Ear Training For Audio Engineers - Oscillator Exercises
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Revision as of 12:32, 22 March 2023 by Marjoriegarce (talk | contribs)
Revision as of 12:32, 22 March 2023 by Marjoriegarce (talk | contribs)
Old school professional audio engineers, like our boy Dave Pensado, have invested a lot of TIME training the ears to HEAR frequencies.
Overview
Ear training is very important for both musicians and audio engineers. For musicians, traditional ear training includes: identifying intervals (Major, Minor, Diminished, etc) and chord changes (I-IV-V, ii-V-I, etc.). While audio engineers generally need to recognize specific frequencies. For example, they need to understand that Middle C (C3) = 261hz. Here is helpful cheat sheet for finding the Frequencies of Musical Notes
To complete this assignment, you will need the following tools:
- DAW
- As always, you can work in the DAW of your choice
- Some type of oscillator (hardware synth, virtual synth/plugin, tone generator, etc)
- The oscillator must be able to generate basic wave forms (sine, sawtooth, square, pink noise, white noise), and must be able to control the frequency and the waveform
- If there isn't a synth or tone generator that comes with your DAW, you can find a free one here
- Real-Time Spectrum Analyzer
- So you can identify and see the frequency that you’re playing
- free Spectrum Analyzer plugins here
- Filters
- At least High-Pass Filter (HPF) and Low-Pass Filter (LPF)
Instructions
- Instantiate a sine wave oscillator and listen to these basic frequencies
- 100 Hz
- 500 Hz
- 1000 Hz
- 4000 Hz
- 8000 Hz
- 12000 Hz
- A sine wave is a pure tone with no harmonic overtones
- Go here for more info: MusicTheory:Harmonics
- Watch the Real-Time Analyzer as you listen
- What you hear will be dependent upon your speakers and/or your headphones
- If your speakers aren't capable of reproducing 100hz, you will see the frequency on the analyzer, but you won't hear it
- This is also all influenced by your room acoustics
- Which is a whole other art and science
- After listening to different frequencies using a sine waves, listen using a complex wave form like sawtooth wave
- A sawtooth wave is comprised of sine waves and contains both even and odd harmonics
- Use this to train your ears to hear the difference between sawtooth and sine wave
- Notice it has a buzzy sound and that your RTA is displaying all of the frequencies that are comprising the sawtooth wave
- Change the fundamental frequency of the sawtooth wave and see how the corresponding harmonics change
- Now listen to the same frequencies you did using the sine wave (100hz, 500hz, 1000hz, 4000hz, 8000hz, 12000 hz)
- On the same track, instantiate a filter. Apply the filter to the sawtooth wave
- Watch and listen to how the different filters (High Pass, Low Pass, etc) affect the sound
- Create a 1 min video screencast of you listening back to different waveforms while using your analyzer
- Upload that video file to a platform like YouTube or Vimeo
- It can be private/unlisted with permissions set so that anyone with the link can view
Submit in Canvas
- Paste a link to your video (on YouTube, Vimeo, etc.)
- Double check that your sharing/viewing permissions are correct
Next Steps
In the future, as you have time...
- Replace the oscillator with Music!
- 24 bit WAV files!
- Mastered Mixes
- Unmastered Mixes
- Vocals
- Various Instruments
- Drums
- Bass
- Guitars
- etc...
- Use Equalizers (filters) to boost and cut various frequencies
- Train your ears to recognize these frequencies