Thursday, January 28, 2010

Evaluation Question 1

1. In what ways does your media product use, develop or challenge forms and conventions of real media products?













































Evaluation Question 2

2. How effective is the combination of your main product and ancillary texts?

Evaluation Question 3

3. What have you learned from your audience feedback?



3. What have you learned from your audience feedback?

Evaluation Question 4

4. How did you use media technologies in the construction and research, planning and evaluation stages?






blogger.com We used blogger to keep a record of all our research, ideas, planning, construction and evaluation.






jamendo.com This is where we found our two soundtracks for the trailer. They were really easy to search for, just typing in a key word and then listening to them. Downloading them was pretty quick as well so we could get them into the trailer fast.






 weebly.com This is where we hosted our films website. It was free which is why we used it. Setting the page up was quite simple and editing the pages was easy once you got to used to where everything was. I think the overall outcome of the website looks the best it could, considering what the hosting site offered.






youtube.com We used youtube for our research and distribution/advertising. Uploading the trailer took a while but already being a user of the site meant there were no problems. Using it for research, we embedded clips into our blog and powerpoints. We also used tubechop with them.






interactimage.com This is where we made the title for our film. I found it by searching 'font generator' in google. We tested out a few different fonts and colour combinations and then decided which looked best. The font we used was called 'a night for crocodiles' and has the connation of dripping blood.






Photoshop We used photoshop when creating the poster, pictures for the film and website, wallpapers for the website, and the titles.

facebook and itunes
























Tripod






Camera






Firewire






iMovie






Garageband






Apple Macbook



DVD

Friday, January 8, 2010

Postmodernism and music...

The postmodern sensibility that anything can be considered cool in an ironic ‘I know it’s bad, but it’s so bad it’s good’ way.

I first heard this song on radio 1 and heard it played nearly everyday on radio 1 for a few weeks and I didn't really like it, thoght it was a bit repetitive, but when I went into to town and heard it played in Liquid I liked it and I think you just have to hear it in the right environment to like/appreciate it.

Work that is created based (entirely or in part) on older material. This incorporates sampling and will take you from the realms of hip hop culture transporting you finally in today’s modern fragmented musical landscape. You will have to listen to some of the artists to fully appreciate them and their work.

This is my favourite MIA song and when I saw 'Slumdog Millionaire' I thought it fit the film great especially the scene it was used in.

Its backing track is a sample from the 1982 song "Straight to Hell" by The Clash, while the chorus is based on that of the 1992 Wreckx-n-Effect song "Rump Shaker".



Another example...

 Interpolation of Alphaville’s Forever Young sang by Mr. Hudson.


Audiences that are both niche and mainstream. E.g.: Radio 1, 1xtra, BBC6, XFM



























The ways in which people engage and listen to music e.g.: iPod, DAB, mobile phones etc.





The legal issues surrounding sampling. (Led Zeppelin ‘borrowed’ heavily from old bluesmen and it took years for the songwriters to be credited and paid royalties. The same group took a hard-line stance initially to be sampled by hip hop groups.)
'Early sampling artists simply used portions of other artists' recordings, without permission; once rap and other music incorporating samples began to make significant money, the original artists began to take legal action, claiming copyright infringement.'
'One of the first major legal cases regarding sampling was with UK dance act M|A|R|R|S "Pump Up the Volume". As the record reached the UK top ten, producers Stock Aitken Waterman obtained an injunction against the record due to the unauthorized use of a sample from their hit single "Roadblock".'
'Vanilla Ice sampled the bassline of the 1981 song "Under Pressure" by Queen and David Bowie for his 1990 single "Ice Ice Baby". Freddie Mercury and David Bowie did not receive credit or royalties for the sample.'
Examples: the use of the drum introduction from Led Zeppelin's "When the Levee Breaks" in songs by the Beastie Boys, Dr. Dre, Eminem, Mike Oldfield, Rob Dougan, Coldcut, Depeche Mode and Erasure, and the guitar riffs from Foreigner's "Hot Blooded" in Tone-Loc's "Funky Cold Medina".
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sampling_(music)




The state of the music industry incorporating any recent developments that change how we access/ interact with music e.g.: Spotify, X Factor, iTunes, illegal downloading, free cds with newspapers etc.