Bela Belazs READING
A few pages in, the reading goes on about how a silent space in film doesn't seem real to the viewer. I had never really thought about sound in that way. Texture is a word usually associated with touch, but sound gives us the texture needed, in film, for a place to seem real. A busy cityscape is numb without the texture that sound provides. It feels like you're not there without it. Further on it talks about the ear being able to pick up on more subtle nuances than the eye. This, I suppose is what gives us the ability to make music. Maybe this is what gives us the ability to sink more deeply into auditory experiences? I find myself moved more by the beauty of music or more deeply enthralled in a podcast than I would seeing something that is visually beautiful or watching a movie. I have never gotten goosebumps from seeing something beautiful, but let Joe Cocker get towards the end of "With a little help from my friends" and you would think someone turned the AC up I'll have so many goosebumps.
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