They are :
An introductory jingle
A presenter, introducing the show, themselves and welcoming their guest
The guest's response
The archive sound clip, relating to the guest.
At the end of the volume stage of the jingle, I put the song on at the end, higlighted in orange. This finishes of the porject very well as it links into the discussion of what was said on the talking part of the project.
After putting the clips, loops and jingles all in the right places, you have to adjuct the volume so the audio does nbot get distorted when finally played on the air. as you can see abive, the blue area under each sub title is the volume, and can be adjusted at every stage. this took along time.
After choosing some tunes and loops, I put them together to make a jingle that agreed with all the cold and conventions. As you can see, on the left hand side there is a list of boxes, one of them highlighted. these are all the different types of instruments and audio that are in my project.
By going through all of these sub titles abive here, it is easy to hunt down the type of jingle you are after. on the far right of the picture it will give you a list os all the possibilities there are for what type of genre you want for the audio production. I went for a mix between Cheerful, drum kit, guiters and Ensamble to find all the loops and short tunes to produce my Jingle.
This is what the screen shot looks like when you have just opened Garage Band. This is what you start with and can progress from here. The first thing I did was to have a look through the programme to have a look at the loops and sound mixes, to give me an idea of what my jingle would sound like. Also thinking about the codes and conventions of making an audio production.Garage band is has so many functions to control editing, volume and speech. Which is very handy for a radio show. It allows a non - musical person to build a song with the many loops and clips it has to offer to finally give a good song.

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