Suspension of disbelief
This is a term – or maybe a thought process – that I rarely run across.
I suppose that if you were actively thinking about how real the recording sounds, and you were thinking about the sound effects more than the music, it could happen.
Of course, while I appreciate the term emotional engagement, and it certainly does happen, for me and my clients, we use the term Musical Engagement.
Here is the example that I have used on every voicing session for the past ten years or so.
I know when I am finished voicing when I find myself falling into the music on any and all of 70+ tracks on my RoomPlay playlist. I’ve probably heard these tracks thousands of times, and I know what’s coming in the next second, but only when the ME Factor – Musical Engagement – comes forward on the tracks do I turn to my client and say, “We’re done.”
This is not meant to be a criticism of “Suspension of Disbelief”, just as an alternate viewpoint/course of action.
This is a term – or maybe a thought process – that I rarely run across.
I suppose that if you were actively thinking about how real the recording sounds, and you were thinking about the sound effects more than the music, it could happen.
Of course, while I appreciate the term emotional engagement, and it certainly does happen, for me and my clients, we use the term Musical Engagement.
Here is the example that I have used on every voicing session for the past ten years or so.
I know when I am finished voicing when I find myself falling into the music on any and all of 70+ tracks on my RoomPlay playlist. I’ve probably heard these tracks thousands of times, and I know what’s coming in the next second, but only when the ME Factor – Musical Engagement – comes forward on the tracks do I turn to my client and say, “We’re done.”
This is not meant to be a criticism of “Suspension of Disbelief”, just as an alternate viewpoint/course of action.