Saturday, 21 March 2015

Editing the Music Video


Editing the Music Video

We did all of our music video editing on the software Adobe Premier Pro. We made sure that the video had four screens of the four members of the band and their instruments. This meant that we had to have 4 timelines and edit them at the same time constantly instead of 1. The beat of the song affected the music video as the editing and the shots were changed at a steady pace to the song.













Above is the timelines of our video, as you can clearly see we have more than one. In order to edit to the beat, we had to put markers up in order to make things easier. This took up a lot of time and we wanted to make every thing perfect.

In order to make the four screens play at the same time, we played with the settings and managed to put four windows in different corners and evened them out.


This is an example of what is seen throughout the video. Here are the four screens running at the same time.










The different scales of the video:







The final video on YouTube:



 

Wednesday, 18 March 2015

Album art Exercise


Album Art Exercise



The Album exercise was something I used to help make an album cover for my music video. I needed practice so I used a site that simplified making an album cover.


I first had to get a name for a band, I chose "Executive Search" as i clicked a link called 'Randomly-Generated-Wikipedia-Article' that gave me a random name for my band.




I then needed a title for my album. I found a link to a site that was a page of random quotes from celebraties and films.








Band name: Executive Search

Album title: All I can say

My image:














For the album cover image I used the website "Flickr" and I downloaded an image, in which the person who put up the image has allowed people to access and download it. I put it into photoshop, added text with fonts from "Dafont" and manipulated the image. The final product of the picture was this:

















Thursday, 12 March 2015

Audience Feedback


Audience Feedback


We collected audience feedback through many different ways including holding focus groups, asking people what they thought of the music video on social networks and in person and what liked and disliked.




The focus group when we discussed ideas for things like the song we were going to use and what we were going to do for the music video.

This is a response of a survey made specifically for people to tell us what they thought of our music video.


This is a response from Facebook for audience feedback

The video had no comments but was liked by three people and seen by many.

Thursday, 5 March 2015

Brand Identity & The Spice Girls Blog

Creating a Brand Identity:

Dawn of a New Era

The introduction of music videos on MTV meant that artists now had the opportunity to create an image of themselves to present to the public and gain a following. These videos gave artists the ability a convey a more comprehensive message to their audience to create this image and make a brand of themselves.These videos are powerful in which they can make or break a single or a new artist's career as a whole.

Brand Identity
Creating a Brand Identity requires careful consideration. This "image" can be created using a clever formation of colours, image, text or fonts, etc. Products such as music videos, websites, Twitter or other social media accounts, digipaks and magazine adverts, etc, must promote clearly one image of the artist across all elements. For example, The Spice Girls were all advertised individually with the different personalities for each of the girls in their stage names, e.g. Mel B = Scary Spice, Emma Bunton = Baby Spice, etc.

Changing Landscape

Though the broadcasting of music videos on Television has declined, the music video is still the most powerful and popular way to promote music.

With improvements in web-video technology, music videos have maintained their dominance through the Internet to promote music. Online platforms like websites and social media, e.g. Twitter, must be linked clearly with image of the artist. For example, a tweet on Twitter can get as many people following as a TV channel can reach in only a matter of minutes.

This makes the Internet a dominant force in promoting music.

Wednesday, 4 March 2015

Shooting Schedule

Shooting Schedule

This is the shooting schedule for ou music video


Day
Scene
Location
Equipment
Costumes
Props
Cast +Crew
1



2



3



4


Drummer



Bass



Lead



Singer
Robert Clack Music Room
Robert Clack Music Room
Robert Clack Music Room
Jamie’s House

Drum kit, Camera, tripod
Bass, Camera, tripod
E. Guitar Camera, tripod
Microphone, camera, tripod
Black Shirt & trousers
Grey shirt & Skirt
Dark shirt & jeans
Black shirt & jeans
Drum kit


Bass Guitar


E. Guitar


Microphone
Joe, Jordan, Marianne
Joe, Jordan, Marianne
Joe, Jordan, Marianne
     Joe Jamie   
                

Location Sheet


Location Sheet


Location Visit Sheet

Programme Title: Wave of Popular Feeling by Groundswell (Three Days Grace)
Writer: Joe Howlett, Marianne Webb, Jordan Walters
Producer: Joe Howlett, Marianne Webb, Jordan Walters
Director: Joe Howlett
Date: 04/03/15

Rough Sketch/Explanation of location and key points to note
Music Room – Robert Clack School Lower Site (see map below). Located next to field. Small – 4 rooms in total (only 3 rooms used) – stores musical instruments (e.g. 3 drum kits, keyboards, guitars, bass guitars)


Access to location via:
Robert Clack School Lower Site – key needed. Get key from Music Department.

Name and number of location contact:
Mrs. Thompson – Media Department – Robert Clack School Lower Site
Music Department – Robert Clack School Lower Site

 Health and Safety Issues to note:
      Tripping over wires
      Dropping heavy instruments on limbs
      Slipping over slippery surfaces while filming or being filmed
Potential Filming Problems:
      Teachers and students might come in and disturb filming

Additional Notes:  (map of area/weather forecast etc)
Mainly muddy near Music Room.


Rough Cut

Rough Cut





This is the rough cut for our music video. This is part of a finished product and shows roughly what we are doing and are going to do for the rest of the video. As you can clearly see we used four screens with different people and instruments in them. Throughout the video the screens will change and at certain points show the same person in all four windows.

Treatment


Treatment
Group Roles

Cinematography:  Joe Howlett
Mise-en-scene: Marianne Webb
Sound: Jordan Walters
Editing: Joe Howlett

Title:
Groundswell – Wave of popular feeling

Tag Line:


Synopsis:

In this music video for our version of Wave of Popular feeling by Groundswell we are going to have multiple screens that will change throughout the video. The four screens will at some point show different angles of the drummer, different angles of the singer, different angles of the lead guitarist etc. The four screens will also show the four musicians holding and playing their different instruments in time with the song.

                             









Key Genre Conventions:

In the video we will also be doing similar things to real life music videos and use skills learned from studying music directors and theorists such as Andrew Goodwin. He spoke about screens within screens and close ups, in our video we will be zooming into instruments and using close up techniques on our faces. We will also be putting screens in screens and lay them out professionally.






Pulp Fiction

Post Fiction

"Why is 'Pulp Fiction' postmodern?"


'Pulp Fiction' is a postmodern film because it 'Looks back' and makes constant reference to earlier films.

The film starts with a reference to the French new wave film "band a part" by Jean-Luc Goddard. A key characteristic of postmodern films is inter-texual reference to other, older films.

Sunday, 1 March 2015

Constructing the digipak



Constructing the digipak


Below are six panels of my digipak including The title and album cover, pictures of the individual members of the band, the Bar code and the song list. We did a little bit of research on popular album covers and made our cover look more legitimate by putting the bar code in the correct place, putting the song list at the back etc.
In order to alter the images a bit we edited them with the filter Stamp which made the image look like a cutout of the original image. We based the panels of the digipak on our music video by using 4 squares. We chose black and white for our theme and it worked perfectly. We had to make sure that white text went on a black background and black text went on a white background in order for the text to be seen.


We also did the idea of the four screens on the front and back colours by inverting selections of the images on the covers.

We then added signatures beside each of our pictures using the Dafont website and downloaded a font that looked like a signature.