Thursday, 22 November 2012

Friday, 16 November 2012

What i thought about the location shoot

I felt the first location shoot went well because we found five key positions that we can great scenery and close shots of the characters also we successfully got high and low angle shots long shots and close ups i felt doing this early we can see more efficiently   what works and what dosent .

FIRST LOCATION SHOOT

Friday, 9 November 2012

Stuart wall theory

dominant this means that you stongly agree with the audio and that you can come away from the footage having it opened  your opinion on that subject matter Evan further , this is about excepting and embrace the messages portrayed by audio.


negotiated is the half way, you except the message that is being shown but still keep your opinions its away of looking at opinions in different ways but its not life changing just more eye opening .

oppositional this is when you do not feel that the message has been truly conveyed by the audio in ethither in a disrespectful way or that they have not understand the subject fully and the way it should of been shown

Tuesday, 6 November 2012

idea for closing shots

this one of the closing shots i would like to have at the end of the music then pan shots of the actors then finally  long shot of all the lanterns floating away and this will show the unison  of the characters but also show the freedom that is shown in most folk rock .

Thursday, 1 November 2012

the Andrew Godwin theory applied to music

about copyright laws for music

What copyright exists in music?
 There are principally 2 types of copyright to consider when we talk about music copyright. The traditional ©, ‘C in a circle’ copyright, applies to the composition, musical score, lyrics, as well as any artwork or cover designs, as all of these are individually subject to copyright in their own rights, (though when you register, you can include them all in a single registration provided they have the same copyright owner(s)).
The second type of copyright applies to the sound recording itself, and is signified by the ‘P in a circle’ phonogram copyright symbol.