- Field recording
Field recording is the technique for capturing the audible illustration of an environment, produced outside of a
recording studio . A "field recording" is the actual recording that is produced.Field recording, sometimes called
Phonography , was originally employed as a documentary adjunct to research work in the field, but has since also found use as evocative art in itself.Techniques
Field recordings are usually recorded on portable devices which utilize DAT (Digital Audio Tape) or completely digital (hard disk/Flash) technology, to reproduce an exact audio replica, or
soundscape . Other dated, yet popular means for field recording are the analog cassette (CAC), the DCC (Digital Compact Cassette), and theMiniDisc . The latter two are declining in popularity due to the loss of fidelity resulting from their data compression technologies such as Sony's ATRAC. MiniDisc, however, particularly in its contemporary lossless HiMD version, is still used by many.Research
Ethnomusicology
Field recording was originally a way to document oral presentations and
ethnomusicology projects (pioneered byCharles Seeger andJohn Lomax ).Bioacoustics
Field recording is an important tool in
bioacoustics and biomusicology, most commonly in research onbird song . Animals in the wild can display very different vocalizations from those in captivity.Art
Music
The use of field recordings was in the
avant-garde ,musique concrete , experimental, and more recently ambient was evident almost from the birth of recording technology. Most note worthy for pioneering the conceptual and theoretical framework with art music that most openly embraced the use of raw sound material and field recordings wasPierre Schaeffer who was developingmusique concrete as early as 1940. Field recordings are now common source material for a range of musical results from contemporary musique concrete compositions to film soundtracks and effects.Radio documentary
Radio documentaries often use recordings from the field e.g. a locomotive engine running, for evocative effect. This type of sound functions as the non-fictional counterpart to the
sound effect .Politics
During the early years of commercial recordings, the speeches of politicians sold well, since few people had radios. The HMV catalogue for 1914 - 1918 lists over a dozen such records, by Lloyd George and other politicians. Probably the last time such records sold well was in 1965, when the LP "The Voice of Churchill" reached number 7 in the Uk album charts. This was immediately after his death.
ee also
*
Biomusic
*Soundscape External links
* [http://history.sandiego.edu/gen/recording/field.html Early history]
* [http://www.quietamerican.org/links.html Do-It-Yourself field recording advice] at Quiet American
* [http://www.gruenrekorder.de/ Gruenrekorder]
* [http://www.throughmyears.com/ Examples of some field recordings]
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