Top-Rated Free Essay
Preview

Sound Acoustics

Good Essays
1397 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Sound Acoustics
Mr. Swihart
Current Date: 2/10/14
Due Date: 2/17/14
Acoustics and Psychoacoustics Essay

Today in Survey Recording Technology class, we were taken through a vast

majority of venues, in attempt to exemplify the many different ways of how sound

particles react in many different situations. Some are able to have high chances of

interaction such as reverberation and echoes, while other venues forced the sound to

distribute or even be absorbed. Many areas the class had been taken through also had

large capabilities of reflecting sound completely. The class was taken through two studio

rooms; Studio A and Studio B. Also, the class had the opportunity to witness the

mechanics of sound as it traveled through the two theatres; Gilespy and the Davidson

theatres. The class stood in awe at the acoustics provided in the two stairwells; North and

South. Finally, the class walked eagerly outside to the front of the News Journal Center,

and to the edge of the parking lot.

The very first two rooms that the class was taken two were both studio A, and

studio B. We all gathered around and listened to the crack-like hit of a snare drum fill the

room. In studio A, which was much more dry sounding, had a very “in your face” sound.

Mr. Swihart pounded on the snare drum in the middle of the room, and it sounded like the

crack would immediately refract off the hard, bare, non-treated wall, and would “blow

up” in your face. The floor was a hard wood, so it was also very reflective. However,

once the sound was able to reach the roof, it was dispersed evenly due to the treatment on

the ceiling. The walls were very flat, with very little treatment to help dim the

reverberation. When the snare drum was hit, it sounded very harsh and bright. Compared

to studio A, studio B was much more dense and sounded almost like a deeper, heavier

tone came from the drum when it was hit. Mainly, this was due to all of the absorption of

sound in the room due to the mass amount of treatment. All of the walls were a dense,

noise absorbing material, while there was also very tightly woven fabric covered chairs

all through-out the studio. Studio B was much smaller than studio A, however the noise

almost seemed quieter. There was no decay in sound either. It seemed that once the drum

was hit, it made its sound, and was immediately cut off because of all the dense, flat, soft

walls absorbing most of the remaining noise to cancel out any chance of reverberation.

Two other very interesting and well-acoustically-balanced were the Gilespy Hall,

and the Davidson Theatre. First, the class was brought into the Gilespy Hall. Walking

around, we all observed how the room was almost like a large circle, all centered around

a small, curvy wooden stage. There were many seats throughout the theatre, all of which

seemed to be woven in a tight cloth, like the chairs in Studio B. The walls were also

cloaked in a thick, soft fabric, from which I would think was to help cancel out any

chance of reverberation. Assuming I was going to hear a short dense noise like in studio

B, when the snare drum was hit, the class was in shock at how much of an echo was

made, and which direction of travel it took. The noise was mostly dense like studio B,

however it was not short and cut off. The drum made a very low-pitched echo the roared

through the entire theater. It seemed like the sound was able to reflect immediately off of

the wooden stage, be absorbed into the seats of the theatres, and distribution along the

ceiling corners. From which the noise was gathered in the ceiling corners, the ceiling was

untreated for noise cancellation, so the sound of the drum had a much louder crack up

near the edges of the wall. From these points of the theater are from where the echo came

from. The sound would refract back and forth between ceiling corners, to which is then

eventually absorbed into the lower treated areas of the wall. Compared to the Gilespy

Hall, we also had the opportunity to listen to the acoustics of the Davidson theatre, which

is where most of the orchestra bands have their performances. As we all walk out onto

the stage, it seemed almost silent. Even though this theatre was a very open, wide venue,

it seemed like sound was absent from the space. As soon as Mr. Swihart hit the snare

drum, the only area where we were able to hear sound, was out in the audience seating

area of the theatre. There was almost no noise on the giant wooden stage. On the stage,

which was very hard and wooden, there was a large, smooth wall with tilted tops and

edges for refracting the sound back into the direction of the audience. Mr. Swihart noted

to us that underneath the stage was a very large amount of treatment as well, which

helped absorb all of the possible noise that could happen upon the stage. The audience

portion of the studio was vastly open and untreated. The walls were flat and bare, the

ceiling was tall, and the room was long. There was much room for the sound to echo

throughout. There were tightly woven cloth seats that did have chances of absorbing

some sound, but it was all mostly a long decayed echo. Much like what we heard

previously in studio A, however the sound decayed for a much longer time period.

The two areas that I, along with most of the class, found the most interesting of the

entire news journal center, were the north and south stairwells that Mr. Swihart took us

through. First, we visited the north stairwell in the front of the building. This stairwell

consisted of multiple flat, bare, stone walls, and also giant glass windows peering out into

the parking lot in-front of the building. The stairs were also made of stone, along with the

ceiling above. Everyone walked into the stairwell, a tad afraid at how large the amplitude

of this room may be. As Mr. Swihart hit the snare drum, we heard a very intense amount

of amplitude and reverberation fill the air space around us. The sound was not absorbed

in any way, but fully reflected back and forth between the hard, stonewalls. The noise of

the snare drum sounded as if it were directly smacking you in the face. There was direct

sound, indirect sound, and a small bit of an early sound. Most of which, all noise was

reflecting back and forth of the walls. After, we visited the south stairwell in the back of

the building. The south stairwell, a lot like the north, was mostly concrete stone,

however, this room was fully concrete stone. The stairs, the walls, the ground, the ceiling,

the railing, everything was made out of stone, and this room was about four stories tall,

unlike the first stairwell, which was only two stories tall. Even though in this stairwell,

the direct sound amplitude was very large, the indirect sound was a lot more vibrant than

the first stairwell. With a lot more space and concrete for the sound of the drum to bounce

off of, the sound was able to decay at a very slow rate, due to the lack of absorption from

no wall treatment. In studio B, the hit of the snare was short, direct and heavy. However,

in this stairwell, the opposite took place. This area was a very dry, bright sounding noise,

that echoed on for about seven seconds.

At the end of our tour we, the class, all had a better understanding of how different

sounds and noises react in different venues, with certain materials, and with the amount

of treatment that takes place. We were able to hear and compare all of the similarities and

the differences, and we learned more about amplitude, decay, echo, absorption,

reflection, and all the factors that make certain noises, sound the way that they do. After

this tour of the News Journal Center building, we all had a better understanding of how

the mechanics of acoustics and psychoacoustics work.

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Satisfactory Essays

    Classroom 3-A, Hajime couldn't tell if he was lucky or unlucky to be in a classroom with his peers. The faces he found familiar were outnumbered by the many unfamiliar faces. His saving grace was that his homeroom teacher was a breath of fresh air compare to the painfully boring teacher his earlier year. None worse than his freshman teacher who would yell at them about how entitle their generation was from the clothes they wear to the technology they used.…

    • 376 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Better Essays

    The place was mobbed, and there was loud applause as he walked in. He was led up to the second floor on the incredible glass escalators, and he took in the copper plated chimneys that used to be part of the former power…

    • 1775 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Deaf Book Review

    • 1834 Words
    • 2 Pages

    to their ears. Terry says “(the) sounds had started disappearing all around me. I didn’t…

    • 1834 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    Dave Matthews Band Essay

    • 837 Words
    • 4 Pages

    production. The sound has gone from a loose jamming sound with a lot of Jazz influence to a more polished studio sound.…

    • 837 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The 10 rooms include an administrative office, game room, k-1st classroom, 2nd-3rd classroom, 4th-5th classroom, library, two outreach offices, dance room, and computer room. Each room does not include any type of rate.…

    • 1385 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The facility is setup so that a large number of students can be accommodated rather quickly. There are four…

    • 741 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Best Essays

    The following report introduces two producers I draw inspiration from, and am influenced by; Rick Rubin and Ken Scott. Firstly to critically analyze their bodies of work we must first understand the role of a producer and what classifies an individual as a producer or engineer. A producer must be able to oversee and effectively manage the recording, they must be able to understand the bands vision, they must have an overall goal as to what they wish to produce with the band, they must be creatively innovative and true to the bands and their own style, they must effectively portray the story the band is telling through their song, they must be able to shape and mold a piece of music and make it sound cohesively perfect. The producer is relied on to take a sound and make it happen, they are expected to work within a certain timeframe and have to be able to follow the direction of the band, the overall mood and tonality of the song must be effectively conveyed in the piece and therefore an appropriate use of mixing must be analyzed by the producer in order to achieve the most relevant sound that the band is associated with. The producer must have a competent understanding of processing a sound, and the recording path that is used to do this. The role of a producer, however, has greatly changed over the past decade with the forever expanding world of technology - we mere a need a laptop and a simple recording device to be classified as a producer in today’s music society, furthermore as future producers ourselves we must have a sound knowledge of our industry that lays before us and the greats that are within it, for these are the people we will most learn by and draw inspiration from. To produce a reliable report the validity of resources must be considered, and the relevance of sources to the topic presented should be…

    • 3405 Words
    • 14 Pages
    Best Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Extending back from the main entrance, three academic wings house a learning media center, science, math, special education, and English on the first floor. The second floor houses four forum rooms, foreign language, social studies, driver's education, science and business education. An auditorium anchors the east portion of the building with a 65-foot fly space for theatrical and musical productions. Each classroom is equipped with a telephone, computer, and television. The learning media center provides print, audiovisual, and computer-related resources. There are three multipurpose forum rooms equipped with visionary computer, audio, video, and satellite technology. In addition heating, ventilation, air conditioning, and lighting are…

    • 3793 Words
    • 10 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Judgment Cochlea captures, corralling casually Sounds uncensored by receiving senses. Retreating ripples and their rolling resonance Steadily yet disconcertingly spur outward In some sort of a certain order. Juveniles jumbling as the jury judges, Turning and tumbling interminable pages.…

    • 321 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Reggae Drumming

    • 625 Words
    • 3 Pages

    The Snare is usually played along with the bass drum on the 3rd beat of each bar (sometimes more) the snare hit is often a rim-shot (which is when the snare-head) isn’t hit, but the rim of the snare is hit to provide a softer,…

    • 625 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    Sound Engineering

    • 1041 Words
    • 5 Pages

    As a future audio engineer, it is in my best interest to learn the techniques of audio production. For editing sound you need the proper equipment, whether it is software or hardware. In order to give sound a little flavor you will need to know about mixing. Mastering is what ultimately completes the sound. Equipment, mixing, and mastering are the most important steps in audio production.…

    • 1041 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    2- Providing 2 class rooms in EMC and the size of each class room is (10*16) – assumption.…

    • 313 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Better Essays

    Four rooms were prepared for the experiment. Two of the rooms were computer training classrooms, equipped with 16 computers each. One room was provided with yoga maths, blankets and sitting cushions. One room was prepared with chairs and tables.…

    • 1009 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    As an extension of building 1, we have seminar rooms A and B, where students’ and employees’ trainings, seminars, film showings, and other events are held.…

    • 1455 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    7. Teachers movements restricted to the front of the class Because students’ chairs and tables have locked every space.…

    • 343 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays

Related Topics