How good is your knowledge of acoustics, and how does this affect your sound design? - Social Sound Design most recent 30 from http://socialsounddesign.com2013-05-21T14:43:52Zhttp://socialsounddesign.com/feeds/question/13717http://www.creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/2.5/rdfhttp://socialsounddesign.com/questions/13717/how-good-is-your-knowledge-of-acoustics-and-how-does-this-affect-your-sound-desiHow good is your knowledge of acoustics, and how does this affect your sound design?Mark Durham2012-04-26T17:55:42Z2012-04-29T21:37:14Z
<p>I'm curious as to how scientific your understanding of acoustics is and how often you draw on this knowledge when designing sounds, editing or mixing. What do you get your calculator out for, and what do you leave down to artistic license? Did anyone here study acoustics and then go on to become sound designers?</p>
<p>I've been reading Andy Farnell's book <a href="http://aspress.co.uk/ds/about_book.php" rel="nofollow">Designing Sound</a> for some time now, and find his analysis of how and why different sounds are produced is proving to be as fascinating as the PD patches. Does anyone know of any other good resources on acoustics which are easy to digest (ie, more about general principles rather than serious maths).</p>
http://socialsounddesign.com/questions/13717/how-good-is-your-knowledge-of-acoustics-and-how-does-this-affect-your-sound-desi/13720#13720Answer by Chris for How good is your knowledge of acoustics, and how does this affect your sound design?Chris2012-04-26T19:15:15Z2012-04-26T19:15:15Z<p>I think the knowledge of acoustics is something that grows with me every day just through listening to the world. Of course if I didn't know the basics then it would mean I'm not a sound engineer.</p>
http://socialsounddesign.com/questions/13717/how-good-is-your-knowledge-of-acoustics-and-how-does-this-affect-your-sound-desi/13722#13722Answer by Michael for How good is your knowledge of acoustics, and how does this affect your sound design?Michael2012-04-27T00:03:09Z2012-04-27T00:03:09Z<p><em>Sonic Experience: A Guide to Everyday Sounds</em> by Jean-Francois Augoyard and Henri Torgue is an excellent book that explains many sonic experiences and acoustic phenomena by going into the philosophy, aesthetics, cultural context, and psychoacoustics of sound without going into too much detail about the physics or math. </p>
http://socialsounddesign.com/questions/13717/how-good-is-your-knowledge-of-acoustics-and-how-does-this-affect-your-sound-desi/13726#13726Answer by schwartzsound for How good is your knowledge of acoustics, and how does this affect your sound design?schwartzsound2012-04-27T21:22:49Z2012-04-27T21:22:49Z<p>I did a year of acoustical consulting (architectural / noise control) before going back the more creative sound design route. The first book my old boss had me read was <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Architectural-Acoustics-Ross-Publishing-Classics/dp/1932159789" rel="nofollow">M. David Egan's Architectural Acoustics</a>. Very easy to read, with good practical principles and illustrations, also some cultural case studies. Obviously geared toward architectural use, but even the construction details in there are fascinating if you haven't considered how to build a sound isolating wall before...</p>
<p>Other than how to deal with clients, the acoustical consulting bit really helps me think about spaces and physical relationships, particularly when using convolution reverbs or designing for unique acoustical situations. Most importantly it reinforced to me how subjective sound is, that there are really no hard and fast rules, which is something I always like to keep in the back of my mind while working. Does an impulse labeled "City Street" really sound like a city street? Does it work in this particular context? Does simply adding the sound of a car horn into the mix convey that aural message better than any fancy plug-in I could ever find?</p>
<p>I have done some experimentation using custom IRs and EQs based off of actual acoustic transmission and insertion loss data (Architectural Acoustics has some nice general data), and of course found that again everything is subjective. Some do provide a good starting point, I find my collection of "hollow door" and "inverse phon" EQ curve presets do help give a nice sense of distance to a sound, though best when mixed with other effects. It always boils down to artistic license in the end.</p>
http://socialsounddesign.com/questions/13717/how-good-is-your-knowledge-of-acoustics-and-how-does-this-affect-your-sound-desi/13730#13730Answer by Bit Depth for How good is your knowledge of acoustics, and how does this affect your sound design?Bit Depth2012-04-28T10:39:30Z2012-04-29T21:37:14Z<p>I find a good understanding of acoustic principles a vital aspect for sound design, especially when it comes to setting sounds in different environments - difficult to do well unless you understand how sound waves move and interact with obstacles. I recommend <a href="http://www.amazon.co.uk/Master-Handbook-Acoustics-Alton-Everest/dp/0071603328/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1335609473&sr=1-1" rel="nofollow">Master Handbook of Acoustics</a> to my students. Quit scientific, but gives some great descriptions of the principles.</p>