This post is my summary of the first audio storytelling genre for ds106. The assignment required creating several audio projects, including a mandatory “Spooky Season” story and enough other assignments to total at least 9 stars. After creating each piece, I posted them to my blog and have collected them all here, along with a final reflection on the process.
Part I: My Audio Assignments
1. Spooky Season (4 Stars)
- [Spooky Season]
- This was the required assignment to create a 20+ second spooky story. I created a scene of someone walking in the rain and entering a haunted house.
2. Make Noise From a Normal Sample (3 Stars)
[Cat Meow into Industrial Noise]
- For this assignment, I took a simple sound of a cat meowing and completely transformed it using distortion, reverse, and echo effects in Audacity.
3. All the Relaxation (2 and a half Stars)
- [Relaxation]
- The goal here was to create a loopable, relaxing soundscape. I layered sounds of wind, rain, and a spontaneous bird call to build a peaceful natural scene.
Part II: My Reflection
This was my first time diving deep into audio editing, and it was a really interesting experience.
- What did you learn? I learned the fundamentals of working with a digital audio workstation (Audacity). The most important skill I picked up was audio layering; learning that you build a “soundscape” by putting different tracks on top of each other. I also learned how to use the Time Shift tool to control when sounds happen, which was key for the Spooky Season story.
- What drove you crazy? Why? The SoundCloud copyright bot. That was easily the most frustrating part. I used sounds from freesound, but my Spooky Season story still got flagged and taken down immediately. It drove me crazy because I was following the rules, but the automated system didn’t care. It was a good lesson in why you need a backup plan, and I was relieved I could just upload the MP3 directly to my blog.
- What was harder than you thought it would be? Making something sound good was harder than I expected. It’s easy to drag and drop 10 sounds on top of each other, but it just sounds like a mess. The “All the Relaxation” assignment was a good example. I had to adjust the volume levels and use fades to make the wind, rain, and bird calls sound natural together, rather than just being a wall of noise.
- What was easier? Honestly, getting started with Audacity was easier than I thought. It looks intimidating, but for these assignments, I only needed to know a few tools: the Selection tool, the Time Shift tool, and the “Effect” menu. The “Make Noise From a Normal Sample” assignment was really fun and surprisingly easy; just layering effects like Distortion and Reverse created a cool result really fast.
- What did you enjoy? Why? I really enjoyed the “Make Noise” assignment. It felt like pure experimentation. There was no “right” answer, and it was a lot of fun to take a normal cat meow and completely destroy it with effects until it sounded like something from an industrial or sci-fi movie. It was a great way to learn what all the different effects do without any pressure.



