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Monday, 22 July 2013

HOW HIGH THE CAMERA?

HOW HIGH THE CAMERA?

How High the Camera?
Different camera heights serve different purposes and achieve different effects.
One of our notorious Seven Deadly Camera Sins is Upstanding: recording every shot from the height of an upright adult. Upstanding happens because videographers are usually in that position when the camcorder rolls and they don't see any good reason to change it.
In this article, we'll talk about five common camera angles (see Figure 1):
If the viewer can tell that the shot is above or below adult viewing height, then it's a high or low angle. If the viewer feels like a hawk or like the mouse it's hunting, the height is bird's-eye or worm's-eye. Also, in full shots or closer angles featuring people, the neutral position means the camera's at the subject's eye level, whether standing or sitting. Let's start seeing what different lens heights are good for. The truth is, there's not just one good reason to avoid upstanding, but four: variety, suitability, practicality and psychology.
Variety
How many home movies have you watched that zoomed in and out and panned back and forth (often too frequently for comfortable viewing), but never strayed an inch up or down from Uncle Ezra's eye level? Despite all their busy motion, these one-height movies eventually grow boring because everybody sees the world from this perspective, so there's nothing new and interesting.
To spark viewer interest, edit out that pan or zoom and try shooting from a novel perspective. For example, a high angle that reveals a clot of dancers as parts of an intricate choreography or a low POV (Point Of View) that shows why a vase on a coffee table is so fascinating to a two-year-old. Varying the camera height literally delivers new ways of looking at things and novelty is interesting all by itself.
Variety is also useful for editing. We've often noted that for a really smooth cut, the new shot should differ in at least two ways from the old one. The available differences are in horizontal angle (say, from 3/4 to profile), subject size (as in full shot to close-up), and lens height (e.g. high to neutral). By ignoring height changes, you lose a full third of these available options. This reason alone should have you looking for new and appropriate camera heights.
Suitability
What's appropriate for your scene? This may be the most vexing question in video. For any one shot of any single subject, there may be a theoretical best camera angle, the perfect one for that shot. The trouble is, no two directors will agree on what it is. But, as Supreme Court Justice Potter Stewart once said (about a very different subject), "I can't define [it], but I know it when I see it."
A good director has a killer instinct for that perfect setup, an ability to find the combination of horizontal position, subject size and lens height that feels exactly right for this subject at this moment. If it's the toddler looking at the vase on the table, a low angle makes obvious sense. If it's alternating close-ups of a boss and an employee, the decision is subtler, as we'll see in a moment. In general, just keep in mind that height is one-third of every setup description and one height is usually more suitable than others.
Practicality
Sometimes, the reason for choosing one height over another is purely practical. High angles are great for excluding unwanted overhead elements.
If the lights or the microphone boom want to sneak into the image, a higher angle will more easily frame them off. On location, raising the camera so that the top of the frame stays below them can eliminate unwanted backgrounds.
High-angle wide shots are great for establishing geography and ambiance, introducing and making visual sense of the teeming bazaar before we plunge into it and start teeming ourselves. For example, say the olive oil merchant is over here and the amphora potter is over there. When Ali Baba strolls from one to the other we can look down and track his progress through the throng.
Low angles are also useful for concealing unwanted backgrounds, if only because you can't see very much except ceiling or sky. They also lend themselves to dramatic compositions and, with wide-angle lenses, to dynamic, exciting movement. And with that, we move on to the psychology of different camera heights.
Psychology
High and low camera angles convey distinct feelings and a skilled director exploits them fully. Birds-eye and very high angles are lofty, detached and, literally, above it all. A crane shot that begins high above the bazaar and then booms down among the shoppers is visually moving from distant and cool to immediate and warm.
High and low angles are complementary, especially in conveying strength or weakness. Encounters taped in traditional pairs of opposing close-ups will often use a mild high angle so that the dominant person's POV looks down on the less powerful subject (think about a dialog between the boss and an employee). The weaker person's POV will be a moderate low angle that peers at least slightly up at the strong subject. To experiment with these angles, try the activity suggested in the sidebar.
Very low angles tend to be claustrophobic, perhaps because they reproduce the perspective of childhood. We can't see things through the forest of legs and furniture and everything and subconsciously want to get up where the view isn't blocked. Worm's-eye angles are very unsettling because the whole world is running right over us, which is why ultra-low perspectives work great for races, buffalo stampedes and other dynamic action.
Rising above It
The obvious way to frame high angles is by taking the camcorder to a roof, a balcony, a staircase, or any other platform raised above the action. (It should not be necessary to add that high places can be dangerous and eager videographers should exercise good sense.)
Today's external view screens allow you to shoot with the camcorder held over your head. For even greater height, attach the camcorder to a monopod, tilt the screen almost straight down, set the lens to wide angle, press record and raise your impromptu rig to working height. Though you can't see the screen very well, the wide-angle setting will compensate for mis-framing.
Nowadays, sophisticated jib arms are within financial reach of prosumer videographers. With these rigs you can operate remote pan, tilt and zoom controls while watching a view screen at one end of a boom, while the camcorder high at the other end does your bidding.
If you need to ride high throughout a long event like a game or parade, you may be able to rent a cherry picker rig that can raise you up to 20 feet. A word of caution, though: cherry pickers make adequate fixed platforms, but they move far too jerkily to be used for motion as you can with a crane. Also, they require competence in safe setup and operation, a point to be determined between yourself and the rental agent and, of course, you'll need permission from the venue.
Getting Down Low
Low angles are easy because external LCD screens allow you to take the camcorder away from your eye. To boom up from a low angle, hold the edge of the screen in your left hand and rotate it to keep the frame in view as you raise the camcorder.
Low angle moving shots can be very dynamic, especially at wide-angle lens settings. For a dramatic commercial-style shot of a car wheel steering along a mountain road, simply mount the camcorder on a monopod and hold it outside the passenger window upside-down (it's simple to invert the shot digitally). If you try this, however make sure you have a clear lens filter mounted to fend off small stones. A student of mine once taped his parents' camera to a radio controlled toy SUV and let 'er rip. Though the results were spectacular, I thanked the Powers That Be that I'd known nothing about it until I saw the footage.
Contributing Editor Jim Stinson is the author of the book Video Communication and Production.
[Sidebar: Mini Scene: Who's in Charge Here?]
As an experiment, shoot a very short scene of a boss and an employee. In the wide establishing shot, make sure they are about the same height and place the camcorder at their eye level. Next, shoot all the dialogue in matched opposing close-ups, with the lens looking slightly down at the employee and up at the boss.
Finally, re-shoot the close-ups the opposite way: looking down on the boss and up at the employee. When you screen the edited sequences, you may see that the boss feels properly powerful in the first version, but less so in the second.

5 LOW ANGLE TIPS

5 LOW ANGLE TIPS

Take 5, low angle tips
The world isn't viewed from just one's eye height - it's a 360-degree, three dimensional vista of camera angle opportunities. Getting low camera angles is one sure way to engage your viewers.


We often don't take the time to lay flat on the ground, or gaze up under tables, but there's a completely different world to be seen from low angle shots. Using low angles effectively in your story can be a challenge, but these tips for going low can help get your brain working toward even more creative uses. In no particular order, here are some ways to use your camera with very little clearance above a solid surface.

   1.Emotional Composition - Keep the camera low, but point it upwards and you'll create the feeling that the audience is small and the subject is gigantic. This will be emphasized when the subject takes up the majority of the frame, so the distance between camera and subject will play a big role in this shot. Belittlement is the key here, so if you need a bully in your scene, shooting low with your subject down towards the bottom of the frame can further accentuate the height of the monstrous subject. Basketball players, skyscrapers, mountains and stacked items are all easy subjects here. 

2. Stability - Your camera's center of gravity is the focus of camera stabilizers across the board. It may take a physicist to explain, but it should be pretty clear that anything having a low center of gravity is going to be much harder to move. Like a well-engineered structure, give your camera a good foundation and get your camera low. Many cameras have a handle on top and will help make this happen. Getting flexible can have positive health effects, but it can sure make it easier to squat for an awesome shot. Work on smoothly bending your knees and ankles so that your body becomes a shock absorber for the camera. Low and steady wins many a race.

3. Animal/Object Perspective - If you're like me one of my early videos included a talking hat in an otherwise real world ... OK, so that's probably not many of you, but if you want inanimate objects like LEGOs, dolls, My Little Pony, Hot Wheels, and other toys to have a perspective in your video, go withtheir point of view using low angles because life-size toys are rare. A simple pan from the eye level of a doll can demonstrate a character discovering a new world outside the toybox. The three "Toy Story" movies are good research subjects to get ideas of a toy's low angle point of view.

4. No More Eyes in the Skies - There are plenty of reasons to see the underside of obstacles. If you've got doorframes that are warped and pesky coffee tables that do nothing but stub, then you might have very good reasons to frame for low shots. Consider a dropped fork viewed from beneath a chair (isn't that how carefully planned escapes always start?) Letting your audience see a parent's shoes from beneath the passenger side door can put a thrill on a delinquent's situation. If you're still looking for intensity, consider races: how often do you see low angle shots of cars' tires or runners' heels before the start? Placing the viewer beneath a runner's heels or at the tailpipe can help sell the speed of a race, but it's all in giving viewers the experience of watching something that would otherwise be impossible to see.

5. Objects Have More Impact - A sure way to show depth of field is to have objects in the foreground or closer to the camera than the focal point. The focus is going to be paramount when it comes to shattering impacts, so lining up your camera with a solid surface is a great place to start. Glass, now that's a nice example; but anything that shatters on impact can be a great subject for impacting. A slow-motion shot that is even with the impact surface can play directly into emotional feelings. Getting low to a surfaces like counters or roads can pretty well guarantee that you have a good reference for you viewers that what's in focus is exactly important, and the rest can be one bigbokeh.

If you want to show something unattractive - like gum under the table - take the camera low, and even shoot undersides of things. Chances are, you didn't clean the bottom of your shoes today and you probably didn't scrape the gum off of the underside of the school desk. Let's just say there are some nasty things on the ground and in low places, when you want that dirty look, know that you can go low.
As long as you do not compromise the safety of your camera, these low angle ideas will give you some creative juice and even turn the task of editing into an easier job. Getting good camera angles will add variety and that always makes editing easier. Low camera angles are fun, can look very professional and don't require a lot of expensive equipment. Go shoot some low shots and enjoy the power that comes from knowing the lowdown

7 TIPS FOR SHOOTING LOW CAMERA ANGLES

7 TIPS FOR SHOOTING LOW CAMERA ANGLES


Getting low camera angles is one sure way to engage your viewers. Using those low angles in an effective story can be a challenge, so we're bringing you 7 tips for shooting low camera angles, hopefully they'll get your brain working toward even more creative uses. In no particular order here are some ways to use your camera with very little clearance above a solid surface.
1. Emotional composition - Keep the camera low, but point it upwards and you'll create the feeling that the audience is small and the subject is gigantic. This will be emphasized when the subject takes up the majority of the frame, so the distance between camera and subject will play a big role in this shot. Basketball players, skyscrapers, mountains and stacked items are all easy subjects here.
2. Stability - Your camera's center of gravity is the focus of camera stabilizers across the board. It may take a physicist to explain, but it should be pretty clear that anything having a low center of gravity is going to be much harder to move. Like a well-engineered structure, give your camera a good foundation and get your camera low. Many cameras have a handle on top and will help make this happen. Low and steady wins many a race.
3. Animal/object perspective - If you're like me one of my early videos included a talking hat in an otherwise real world ... OK, so that's probably not many of you, but if you want inanimate objects like LEGOs, dolls, MY LITTLE PONY, Hot Wheels, and other toys to have a perspective in your video, go with low angles because I know that in my experience, I never got a life-size toy.
4. No more eyes in the skies - There are plenty of reasons to see what's underneath obstacles. If you've got doors that are warped, pesky coffee tables that do nothing but stub, then you might have very good framing for low shots. Consider a dropped fork (isn't that how carefully planned escapes always start?) Letting your audience see a parent's shoes from beneath the passenger side door can put a thrill on a delinquent's situation.
5. Objects in frame will be closer than they can be focused on - A sure way to show depth of field is to have objects in the foreground or closer to the camera than the focal point. Getting low to a surface such as a counter or road can pretty well guarantee that you have a good reference for you viewers that what's in focus is exactly important, and the rest can be one big bokeh.
6. Impact - Ever tripped? The act of falling doesn't hurt much, it's the ground stopping you on the way down that hurts. The stairs and sidewalks feel great impacts every day, it is your job to capture such impacts and make them meaningful to your story. Maybe the sound of someone's footsteps is terrifying to other characters, you'll want a low shot capturing footsteps, and maybe putting it in slow-motion will help even more. Glass, now that's a nice subject, or anything that shatters on impact can be a great subject for impacting, and a shot that is even with the impact surface is likely to be a strong visual.
7. Like gum under the table - If you want to show something unattractive, take the camera low, and even shoot undersides of things, chances are, you didn't clean the bottom of your shoes today and you probably didn't scrape the gum off of the underside of the school desk. Let's just say there are some nasty things on the ground and in low places.
Going into post-production with good camera angles will really make editing easiersince there will be more variety. So enjoy getting low camera angles because they can look very professional and don't require a lot of expensive equipment. Even if gear like the Induro Dual Range Hi-Hat Tripod will give you near complete control and gives you options with a new set of legs supporting 75mm tripod heads comes out this December. So go shoot some low shots and enjoy the power that comes from being low.

Choosing the best camera angle photography tip

Choosing the best camera angle photography tip

We tossed out a challenge for ideas for a video tip and as it turned out the one we picked was from a local pro photographer who offered to come by and shoot it with us so we took him up on it!
Eric Gould joined us at Silber Studios to demonstrate various camera angles and how to choose the best one for your shot.
Eric shows you how to take shots from many different angels and heights and how these change the way your subject will look. For example, he shows a tip for helping an overweight person look thinner.  You can easily follow along with Eric to see how these will work for you.

Sunday, 14 July 2013

How to Become a Successful Musical Theatre Performer

Become a Successful Musical Theatre Performer
Musical theatre is a great thing. You can grow as a performer, as well as developing good singing, dancing, and acting skills. Read on to learn more about what performing in Musical Theatre Requires.

EditSteps

  1. 1
    Educate yourself. If you know more about the art you are trying to break into, it will be a far smoother ride. Besides, almost all musical theatre geeks make frequent references to sometime obscure musicals, so spend some time at the library/video store and watch all of the classics (Rent, Piazza, Phantom of the Opera, Chicago, 25th spelling bee, Avenue Q, West Side story, ETC...)
  2. 2
    Get proper training. It comes in handy to have some basic skills ready when getting involved in this branch of the arts. Enroll in some basic acting, dance, and vocal classes.
  3. 3
    Get comfortable with putting yourself out there. This is perhaps the hardest thing for an actor to do, but it is MORE than necessary. My motto is JUST DO IT. Just... you know, do it! It doesn't matter what other people think, and if you aren't 100% REALLY into it and going all the way, you will look like an idiot.
  4. 4
    Audition for everything you can. It's important to get to know all of the directors, and get good connections with other actors.
  5. 5
    Be courteous during rehearsals. ONLY TALK WHEN COMPLETELY NECESSARY AND NEVER DISOBEY DIRECTORS!!

Top 10 Rules For Better Songwriting


Top 10 Rules For Better Songwriting

I am a songwriter. I typically work from home using a small studio set up and have been fortunate enough to have written, co-written or produced many songs that have been commercially released.
I am also the founder of Audio Rokit, which is a song submission platform helping bands and artists get their music heard by top industry professionals. http://www.audiorokit.co.uk

I thought I could share some of my own personal song writing tips. Although they are very basic, these 10 rules have helped me and I hope that they help you also. Please feel free to add to my list!

1. Don’t Be a Perfectionist
Write a LOT. Churn songs out, bin them and churn more out. Don’t be a perfectionist. The aim is to improve over time, not to sit down and craft the perfect pop song on your first attempt.
By giving yourself the freedom to experiment without pressure you will develop the creative part of your brain instead of the over analytical part. Pop/Rock songwriter, Sting commented once that he finds it harder to write great songs now that he has become more analytical of music.
2. Get Feedback As Often As Possible
Be fearless with your songs. It’s OK if you write a crap song. What is not OK is to try and convince everyone that it’s a great song! Get feedback and allow people to be honest, that way you will start to learn what really works.
3. Hot and Cold
I am talking about combining opposites such as spiccato and ligatto (short and long). When you have long held chords, try a shorter or snappier vocal line. Have a funky bass line? You might want to opt for a simpler, more solid guitar part. It’s simple stuff, but worth thinking about when writing or producing.
4. Learn to Unlearn
As we learn to write songs we naturally analyse what works and what doesn’t. We absorb new chord structures and develop an obsession for doing things the ‘correct’ way. This is great as far as improving song writing goes, but somewhere along the way you may lose the ability to invent something new. Don’t be afraid to break the rules. If it sounds good to you then do it!
5. The Disadvantage of Talent
Michael Jordan is widely considered one of the greatest basketball players of all time. How did he get so good? He became the greatest because he failed more times than the next basketball player, not because he was the most talented.
Raw talent can take someone 10% of the way to success, but hard work and determination make up the rest!
The problem with naturally talented people is that they never learn failure and find it harder to accept defeat. People who are average (but with a desire to win) are in many ways better equipped to stay the course and succeed long term.
6. See the Bigger Picture Always
Once you have the technical knowledge you need to write music, try and develop the part of your brain that can listen to and analyse the whole picture (instead of focusing on tiny details).
You should be able to hear instantly what is needed to make your songs work. Does it need more emotion? More energy? Is the vocal melody boring? By focusing on the whole picture you’ll be able to find the answers quicker by being honest and brutal with yourself.
7. Say it Differently
We all know that there are common lyrical themes in music. I would guess that the topic of ‘love’ is the most widely used lyrical theme. Using tried and tested themes can be a good thing, but you should always try and say it differently.
For example, Dianne Warren said “Un-break my heart” instead of “Mend my heart”. She invented a new phrase to say the same thing a million other songs have said before and it worked perfectly!
8. Keep It Simple
I know so many musicians who agree that the best songs are the simplest, yet they can’t write simple songs themselves? It is a kind of ‘musicians curse’ to assume that complicated means better. Get used to writing simpler songs that have more hooks and adhere to common (natural) arrangement structures.
Remember, you will hear the song over and over but your audience will have to ‘get’ it on the first listen. Keep it simple! 
9. Work With Others
Even if you don’t like working with others, please try it. You’ll see that in many cases more heads really can be better than one.
Working with others forces you to move away from your comfort zone and in my experience produces better songs. The process of getting input from more people during the writing process is healthy and makes it unlikely that you’ll write a real stinker!
10. Take Regular Breaks
Have you ever worked on a song for 15 hours straight and been totally disappointed with the result? It’s happened to me many times!
Doing anything creative can lead you down a rabbit hole of endless ideas that (if no breaks are taken) can spiral into complex introverted expression. In other words, take a bloody break and come back with fresh ears!

Something Out of Nothing: 21 Songwriting Tips



Something Out of Nothing:
21 Songwriting Tips

This is not a how-to article. This is just on some songwriting tips that I want to share with you to help you become a more versatile songwriter. Take the hints that you feel help you out and discard the ones you don’t agree with.
#1) Authors and Musicians... 
I have had some people tell me that composing music is easy, and that anyone can do it. Yes, anyone can do it, but few can really do it. Writing a song is much like being an author. Yes, we all have tools to write (everyone has a brain I hope!), but that doesn’t all of a sudden make us best selling authors. Authors work at their abilities, often every day. The prime goal of an author is the same as a musician, which is to emotionally connect with the reader in some way or another. Writers do this by using motivation, chararacterization, and powerful word combinations among other things. Composers, like authors, have a lot in common. Our main goal is to connect with the listener emotionally.

This is where our first tip comes into play: Never stop working at your abilities. If our main goal is to connect emotionally, we should want to have as many tools as we possibly can to achieve that goal. The more abilities that we have, the more choices we can make musically. It’s important to have a wide arsenal of choices at your disposal, because if we keep doing the same ‘tried and true’ methods, their emotional effects will wear off as the songwriting becomes caged into a predictable movement.
#2) Who are you writing your music for? Know your goal.
The reason why you need to know this is because when you make music for yourself, there is no limit to what you can do to be ‘expressive’. If you are making music for other people, you will have to be aware of how people relate to it. It is like this: when you are a computer genius and you want to tell someone how to fix their computer, you have to speak in their terms so they can understand what the heck you are saying. If you speak in your lingo, you will most likely lose them in techno-talk. Another example is the author. He can write a story with the largest, most sweeping words he knows- but if the reader does not know what those words mean, the entire meaning gets lost.

We, as musicians, face the same predicament. Overcomplicated songs will lose the average listener. Now, other hardcore musicians will greatly appreciate your abilities and probably get more feeling from it- but the common person will most likely not be able to follow. Once again you should ask yourself when you write a song: Who am I making this music for and will they be able to relate?
#3) Scratching in the dirt
Minds are like flowers. If you let it sit there without soaking anything up, it will dry up. Not to say that you can’t invigorate your mind again, but it is saying that it is harder to do so. Just like weight lifting. If you haven’t worked out in awhile, it is quite hard to lift as much as you did when you were lifting every day. So this is my first suggestion. Practice. I’m not talking about technical ability this time (although you should practice that too!). I’m saying that you should practice making new songs. Make a goal to make 1 new song every week, even if it is only 50 seconds long. It is the fact that you are working your brain out. Once you begin the song, you can latch onto ideas rather quickly. That is not the purpose of the exercise. The purpose is to get your brain to find new avenues by exploring different ideas. It’s about trying something new every time.
#4) Music vs. Robots
Music is an art form. It is a way to wordlessly communicate. There are computer programs that are designed to ‘make songs’ on the fly. How much do you think that communicates? Please don’t be a robot! Don’t give in and throw in random notes that fit in a scale just to fill a passage. Make a reason for why every part of your song exists. Find parts in your lead passage that really hook you. Now delete all the other parts. Now build off of the hook. Get it? Computers cannot find hooks, but your ear can. If you can’t feel anything interesting from a part, get rid of it. Unless of course you want to have a “boring” part to build into something grand! There’s a nice strategy.
#5) The song’s opinion is better than yours! Nyah!
When you think in the best interests in the song, you may have to rid yourself some very good ideas that you wanted to do. I have come up with very creative ideas that really didn’t work with the song I was currently composing. Don’t mess up your song by trying to fit it in! If you can fit it in and it feels right to put it there- good shot! If it doesn’t- well then you have an idea for your next song to go! Remember, the song’s opinion is better than yours!

Oh, here is a good one. Just because you got a new toy, does not mean every song needs to have it! There, I said it. Just because you get a wah-wah pedal for your guitar, now every song you make after that needs to have a wah-wah?? I think not! Think about what the song needs not what you want. The both of you might have varying opinions. When you make the music bigger than you are, then you’ll understand what I mean- it tends to have a mind of its own.
#6) Where does inspiration come from?
Quite often when I write a song, I think back to a moment in my life. I use what has happened in my life as an inspiration to make music. The more I do in my life, the more I can write music about- new experiences. Sometimes just getting out of the house and doing something you haven’t done in a long time (or never done!) can open up the doors to musical inspiration. Open up a photo album, read old letters, visit family, friends, go do an activity, do anything but music! Read poetry, watch ballet, go see a movie, walk around in a museum, look at oil paintings and sculptures- these are all different forms of art. Music is an art form too. Sometimes other forms of art can be inspiring to the musician. Come back, after your mind has been freed, and try to write a song about it.
#7) Oops I made an accident.. er- no I didn’t!
Once we begin a song, our minds begin to formulate where to go next, and most of the time- we excitedly travel down the road. Throughout the excitement, we can make good mistakes. We hit the wrong key, and all of a sudden, our mind is opened to a new avenue. Mistakes can be good things, because it is an unexpected thing. I think the best music sounds familiar enough to know where it is going, but unpredictable enough to avoid musical clichés!

Sometimes I will click on a random sequence of notes- not to actually use it in a song, but to see if I can find maybe a simple pattern that I can build off of. About 95% of the time, I just hear musical mush that I can’t use. The other 4% it is good stuff, and 1% of it is amazing! Accidents can be good things. Remember that. If you don’t have an inspiration, sometimes just ‘playing around’ is a good answer!
#8) Country?!? I make rock songs!
It is hard to compare Clint Black to Korn. That is not to say there isn’t something to be learned from different styles. The best way to be able to attack a song from every angle is to have as many techniques and styles as possible. Your talent will tell you which ones would work for your song. Learn country, rock, alternative even try polka! Learn as much as you can. There might be a place to use that knowledge somewhere in the future!
#9) A + B =C. A + B = XYZ???
Don’t use the same formulas for your songs! Just because you found a winning formula, that may only work for that particular song. Try different avenues. There are artists that you hear (even on the radio) that seem to have all of their songs to sound alike. Be creative.
#10) Don’t retrograde your V into a IV??!? Are you crazy?!
Don’t be a music theory lawyer, but use it to your advantage. Knowledge of the rules of music can be a great thing- if you also know that it’s okay to break them. If you stay theoretically sound, you may have a generic sound. Dissonance can be a powerful tool.
#11) That musician can’t play himself out of a paper bag...
Ahh, how many times have I heard one musician talk about another behind their back. The reason why refraining this can help your songwriting is because when you stop comparing to the outside world, you can learn from them. Maybe the guitarist isn’t the most technically sound, but maybe he can fingerpick like you wouldn’t believe. Learn from his strengths so they can be yours too. Examine his style and abilities and see if there isn’t something you can’t learn from him.
#12) I feel like listening to...
Maybe you’re brain fried but you feel like writing a song. Why not toss in a CD of someone who inspires you to write. Examine the style, the mixing, how the entire song is constructed, when each instrument blends in and out of the mix, etc. etc. You’ll find that many times you can get ideas from other artists. I’m not saying steal their riffs (but go ahead if it makes you feel better) but you can take some of their ideas and blend them into your own style. Steal an idea and then bend it to the inner workings of your mind!
#13) Let’s write a Metal song next to a Kinder care...
Location is a very important aspect to songwriting. When you’re next to a lake, you probably get the feeling of relaxation. When you’re at a concert, I doubt you will feel so relaxed. Where you are can impact your music. If you are lucky enough to have your own private place in your home to play music, you most likely have it decorated with posters or something that puts you in the mood. If you don’t... try it! I had a guy tell me that he couldn’t write a song unless he turned off all of his lights except for one... and it was blue. If you create an atmosphere, it will most likely affect your music. When you are in a store you act differently than at home. Even your kitchen will invoke a different type of feeling than your living room. No doubt about it.. Try to get a room that can match your musical personality and write there. Test out different places. I, personally, write my music in the dark. No blue light here.
#14) It sounds okay... I guess...
Get rid of it! To exercise your mind, you have to work it to its full capacity. Back to weight lifting, if you can curl 45-lbs, don’t settle for 20 lbs one day. You won’t get stronger. Half-hearted songs don’t count in my opinion. Playing around is nice and all, but your ultimate goal should be to write a song like you’ve written before. It is how we expand as musicians. Writing songs with methods that we’ve done before is like lifting 20 lbs. Using new ideas and methods, that our mind would have only thought of because we’ve mastered the old- that’s your 45 pounder! Keep it fresh! Don’t fall into the habit of generic music!!!
#15) Ideas.. Ideas.. Ideas...
Sometime I write a song off a central idea, instead of emotion. For example, my idea might be: well what if I wrote a dance song with a heavy guitar? What if I wanted to write a song uses a distortion over drums? Ideas don’t always evolve into songs, but they help you be creative! The important thing is that since they are ideas (kind of like a hypothesis) you shouldn’t come to a conclusion till you have tried it. In other words, if you have an idea that running distortion over drums would sound cool over a love song, and when you try it- you may tell yourself... “no- distortion with drums sounds good on a hard rock song.”
#16) I like it, but what do you think???
Let me start by saying that your friends and family members will most likely be very biased about your music. Ask them what they think if you want a self-esteem booster. I take compliments more to heart from strangers who like my music. The most important thing is that you like the music. Will others like it as well? Maybe, maybe not. If they offer suggestions, consider them... There is no right or wrong way to write a song. There are only songs that people can and can’t relate to. And I’m sure that almost any song that was ever made could probably relate to at least 1 other person in this world.
#17) Catchy phrases for lyrics
If you’re planning on writing lyrics, then I offer you this suggestion: Use words that people use everyday. Why? Because if those same words are used in just an everyday conversation, it will remind that listener of your song. For instance, if I said “I was outside last night and saw a twinkle twinkle little star”, immediately that song pops into your mind. Of course no one would talk like that, so if you mold your song around an everyday phrase, then it will remind people of your song easier. Just think of Staind, “It’s been awhile”. Every time someone says that phrase it reminds me of that song.
#18) Be healthy. Eat, sleep and exercise regularly as part of your daily routine.
Strange to think how proper sleep, exercise and food come into play, but it can. Just think of this: Food is your body’s fuel. Without fuel, your body wants to shut down. That is why people who aren’t healthy are tired more often. When you’re in shape, your metabolism will rise giving you an extra supply of energy that you can use to focus onto music or whatever. Does that mean that if you’re out of shape and not eating right that you can’t make good music? Of course not! But what I am saying is that if you do choose to eat right and get in shape, it will help you keep your focus and energy for a longer period of time. I can’t stress enough how different one feels when they choose to get in shape, but it really helps you psychologically, mentally and physically.
#19) Building a hook.
Some of the most powerful hooks are derived from taking a simple melody and modifying it ever so slightly. Why does that make it powerful? Hooks need to be predictable and not predictable at the same time. If there is a degree of predictability then the listener will be able to relate to the song more quickly. For instance, how many of you have said in your mind, “that would be so cool if this song did this...” and then the song took the same direction you wanted it to go. Immediate satisfaction.

If you twist it a little bit, then the song will have its unique identity that separates it from the traditional cliché of many hooks. People have heard different artists use the exact same musical hooks and patterns, and if there is no unique twist then you will hear something like, “they copied (fill in the blank)’s song. Sounds just like it but with different words.” You will most likely want your song to have its own identity.
#20) Texturize
Music is about textures as well as melody. Think of the texture of a nylon string guitar as opposed to the texture of a steel string. Think of the texture of a piano, and the texture of a synth. Some of the same melodies played with different textures can completely change a song. A lot of metal songs sound like classical pieces when played on a classical guitar instead of an electric. The human voice sounds thicker with a chorus and reverb than a dry signal. Textures can bring out the best and worst in a song. We pay great amounts of money to get the ‘best’ texture we possibly can. That is why people buy expensive musical equipment over cheap pawn shop items. Distortion has a huge variety of different tones and sounds. Not every distortion pedal sounds the same. Why? For texture. Don’t keep using the same sounds, experiment with as many textures as you can. This is so important; I’m going to say texture 20 more times by the end of this tip. Texture Texture Texture Texture Texture Texture Texture Texture Texture Texture Texture Texture Texture Texture Texture Texture Texture Texture Texture Texture .
#21) Have fun
Have fun!? What kind of topic!? Guess what. People don’t have fun making music all the time. It’s really sad. If you don’t believe me, think about all the people who have been upset because of something their band did to them. Revert to the very beginning, when you first realized that you loved to create music... and have fun!

20 Tips On Songwriting

20 Tips On Songwriting

Tips & Tricks

Every songwriter goes through times when the inspiration just seems to dry up, and the perspiration doesn't seem to be working. Debbie Poyseroffers some guidance.
Songwriting is a skill that is rarely taught: musicians more often than not tend to write instinctively, absorbing their ideas about form and structure from the music that's around them, and relying on inspiration for their melodic and lyrical direction. For many this works perfectly well, but there's no harm at all in trying to make a good thing better. You can improve your craft as a songwriter relatively easily if you accept that your work isn't just the result of some mystical process over which you have no control: certainly you need some talent to begin with, but you can hone your songwriting skills just as you can work on your playing or mixing skills. Here are a handful of simple ideas to get you thinking about how you write, and, if you're stuck in a musical rut, perhaps to help get you out of it.
1. If you've already got a chord sequence you're happy with for part of a song but are struggling with where to go next, try reversing the chord order of the part you already have and using it for the new part. It often works, but if it doesn't, try reversing just a section of the chord sequence and repeating it. Also, try doubling the length of time for which each chord plays and see where that takes you. For a bit of variation, halving note values for a chorus creates the impression of an increase in tempo even if there isn't one.
2. If you always write with a keyboard, pick up a guitar for a change and see if that sets you off in a different direction. Get a capo and put it in a stupid place on the neck - really high up, for example - and see how different that makes chords sound. Even the most basic chords take on a new resonance and generate new harmonics which your ear can pick up, maybe giving you an idea for a melody. Conversely, if you always write with a guitar, make a point of sitting down at a keyboard with a piano sound and picking out interesting tunes that wouldn't normally occur to you. You could even consider writing the verse music at the keyboard and swapping to a guitar for the chorus.
3. Keep a list of prospective song titles on your wall. Whenever you hear a good word or an evocative phrase, add it to your list to use when you're trying to come up with new material.
4. Try a different time signature for a change. If you never use 3/4, for example, try and write a song in 3/4. To vary your rhythmic range, try strumming a guitar along to a selection of records, just trying to extract their rhythmic feel in a natural way.
5. Listen to as many of other peoples' songs as you can. Focus especially on those songwriters whose works are considered classics, and don't neglect the best of what's happening now. Always be thinking about what makes a classic song so good while you're listening to it. Try to pick up on arranging tricks and song structures, and remember them; even make a note of any you particularly like. This isn't stealing -- it's studying. Film makers have been doing it for years and make no secret of the fact.
6. Analyse your favourite songs and construct exercises around them -- writing a new set of lyrics for a favourite song, for example, or setting the existing lyrics to a new melody. Write a theme song for a film that doesn't have one, or an alternative theme for a film that does. Listen to a classic song in a genre you don't usually work in and try to write a song which copies its style (but not its content).
7. Always carry a notebook when you're out, so that you can jot down any song ideas that occur while you're going about your daily business.
8. If you usually write songs with a lot of chords in them, try restricting yourself to just three and see what you can squeeze out of a limited set of options. Conversely, if your songs never have more than three chords in them, try writing one with six.
9. Try 'free association' when you have something to write a song about but can't think how to start the lyrics: sit down with paper and pen (or a word processor) and write down every word and feeling that comes into your head about that subject: the process can give you a push in the right direction, and the resulting words are the ones that you'll need to work in if the song is to make a genuine impression on the listener.
10. Though some people find it hard to construct lyrics that rhyme, rhyming is important and is worth persevering with. As highly successful songwriter Janis Ian says in The Songwriters Workshop, "A rhyme scheme helps to hypnotise, to force its way into our listening selves." Others have observed that a good rhyme scheme gives the listener a pleasant feeling of resolution and security. Not every song has to rhyme, but so many of the good ones do that there must be something in it! Don't overdo it, though -- a bad or over-extended rhyme scheme can be irritating to the listener and can distract attention from what you're trying to say. If you have to make a line sound stupid in order for it to rhyme, throw it away and start again.
11. To help with the above, get a rhyming dictionary. This will save you from mentally running through the entire alphabet one letter at a time trying to find a rhyme for 'existential'. A thesaurus, which will give you a list of different words that mean the same thing, is also a good resource for a songwriter and could help you add more interest to your lyrics.
12. Add extra professionalism to a song with sophisticated background vocal ideas. Don't always slavishly imitate the lead vocal's phrasing and timing. Try extending the end of the odd line in a harmony, then pick up with the lead again when it feels natural and musical to do so. When your lead vocal is singing a long held note, look for something short and contrapuntal you can do with the harmony vocals -- with clever phrasing you can fit an entire line of a song as a harmony line under the last extended syllable of a lead melody. This is one area where arranging and songwriting are very closely linked.
13. Get some books to help you. There are several excellent ones around that will really make you think and tell you things you didn't know. Books I would certainly recommend include the following, which are all available from the SOSBookshop (01954 789888): 88 Songwriting Wrongs and How to Right Them, by Pat & Pete Luboff (order code B254, £11.95); Beginning Songwriter's Answer Book, by Paul Zollo (B253, £10.95); The Songwriter's Workshop, edited by Harvey Rachlin and with an excellent chapter by Janis Ian and two cassettes (B260, £15.95); and if you really want an in-depth reading course on lyric-writing, leaning heavily on training your mind and knowing your own thinking patterns as a way to write more effective songs, check out The Songwriter's Idea Book, by Sheila Davis (B250, £12.99). If I was going to buy just one of the above, it would probably be 88 Songwriting Wrongs and How to Right Them, for its straightforward presentation and language. (All the above prices will need postage added to them, by the way -- check the SOS mail order pages on page 276 for details.)

"You can improve your craft as a songwriter relatively easily if you accept that your work isn't just the result of some mystical process over which you have no control."
14. Decide where you're going to keep your songwriting notes and keep them there. You don't want to blow a potential gem because you can't find the scrap of paper you wrote it down on. Use a notebook, which you always keep in the same place, or get a folder for loose notes. If you use a folder, keep a pen and some plain paper in it too, so you can always lay your hands on these as soon as inspiration strikes.
15. If you compose with a sequencer, always have it in record mode while you're doodling at your keyboard. Don't assume that you'll automatically remember anything good that comes up, because you won't. As it happens, the latest versions of many popular MIDI sequencing programs actually have a buffer that captures your ideas for you -- if you find that you've just played something that you wish you'd recorded, press a key combination (Option Record inCubase) places the buffer's contents in a track (incidentally, the next update of Cubase will provide a menu item for this feature).
16. Every songwriter should know that a commercial song has to have a hook. But did you know that it should ideally haveseveral hooks? As well as your main lyrical/musical hook, the high point of the song, try to work in secondary hooks to maintain listener interest -- short guitar, bass or piano riffs between lines of the song, a catchy extra chord change when nothing is happening with the lead vocal or to lead from the verse into the chorus, or perhaps a vocal ad-lib that will stay in the mind of the listener. If you think about these things while you're actually writing the song, when you come to demo it you'll find you've already got a head start for its arrangement.
17. Try to introduce plenty of dynamic and metric interest into your songs, so that they peak and subside rather than plodding along on one level. If a song's verse has lots of short words in a choppy rhythm, try using long, sustained notes for the chorus, for example. Try to make sure that the verse and chorus are not the same length -- vary short and long sections if you can, so that the song's structure does not become too predictable to the listener.
18. Make sure your songs are not all in the same key. It may sound obvious, but it's very easy to just stick with what's easiest for you to write or sing in, and if you don't keep an eye on this your songs could all end up sounding similar to each other.
19. Consider co-writing. Someone else's strengths can fill in for your weaknesses and they can bring unusual melodic or lyrical perspectives that would never have occurred to you.
20. If you've really run out of musical ideas, use technology. Those with computers can try an algorithmic composition or auto-accompaniment software package -- or even an arpeggiator! David Zicarelli's M, the king of interactive composition software, has just been re-released (for the Mac only) and can treat your musical input to predictable or totally weird transformations (www.cycling74.com/products/m.html). PG Systems' Band In A Box is available for various computer platforms, and lets you apply a wide variety of preset styles to whatever chord sequence you input, taking a lot of the strain out of song construction. Even Steinberg's sophisticated Cubase family of sequencing software has a so-called Style Tracks module, and similar facilities are found on many a sequencer-equipped synth. 

Saturday, 13 July 2013

8 Tips on Taking Party Photographs

8 Tips on Taking Party Photographs


Digg 
Image by Dustin Diaz

1. Break the camera out early

Depending on the type of party you may need to start taking pictures early. Arrive early to take pictures of the decorations, food, the cake, etc before any people show up.

2. Get the group

Typically people don’t stay in a large group at parties; they are all spread out in smaller groups. While having everyone in the same room at the same time, get that group shot so you can treasure it afterwards.

3. Capture the emotion

Keep your camera handy and turned on so you’ll be ready for those spontaneous expressions.

4. Be Candid

You can get some great shots of your family and friends when they don’t even know they are getting their picture taken. This is great for capturing emotion at the party

5. Don’t be afraid to zoom in or out

Don’t be afraid of zooming in so your subject fits into your camera frame. This way you can capture the expression of the subject. Also make sure you get pictures of the party as a whole, don’t be afraid to zoom out to capture the entire room.

6. Avoid Red Eye

One of the most common occurrences when taking pictures of people at parties is red eye.  To make sure your friends and family don’t look evil eyed have them look just over your shoulder rather than directly at camera. This should help reduce the chances of red eye in your pictures therefore saving you time having to take it out before printing them.

7. Know the schedule of events

Make sure you get a copy of the time of the events so you can have your camera ready and specific shots are not missed.

8. Try different perspectives

Don’t be afraid to try different perspectives throughout the party: get at eye level with the kids to get their perspective of the party or take pictures standing on a chair or staircase to get a shot of everyone at the party.


8 Tips to Make Your Party the Best Ever

8 Tips to Make Your Party the Best Ever

Source: Photo courtesy of Teresa Speer

Plan Ahead, Work Less and do not Stress so You can Enjoy the Party More

If you plan ahead for the big event, you not only eliminate most of the stress involved in planning, but you will not have to work as hard either. The tips provided below are basics, follow them, write down every detail and you will be on your way to a fabulous event design.
8 Tips for Creating a Great Party
1. Plan ahead, it just makes sense. Choose vendors in advance in order to ensure you receive the best deal possible. If you wait until the last minute they might feel that they have you at a disadvantage and try to charge you more. Also, your chosen caterer or other vendor may not be available. Plan ahead, by doing so you give yourself the opportunity to save money for your party. Set-up a separate account if possible and start saving for your event.
2. Be organized, it is the only way to ensure every aspect of your party runs smoothly. By listing yourself you will be organized. List any equipment you have available and any that you need to purchase. This will also help you to save money if you have equipment on hand that is necessary to the success of your event those items will not have to be rented or purchased saving you money. Listing every detail will ensure that none are forgotten. Create a time line for the set-up and order of service to ensure everyone involved in your event is in the know. Listing will keep your party on track.
3. When you send out invitations be sure to include an RSVP. Follow-up on any guests that do not respond. You want firm numbers so that you know how much food and beverage you will need to feed everyone.
4. Decide on a menu, choosing foods that will taste great, but not put too much of a dent in your wallet or require massive amounts of prep time. Stores like TJ Maxx are great for cheap finds in their food section. Their selection varies so be sure to check back often. You can find stuffed grape leaves, roasted vegetables, olive or artichoke tapenades, various relishes and olives all of which are tasty and less expensive to buy there than at some of the big grocery chains. Costco and Sams are great shopping options as well. Have a Tapas party which allows for a selection of foods to tempt all palates. Use large platters to display the food items you purchase at TJ Maxx and similar stores. Shop at a deli where you can purchase salamis, prosciutto and other assorted meats and cheeses along with crackers and breads. Be creative with your choices. Be sure to place platters of food throughout the different areas in your house where guests will be mingling. Have napkins on hand as well. If you are serving hot or cold appetizers along with other food choices remember 1 dozen appetizers serves 5 people and 5 dozen appetizers serves 25 people. If you are serving appetizers only have at least 4 to 6 per person.
5.To save money on beverages serve beer and wine or have a signature drink available. Always have non-alcoholic options on hand such as; bottled water, sodas and juice. Hire a licensed bartender that has experience. Be sure to hire someone to drive home any guests that may have imbibed too much.
6. If you can afford to do so hire someone to help maintain the party ensuring that food stays replenished, food stations are kept clean along with the spaces where guests will be mingling.
7. Set the mood with candles while music softly plays in the back ground. Keep a fire extinguisher on hand and place votive candles in appropriate glass holders so that no flames extend above the top of the holders. Craft stores such as Michaels offers inexpensive craft ideas at reasonable prices. Once again be creative.
8. Be sure to make arrangements for parking. Let neighbors know that you will have guests at your home and their vehicles will be parked in the street.
Remember to plan wisely. You do not want to plan a party for more people than you can actually afford to feed so keep your budget in hand. I have seen many parties that were not successful because the food ordered was not enough to feed the number of guests in attendance. Food was reordered in some instances, but the guests had to wait for a long period of time before the kitchen had more food prepared. If you are preparing the food yourself you do not want to scramble trying to figure out how to feed guests that have not been fed.
In order to make your party a successful one keep in mind:
A. Who is suppose to make it happen?

B. Never wait until the last minute to accomplish a task.

C. Do ahead of time as much for your party as you can.

D. Allow yourself time to rest before your party begins.
Party planning tip: If you are hiring a caterer they will be more that happy to work with the budget you allocate, if not, do not hire them.
Design your event,
Teresa
If you want to learn more about planning an event read my book, "Events You Design".There are many points to planning a celebration, “Events You Design”, guides you through them while showing you how to take your vision and translate it into a spectacular affair. There is no book on the market like “Events You Design”. From small budgets to big budgets, novice to professional caterers and event planners, from birthdays, wedding receptions, bar mitzvahs, anniversaries to whatever party or gathering you have in mind, this book has hundreds and hundreds of ideas for creating the perfect get together. This is a must have edition on event planning and decoration, organization, logistics, time lines, etiquette, photographs, floor diagrams, food and beverage, cakes, desserts, lighting, aisles, tents, chuppahs and arches. These are only a few of the topics discussed to help you choreograph the perfect celebration!