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December 29, 2011#

Top Music Picks of 2011

2011 has been a stellar year for music… It has been also been the year that my list consists of more new discoveries than releases from favourite artists.

My Top Music Picks for 2011: (in no particular order)

The Antlers: Burst Apart
Highlights:
Corsicana, Tiptoe, Hounds

M83: Hurry Up, We’re Dreaming
Highlights:
Midnight City, New Map, Splendor, The Bright Flash

The Naked and Famous: Passive Me, Aggressive You
Highlights:
Young Blood, No Way, The Sun, Girls Like You.

Cliff Martinez & Various Artists: Drive
A masterpiece from beginning to end, the best soundtrack to come out this year.

Tycho: Dive
Highlights:  
Adrift, Coastal Brake, Daydream

Lights: Siberia
Highlights:  
Flux and Flow, Banner, Suspension

Porter Robinson: Spitfire
Highlights:
Spitfire, The Seconds, Vandalism

Foo Fighters: Wasting Light
Highlights:  Rope, These Days, Dear Rosemary

Coldplay: Mylo Xyloto
Highlights:  Paradise, Major Minus, Princess of China

 

 

August 16, 2011#

Anatomy of a music video: Boss Rebel – “Name in Lights”

After completing the music video for the song, “Heavybad” I knew that I wanted to work again with Boss Rebel on their next music video. I had the idea to shoot a video for “Name in Lights” that involved using vari-speed and one single take. Little did I know how much work it would involve.

We filmed on a Saturday afternoon in a warehouse with around 50 extras and enough confetti that I’m sure is still stuck in most of our lungs from that day.

Photo by Kevin Van Lierop

Photo by Kevin Van Lierop

In the end we did 16 takes, with take number 13 being the magic number.

Photo by Kevin Van Lierop

Photo by Kevin Van Lierop

Photo by Kevin Van Lierop

Photo by Kevin Van Lierop

Getting the vari-speed vision in my head to work was another beast all together.

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To get the frame ramping to work, it was a process of taking the lyrics of the song, matching where each word happened in time on the video as well as where it happens in the song and then telling the editing software to move video frame “A” to match song frame “A”. A lengthy process.

Here is how the video looked, straight off the camera:

There is no lighting and the song is sped up and slowed down during certain parts. This was done so the chorus would always feel slower and the verse by Dreddy would be quicker to match the rapid fire pace of they lyrics.

Once the keyframeing was done, I ran into my first hurdle of the process… rendering. The first render passes that I did on the video would take almost 8 hours to complete. Trying to keep productivity up, it was tough because It would take 8 hours to see if there were any frame issues, and there were plenty. I could only do one fix a day, because every time something need to be fixed, I would have to render the entire thing. Looking back at the process, I did all of the key framing and time mapping in Final Cut Pro… my first mistake.

Final cut pro is an editing package, not a visual effects platform. This is where I made my second mistake… After reading on support boards for the time ramping plugin that Adobe Premiere was the best solution, I re-entered the keyframeing data (1395) events into premiere. While the render time came down to 4 hours, the video would never export properly and produced a jello effect on the band. I thought that my solution would be to put everything on the highest quality and let the mac crunch the numbers. This resulted in a 36 hour render time. In the end I was left with a 20GB video file that looked horrible. This file still had none of the artificial lighting that I had included.

The artificial lighting was done in Adobe After Effects. Out of frustration I thought that I would try the time mapping plugin in After Effects and roll the dice to see if it produced better results. It did. After re entering all of the keyframe data (for the third time now) the vision that I was in my head became a reality. I simplified the artificial lighting because the motion tracking was all over the place. Another mistake, when shooting something with artificial elements, put some sort of marker on the wall so the you can track the camera motion.

In the end, I’m pleased with the results. Approaching a project that requires visual effects, I know that I’ll be more prepared next time.

I’d like to thank the guys from Boss Rebel for their patience with this project.

January 17, 2010#

Show Review: Raised by Swans @ Call the Office.

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Friday, January 15th, I had the great pleasure to attend the CD release of “no ghostless place” by Raised by Swans.  I have been a very big fan of the band since hearing “Violet Light” on the CBC Radio3 Podcast 4 years ago.  Their first CD “Codes & Secret Longing” has been a favourite of mine since the day it was purchased, and sits in my list of top albums of all time.

I have been eagerly awaiting to hear some new material, and after 4 years, the band has release their new CD. I ordered mine via online pre-order hoping to receive my copy the day before the show.  I can review this album with one word: AMAZING.  The new CD is on par if not better than Codes & Secret longing.  I cannot recommend enough to anybody reading this post, leave my site right now, and click on this link to buy this album right now!

I almost didn’t make the show as our babysitter fell through at the last minute, but my wife, Tracey decided to stay home with the kids so I wouldn’t miss the show.

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Moving on now to my review of the show.  If it has not been made clear, I am a fan.  The band played a solid 14 song set, that featured heavily the new material of “No Ghostless Place”.   The new material played very well live, some songs like “Hail of Arrows” and “Secret Garden /S.C” sounding more rounded out and driven than the recorded versions.

Sound at Call the Office has always been a problem in my opinion, and there were times where the vocals did get lost in the wall of distorted mud that is Call the Office’s sound system.   According to interviews with the band, they are about to embark on a coast to coast tour of Canada, so it was nice to have them playing in front of a hometown audience before embarking cross country.

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I managed to take quite a few pictures of the performance, you can view the entire set on my flickr page here.

Setlist from the show: (Show Highlights bolded)

We Were Never Young
Hail of Arrows
Relentless
Easier
Capable of Cruelty
Old Fires
Longer Shadows, Shorter Days
Sandcastles
The Waitings Over
Still Inside You
There’s Hope Yet
How do These Hearts Unfold
Violet Light

Band Website: www.raisedbyswans.com