Wednesday 15 May 2013

Rise Mix Tape

Rise - The Mix Tape



Track List:

0:00-1:40 - "I'm As Mad As Hell" Speech from 'Network' 1976 - Sums up the themes of the album. We're all as mad as hell and it's time our thoughts are heard.

1:40-5:18 - Twisted Sister - 'We're Not Gonna Take It' - Flows on from the speech well in my opinion, and carries the same general message. We're tired of just doing what we're told.

5:18-10:35 - Rage Against The Machine - 'Killing In The Name' - One of the most well-known modern punk bands playing one of their most famous songs. Need I say more?

10:35-14:01 - Dead Kennedys - 'California Uber Alles' - A dystopian image of a fascist California and the dangers of fascism.

14:01-17:19 - Sex Pistols - 'God Save The Queen' - The ultimate British Anarchy/Punk soundtrack. God save the Queen!

17:19-20:46 - David Bowie - '1984' - Another look at a scarily realistic fascist future. Based on the classic book, '1984' by George Orwell.

20:46-22:50 - The Clash - 'White Riot' - Another great British punk band playing one of their most famous tracks. A call to arms for the people to riot.

22:50-25:19 - Creedence Clearwater Revival - 'Fortunate Son' (Something went wrong with the MP3 meaning that this song comes out speeded up on the mix tape, making it strangely comical. I'm going to reupload to fix this.) - One of the most famous anti-war songs of the 20th Century. Brings up issues of class during the Vietnam War. The silver spoons sit at home as the wooden spoons fight and die 'for their freedom'.

25:19-31:36 - Crass - 'Bloody Revolution' - Yet another British Punk band, though this time they're a little bit less well known. A song that mocks the idea of a violent revolution, and how violence can't achieve what they want.

31:36-35:29 - Otep - 'Rise, Rebel, Resist' - The final track on the mix tape is a violent rap/metal track which simply calls for us all to "Rise, rebel, resist." Simple, but effective.



Monday 25 February 2013

How has your understanding of real media conventions developed over the past two years?


Over the last two years, in AS and A2 media studies, I have completed two main tasks. In AS this was to create the front cover, contents page, and double page spread for a music magazine, following a genre of my choice. For my music magazine, ‘Exploit & Destroy’, I chose to focus on the rock and heavy metal genres of music. In A2 I had to create a music video, again for my own chosen song and genre, and two related ancillary pieces, a digipack and a magazine advert for the digipack. In both projects, I chose to stick to many conventions of the type of piece I created, and the genre of music I focused on. These conventions could however, be changed or ignored occasionally when I felt it was necessary. Over the two years, completing these projects, I have developed my understanding of these conventions, allowing me to make relevant decisions regarding their use in my projects.

For my first project, the music magazine I completed for AS, I used a variety of real media conventions. To create my magazine, I took ideas from the layout and styling used in ‘Kerrang!’ magazine, another rock and metal music magazine. These conventions would enable me to ensure that my magazine piece looked like it fit into the genre it was representing, and that it looked professional and like a real music magazine. For the front cover I stuck to a lot of conventions used across all types of magazine, including a masthead, cover lines, the principle of thirds, a barcode, and a variation of fonts used throughout the cover. One convention I felt I would do differently to real music magazines, was the use of only one image across the whole cover. Many of the other magazine covers I looked at used main one image, and then two or three other small images as well. I wanted my cover to focus on the main article within though, and chose to go against the conventions for this. For my contents page I stuck mostly to genre conventions, using features such as a “contents” title, eye-catching colours to direct the reader’s eyes, several images, captions, page numbers, and an editor’s introductory passage. In my double page spread, I chose to mainly stick to genre conventions as well, using a title line, main big images, an introductory paragraph above the main text, and quotes from the main article text.

For my A2 coursework, the music video, I chose once again to follow the genre of rock/heavy metal. My chosen song ‘Evidence’ by Marilyn Manson gave me a lot of room to play around with music video conventions, as it had no official video and Marilyn Manson’s music videos change drastically from song to song.  I chose to take a darker route with my music video and make it a dark fairy tale. Because of this, the main convention I stuck to strongly was a heavy use of narrative throughout. I also wanted to give a sense of speed and fear during certain points in the video, so used a large amount of quick jump cuts. To stick with the conventions of most modern music videos, I also chose to include performance shots of the band performing the song. To switch between these narrative and performance shots, I used another convention of music videos, parallel editing. The same was applied for the ancillary texts; I needed to still follow some conventions of similar real pieces to make mine fit in with the crowd and look like they belonged there. The digipack that went along with my video featured conventions like, the name of the band (Danse Macabre in my case), the name of the album (Personification of Death), the track listing, credits, recording information, barcode, and artwork related to the themes of the album. As a lot of heavy metal bands use hand drawn horror-like artwork on their album covers, I chose to follow this convention as well, featuring hand drawn images of gory and horror scenes across all of my digipack. My second ancillary piece, my magazine advert for the album featured such conventions as the name of the band, name of the album, band website, short review lines from music publications, star ratings from music publications, and an image representing the album.

From my AS to A2 work, I feel that I have developed a greater understanding of conventions and how they are used within media pieces. I believe for the research for my A2 music video, I looked into the conventions of other music videos of the same genre, more than I looked at the conventions of music magazines at AS. I feel that I studied a great range of sources as well at A2, looking across many different music videos, going all through rock and heavy metal, allowing me to get a larger feel for the conventions of my genre, and how to use them in my piece. At AS however, I think I focused too much on the design of one magazine, ‘Kerrang!’, which may have impacted on how my magazine represented and used the conventions of rock magazines. Only using one magazine as research probably impacted on my ability to understand why it had used the conventions it had, and how I could break the mould a bit for artistic effect. Conventions are important in creating a media piece, as they allow us to stick to well know genres and ideas, which makes everything fit together and not look too out of place for the audience of the piece. They also let the creator of the piece challenge set conventions of their genre, generating new ideas and evolves the genre as a whole.

How has your understanding of real media conventions developed over the past two years?


Instruction
Essay Plan
Explain the tasks you have completed over the last two years.
·         AS – Creating a music magazine – its front cover, contents page, and double page spread. Had to follow a certain genre of music.
·         A2 – Creating a music video for a song of our choice, and two ancillary texts: a digipack for the music video’s album, and an advertisement for the album.
Discuss your first big project – the music magazine – front cover, contents page, and double page spread.

How did you use real conventions?
·         Front Cover – Masthead, cover lines, one main image, principle of thirds (text, artist, puppet), barcode, black and white fonts, variations of font.
·         Contents Page – “Contents” title, hotspots, eye-catching colours, pictures, captions, page numbers, editor’s welcome.
·         Double Page Spread – Title line, big images, introduction paragraph, coloured background, quotes, interview style of question and answer.
Did it make a difference understanding the conventions?
How did your knowledge help to inform your decision making?
Understanding the conventions allowed me to make my magazine appear more realistic and professional, as I understood what makes up other magazines of my genre, and how to replicate their designs. It was also important however, to not follow certain conventions, as this allowed me to make my design more unique in certain aspects.
Discuss the A2 coursework – how did you establish conventions?
How did you use them in the construction of your music video? Include work on the digipack and advert.
Compare this to AS – has your level of understanding developed? Explain.

Which conventions did you challenge, and which did you follow in the making of your media product, and why?

Conclusion – How important are conventions?
How significant have they been in developing your ability to create media texts that have meaning?
Include the extent to which your understanding of conventions has developed.



Saturday 23 February 2013

To what extent did you use creativity in your AS and A2 coursework tasks?

Creativity is the ability to think outside of the box and make something new and imaginative. During my AS and A2 projects, creativity was a key part of my designing process, and made sure that I made something new and original. There were however, some constraints placed upon my creativity in both tasks. I had to follow a set of rules and conditions when I created my pieces, and it could be said that this held back my creativity slightly.
In the modern world, technology plays a large role in our everyday lives. It surrounds us, and this is also true in the media world. All aspects of creating a media piece are technological now, from the internet for research, to Photoshop for designing. Whether these new technologies enhance our creativity or not is a big question though. On the one hand, all of these new technologies make it far easier for the modern creator to make an idea into reality. Technologies such as, Photoshop, Sony Vegas, Final Cut Pro, even Microsoft Word, all allow an idea to become something physical. They give us the tools to experiment and mould our ideas into something new and exciting, which would have been lost to a degree before such programs were created. Better cameras and recording equipment also do the same, making it far easier for a budding director to get their story board made into a high quality film that all can see. On a bigger scale, the advancements in CGI have made anything possible for the film industry. Films that were seen as impossible to ever film successfully like, ‘The Lord of the Rings Trilogy’ and ‘Life of Pi’, can now be seen on the big screen thanks to advancements in technology, and the creativity they bring. Therefore, I disagree with the idea that technology has taken the creativity out of media production.
During my AS and A2 tasks, I have thought creatively on a variety of different instances. For both of my tasks, my creativity was hampered slightly by the conventions of the things I was making. These conventions were there to be used and ignored as I pleased, but it was essential that I followed some of the conventions set up by my genre of magazine and music video. Bentley said however that creativity is, “The making of the new and the rearranging of the old.” This means that although the conventions of other texts may have placed some restraints on me, it was my ability to use these conventions for my own work, and change and add to them that ensured I was still being creative.
Another common idea surrounding creativity is that a piece that is too well planned, lacks opportunities to be spontaneous and creative. I once again disagree with this view, as the process of research and planning ensures that the creativity presented is more thought out and intuitive. Without a degree of research and planning, a project can never reach its full potential, as it will encounter problems and issues that only research and planning would have been able to prevent. The fact that planning a task holds back the creative flow is debateable as it is this planning that allows the creator to really think through their work and look at new and interesting ways to complete their goal. Without planning it is likely that many media pieces would fall into the same problems time and time again, whereas with planning, it can be ensured that the piece runs smoothly and gives way for creative resolutions to problems that may come up.
In my AS task, my creativity was more controlled as I was knew to media and was learning as I went on. My magazine was largely based upon the common conventions of similar music magazine designs, and so my creativity was limited slightly. I was also held back by needing to reserve my magazine for one chosen genre of music, cutting off a lot of possible creative ideas that could have come from a greater scope of genres. The design, was largely up to me however, barring some of the conventions of other magazines, and I was able to put forward my creativity into the layout of the pages, and the image editing and typography I used in them. My A2 task had more scope for creative thinking as I chose a song that bordered two genres of music, ‘Evidence’ by Marilyn Manson which is a mix of rock and heavy metal. This allowed me to really play around with the ideas for my music video, and the eerie sound that the music brought gave me a huge opportunity to develop a creative narrative to run throughout the video. I was once again held back slightly by the conventions of similar videos, trying to keep the costume and theme quite representative of Marilyn Manson’s other music videos to make sure it fit in with them and wouldn’t stand out too much.

Saturday 26 January 2013

The Death of Uncool - Phone Shuffle Playlist

1. Tonight - Seether (Rock)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sCzdecygpmg

2. Cult of Personality - Living Color (Rock)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7xxgRUyzgs0

3. For Whom The Bell Tolls - Metallica (Metal)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bg92QpjRcJk

4. If I Was Your Vampire - Marilyn Manson (Industrial Metal)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o3c4lc3Ea4Y

5. Arma-Goddamn-Motherfucking-Geddon - Marilyn Manson (Industrial Metal)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YKAgJutiUm0

6. I Don't Like The Drugs (But The Drugs Like Me) - Marilyn Manson (Industrial Metal)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6EefPcht54c

7. Stricken - Disturbed (Metal)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3moLkjvhEu0

8. Indestructible - Disturbed (Metal)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aWxBrI0g1kE

9. Ain't That A Kick In The Head - Dean Martin (Swing)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kh8fPUUJT9k

10. The Beautiful People - Marilyn Manson (Industrial Metal)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ypkv0HeUvTc

11. Dark Passenger - Fozzy (Hard Rock)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8KYjGVbcslU

12. Jesus Frankenstein - Rob Zombie (Metal)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o5b8CjTMpoo

13. Fur Cue - Seether (Rock)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D5qH6ZKFdp4

14. Boulevard Of Broken Dreams - Green Day (Punk-Rock)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aGzgoSg5OZg

15. Not Ready To Die - Avenged Sevenfold (Metal)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WKP9RwoTWwE

16. Imagine - John Lennon (Rock-Pop)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yRhq-yO1KN8

17. Lonely Train - Black Stone Cherry (Hard Rock)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=omo-fwok15E

18. Save Me - Shinedown (Rock)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T8dyxGiBx3g

19. Feeling Good - Nina Simone (Jazz)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h8tuTSi6Sck

20. Hollywood Whore - Papa Roach (Rock)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XjQvk_R20r4