Last year I purchased a Geofón, a special microphone made by LOM Audio.
I had been trying to buy it for a long time, as LOM is both a record label and a microphone manufacturer based in Bratislava and they don’t make very many units of their products: if you want one, you need to subscribe to their mailing list and they will tell you the next time a batch of a specific microphone is being made and is due to go live on their website.
When this happens, you need to move fast! Their stock runs out very quickly.
I know, managing to add a Geofón to your microphone collection sounds like a complicated business but trust me when I say it’s totally worth it.
Well, a geophone is a device that converts ground vibrations into electrical signals, and it is typically used to measure seismic activity.
The Geofón is… a geophone adjusted for field recording purposes: it can be attached to objects using the suction cup or the neodymium magnet included, or you can “plant it” in the ground using a metallic spike and capture even the faintest vibration in the surface.
Since I bought one, I put the Geofón to very good use: it gave me many hours of experimental recordings, growing my collection of textured, immersive elements that I have used in my sound design many times.
Some of these recordings ended up in Sonora Cinematic's Fieldworks Vol. 1 and you can see the Geófon in action in this video, which is also important as it shows me with rather ridiculous shorts:
I recorded bathroom fans, boilers, dehumidifiers, a towel rack… you can probably spot a recurring "plumbing/HVAC" theme, and indeed the Geófon is great at capturing this sort of sounds, which can easily be turned into eerie soundscapes with a bit of reverb or granular synthesis (or both!).
Several of these sounds also have a tonal quality which can be preserved and “tuned” in post-production, with great potential for musical applications (we’ll explore some of them in this blog).
My only regret is not buying two of them! I can really imagine capturing some very interesting sounds attaching two Geófons in slightly different parts of an object and running them in stereo…
In my house there is a room covered with carpet and a specific spot of the floor sounds particularly hollow and bass-heavy every time you step on it (one of the wooden planks under the carpet must be loose or misplaced).
I captured the sound of my fist hitting the carpet in this spot with the Geófon, and the result is a fantastic sub layer I use any time I need more body on cinematic percussions, as the main ingredient for trailer booms or as a kick drum with an organic feel. I made a whole virtual instrument with this sound, it has several variations of it and many round robins. It is available both as a Kontakt instrument (Kontakt 6 Full necessary to run the library) or as a folder of wav files.
Here’s a video about recording and processing the sound:
And you can join our Discord community here to access the link to the free instrument.