#Record player sound effect movie#
I admit, the trailer has all the hallmarks of a bad children’s movie – the cheesy voiceover, the record scratch moment, the prerequisite scatological humour where Kevin Spacey urinates in his ex-wife’s handbag, and the wordplay. Jamie Kastner, National Post, 12 February 2005
#Record player sound effect tv#
On TV it'd be one of those record-scratch moments when everything stops and the high school kids stare at each other. Record scratch is often used attributively to modify moment, showing that the associations made of the sound effect have become clichés: : the sound of a phonograph needle suddenly producing a single scratching sound on a record as an abrupt interruption-used to call immediate attention to something He outright denied that Hitler used chemical weapons against "his own people."Ī dictionary definition of record scratch would incorporate both the literal and figurative elements of its use:
The term then moved from the literal to the figurative: these sound effects were so often used to accompany the depiction of surprise or a sudden change of subject on TV and in movies that record scratch has come to mean “something that abruptly calls attention to surprise or change”:īut Pelosi's statement refers to Spicer's comments as "downplaying the horror of the Holocaust." It's a record scratch of a line: Spicer didn't downplay anything. Simon Houpt, The Globe and Mail (Toronto), 12 January 2002 CNN maintains it was actually a record scratch-a common TV sound effect emphasizing surprise. competitor, Fox News, crowed that the word "sexy" was accompanied by the sound of a zipper. Subsequently, record scratch came to be used in contexts that referred to sound effects rather than music: Rob Bailey, Arizona Daily Star, 16 November 2001 "In terms of having stuff like the record scratches and organ sounds, adding them to the live performance would mean dealing with tape loops and other musicians," Valentine said. Record scratch as a description of the sound itself was initially used in music contexts: Herald Sun (Melbourne, Australia), 22 April 1988 The DJ hand-turns a record to "scratch" the music and make sound effects, or intersperse other music. Jon Pareles, The New York Times, 17 Jun. ST., whose instrument is a turntable and who makes sounds by ''scratching'' records back and forth. Hancock is a veteran jazz pianist who has kept up-to-date with the latest gadgets and styles the Rockit Band includes Grandmixer D. In addition, they work with a live band rather than a record-“scratching” dee-jay. The literal sound came to be used figuratively as a rhetorical interruptionīy the ‘80s, the terms had moved beyond music journals and were being used in print in major newspapers: