Friday, July 3, 2009

Wild Track, Wild Sound, Wild Lines

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wild_track

Wild track
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Wild track, also known as wild sound and wild lines, is an audio recording intended to be synchronized with film or video but recorded separately. Generally, the term "wild track" refers to sound recorded on location, such as sound effects gathered when the cameras were not rolling or extra takes of lines performed for audio only.

[edit] Reasons to record wild track

* When only the sound is needed, not the image; for example, recording a scream that will be heard off-camera.
* When it is impossible to get good sound and video in the same take; for example, when actors are in a situation (such as the middle of a field in wide shot) that makes boom recording impractical and no wireless mics are available.
* When a take was good visually but there was a sound disturbance, and repeating the entire take is impractical.
* To obtain room tone (the background noise of a location) which is necessary for post-production sound editing.

Note that wild track is considered something of a "cheapie" solution to these problems, and a big-budget production is more likely to use studio-recorded sound in these situations, as its quality is more controllable and predictable than wild track.

[edit] Procedures related to wild track

* Dubbing, Automated Dialogue Replacement, in which actors read their lines in a studio setting to match lip movements already filmed.
* Voiceover, in which a voice track is used but not synchronized with onscreen action.
* Foley, in which sound effects are created in a studio.
* Scratch track, a temporary sound recording intended to be replaced later

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