2008.10.12

What? Third Coast is over? Already?

I feel like I was in a car racing down a highway lined with amazing people and incredible ideas.

I didn’t get to meet everyone or take in everything that was available, yet the people I did connect with and the sessions that did resonate with me proved to me that this was the conference to attend.

I have long preached the use of ambient sound as a way to provide a backdrop to an audio piece.  However, Jens Jarisch’s session, The Inner Sound of the Outer World, has changed the way I think about the use of ambient sound for storytelling and effect.  His approach makes the ambient sound a character in the production and allows the ambient sound to tell elements of the story.  He played several examples of how he has used this approach in his documentary work in order to take the listener inside the minds and bodys of the foreground characters.  In most cases, he has used the naturally occurring ambient sound instead of adding it in post production.  However, he did play and discuss an example of how he has done this with post-production trickery.  The emotional impact of one piece was so incredible that a few of us techy-types asked a series of questions on how he did it so effectively and naturally (did you use a low-pass filter?).

I attended the first twenty minutes of Jonathan Goldstein’s session before having to leave for an appointment.  I had started to wonder if I should actually keep my appointment as Jonathan got to the meat of how to build a story that doesn’t appear to be a story at all and played an excerpt of a piece by Scott Switzer in which Scott told the story of his daughter’s first swimming lesson.  I wish I could say more about the session.  I kept my appointment.

The conference ended with the Kitchen Girls sharing a few of their favourite pieces of audio and video content followed by the reading of a short essay by Brian Eno about the impact of singing.

Some guitars, a bass, violin and a cool lute-like instrument from Russia materialized on stage and the room erupted into two songs recommended by Eno: Sixteen Tons and With a Little Help From My Friends.  Who knew that us audio geeks are such great musicians and singers?!  It was a great way to wrap-up the formal program of the conference.  You couldn’t help but feel connected to everyone and every idea as we all belted out the songs.

There is so much more to say and process.  I’ll have to post more later on.  I have to get ready for the da before I meet Jens for breakfast.

2008.10.11

Alive at Third Coast

One of the first two people I introduced myself to at the Third Coast PRX party last evening is an intern with the festival, Ben.  He knew about me.  I had contacted the festival from the airport in Edmonton to tell them that I was delayed and still coming.  Apparently word got out about my travel ordeal and my determination to get to the conference.

Ben told me that I’m one of two Canadians that met with in-flight emergencies en route to Third Coast.  I didn’t get all of the details on the other attendee.  It sounded like there was another passenger on his flight that had a medical emergency requiring the pilot to land the plane for medical care.

The PRX party was a unique experience for me.  I went in cold.  I don’t know anyone here.  And, because most of the people at the conference are NPR-connected somehow, I don’t even know their names.  And, with the exception of the people who know about my travel story, noone knows me from a hole in the ground.  That’s quite a difference from all of the social media conferences I attend.  In fact, I heard very little social media talk last night.

Having said that, I was introduced to Sean Cole who appeared on CBC’s The Current earlier this year with a piece he did on wanting to move from the United States to Canada.  It was an amazing documentary and Sean and I corresponded after the piece aired.  During our conversation, Sean told me that there are other Canadians at the conference including Jowi Taylor who I did some work for (see Six String Nation) and others that I’m not familiar with.

Later in the evening I met Sarah Boothroyd.  She works for Carleton University, just a twenty-minute walk from my house.

I feel ripped off that I missed so many great sessions yesterday including How to Make Good Radio When You Don’t Have Any Time or Good Tape, Noah’s “The Classics” and Caging Chaos: How to Produce Radio Stories That Aren’t Exactly Stories.  And, my audio doctor session, of course.

I’m looking forward to maximizing my day today, learning as much as I can possibly take in and meeting as many people as I can — cementing the real-life friendships that you don’t get to experience by friending a disembodied person in your favourite social media tool.

Photo: http://thirdcoastfestival.org/annual_conference.asp

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