Thursday, 27 September 2012

The Treatment

My group and I have decided to create a music video to Lana Del Rey - Dark Paradise. Our music video will feature actors, actors specially chosen from the performing arts department at Leyton Sixth Form College. One female character who is the artist who will alos be lip-synching and acting also and another chracter who will play the female character's lover. In our video, we plan to explore the themes of loss and depression as this is what links to our song choice (lyrics). The video will follow a young couple in their relationship and how the female struggles to copeafter her lover (boyfriend) dies. We plan to shoot a scene of our music video in a graveyard, however we may have to re-think that idea due to the fact that we have to ask permission, due to it's location and how it will link to the fact that her love has dies, we're undescive whether or not we should include the 'graveyard scene' or just use something that connotes grieve and lost. Another location that we will be using is the forest located in Waltham Forest, as this will be the place that will be the last place the female charcter (artist) saw him alive. The narrative will feature as well as show how often she visits the forest to find her lover as well as showing that he is not there by including the editing technique fade.
The song is nearly 4 minutes long in length, which fits perfectly within the time limit set. Our target audience will be 16 years old to fit in with the 'Young Adult Category'.

We'll be using social networking sites to broadcast our video, like for example Youtube, facebook and twitter to allow our audience to be aware of which website to visit in order to watch the video.


Thursday, 13 September 2012

James Vincent McMorrow



From the artist's website:

James Vincent McMorrow released his debut record, Early in the Morning, in Ireland to widespread critical acclaim in February 2010.


A stunning collection of songs recorded over 5 months in an isolated house by the sea, the album is a completely self recorded and played affair, filled with beguiling and vivid stories, fables that move from a whisper in your ear to a mountainous crescendo in the space of a song, all the while retaining the environment and sentiment in which they were formed.
“This record was borne out of my desire to create something singular, take the simplest of chords, wrap them in washes of melody, so lines come in, they drop out, everything ebbs and flows as the songs move towards their inevitable end. I don’t sit down with an agenda when I write, I usually have a first line, and a vague sense in my head of where I’m going, but no real solid structure. Music tends to reveal itself to me over the course of weeks and months. It’s probably quite like sculpting, you have a chisel, you know what’s waiting for you inside the stone, all that’s left is to chip away the pieces and reveal it.”
From the very first lines of the album, that singularity is there for all to hear. A 5 part harmony cascades in, followed by a growling organ and slide guitar line of the eeriest and spectral kind. ‘If I had a boat’ is not only a most fitting opener, but also a song that perfectly encapsulates the dense lyricism and compelling melody of the 40 minutes that are to follow. Its words intense but never over wrought, a vocal line that pulls you along towards a truly epic ending, an arrangement of swirling lines and inventive thought, it is a song to truly build upon for sure.
“I always knew when I wrote this song that it would open the album” acknowledges James, “the lyric is very much about transition, about change. That is definitely the underlying theme that ties it all together. The last 2 years that preceded this record being made involved some of the greatest change I’d ever experienced, physical, emotional, and spiritual. When I write lyrics they come together in a pretty uncoordinated way, lines get written, slowly link up until a story reveals itself. It was only when I was finished that I looked back and saw the words for what they were, realized what they meant.”
Over the course of the 10 songs that follow, Early in the morning captivates completely. From the simple beauty of “hear the noise that moves so soft and low”, the pastoral thump of “sparrow and the wolf’, and the haunting grace of ‘follow you down to the red oak tree”, the change and movement that James speaks of in the lyrical themes is perfectly reflected in the structure and pacing of the record itself. There is a deliberate sense to the tracklisting. When the lone kick and dual pianos of ‘we dont eat’ give way to the 1960’s west coast folk of ‘this old dark machine’, its exactly the way James intends it to be.
Towards the latter half of the record a darker tone emerges, or as James puts it,“the closest I’ll ever get to proper mythical fantasy writing!” These songs are where we find him at his most literate and ornate, creating ominous figures, and a wholly tangible sense of tension and foreboding. Drawing on his childhood love of Roald Dahl, as well as his fascination with American novelists such as John Steinbeck and F Scott Fitzgerald, James draws life from their writings because “they all examine the darker less spoken about aspects of life, solitude, disillusionment. I’m not one for defining a lyric, or what it definitively means, but songs like ‘follow you down to the red oak tree’, ‘from the woods’, and ‘down the burning ropes’ are certainly me exorcising the underside of my personality. The characters I create in those songs, the ones existing in the shadows, they are all elements of me for sure”
And then the album draws to a close just as it started, bucolic 5 part harmony. the title track of the record, which James describes as a “simple ode to the love that I have”, is backed by a banjo and a piano, a folk round that fades out as quietly as it arrives, the squeak of the piano stool a final reminder of the homespun nature of what has just occurred.
Currently playing live for James is a hushed and reverential affair, each show met with pin drop silence as people follow every word, every syllable. It will not always be this way though, as James dreams of a much grander affair in the near future. “I do want the music to be played how it is on the record, I dream in vivid Technicolor when it comes to my songs, not just black and white. I hear it with drums and horns and accordions and banjos and anything else that can be hit or strummed! Playing on my own right now is beautiful because it allows me to connect on a very primitive level, but I’d like to be in a place soon where I can be surrounded with friends on stage to share this with me”.
Whatever that near future might hold, you get the strongest sense that there are some truly wondrous things to come for this man. “Music to me is this fluid notion, I’ve captured one element of it with this album, but there are endless others out there to be sung and written about”




Lana Del Rey


From Wikipedia:

Elizabeth Woolridge Grant (born June 21, 1986), better known by her stage name Lana Del Rey, is an American singer-songwriter. Del Rey initially began performing in clubs in New York City at age 18 and signed her first recording contract when she was 20 years old with 5 Points Records, releasing her first digital album Lana Del Ray a.k.a. Lizzy Grant in January 2010. Del Rey bought herself out of the contract with 5 Points Records in April 2010 and signed a joint contract with Interscope, Polydor, and Stranger Records in October 2011. Releasing her debutsingle "Video Games" in June 2011, a music video created by Del Rey for the song was posted on YouTube in August 2011. After the song became a viral internet hit with over 20 million views, her second studio album, Born to Die, was released in January 2012. The album sold over 3.4 million copies worldwide in 2012, making it the fifth best-selling album of 2012. Charting across Europe, the album spawned numerous top ten hits, including "Blue Jeans", "National Anthem", "Born to Die", and "Summertime Sadness." With the release of her third EP, Paradise, Del Rey spawned her third top ten album in the United States, debuting at number 10 on the Billboard 200 with 67,000 copies sold in its first week. To date, her discography includes two full-length studio albums, three EPs, seven singles, and eight music videos. She has won the Q Awardfor "Best New Thing", a GQ Award for "Woman of the Year", a BRIT Award for "International Breakthrough Act" and another for "International Pop Female Solo Artist", and an EMA for "Best Alternative Act".
Del Rey's music has been noted for its cinematic sound and its references to various aspects of pop culture, particularly that of the 1950s and'60s Americana. The singer has described herself as a "self-styled gangsta Nancy Sinatra." Before signing to a major record label, Del Rey provided sole production of her music videos. Musically, she draws influence from what she deems to be the masters of each genre, includingElvis, Janis Joplin, Eminem, and Britney Spears, as well as from poetry and film noir. Del Rey has endorsed clothing line H&M, serving as the model for their Fall and Winter 2012 collection. In 2012, Del Rey became the face of the Jaguar F-Type luxury automobile.

Paramore




From the band's website:


The combination of musical energy between brothers and Hayley's bold charisma earned them instant attention, particularly from Florida indie Fueled by Ramen, who signed the band and put them to work recording their debut. Says Hayley, "Some of our favorite bands are on Fueled by Ramen. We knew that they would know exactly how to carry out the vision for our band and music." Paramore went into the studio with producers James Wisner (Dashboard Confessional, Further Seems Forever, Underoath) and Mike Green (Yellowcard, The Black Maria) and blew them away with their sincerity and enthusiasm.


When Hayley Williams began writing lyrics for the songs that appear on Paramore’s self-titled new album, she found herself feeling more optimistic than ever before about the future of the band she has fronted since she was 15. “I had this kind of Tony-in-West-Side-Story-moment when he sings about how something is coming. He doesn’t know what it is, but it’s going to be great,” she says with a laugh. “A lot of the new songs came out of that. They’re about needing to find whatever’s next.”
Lead-off single “Now” — with lyrics like “if there’s a future, we want it now” — sets the urgent tone ofParamore, the Nashville, Tennessee-bred band’s fourth album. Given the choice of packing it in or reinventing themselves as a trio, Williams, guitarist Taylor York, and bassist Jeremy Davis chose the latter and made a positive, uplifting album that reflects who they are in the present. “I’m really proud of the fact that this is not an angry Paramore album,” Williams says. Adds Davis: “It’s a lot happier and brighter album than people might expect given what’s happened. We’ve wanted to write songs like this for so long, but weren’t there emotionally. Now we are.”
The band members holed up to write over the past year and a half and emerged with a collection of songs that retains Paramore’s youthful spirit, but clearly shows their evolution. It’s the most musically adventurous set they’ve released to date. Which isn’t to say the album won’t thrill longtime fans. Still present is a ferocious, churning energy (a hallmark of Paramore’s sound) on “Now,” “Fast In My Car,” “Proof,” “Anklebiters,” and “Be Alone.” But the album should also earn Paramore new listeners, thanks to the trio’s willingness to explore uncharted sonic territory, like the funky, high-stepping “Ain’t It Fun” (featuring soulful vocals from Williams, slap-bass from Davis, and the soaring sound of a gospel choir), the doo wop-inflected “(One of Those) Crazy Girls,” and the lilting, string-filled “Hate To See Your Heart Break.” “People obviously give Hayley credit for being an amazing singer, but I don’t think they really understand how versatile she is and how much her voice can do,” York says. “You really hear different sides of her on this album.” 
For her part, Williams says that York stepping into a songwriter role was key to the album’s musical diversity. “I don’t think anyone knew Taylor had it in him,” she says. “Not that we had any reason to doubt that he did, but he just never had the opportunity before. While we were writing, I would walk into the room and hear something he’d be working on and be like, ‘What is that? That sounds insane.’ He’d say, ‘Oh, it’s just something I was doing for me,’ and I’d say ‘No, we’re going to use that.’” Says York: “Hayley and I really challenged each other during the songwriting process. It was a really cool experience to write with her and go on a new journey together. Once we found our own dynamic, it led to something different than our classic Paramore sound.”

All three band members agree that the album‘s producer, Justin Meldal-Johnsen, encouraged them to follow through on the chancier ideas that came up in the studio and not cut them off at the pass because they didn’t sound like traditional Paramore. Meldal-Johnsen (known as JMJ) is a former musical director for Beck and Gnarls Barkley, who also played bass with Beck and Nine Inch Nails, and produced M83’s Grammy-nominated Hurry Up, We’re Dreaming — one of Paramore’s favorite recent albums. “JMJ really found the heart in our new songs,” York says. “He didn’t want to change them, he just wanted to bring more life into them. He knows how to support other people’s music and I really respect that about him.” Adds Davis: “He really helped us be as creative possible and paint the exact picture we wanted.” 
The album was mixed by former Failure frontman Ken Andrews. “Having JMJ work on the project meant that we got to bring in some of his friends who are heroes of ours, like Ken,” Williams says. “As a 13-year-old girl listening to Fantastic Planet, I never expected that the guy singing on that record was eventually going to mix not only our album, but our fourth album. He even sang a little background part on ‘Be Alone.’ I smile like an idiot every time I hear it.”
Lyrically, Williams found herself inspired by being on her own for the first time after moving to Los Angeles to record the album (“Be Alone,” “Ain’t It Fun”) and the effect it has on her loved ones (“Still Into You”). Then there’s “Last Hope,” which Williams considers a song the band was always meant to write.“There were moments over the last year and a half that I really was just hanging by a thread,” she says. “I felt like my purpose was gone. The song is about how I crawled out of it.” On the flipside is “Fast In My Car,” which Williams says “is the story of the three of us as friends. We got to this place where it was like, ‘Let’s make it easy on ourselves by just being open and honest and having a good time hanging out as a band.’ When I hear that song, I think about us all piling into a car and going out on the town.”
That camaraderie is something that Paramore has striven for ever since they formed in Nashville in 2004 when they were teenagers. Since releasing their gold-certified debut All We Know Is Falling in 2005, the 3x-Grammy-nominated band has shot to international stardom thanks to a strong connection with its fans that has translated into a string of platinum and gold singles, including “Misery Business,” “Crushcrushcrush,” and “That’s What You Get” from 2007’s platinum-certified Riot!, “Decode” from 2008’s Twilight soundtrack, “The Only Exception” from 2009’s platinum Brand New Eyes, and “Monster” from 2011’s Transformers: Dark of the Moon soundtrack. It’s also led to a series of sold-out arena tours, including headlining the 2010 Honda Civic Tour and multiple visits to Europe, Asia, Australia, New Zealand, and South America.
More than anything, Williams, Davis, and York are ready to get back on the road. “Our connection with our fans is the most important thing to us,” Davis says. “I’m really excited to get back into the swing of it and feel that energy coming from the audience.” They also can’t wait to hear how the fans react to the new songs. “We really mean it when we say this album feels like the record our band was always supposed to make,” York says. Which is why they’ve chosen to self-title it. Says Williams: “We felt that the best way to give it a name was just to call it what it is. This album is us.”

Wednesday, 12 September 2012

3rd Idea

This is my 3rd Idea for a potential music track.






2nd Idea for Music Video

One of my other choices is 'In the Mourning' by American rock band Paramore.



This song is quite mellow and calm song, that could have quite a simple Music Video.

Initial Song Choice

The top song choice for the music video is 'Dark Paradise' by Lana Del Rey


I chose this song because it's a mysterious, somber song that I believe can be portrayed well in a Music Video.

Tuesday, 11 September 2012

Welcome!

My name is Symone and this is my A2 Media Blog. On this blog I will document my coursework on a regular basis and update you as my work progresses.