Tag: Hear No Evil Sound

  • Panels and Workshops, oh my!

    Panels and Workshops, oh my!

    I don’t get to update this site often. I work different projects every week, make music, work on AES Columbus’ site and newsletters, teach, write, practice, and attend a lot of workshops and panels. 

    Women in Media Panel at CRASS 2022

    I usually take a screenshot though and will have to make a collage one rainy day soon. This whole site needs overhauled and merged with my other site using one of those Hootsuite apps, or whatever they’re called. I could stand to work on a reel site and maybe swap out a few gigs. But, life is good. Technology is getting really good lately, isn’t it? I’m at my best when learning instead of pushing the same buttons every day.

  • Opera Project Columbus wins

    Opera Project Columbus wins Columbus’ biggest arts awards for organizations with budgets under $1 million dollars. Congratulations!

    It took me a while to post this–I am a one-person boutique with a lot happening. We’re all navigating this overwhelming pandemic. But I want to note this project as I look back over 2021.

    The content Opera Project Columbus programmed for Black History Month was choice. They chose from Rosephayne Powell’s art-song collection tribute to Phillis Wheatley. “I Want To Die While You Love Me” is wonderfully dark and the text to that is great lyric writing. Dr Battle did a soulful interpretation of Moses Hogans’ spiritual. The content choices, the singers, and the pianist were admirable. And I like that they had young Zion recite Langston Hughes’ “I, Too, Sing America” then ended the program with Margaret Bonds’ song portrait of the poem which Dr Bennett sang powerfully. She also beautifully sang “Since You Went Away” by Ohio’s own Leslie Adams. They really deserved this recognition from Greater Columbus Arts Council. Congrats to Leslie McBride, the Maestro, and all at CAPA and OPC!

    I was on the small nimble crew that created the “I Too, Sing America” video with Spyroll Studios. It wasn’t a grueling shoot with long setups, several takes, or edits—didn’t want to exhaust the singers. I sang opera a lifetime ago and was excited to handle sound. Love the promo shot with Dione Bennett in that cool nouveau headdress singing into my U87! Ai, ha. Lincoln Theatre graciously let me use their CL5 and opened their mic cabinet. Paul Kavicky made sure I got DPA 4099s from the Ohio Theatre. And Lincoln’s manager Jim hooked me up—I asked if I could hang a couple of Neumann KM185s from the catwalk and he climbed up there and did it! Just cool people interested in facilitating the best sound. I had plenty of options to do quick budget-minded post-production.

    Here is the award celebration video emceed by Angela Pace. Jump to 26:22 to hear about “I, Too, Sing America” and Opera Project Columbus!

    And please do check out the “I Too, Sing America” video, the soundtrack for which has been widely shared with schools.

  • Field & Post-Production Audio – Lesley Ann Fogle

    Field & Post-Production Audio – Lesley Ann Fogle
    Lesley Ann Fogle
    Here’s some of my recent field recording and post-production mix sound work. Well, the Highball video is from 2019…I did sound for the 2020 video as well but need to track down the link.
    I do several different jobs per week so have a lot of material but little time to work on reels. I grabbed these links to secure an upcoming job. Just hit me up if you’re looking for a specific genre of audio work for your job. Thanks!

    HGTV Hart Tools – Steve Ford
    Field Audio & Post-Production Audio – Lesley Fogle, Hear No Evil Sound

    Opera Project Columbus
    Field Audio & Post-Production Audio – Lesley Fogle, Hear No Evil Sound
    Lincoln Theater – What a fun project this was to record and mix the singers!
    I studied opera back in the day and I like to hear vocals mixed well without heavy-handed compression.


    Highball Halloween
    Field Audio & Post-Production Audio – Lesley Fogle, Hear No Evil Sound

    Action For Children – Childcare is Essential
    Field Audio & Post-Production Audio – Lesley Fogle, Hear No Evil Sound

    Jewish Columbus – Together We Shine 
    Field Audio & Post-Production Audio – Lesley Fogle, Hear No Evil Sound
  • Artist-In-Residency at ACPA

    Artist-In-Residency at ACPA, the Arts & College Preparatory Academy

    These days I start off my posts by saying that I am not able to update this site often. I do a new shoot or project every week with many irons in the fire. And of course creating art is a priority in my personal time. We do a decent job of keeping the After-Death Plan website and related social media updated…at the best of times.

    But I want to post about a couple of important things, my recent artist-in-residency at the Arts & College Preparatory Academy (ACPA) and also the wonderful Professional Development grant awarded to me by the Greater Columbus Arts Council.

    First, the artist-in-residency: The grant was written by Ben Shinaberry at ACPA, the Arts & College Preparatory Academy, here in Columbus Ohio and awarded by the Ohio Arts Council. There is an excellent program at ACPA called Bandlab, taught by Noah Demand, where students form groups that study music, write songs, and practice consistently. The grant was to bring in an engineer/recording artist to record a song with each of the eight Bandlab bands comprised of 40 students.

    We started with recording preparation sessions where I talked with students about what to expect during their time with me. Aided by some Song Description sheets I’d sent them to fill out, I met the students, gave them an overview of session protocol and the hardware/software we’d use, and talked about what to expect and how to get ready for their recording session. This as aided by informative visuals:

    Color Coding

    And, at times, snarky visuals such as this one on sensitive studio mics:

    Microphone vs Sandwich

    I spent some time getting things organized: labeling snakes, setting up equipment, updating drivers, tweaking the Pro Tools session template, etc. We were set to go for the two weeks of tracking with a different band each day.

    During the prep session we’d made a list of students interested in engineering whether as a potential career or just to further their own music. Those students switched off in the engineer’s chair while I talked them through running the session. Each player connected their own cabling which was color-coded and corresponded to the patch bays, pre-amps, and session inputs; and worked with each other while we went through the lengthier process of dialing in everyone’s tone and levels. Being a whole new experience for most, we typically did quite a few takes before finding our working scaffold/take with the most solid drum foundation. Then, generally, we overdubbed or punched in any parts of instruments that needed work. From there we generally overdubbed the vocals to eliminate all of the drum and amp bleed from the original tracking. And from there we moved on to vocal mults and harmonies.

    This was a hands on, engaging experience. Different groups spent their time in different areas. One group built a blanket fort around the drum set to calm some of the room reflection, another lined the kick drum with carpet tiles, another spent the bulk of the tracking day re-arranging their song and making it stronger with better chord progressions, another focused on building both the chorus and hooks with instrumental and vocal overdubs, and another spent a large portion of time working on group vocals. One person declared they’d played the wrong chords at part of a song for months and even live because they could never hear themselves and everyone else simultaneously. And most of the singers had not used a condenser mic and were very interested in studio mic technique. I could go on and on here but the basic premise is that we came to these conclusions through discussion and the students learned a lot about technique and arrangement through this experience where every note was heard and permanently captured.

    That was about the entire school day for most of the groups though some of the groups were able to fit in some edit time after a crash course on editing. Honestly, we could easily have spent a week on concepts alone so these were action-packed days. And these Bandlab teens were all very talented and into recording the songs they had written.

    We then moved on to mixing concepts with each of the eight groups. After rearranging the space a bit to get the monitors at ear level, I met with each group to discuss mixing concepts. Working wth their basic plug-in bundle, I imported some fx busses into their template so we could quickly activate any needed effects. We started with basic editing concepts then mostly started honing in on drum sounds individually and as a whole before incorporating the bass till the entire rhythm section gelled nicely. We went over the concepts of the frequency spectrum and where each person’s instrument sits in that spectrum in order to touch on EQ, panning, compression, delay, and the types of reverb. We touched on many mix concepts and though it takes time to train one’s ears, I hope this gave everyone the encouragement to keep experimenting with mixing.

    Parallel Compression
    Parallel Compression

    Vocal Treatment Choices
    Vocal Treatment Effects Options

    Then we moved on to finding placement and tone for the guitars and keys to sit in the mix before dressing up the vocal.

    That about summarizes the experience. Anyone who mixes knows you can work for weeks on an individual track while we created these recordings in a short amount of time. That said, the songs sound great and really don’t need to be tweaked further because there is no doubt that the next series of recordings will start st a level where these recording leave off…you know what I mean? The level of talent these young ones possess is eye-opening and I’m glad they were able to hear just how good their songs can sound in a controlled environment. I look forward to hearing the tracks assembled into an ACPA album! I’ll post info here when it’s released. It may not be mastered so crank it!

    I might also add that I wanted to take this opportunity to show female visibility to potential aspiring engineers. It took over a decade for me to see another woman working in post-production audio in the relatively large arena of Chicago. The number of women in the industry has apparently risen to a whopping 5%. I have some insight into why young women might be intimidated by this field and want to do my part in empowering future generations in going after their dreams. The inner voice is genderless.

  • Psycho Social Sexual by After-Death Plan

    Psycho Social Sexual by After-Death Plan

    Psycho Social Sexual by After-Death Plan

    ADP_Psycho Social Sexual

    Let me start by saying that I am not able to keep the work I do very current on this site. I go through a new shoot/project/scenario every week and keeping up with the work is priority. I’ve been threatening to take a week to update my reel but the time has not presented itself.

    But I do want to post about our new album and music videos. I updated a bit of my gear to record and mix this album. Mostly links will have to do here because we’ve already spent a lot of time creating and promoting this work. The new album, released January 15, 2019 is called Psycho Social Sexual. There is a considerable amount of info about it and press coverage of it on our website: www.afterdeathplan.com

    Our first video for the song Neil Harvey premiered Pure Grain Audio: https://puregrainaudio.com/videos/gothic-art-rock-duo-after-death-plan-leverage-video-to-share-the-dark-tale-of-neil-harvey-exclusive-premiere?fbclid=IwAR1a14zEO8hhQ8_0GC38iHps3SU3BgeeuAl-4HDiQVM-NSJuiX96hGMcEjo

    Followed by the second premiere of Psycho Social Sexual on Ghettoblaster Magazine: http://ghettoblastermagazine.com/video-premiere-after-death-plan-psycho-social-sexual/

    We released the next video, Starlight, ourselves: https://www.afterdeathplan.com/single-post/2019/01/20/Music-Video-for-Starlight-by-After-Death-Plan

    And Columbus Underground premiered the video for Walkinghttps://www.columbusunderground.com/local-music-spotlight-after-death-plan-gw1

    Time is pretty tight but best thing is to reach out to me if you’ve a professional project that needs sound or voice. I’m always open to a pitch on artistic projects as well. Worst case scenario is that someone will have listened and appreciated the concept.