Category Archives: Creative Sound Projects

Starting my Piece – Ideas for Where it May Go

When starting my piece for this project I wasn’t quite sure what direction I wanted to take it. I’d gone to the seaside to record the change coming out of slot machines, but I hadn’t properly recorded it with an idea of what I wanted to do with it. Originally I thought that I could try and do something rhythmic with all the different recordings but in practice I found it very difficult and decided I needed to change what I was doing. Seeing as the theme of the piece didn’t have to be ‘change’ anymore, I just decided to put a few of the field recordings into my DAW and see what I felt like making.

I started by looping the 18 second sound clip that I included in one of my recent blog posts and used it as a sort of background soundscape to open up with. I put a few plug-ins onto the track to enhance the track a little bit. I added a stereo spread and sample delay to help spread the track across the stereo field, and a short room reverb (I’m not entirely sure why I did this but I felt as though it made the track sound a little better).

Sample Delay settings for the background track
Stereo Spread settings for the background track
Reverb settings for the background track

I then used a technique that I had used in a previous project – I looped the sound effect of coins dropping that I previously posted on this blog, to make it sound as if it was never ending and the coins never stop dropping. I did this previously in my first project where I made it sound as though a door would not stop creaking open for 2 minutes. I find that if used effectively, this can definitely create a sense of unease in the listener as normally you would not hear that sound continuing for that amount of time – you usually only hear coins dropping from a machine or a door creaking for a couple of seconds at a time.

Looped sections of the coins dropping

Already from having these two tracks put together, with all of their overwhelming noises, I figured out that I could make a disturbing piece of sound art that relates to my social anxiety when I am in public spaces. It would be an interesting concept to make something that is purposefully unpleasant to listen to, as I feel like that is one of the only ways to make an audience understand truly how horrible anxiety can be at times. To listen to it and just feel overwhelmed and want it to be over is a very uncommon reaction to want to get from an audience, but I feel as though it could be an interesting experiment.

I tried to add a couple more field recordings from the arcade but it ended up not sounding great and decided it was time to add some new textures.

A field recording from Hastings that I ended up not using

I found an experimental synth preset on my DAW called ‘Old Robot Factory’ which was very percussive and eerie sounding. I changed some of the settings and added an EQ and some stereo spread and this is the result I got:

‘Old Robot Factory’ Drums

At the moment I’m keeping it quite low in the mix, as having it too high does make it feel a bit like a horror/sci-fi track from the mid 20th century. However, if you have it quieter it just adds to a general feeling of unease.

The last thing I’ve added so far to cause a big sense of anxiety is a high pitched, distorted laugh that sort of sounds like a deranged child-demon mocking the listener. Here is the original piece of audio that I recorded, without any plugins:

As you can hear, it doesn’t sound particularly amazing. In order to fix this I added a vocal transformer, chorus, EQ, reverb, heavy compression and distortion. Here is the end result:

I’m not sure how I feel about this sound at the moment but I’m going to stick with it for now and see where the piece takes me. I think it definitely adds to the piece feeling very overwhelming, so in that sense it does work but I’m not sure if it maybe comes across too gimmicky.

Vocal Transformer for laughter track
Chorus for laughter track
Reverb for laughter track
Compressor for laughter track
Distortion for laughter track

This is as far as I am with the piece so far, and I will update the blog as I go along. I think I’m happy with the direction I’m taking, although if I had more time I would probably start off a few pieces and see which one I think is best.

Hyperacusis

In our psychcoacoustics lecture a few weeks ago, I came across a condition that I had never heard of before – Hyperacusis.

What is Hyperacusis?

According to the NHS website, “Hyperacusis is when everyday sounds seem much louder than they should”. It sometimes appears on its own but can also be caused by other conditions such as tinnitus (constant ringing of the ears), migraines and Lyme disease, amongst others.

The NHS website also states that sounds that can affect people with the condition include “jingling coins, a barking dog, a car engine, someone chewing or a vacuum cleaner”. Seeing as I just went to Hastings to record jingling coins (the first sound that NHS lists as causing difficulties), I wanted to research this condition more and find out how it affects people who have it.

Table by South Warwickshire NHS Foundation Trust showing the differences between Hyperacusis and other similar conditions such as Phonophobia and Misophonia.

How does it affect people in day-to-day life?

It’s all well and good reading about the condition and grasping how it might affect people, but for my research I wanted to find actual case studies of people who suffer from hyperacusis and see how it really impacts their day-to-day lives. I found an ABC interview from 2014 with Joyce Cohen and Ben Meltzer (https://abcnews.go.com/Health/quest-silence-living-wth-hyperacusis/story?id=22284805), a couple from New York who both suffer from an extreme form of the condition. The interviewer follows Cohen around the streets of New York, and it becomes apparent just how much this condition can affect people. Cohen walks around with industry grade ear protection over her head, which she only takes off “if I’m out in my block in the middle of the night…But typically, it’s too hazardous”.

Seemingly innocent noises such as a doorman blowing a whistle have an incredibly strong affect on Cohen – she describes the sensation as her “ears being filled with burning acid”. Matters are even worse for her husband, Ben Meltzer, who hasn’t been able to leave his apartment for years due to his condition. In fact, the only time he has left his apartment recently is for the interview, and even then the team has to take extra special precautions to accommodate him, such as removing all jewellery and footwear, and switching their phones to silent. Even when they are 29 stories above street level, they still have to briefly stop the interview when vehicle with a siren drives past the building on ground level.

In other cases hyperacusis has had an even more serious effect on those who are unlucky enough to develop it. A few years ago two young musicians who were seriously affected by the condition tragically committed suicide. Meltzer has since set up an online support group, Hyperacusis Ear Pain, in memory of the two.

What can be done to cure it?

Unfortunately, there is no specific medical treatment to help cure hyperacusis. However, there are certain therapies that have proven useful for some who suffer from the condition. CBT (Cognitive Behavioural Therapy), according to the British Tinnitus Assocation, is used to “recognise what is helpful and/or unhelpful in your everyday life when it comes to living with hyperacusis”. The therapist that works with the patient then tries to help find ways to manage the condition and reduce the impact it has on day-today activities.

There is also more specific therapy that is occasionally used for the condition, often delivered by therapists that also work with conditions such as tinnitus. They will usually work with the patient to gradually introduce aspects of noise into their life in a process known as sound therapy. The patient will be given a small device that plays quiet amounts of background noise, which is often something similar to white noise. They monitor how this affects the patient and then continue from that point as required. In a lot of cases this will be successful however there have definitely been cases where this hasn’t worked and the patient has kept suffering from the symptoms.

Bibiliography

  1. nhs.uk. 2019. Noise sensitivity (hyperacusis). [online] Available at: <https://www.nhs.uk/conditions/hyperacusis/> [Accessed 29 April 2022].
  2. Deutsch, G., 2014. On the Quest for Silence: Living With Hyperacusis. [online] ABC News. Available at: <https://abcnews.go.com/Health/quest-silence-living-wth-hyperacusis/story?id=22284805> [Accessed 29 April 2022].
  3. ENT Health. 2019. Hyperacusis – ENT Health. [online] Available at: <https://www.enthealth.org/conditions/hyperacusis/#:~:text=There%20are%20no%20specific%20surgical,affected%20ear%2C%20or%20both%20ears.> [Accessed 29 April 2022].
  4. Baguley, D. and McFerran, D., 2019. Hyperacusis. [online] British Tinnitus Association. Available at: <https://www.tinnitus.org.uk/hyperacusis> [Accessed 29 April 2022].
  5. Swft.nhs.uk. n.d. Hyperacusis information for audiology patients at Warwick Hospital. [online] Available at: <https://www.swft.nhs.uk/our-services/adult-hospital-services/audiology-hearing/hyperacusis> [Accessed 29 April 2022].

A Day out to Hastings

When we initially started this project, we were given the theme of ‘Change’. Although the theme eventually did end up changing to be whatever we wanted to take a piece about, I decided to stick with the original brief and record some change coming out of slot machines in an arcade, taking the brief rather literally (this was also a brilliant excuse to have a nice day out at the seaside which I rather enjoyed!)

As it was quite a last minute idea for me to go on the trip, I didn’t have time to take out a Zoom portable recorder so I had to record everything on my phone. I was initially very sceptical of this but decided to just press ahead anyway, and I found that I was quite happy with the results. Whilst I don’t think they were up to the same standard as a more professional recording device, I think that within a mix they would sound good enough to use.

Below are a couple of examples of recordings I made.

I think that the first, longer one could be used as a general background soundscape, although it is quite low quality. The second clip would sound great and I actually practiced using a noise gate and EQ to cut out all of the background noise and I think I now have a very usable piece of audio that can be placed over other clips to hide the small amount of noise that is still there:

Noise Gate settings for the clip
EQ Settings for the clip

I also saw a couple of really creepy looking arcade games that inspired me to maybe make something a little spooky: