Friday, 27 April 2012
Sunday, 15 April 2012
Saturday, 14 April 2012
Wednesday, 11 April 2012
Tuesday, 10 April 2012
Monday, 2 April 2012
Friday, 30 March 2012
Media Evaluation Question 1
Media Evaluation Question 2
How effective is the combination of your main product and ancillary texts?
After doing my research, and using some initiative, I realised that the first thing a band would do is create their album. Now as I wasn’t actually going to sit there and record 12+ songs for my media project, I started off by designing the album cover. Here, I named the album after the hit song that I would be creating my music video, called believe in me. I did this because by naming the album after the most popular song by that band, audience members far and wide will recognise the title of the track and therefore be more likely to buy the album. In regards to the design itself, I intended on basing my music video on the story of a young child, and I therefore linked that idea to my album cover by taking a photoshoot with a young child model and used an image of him looking upset. This relates to the title ‘believe in me’ which for me, connotates a lonely young person who want’s someone to put their trust and love into them. I also wanted my music video to denote the cracks in a relationship and I therefore applied this on my album cover by creating a cracked effect on my model’s face, showing the irony and metaphorical message. I then added a dark background with dull colours which connote loneliness. As the image of the digipack was so meaningful, I didn’t want to add many more effects and decided to leave it at that after adjusting the colours, hue, and brightness. Lastly, I added the title of the album and the name of the band, with again, cracks through the letters, to expand on the message of a broken relationship.
Secondly, after creating an album, a band would shoot a video for the most popular song on that album and use that as a tool to promote the upcoming CD. I therefore decided to shoot my music video next and keeping to the theme of young actors and this idea of broken relationships, I decided to portray a relationship between a child and her father who is never home. The video expresses how much the young girl misses and loves her father and the crack appears when soldiers come to her house and inform her of the father’s death. With these elements present, the video therefore links directly to the album cover in terms of the message and moral issues. However, in terms of visuals, there are also some differences, for example, the young actor I used for my album cover is different to the one used in my video. Also, in the music video I have footage of the artists themselves performing there verses, whereas the artists can not be seen in the album cover.
This brings me to my third and final task of creating a magazine advert. Here I used elements from both the music video and the album cover. On the topic of the artists, in my digipack, the main focus was on the young child, then in my video, the main focus again was on the child however the artists were introduced. Therefore in my magazine advert, my artists became the main focus taking up the most space in the ad. I did this because the advert will be shown in magazines that are viewed by the bands fanbase, therefore by seeing images of their favourite artists, audience members will automatically be enticed and then continue to view the rest of the ad. The remainder of the advert contains a small copy of the album cover at the bottom, logos to websites and shops where you can purchase the album, relevant names such as title of the album and band name, and lastly, a big quote which is a common convention in adverts, the quote read ‘the most anticipated album of 2012’. This magazine advert relates perfectly with my other two production tasks as the order in which I published each task shows the transformation of the band and the best technique to sell the album itself. To keep the same metaphorical message as the album cover and the video, I added cracks to the font in the magazine advert. By keeping this house style, it becomes a theme that the audience become subtly aware of and begin to realise the link between each product.
Media Evaluation Question 3
After exporting the first completed edit of my music video, I uploaded it onto the website ‘youtube’ and asked a number of people to view and comment on it in various ways. My Target audience is 16-28 male and females. As this age group is particularly young, I used up to date social networking websites such as facebook, twitter and tumblr to post my video and show both males and females within that age group. I gained feedback by people commenting on the video itself through youtube, also through people messaging me on both facebook and twitter. Online social networks such as facebook and tumblr also have a feature known as the ‘like button’. I used this to my advantage by asking those who thought my music video was a good ‘finished product’ to hit the like button. Surprisingly, I had a good number of people liking my video. However, by gaining a number count of ‘likes’ theres only so much information I can take away from that. Therefore, I read through every comment that people posted on my video and gained knowledge about what things need to be improved.
One aspect that people commented on a lot which needed improvement was the fact that my video contained some extra shots that were not needed. This included footage of birds eating bread, bikers riding on flat surface and people walking down footpaths. Taking these points into consideration, I deleted some irrelevant clips from my video and found that it would flow much better when I did so.
Aside from online interaction, I gained feedback from an older group of people which were my secondary audience. Using research I had gained from the 2011 social networking demographic analysis, I realised that this group of audience is less likely to use social networking to interact and view music videos. I therefore took a much more up front approach and interviewed people face to face on camera, asking for their opinion on my video. Something very noticeable to me was that the older audience generally paid much more attention to the narrative and felt emotionally attached to my character. However IU also gained feedback here regarding extra unnecessary footage, especially when the young girl is painting. I therefore took out some of this footage and let the audience figure out what is being written, thus respecting the audience’s intelligence.
I decided to log the audience feedback I received also, and that allowed me to gain a numeric count of the general comments that came up often. This helped me a lot when analysing my feedback. Taking feedback from both audiences helped me a lot and was very effective in enabling me to create the final product that I wanted.
I also showed both my primary and secondary audience my digipack and album cover’s, this allowed me to see if the connection between all 3 production tasks was clear and whether the 3 products complimented eachother. Here I received very good feedback and audience members noticed little details such as the ‘crack’ in all products.
Media Evaluation Question 4
Ever since the first glimpse of music video’s in the early 1960’s, technology and its evolution has played a huge part in the production, visuals and even direction of videos. To begin my research, I used the internet to view different music videos so that I could gain a better understanding of common conventions within music videos as a whole. To do this I used websites such as youtube, vimeo and vevo. Social networking sites such as Facebook and Twitter also helped me as it gave me the opportunity to view which videos were popular at that moment in time and which music genre’s were being most popularly shared through the internet.
When planning, it would have been next to impossible for me to have created my music video without using new media technologies to both organize and plan it. I created a blog online using a website called blogger.com which allows users to create an online web blog, this helped me to put my reminders and updates of what I had recently done into one place. Keeping myself organized using blogger helped me to keep on top of other aspects of planning. I also kept in touch with the band through text messaging and emails, all of which I saved on my blog. Using a mobile phone and electronic mail allowed me to instantly contact my artists and actors in order to plan my shoots. I also used Microsoft powerpoint to plan my earlier idea and create a detailed spec for my actor’s as to what would be required of them. Adding to this, I used a similar program, Microsoft Word, to create a call sheet which explained who I would need on what day and at where I would be filming. I then emailed this sheet to the relevant people after exporting it into a Portable Document Format (PDF). Using a cannon 500D I also took some practice shots and filmed a practice scene inside my house.
I then used both the cannon 550D and 500D to film my actual video, taking advantage of different types of lenses. I also increased the aperture to gain a depth of field, this made the footage visually appealing. These camera’s are known as Digital single-lens reflex camera’s or DSLR and at first glance, may seem like they wouldn’t give good quality video footage, or a professional feel. However, major directors and artists are increasingly using DSLR camera’s for popular music videos, tv and even film. The advantages of using an SLR instead of a big stereo-typical video camera are that it’s smaller so much more portable, the quality in these camera’s are now high definition, and when uploading the footage to your computer, all that has to be done is the memory card has to be inserted into the computer. This contrasts to the endless alternative of loading your footage onto a software which could take hours. I also used a shoulder mount which enabled me to steady the camera as I filmed on location, a shoulder mount has almost the same effect as a tripod, only it still lets you move about where as a tripod remains stationary. Having said that, I did use a tripod for numerous shots where I needed the camera to remain completely still.
In post-production, I used the software ‘Adobe Premiere Pro CS5’ to edit my music video. This included chopping clips, adding transitions and creating effects such as slow motion. I also used ‘Adobe After Effects’ to colour and gradient my music video as the colour connotation was very important to me.
To create my digipack and magazine advert I used ‘Adobe Photoshop CS5’ using various different effects and variables such as motion blur, gradients, noise and brushes. For my digipack and advert I conducted a location photoshoot with my model. I chose to do my photoshoot on location rather than in a studio as I did my previous photoshoot in studio for my magazine and I wanted a much more gritty effect, therefore I chose an urban block of stairs. Using the Cannon 500D, I increased my shutterspeed in order to gain a sharper image. I also used the software ‘Adobe Photoshop Lightroom’ to edit and gradient the images. Lightroom is an addition to Photoshop which focuses more on image colouring for photographers.
Thursday, 29 March 2012
Friday, 23 March 2012
Wednesday, 21 March 2012
Tuesday, 6 March 2012
Monday, 27 February 2012
Monday, 30 January 2012
Behind the Scenes of Day 1
Saturday, 14 January 2012
Asking permission to use basketball court
Friday, 6 January 2012
SCORCHER - IT'S MY TIME [MUSIC VIDEO] - Inspiration
Scorcher - It's My Time from Staple House on Vimeo.
This is one of the music video's that I am most inspired by when it comes to the storyline and technique of it. My music video will, similarly, show the stories of different actor's through their struggle or progress in certain sports/tasks through life.