Shadow creature sounds - Social Sound Design most recent 30 from http://socialsounddesign.com2013-06-18T23:04:28Zhttp://socialsounddesign.com/feeds/question/15154http://www.creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/2.5/rdfhttp://socialsounddesign.com/questions/15154/shadow-creature-soundsShadow creature soundsSimon Lebel2012-08-24T10:54:09Z2012-08-24T21:26:31Z
<p>I have to design the sounds of a creature made of shadow for an horror short film.
The sounds will be melted in a cemetery background. We only see it for 1 or 2 seconds at the end, so the sounds must be intriguing, and slowly create tension through the scene.</p>
<p>Any ideas, advices, or movie examples ?</p>
http://socialsounddesign.com/questions/15154/shadow-creature-sounds/15155#15155Answer by Joel Corriveau for Shadow creature soundsJoel Corriveau2012-08-24T12:15:53Z2012-08-24T12:15:53Z<p>A creature made of shadow? "<a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m0X3OKjIlUg" rel="nofollow">Ah-WOOOOOOOOOO! Shaka chaka chaka chaka.</a>" </p>
<p>Maybe not.</p>
http://socialsounddesign.com/questions/15154/shadow-creature-sounds/15156#15156Answer by Christian van Caine for Shadow creature soundsChristian van Caine2012-08-24T12:41:03Z2012-08-24T12:41:03Z<p>If it's an ethereal creature without a solid physical body then I probably would start with micking up some different fans and ventilation-systems (as worn and gritty as humanly possible), as well as vocalize lots of very whispery/breathy noises and half-words!</p>
http://socialsounddesign.com/questions/15154/shadow-creature-sounds/15158#15158Answer by Iain McGregor for Shadow creature soundsIain McGregor2012-08-24T19:10:21Z2012-08-24T19:10:21Z<p>I would record wind sounds with different pitches. After that load the sounds onto a sampler and use pitch bends to create a layered doppler effect so that it sounds like the creature is moving back and forwards towards the audience.</p>
http://socialsounddesign.com/questions/15154/shadow-creature-sounds/15160#15160Answer by Matt Glenn for Shadow creature soundsMatt Glenn2012-08-24T19:19:37Z2012-08-24T19:19:37Z<p>It always depends on how heavy-handed you want the moment to be. If it's a more subtle gesture (less slasher thriller, more psychological), try performing a similar effect that Iain suggests with the other backgrounds in the scene. For instance, if the cemetery has crickets or a roomtone of its own, try distorting/pitch shifting those sounds as the creature goes by. Using the normal diagetic sounds gives the sense that the presence of the creature messes with reality.</p>
<p>Good luck! <br>
~Matt</p>
http://socialsounddesign.com/questions/15154/shadow-creature-sounds/15161#15161Answer by davidreino for Shadow creature soundsdavidreino2012-08-24T21:19:15Z2012-08-24T21:19:15Z<p>I can't remember the sound exactly per se, but there was an episode of the X-Files about deadly shadows called "Soft Light", I remember it had a lot of creepy atmospheric sound typical to the series. Another technique that seems to work well for tension of this sort is a sort of high-pitched metal groan with reverb, you can hear it around 0:24-0:25 in this clip: </p>
<p><a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pqqEriE0ogc" rel="nofollow">http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pqqEriE0ogc</a></p>
<p>Good luck! </p>
http://socialsounddesign.com/questions/15154/shadow-creature-sounds/15162#15162Answer by SonicDesigns for Shadow creature soundsSonicDesigns2012-08-24T21:26:31Z2012-08-24T21:26:31Z<p>I worked on a feature called shadow people and I ended up using the moogerfrooger app DI into my protools session and messed with the output gain to create crazy feedbacks. Worked really well.</p>