Monthly Archives: May 2009

Giant Kings Videos

I’ve uploaded two videos of the Giant Kings performance at Stone Mountain Arts Center to YouTube.

1) A “highlights” reel from the 9-May show:  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yCJxQepJhMs

This video starts off a bit shaky (OK, very shaky) because I hadn’t set up my camera supports and the “trombone” bit was too good to pass up even if it induces seasickness when watching (I plastered a few stills in there to make it less annoying..)

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yCJxQepJhMs[/youtube]
2) I have also uploaded the “I Found a Love” video to YouTube (with Mark’s Earley’s name spelled properly in the credits (sorry Mark!)  and with better color correction):  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LqWR_Drh3EQ

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LqWR_Drh3EQ[/youtube]

Both are available in YouTube’s new HD format, which, I have to say, isn’t all that bad at all.   If you have a fast connection it is definitely worth pushing that little HD button because the default format YouTube uses is pretty awful.

Technical drivel:

All shots are with the Canon 5D Mark II. The highlights reel inadvertently shows how lens selection and support makes all the difference in the world.  The initial shot (Chris Cote’s “trombone”) is the 24-70mm f/2.8 L lens shot completely handheld.  This lens has no image stabilization and while I’m actually pretty good at holding a camera steady for a still shot, eventually the muscles have to move.   As the highlight reel continues you will see the 24-70 being used on a monopod.   This takes some of the harsh erratic movements out, but it still looks pretty unclassy at times.  After the intermission I changed my seating and switched lenses with my 1D, so now the 5D had the 70-200mm f/2.8 L IS lens on it.  This is a stabilized lens that works pretty darn well on the monopod.  Zooming and panning from the monopod are still something I need to practice more, but overall the results are much more watchable (at the expense of not being able to zoom out to the entire stage).

All footage is converted to Apple ProRes 422 for editing.  I had dropped in some stills into the highlights reel (as a band-aid over the jerky footage) and used them as a basis for color correction of the video.  The edited footage was compressed to H.264, 5Mbps, and uploaded to YouTube (smack in the middle of their outage earlier today, which made the whole experience just tons of fun.)

And yes, I did try running the FCP SmoothCam filter over some of the handheld footage.  I played with the SmoothCam settings quite a bit actually and rendered out a few tests.  None were satisfactory, so I’m taking my lumps with the raw footage.

Why YouTube vs. Vimeo?  1) Vimeo only allows 1 HD upload per week unless you pay money.  I don’t currently produced enough video to warrant the subscription, so it’ll be Sunday before I can upload the next video.  YouTube doesn’t seem to have such a restriction.  Fortunately they both ingest the same formats/bitrates/etc.; and 2) Videos are much more “findable” by the masses on YouTube vs. Vimeo.  The purpose in making these was to promote the band, so it makes sense to make the videos available as widely as possible as long as the quality doesn’t suffer too much.   This was my rationale — we’ll see if it was a good decision or not.

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A model project

Brooks Jensen is the publisher of a great B&W photography journal called Lenswork.  I’ve mentioned Lenswork in earlier articles and I also recommend that photographers subscribe to his Lenswork Podcast.  As the publisher of a photography book Brooks always has an interesting take on photographic projects — he sees zillions of submissions and so he speaks from experience.

Lenswork Podcast #526 discussed the idea that a project should explore depth not repetition.   Good stuff.  I’m currently working on my next exhibit and this was sage advice.

Yesterday evening, after a long day of editing (and signing letters) I opened up the latest issue of Arizona Highways magazine that had arrived along with the pile of letters looking for our attention (all of them wanting our money in different ways — short of running a ponzi scheme will we ever have more letters with people giving us money?)

Arizona Highways is one of those rare magazines that produces both great editorial content and phenomenal photography.  I’ve been a subscriber for many years.  Compared to most of New England, Arizona looks like a photographer’s paradise: varied scenery, sweeping landscapes, abstract shapes, color, sky, sun, stars — and Arizona Highways magazine is both a source of inspiration and frustration (because I haven’t been able to make time to visit the state for any length of time).

Every once in a while you turn a page of this magazine and you just say “wow”.  Today I saw the first photograph of an article and said wow.  Turned the page.  Wow again.   3rd page.  Wow…  And it just kept going.   (And after a bit I read the comments and realized that the editors were equally taken by this project.)

Wes Timmerman‘s fantastic “Rock Art” article on page 25 is a must see.  From both the photographic skill and, getting back to Brooks Jensen’s advice of depth not repetition, the structure of the project.  Here was a set of photographs that could have easily just continued on in one direction but rather pushed deep.

Most important for me, personally, is that while certain aspects of this project were “Arizona” influenced, there’s nothing in it that substantially couldn’t be reproduced here — in (relatively) boring New England.   Having spent the weekend driving around parts of Maine and New Hampshire looking for something interesting to photograph and not finding much, I realize that I need to dig a bit harder.

[Photograph above: A mountain stream among the birches, Frost Mountain, Brownfield, Maine.  Canon 5D Mark II, 24-70mm f/2.8 L]

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Giant Kings at SMAC – Video #1

As promised in an earlier post, I have a video from the Giant Kings show at the Stone Mountain Arts Center.  This is Wilson Pickett’s classic song “I Found A Love”.  The band invited the center’s owner, Carol Noonan, up to the stage to join in the fun.

[vimeo]http://vimeo.com/4600260[/vimeo]

The Giant Kings are Duke Levine, Chris Cote, Paul Ahlstrand, Mark Earley, Kevin Barry, Marty Ballou, and Andy Plaisted.

The best way to find when the Giant Kings will be playing next: visit Duke Levine’s MySpace page.

Technical drivel:

Recorded using a Canon 5D Mark II with a 70-200mm f/2.8 IS L lens.  The camera was on a monopod. Exposure compensation -2/3 stop.  Audio was from the camera (next time I promise to plug in a real microphone — although that has its own problems).  Filmed with automatic white balance and corrected in Final Cut Pro  (I have a preferred color balance setting in Lightroom for SMAC stage photographs and need to try dialing that into the camera to see if it will work right out of the camera.)

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