that information more efficiently.

With this in mind, it occurs to me that if you are reading this, you have an interest (vested or not…perhaps pantsed?) in audio recording of some kind, yes?
With Apple coming out with more and more software to make anyone a podcaster or audio content creator, where does a real professional become necessary to you? Assuming you’re reading the apple manual. Perhaps you’re not. Is a Audio Recording for Dummies blog needed?
Alternatively, what are THE TOUGH QUESTIONS you have about recording?

Let’s get this whole online community thing rolling…

Where I come from, QUALITY is job 1

Monday, June 5th, 2006

Anyone who can scan their music memory banks and send me from whence this song quote came from gets real props. I think one day they should invent a device that scans your brain and if there’s a song in there it should match it with a database and play that song on your computer. I’ll give that one to the entrepreneurs.

Anyhow, the issue of quality is constantly argued in audio circles. I went to an AES meeting once with keynote speaker George Massenburg; arguably one of the greatest minds of our technological time (this guy invented the parametric eq for God’s sake people). George spoke of how important audio quality was to the music industry and felt that the music industry would not die based on mp3 downloads because people wanted quality. They wouldn’t necessarily care the first time they heard a song but a true fan would listen repeatedly and start to find the minor glitches that might eventually lead to them actually disliking the song. Maybe not something to be concerned with for podcasting. Or is it!? DUN DUN DAHHHHH!

After a great episode (34) of Across the Sound with Joseph Jaffe where Jaffe, in a very impromtu manner, interviewed Saatchi and Saatchi’s CEO Kevin Roberts the question arose for me again… is sound quality important in podcasting if the real import of that podcast is content?

The quality of the recording of that interview was poor at best (no offense Joseph), I know it was done in an elevator, likely with a handheld recorder, but the important thing there was the content; don’t get me wrong (there’s another audio clip going in my head) I agree that content is king but here’s my point…

Audio that is recorded with full knowledge that that audio will be used for podcasting should be as good as possible. Why?

Efficient production gets the message out sooner.

I am an editor for IT Conversations; an excellent organization bringing you excellent content, constantly. How does this happen? Volunteers record discussions, panels, conferences, etc. then those programs are overseen by series producers to pick the best content from those panels, coferences,etc. which are then edited by the editors, uploaded to a server and posted on an IT Conversations site page. No slight to the engineers recording but it takes A LOT longer to edit content that isn’t recorded well. It’s no different than recording a band in studio; a bad drum sound never becomes good, just less bad.

The result? I, as an editor, spend more time trying to fix problems with volume & noise rather than editing minor speech problems (ums and ahhs). The second result is that it takes longer to get the program up.
Why does this matter?

If the name of the podcasting game is excellent content delivered to the masses, and the masses want their content as soon as possible, the content’s quality must be kept up throughout the whole process to save time in post production.
Think of any advertising that gets screwed up in printing; either a problematic ad is run or the product doesn’t get advertised when the company needs it to.

Audio is no different than text, it’s content value is just as high.

And easier to emotionally interpret :) Let’s think of who’s listening to this podcast. An attendee of the conference stands to benefit just as much as anyone from hearing that conference’s content. A repeated listen might fill in gaps in that person’s notes or perhaps they are siting the content of a panelist’s speech for research; maybe one of the most salient points here. In the same way that we preserve books and magazine’s for their relevant content, we should ensure the quality of audio remain excellent for future generations.

I could go on with reasons why, that’s not the intent, here’s the thing…

How do we solve this issue?

I have some of my own ideas that I will be posting in the future, but for now I invite your thoughts on the topic. Important? Not?