Me and some friends made a music video for a local band for a school project.
[video=youtube;lq9Nzj47o2o]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lq9Nzj47o2o[/video]
Enjoy!
Oh god that voice.
[QUOTE=sovietbrony;34373627]Oh god that voice.[/QUOTE]
It can't that ba-[b]OH GOD THAT VOICE[/b]
Nah, the vocalist is acceptable. In fact, everything is "acceptable." The tone of the instruments, the quality of the sound, the vocalist's ability, and, yes, even the music video is "acceptable."
That is mean to mean I've seen far worse, but I've seen far better.
I think if you guys keep at it, you'll get pretty good. Practice makes perfect. Good start, though.
The recording is over a year old, but we weren't able to record a new one since it was "only" for a school project. The band's got a new vocalist and everything, so they are way better now than they were then.
I'm not part of the band, by the way. I'm just a friend of them. And a fan.
The drum fills don't seem to match the video.
[QUOTE=Hakita;34374875]The drum fills don't seem to match the video.[/QUOTE]
Chances are they recorded the video live, then dubbed the "studio" track over the video.
That's how a lot of high-quality music videos tend to do it.
You'd either have to take God knows how many takes of the relevant scenes, or have the drummer be really good, to be able to match the fills to a believable degree.
Or alternately, you can purposely avoid recording video of the fills, which I see a lot of bands do for their videos. I would suggest the same thing to you, Souly, if you decide to make another music video.
In fact, I'll generalize it: if there is something in the music that is hard to replicate to a believable degree, such as the fills, then don't record video of them; instead, record something else. If you're not sure what all the band will be able to replicate (for example, maybe a band has a mediocre guitarist whose timing gets a bit off when doing a fast section in a song), then you can try making a single live recording (one camera, no shifts), and play the "studio" track over the video; if the mismatch is noticeable (ask a friend whose completely unrelated to the project), then make a note of it. Then, when you're making the "actual" video, actively make sure to [b]not[/b] include the mismatching section in the video.
And don't tell anyone why you chose the scenes you did, so no one's the wiser. ;)
nnice nipples
lol i love these vocals
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