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To create our soundtrack, we used vocal techniques, the guitar and sound samples
of trains and animals. We mixed a wind-like vocal with classical guitar
stylings and mixed in some samplings of horses galloping across the plains
and a train-whistle.
~ Charles Calderon & Emmanuel Coronel (North American Mammals)
Our favorite room in the museum was the gemstone room because when we walked
in the room it felt as if we were spaced out, because the room was dark
and the light was coming out on the bottom of the gems. It seemed like
they were
floating. We mixed different songs together and played with them until
we found the sound we wanted.
~Eymee Gonzalez , Irene Velasquez, Karina Puerto, Geovany Gaona and Jessica
Calabro (The Movement of Gems)
The goal of our group was to make our music give our audience
visuals of shining crystal gems. We wanted a lot of high-pitched shiny
noise that sounded beautiful. When you listen to our musical gem piece,
we hope
you see crystals, cuz we do.
~ Ashely Navarro, Jonathan Freeman, Samm Gaber, Remy Velasquez (Crystals
and Gems)
We really wanted to do something different and unusual; not the usual thing
you might hear on the Discovery Channel. Insects have a lot of adrenaline
and are high -- they are everywhere. So we selected some techno music to
mix in
with insect sounds. Each of the members of the group has different taste
in music and so we each contributed something different to the sound.
~Oscar Anti, Bryan Lopez, Christian Mendez & Christian Anguino (Insects)
We pretty much made our soundtrack from scratch. We threw a bunch of sounds
together and came up with the best project. Juan got a song from a group
called Nile, Anthony and CJ threw in some hip-hop beats, and Hanna put
them all together.
We were trying to create an African Mammal sound and we think it came out
rather well.
~Anthony Talavera, CJ Montano, Juan Diaz and Hanna Landaverde (African
Mammals)
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