MUS 14A/714A • Department of Music • Fall 2019

Introduction to Music Technology

LIU Post • Long Island University

The purpose of this exercise is to give you the opportunity to explore the loop-based composition process by working in a multitrack enviroment using audio and MIDI loops, sound effects, and excerpts from original music and/or other recorded music.

As you complete the project, imagine the possibilities. How would you use this type of composition in your own arrangements, songs, compositions or multimedia projects?

Instructions:

  1. Create a soundtrack for a scene from an imaginary movie which follows a description of the scene you write yourself. Take some time to think about the description then write it and email it to JM before starting your soundtrack.
  2. Here are some sample descriptions from previous semesters:
    1. "The scene for my movie is someone wandering through the rain forest. They stumble upon a small community that is having some sort of celebration and playing music. This person hangs around the community, then goes on to exploring the rest of the rain forest."
    2. "The scene opens to a prince journeying up a mountain to slay a dragon. Immediately, you are surrounded by the sound of mist, as the music brings us to the top of the mountain where the dragon lives. Both the prince and dragon see each other, and they begin fighting to the death. The prince knows that slaying the dragon is the one thing stopping him from becoming king, and the dragon knows that the only way to keep his life is to kill the prince. Who will win this epically passionate battle? The scene comes to an end as we hear the dragon fall to its death, and the prince walks out in celebration that he is now to become king."
    3. "My movie scene is about a wounded solider in the line of duty. You start to hear a subtle heartbeat becoming more and more intense while a simple tune is being played shadowing his closeness with death. Bombs, helicopters, guns and screams are present throughout the entire scene to resemble an actual battlefield. Towards the end of the scene a quiet trumpet playing a lyrical passage comes in, this resembles the all-familiar taps (which resembles death). Within that a section of strings hold on to one note to resemble a flat line, also signifying death. With death around the solider it is not known if he does pass away at the end, but just a gasp is the last thing you hear."
    4. "A few kids are spray-painting a wall. The cops catch them. The kids run away, they run and climb up and over a fence. They find a wall to hide behind. They see the lights of the police car approaching. The car passes by. They jump on the opportunity to run away. They get to their apartment building climb up the stairs, get inside and lock the door."
    5. (If you find that you're having difficulty creating a soundtrack for your original description, you may modify it or change it completely. The original description is just a starting point.)
  3. The soundtrack must be at least 60 seconds long.
  4. The location and content of your movie scene will dictate the sounds and music you use to create your soundtrack but the track should include the following:
    1. One "persistent" background sound (e.g. ocean sounds if your movie scene takes place at the beach.)
    2. Several other sound effects that help establish the location of your scene (e.g. the sound of seagulls and waves in a scene at the beach.)
    3. At least one "one-shot" sound or loop.
    4. At least one MIDI loop which you can create or get from the GarageBand or ACID loop libraries.
    5. At least one audio loop which you can creaate or get from the GarageBand or ACID loop libraries.
    6. (Ask JM for assistance if you'd like to create your own loops in Audacity or GarageBand.)
  5. A good source for sounds effects is SoundBible.
  6. When completed:
    1. Share menu > Export Song to Disk > Export using the AAC encoder at High Quality. Save this file in your folder.
    2. Open the rendered/exported file in Audacity and convert it to 128kbps MP3. Send the file to JM at the assignment address.
  7. Please Note: we have an older version of GarageBand in the lab. If you work on your project on your own computer you might not be able to open it in the lab.