TOPICS
TWITTER UPDATES
TUESDAY AUGUST 4, 2009

The power of Audio in your presentation!

What was your favorite movie?  What made it so memorable?  Recently I was asking a few Duartians at work what sound in a movie was most memorable to them?  I got a great response from the crew.  The variety was interesting because some people most remembered the orchestral sound score of a film.   Audio pieces like the Superman theme, or Star Wars, came up in the list.  There was even a mention of Harry Potter and the Pink Panther.  This was one distinct element of audio enhancing a film as musical interlude.

Another aspect of audio being a great additive was as an effect.  This isn’t new, theater performances have used sandboxes, breaking twigs, banging cups together and more since before Shakespeare era.  I always think to classic BBC films because they did so much soundstage work that enhanced their films.

Some Duartians recalled sounds like the Jaws theme, “da duh da duh”!  There was mention of classics like the shrieking sound during Alfred Hitchcock’s movie Psycho and the more modern “Transform” sound in Transformers.  These sounds become synonymous with the movie, or even a particular character within the movie.  Think of R2D2 in Star Wars for a moment.  He never says a word, only blips and bleeps, but the Sound Artist conveyed emotions like excitement and disappointment through a few simple electronic tones.  Over time, that memorable quality makes it brand worthy, and now is an extremely valuable commodity to the franchise and it’s licensing.

What were a few of the sounds that you remember most from a film, story, commercial, or anything?

Walter Murch, award winning Sound Designer and Editor for Hollywood, has worked on films like Apocalypse Now, The English Patient, The Godfather II, and many others.  When working on sound for Apocalypse Now, he said “We started with the script,” meaning they thought about sounds as they directed the visuals.  This collaborative effort allowed them to create environments around the characters that didn’t necessarily need to be displayed visually.

Audio shouldn’t be a slave to the visuals but instead should be thought of while all parts are in development, allow them to be collaborative as an element.   Randy Thom, another brilliant Sound Designer and Editor from major motion pictures like Forest Gump built this list in an article he wrote in 1999 titled

“Designing a Movie for Sound”.
Sounds Talents
Music, dialogue, and sound effects can each do any of the following jobs, and many more:
•    Suggest a mood, evoke a feeling
•    Set a pace
•    Indicate a geographical locale
•    Indicate a historical period
•    Clarify the plot
•    Define a character
•    Connect otherwise unconnected ideas, characters, places,  images, or moments
•    Heighten realism or diminish it
•    Heighten ambiguity or diminish it
•    Draw attention to a detail, or away from it
•    Indicate changes in time
•    Smooth otherwise abrupt changes between shots or scenes
•    Emphasize a transition for dramatic effect
•    Describe an acoustic space
•    Startle or soothe
•    Exaggerate action or mediate it

Of course like anything involved with design, presentations especially, there are clichés we should try to avoid.  Unless your presentation has a story, or theme, the context is important and audio shouldn’t be included “just because”.  Before my days as a Duartian I had seen more then my fair share of explosion sounds as a graph climbed to a high point.

But, a dramatic photo of a new business site can be enhanced with some environment sounds of the area.  If you have a slide mentioning how quiet your product runs in comparison to a competitor, why not let people hear that?

It’s another dimension that many people rarely explore, and adding audio to a presentation is very simple.  It can be applied to an object within a custom animation or over a series of slides using the transition feature.  Powerpoint and Keynote both are very capable of this media feature, but what you design with sound is that which makes the experience unique for your audience.

Slide:ology rule: Treat the Audience as King!

Tutorial:

Adding Audio to an Object Animation

Adding Audio Over Multiple Slides and Transitions

Back to Top

Topic: Design, Event, Tutorial, Video
Tags: , , , , , ,

  • COMMENTS (10)

Felix Pizarro

August 4th, 2009
7:02 pm

I usually present at churches, and since its more informal, I use both audio and video extensively. For example, some of The Last of the Mohicans music (Main Title, Elk Hunt) are just amazing for enhancing tension/problem slides (think study of Revelations!).
Great article!

Arnold

August 4th, 2009
9:55 pm

What software did you use for screen recording?
I like how it grays out the screen and highlights the center of interests with a circle

Maryanne

August 5th, 2009
8:14 am

I work for a local municipality. I recently viewed a training presentation created by our fire dept that combined an arial photo with the dispatch recording to show the progress and actions of the crews responding to a specific incident. The arial photo was the slide background, and animation was used to show crews arriving, entry points, apparatus used, etc. as they occurred in the audio.

Mark Heaps

August 5th, 2009
9:34 am

@Felix: Those are great examples of audio used for audience enhancement. Just understanding that level of engagement I’m sure makes your presentations very powerful.

@Arnold: It’s called Screenflow for Macintosh

@Maryanne: That’s great, and because it’s all individual elements the ability to edit and adapt makes it a very strong training tool. I can just imagine how exciting the audio playing over the aerial view must have been. Someone really had their thinking cap on with that one. How did that compare to other training presentations you’ve sat through before? Did you feel you were more engaged because it was peaking more then just the visual senses?

Louis St-Amour

August 5th, 2009
12:28 pm

The trouble I’ve had with audio in the past is the difficulties of getting it configured … often a room has video and mic covered, but adding in an audio feed from the computer can be tricky.

And what’s the difference between a presentation with audio and a movie? I wonder if such background noise will distract from the person presenting. I mean, Steve Jobs doesn’t go up on stage with an orchestra, even if he’s in a fancy hall. Instead he does the visual presentation (with a rock-star song intro) and saves the music to the end, as entertainment after the presentation.

Perhaps music during questions would be appropriate. ;-)

Mark Heaps

August 6th, 2009
9:30 pm

Hi Louis,

I agree that is a more common experience. Dealing with an AV team at an event hall can often be daunting and frustrating. But I don’t think that’s a good enough excuse to deny your audience your brilliant ideas at the full experience you can offer them. More often then not, AV teams like any vendor just require some advance notice and preparation. Find out who your point of contact is at the event, make them aware of your needs, and ask them if there are any special instructions they can offer you to prepare for the event.

Being a designer, and previously an AV guy for live events, it was more common that a presenter would show up hours before their talk and would say “Oh yeah, my presentation has sound so what do I need to do?” Taking presentation quality to the next level means respecting the craft and really investing in full preparation for the experience.

It’s true that presenters like Steve Jobs don’t have an orchestra, but he also doesn’t have a lift crane and that worked for Al Gore! It really depends on content, and context. I love Steve Jobs as much as the next guy but I don’t wear black turtle neck sweaters…you get my point. :O)

Movies were once silent, and presentations never had animation in the past. It’s all changing, and it’s getting better. Radio DJs talk over subtle sound audio, same with the news, and most broadcast media. Yahoo has their audio speech mark, and there are countless examples around us everyday. I feel like it’s the next evolution, using this extra dimension, and I’m here to help anyone with accomplishing that goal for sure. It mixes all of my passions, and I bet with some support we can help a lot of presenters accomplish more cinematic and engaging presentations for their individual message.

And music during QA = Genius! Or maybe some gameshow sounds…wah wah waaaaah!

Speaking of sound, my newborn is crying…good night everyone!

Susan Murphy

August 9th, 2009
1:47 pm

Mark,

Thank you for the great demos on adding sound to presentations. I am new at saving sound files. When you say you use a wave file, where do you find the sounds and how do you save them as a wave file? Need special software?

Appreciate all your great work.

Susan

Mark Heaps

August 14th, 2009
7:36 pm

Hi Susan,

there are all kinds of free wav file sites out there. Often if you just google a particular sound with .wav extension you’ll find a site that hosts it. However, now istockphoto.com offers very affordable audio sounds at a good quality.

If however you want to edit your own sounds there are a variety of software programs available on both mac and windows. I am a mac guy personally so I use Garageband because it came free with my mac and after a little bit of tinkering it’s very easy to use. If you go to http://www.download.com you can search by operating system, and even refine your search for Freeware. Just do a search on “wav editor” and there are plenty of choices to experiment with. Once you have got your program, and a few sound files to experiment with, the rest is just down to some creativity and patience.

Good luck! :O)

Andy

September 10th, 2009
10:40 am

Hi Mark,
Thank you for sharing a great capability!
I looked into using Screenflow to share my presentations and tutorials but found out it’s only available for Mac.
I work in Windows and (I’m embarrassed to say) run Windows 2000. Do you know of a PC software that accomplishes similar functionality as Screenflow that will run on my OS?
Thank you!
Andy

Robert

September 22nd, 2009
1:51 pm

@Andy…there’s a few screen capture software tools out there…Captivate by Adobe and Camtasia by Techsmith are both pretty popular. There’s also an open source software called CamStudio.

Personally I found Camtasia the easiest to use, but it’s not without it’s limits.

  • SUBMIT A COMMENT






© 2010 Duarte Design, Inc.  • Privacy Policy  • comments@duarte.com  • Log out