Jay Rose

Jay Rose CAS is a Clio- and Emmy-winning sound designer whose studio career has included program opens for NBC, documentaries and spots for PBS and MGM, videogames for Parker Brothers, and close to a thousand independent film and video projects. He's also programmed audio software for broadcast manufacturers Eventide and Orban, written a column for DV Magazine and a few best-selling books about sound for film and video, and been a section officer of the Audio Engineering Society. More tutorials, humor, and info about his studio at dplay.com.


Friday, August 29, 2008

Hilarious. Also true.

How to interpret ‘crew wanted’ ads

Craigslist is a marvelous institution. There are editions for some 500 different cities, but you can still consider yourself lucky if you live near one. Among (lots of) other things, Craigslist has ads for temporary or permanent film/tv jobs. Some of those listings have more to do with a newbie director’s fantasies than anything real - no budget, no plans, no technique - but you learn to ignore them.

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Business
Pre-Production
Production
Training • (4) Comments • Most recent comments by: Download Movie, Reverse Phone Lookup, Mary Yurkovic, David, • Permalink



Monday, August 25, 2008

QuickTime Quickies

A couple of non-intuitive hacks for QuickTime audio

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I’m a soundie. So I frequently have to send music samples, progressive mixes, and other pieces of track to directors or clients for approval. Since I’m also a lazy soundie, I’ve discovered a couple of ways to speed up the process… and save my clients a lot of download time.

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Audio
Distribution
Post Production • (1) Comments • Most recent comments by: pccaudioprof, • Permalink



Friday, August 22, 2008

Free Book

I seem to be a premium…

I just learned that BeachTek is giving away copies of my recent Producing Great Sound for Film and Video (3rd Edition, Focal Press, March 2008), if you buy any of their products from their online store.

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Audio
Cameras
Production • (0) Comments • • Permalink



Tuesday, August 19, 2008

Vacuum Packed

Compress audio files without losing quality? You can, if you measure them the right way.

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My last two blog tutorials discussed neural masking, and how an mp3 or AAC can be good enough for broadcast or film sound when you do it right. (If you followed the link to my website, you even got proof.) But sometimes, even AAC’s tiny losses can be too much: you might be sending elements that will be processed or compressed more, or be saving an archive. While most non-audio files can be successfully squeezed with Winzip or Stuffit, those processes behave strangely with audio.

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Audio
Distribution
Post Production • (2) Comments • Most recent comments by: Mary Yurkovic, Travis, • Permalink



Saturday, August 16, 2008

Living with (Data) Loss

mp3 and its cousins are a fact of life… here’s how to get the most out of them

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If you do audio for the Web, broadcast, or movie theaters, sooner or later you’ll have to deal with some form of lossy data compression. But you don’t have to buy into the mp3 myths and hype. If you understand how those algorithms actually work - how they decide what data to lose - your tracks can sound a lot better.

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Audio
Distribution
Post Production • (0) Comments • • Permalink



Thursday, August 14, 2008

Hearing What’s Not There

Sometimes, making data disappear can be acceptable

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Ever wonder how magicians make a large object disappear, or a woman’s dress instantly change color?  According to a study in Nature Reviews Neuroscience, cognitive scientists have been wondering as well. The scholarly, footnoted article explains magic tricks in terms of the visual and neurological quirks they rely on. It credits The Amazing Randi, The Great Tomsoni, and Teller (of “Penn and…”) as co-authors. It’s visually oriented - as is a lot of magic - but abracadabra: Here on the audio side, we’ve been benefitting from that kind of research for years. You can benefit, too.

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Audio
Post Production • (2) Comments • Most recent comments by: JayR, billS, • Permalink



Friday, August 01, 2008

Deep Throat, Cetacean

What whales consider sexy… and what’s really going on in the audio band.

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Ask and you shall receive. A few weeks ago, I posted a blog entry about some fascinating research on how hormonal changes can affect the attractiveness of a woman’s voice. In the entry, I wondered if there was an equivalent phenomenon for male voices.

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Audio
Post Production • (0) Comments • • Permalink



Page 1 of 1 pages



The Future of Visual Effects
Mark Spencer

Automatic matte extraction, touchup and rig removal?

Remove the Jitters
steve martin

Learn the ins and outs of Final Cut Pro’s SmoothCam filter

Graphic Design from Poetry
Mark Spencer

Interactive Graphic Design with Words

Match Frame Speed Changes
steve martin

Change clip speed without changing clip duration

In the Spotlight
steve martin

Emphasize your subject using this classic effect.







image

The Future of Visual Effects

Mark Spencer | 08/26- 11:50 AM

Automatic matte extraction, touchup and rig removal?

Some very smart folks in the University of Washington’s Computer Science department are cooking up some pretty amazing procedures that could well revolutionize the process of creating visual effects.

image

Remove the Jitters

steve martin | 08/20- 11:50 AM

Learn the ins and outs of Final Cut Pro’s SmoothCam filter

Remove unwanted camera movements from your shots using technology inherited from Apples’ Shake.

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