I am very excited and can hardly contain myself from letting my Pastor know how far the Lord has has provided for me to progress. I have now recorded and uploaded 17 days of readings, Genesis is now complete and I am moving forward with Exodus. While I doubt I will be receiving any hits to the blog anytime soon, I thought it would be nice to record a few thoughts about generating the readings for the public.
First, awhile back I had seriously considered doing a fundraiser for my church in which the Bible would be read over a period of "x" hours, like a marathon. Seeking sponsors and using it as a time of continuous fast and prayer as the participants, and anyone with the opportunity, would have the Word shared straight through. I originally thought it might be done in 60 hours, but I had no confidence in that number. So, I decided to read several chapters out loud and time myself, being sure to speak at an even, understandable pacing. The test was a failure because of the variety of chapted lengths, sure I could get through Genesis 10 in 5 minutes, but Psalm 119...not so much. So I decided to find a straight though reading which broke the Word into daily segments. I have discovered that by reading the Bible at an understandable pace in one year out loud requires about 14 minutes per day.
Using simple mathematics...14 x 365 = 5,110 minutes of reading = 85.17 hours. Therefore, it is plausible that a readthrough of the word may be completed in a little over 3 days and 13 hours. That may serve as a little long for a marathon reading and it would not provide any time for prayer breaks.
Next, I felt compelled to read through the Bible from start to finish one time myself using an existing plan in 2007. Of course I decided this on December 29th, so I had to scramble.
As you may have read in my prior post it took about 6 hours to complete the first couple of readings, and much of that time is spent on the technical aspect of recording, softening, saving, converting and uploading readings.
Recording: I did not have a great deal of success pausing my recordings and restarting, so with all the disturbances in my environment I found myself forced to record and re-record just the introduction about 6 times; the dogs would start playing, the kids would ask a question, the furnace would start up, the phone would ring or my wife would make the appalling choice to start the washer or dryer (about 6 feet from my makeshift recording studio). All of these events generally occurred about the time I reached the last sentence of the recording. So intead of trying my luck with recording 2 or 3 chapters at a time, I complete the previous chapter and record new readings one chapter at a time, then place the readings in order on a single track. This appears fairly effective so far, but I must admit there were a couple of chapters that were real trials.
Genesis Chapter 49 is a great example, I could not get a good start on the chapter at all, and then when I got started it seemed like very time I was almost complete the phone would ring!; I must have read that chapter about 8 times before I got through it.
While recording I am listening to the same music you are in the background, and don't ask me how I decide which music I will have in the background, it's really whatever seems to inspire me to read more. After I have completed the recorded reading I then arrange the music to cover the expanse of the reading as best I can.
Softening: While I have a reasonable reading voice, I. like most, cannot stand to hear my own voice recorded a capella. So I add light music in the background and then I use an equalizer to pretty much eliminate the highest frequencies since I dont want to sound more like a snake than I already do with my cheap microphone and to emphasize the baritone quality of my voice for a more relaxing, and less breathy. tone.
Yes, with a cheap DJ headset microphone and no pop filter, I have to manipulate the voice the Lord blessed me with. Trust me, I am certain he would not have blessed me with the software to do so had he not wanted to spare you the pain of unfiltered listening. I deeply apologize if you felt misled.
Saving: Once I have recorded the reading and softened it, it takes about 15 minutes to convert the recording into a .wav file. The file for a 14 minute, two track (music and voice) recording ranges from 140 to 165 megabytes. Which is very big considering that, at an average of 150MB for 365 installments would be approximately 55 gigabytes.
Converting: Once I save the file as a wav I send it thorugh my handy-dandy wav converter, let it bake for about 3 minutes and out pops a freshly minted 22 to 26 megabyte mp3. I then delete the original wav, as it is just taking up space and I can reproduce it at any time from my recording software.
Uploading: At approximately 25MB my new .mp3 file is 1/6th the size of the .wav file, but it is still too large for uploading to a free account a SoundClick.com, therefore I am paying for a monthly VIP subscription so that I may upload files up to 40MB thus the request for donations if you feel so inspired. Uploading the file to soundclick takes approximately 15 minutes because of it's size.
That's the process.
All in all, I figure a 15 minute reading takes about 90 uninterrupted minutes to process. Much more if my wife chooses to provide clean clothes for the family, which appears to be her yen, God bless her for that truly. It's kind of funny, I have learned (mostly by my mistakes) how to record, soften, save, convert and upload all of Genesis...and yet, it is beyond me how much detergent is the correct amount for a load of wash. Go figure.
God bless you and make sure to visit and rate the readings at http://www.soundclick.com/aaronmorrow the more you visit the higher the rankings go and the more people are exposed to the The Word!!
Thanks for stopping by!
Aaron