Archive for the ‘Video’ Category

Common Chords and Elvis

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Here’s the main video for my latest Common Chords column. It’s hard to believe this is the 18th post featured.

Nathan Belt was a pleasure to work with and an excellent musician and craftsman. His love for music is genuine and he has a good sense of life outside of his time on stage.

Please check out the last video on the post where some of the tribute artists at Legends In Concert get together for an impromptu jam covering a famous Beatles song.

Here’s the link to the Common Chords blog.

rlh




Feeling the tug of age with my latest Common Chords

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My latest Common Chords column is on a 17-year-old North Myrtle Beach singer/songwriter named Steve Pethel.

I first heard Little Steve (he’s a junior) sing and play at the local open-mic I attend on Thursdays at Fresh Brewed Coffee House in Myrtle Beach. I noticed right away he was different and his songwriting skills were well beyond his age.

His playing is unique because he is left-handed and plays a right-handed guitar just flipped over. So the treble strings are at the top of his playing approach instead of the customary bottom. This gives him a sound that is opposite to most.

Being slightly different has not hindered his playing for he has adapted well and knows his way around the fingerboard.

This kid reminds me so much of me at that age. I too struggled to fit in with my peers at school and the guitar and writing helped soothe the pains of disappointment and rejection.

Steve’s advantage is he lives in a different time where uniqueness can be nurtured and encouraged. I know for sure his life will be better because of this trait, whatever path he chooses to take with his music.

For this CC, my friend James Rimes brought along his recording rig and he took care of the sound so I could concentrate on the visuals. This was a big plus and I hope you notice how well this one sounds.

rlh




Common Chords and the jam band

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It’s hard to believe this is my 16th Common Chords completed and done.

On this installment I met with the jam band Ten Toes Up for music and interviews about how they travel together and then live together in a small home in Murrells Inlet.

The challenge for these videos was the sound. Recording multiple instruments from several different sound sources in the bands practice area and without a stereo point made for some muffled recordings.

In the end I found the best solution was to place the Edirol close to the source of the lead vocals and then let everything fall below that in the mix. This worked and so I feel the sound is as good as it could be in this situation.

I’m getting pretty good at working with the Edirol and it’s fun to see if I can find a limit for it. So far it has shown no limits. It is the perfect field-recording tool that lets me worry about other things like the 2 cameras and 2 tripods I have to juggle while shooting these.

Go here to the Common Chords blog to read my story and see performance only videos of the band.

rlh




Watch this video if you’d like to smile…

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Dave The Horn Guy was at the 2010 California-Carolina Leagues’ All-Star Game Gala tonight and I decided to make a little clip. If he lived in the area he would certainly be a candidate for my column but since he is not a clip will have to do.

I hope you enjoy.

rlh




MPEG Streamclip saved my week.

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Last Tuesday I put together this video after I finally sat down and learned how to convert the Canon h.264 codec to one that is compatible in Final Cut Pro without rendering. After a few experiments I found the Apple DVCPRO HD 720P60 codec was the best to covert to and worked with very little flickering.

Converting the codec saved me a lot of time but the conversion process still takes time.

With the converted codec, I was able to complete my images for the paper, a gallery of still images for the web and a video and still get home for the home cooked meal made by my fiancé.

rlh




If I just had one sister…

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My latest Common Chords was fun to shoot as I got the opportunity to hang out with a group of awesome sisters for a warm evening of fellowship and music.

The Bellamy Sisters have one of the most loving relationships I’ve seen in my career and it was an honor to tell the world about them.

They have used this love to transcend hardship and sickness and make the world a better place for others. This is the heart of what my column is about.

I spoke with Jannett Bellamy soon after this video published and she liked it but for the close-up of her shoes. The sister’s claps and toe taps are the drums of the acapella group so I felt the need to show them working. Plus her shoes are the same color lime green as most of the rooms of her home. She said her daughters and nieces gave her a hard time about her shoes.

I’m having so much fun with this column and I’m hoping folks enjoy it as much as I do. It’s a lot of extra work but I’m learning so much about life and music from my subjects.

Go to the Common Chords blog page to see my story about the sisters and view extra music-only videos.

rlh




An IPOD video mixed with an Edirol R-09 recording

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Higher quality sound version

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Lower compressed sound version

I learned what will hopefully be a new trick as I put this video together with a video clip from an IPOD and sound recorded on my Edirol R-09.

When compressing for the web, I would normally compress the sound along with the video.

On this video I decided to make two versions and not compress the sound channel on one and see what effects it has on the quality and streaming capabilities of the video.

I found I gained better sound quality and lost the tunnel effect common when compressing for the web.

My concerns are the file size will be too large and streaming capabilities will be slowed.

In the top video, the sound channel is not compressed and the lower video the sound compression is set at 44100 hz and 64 KBits/S.

With the Common Chords blog, the sound quality is the money, so I will use this trick on the next column to boost the quality of the sound if this video will stream smoothly.

For all you guitar folks, I’m playing my Martin OO-18V named “Lit’ Billy” and a Seydel Black Blues Favorite in the key of G and played cross.

Another comparison I failed to mention is It’s not hard to notice the quality difference between the footage shot with the Canon 5D and the IPOD video.

One can work forever and still not master this stuff.

rlh




My 50th Birthday and a rare video

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This past weekend I celebrated my 50th birthday along with my fiancé’s Chris and family in Surfside Beach.

Chris was celebrating her 39th (politically correct number) on the 16th so we combined our party to include her son Luke who turns 14th later this month and my blood brother Bubba who celebrates his 52nd on May 20th.

I should include our dog Chloe who was 1-year-old on May 1st.

We had a big party with a pig-pickin and all the beer one could hope to drink. The celebration included about 50 friends and family who showed to help me make it through this milestone birthday. Even my brother Mike flew in from Tenn. to help.

We played a lot of music throughout the weekend and on Monday evening I convinced my cousin Iva to help me record several of my songs on video. I do this for everyone else on my Common Chords blog so it is rare I get to record videos for myself.

Corporation Blues is the first one I’ve had the opportunity to piece together since the party.

For those interested, Iva is using my Canon 5D with a 16-35mm L lens to record the HD video.

In fairness, this was the first time she used the camera and found out it is like a wild hog to keep focused.

I’m recording the song on my trusty Edirol R-09 digital recorder and playing my Gibson Advanced Jumbo I call “Smoky”.

“Smoky” is a bought new 1999 model with a beautiful tobacco sunburst and a tone meant to play the blues.

The harmonica is a Seydel Black Blues Favorite in the key of G and I’m playing cross harp to the guitar in the DADGAD tuning.

Seydel harps rule and I don’t even get paid to say that.

I’ve Also included an .mp3 version of the same recording so those interested can see how much of the sound quality is lost on the compression of the video to use on the web.

It’s pretty amazing the loss.

Corporation Blues © 2009 Hippiedog Produce

rlh




The Heros of Stalag 17-B

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Sunday I had the honor of witnessing a memorial service for the 65th anniversary of the liberation of German prison camp Stalag 17-B by allied forces.

Now In their late 80’s, many of the survivors are wonderfully vibrant and clear about the day when Patton’s army came riding to them in Sherman tanks.

Al Nash, one of the survivors, had great photos of himself and his plane from that era.

With 10 crewmembers on his plane, 7 were killed under heavy German anti-aircraft fire while they were bombing submarine forces in 1943.

Getting shot down in Italy, the air force sergeant was eventually placed with other airmen and transported to Austria for two years at the camp before their liberation.

The Ocean Dunes Resort has a special room for military guests called the Hall of Heroes designed to honor all veterans of America’s wars. It’s not unusual for me to get reunion requests at the resort.

This was a special one because they where POWs and their story needs to be remembered.

rlh




Common Chords and the advocate of the song

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Over the last several months, I’ve been honing my musical chops at a weekly open mic sessions at Fresh Brewed Coffee House on Thursday nights in Myrtle Beach.

During that time, I was impressed with the musical selflessness of the open mic’s host Brian Roessler.

I was hesitant at first to include Brian as a subject for my Common Chords column because I didn’t want the other musicians that frequent the session to feel left out. Brian’s community of songwriters is strong and there are several excellent musicians and writers that frequent the event.

After realizing the column is more about community action with music than about musical prowess, I decided the others would understand.

The video was difficult to piece together. I recorded two songs and the interview footage during our video session last Thursday afternoon. The first song “Fine Print” was an up-tempo, fast paced song and the other, “Never Meant To Last” was a slow beautiful song about the fleeting status of love.

For the interview video I chose “Fine Print” as the background. The fast paced rhythms of Brian’s guitar at times were a little overpowering when I inserted the interview footage because of Roessler’s soft pitched voice. No matter how low I took the volumes on the song, It still seemed to distracted from what he was trying to say. In hindsight “Never Meant To last” would have been a better choice.

On the Common Chords blog I was able to include both songs as music only videos so nothing was lost.

The time I’m spending on these posts is phenomenal. Because of codec issues with Final Cut Pro using the Canon 5D Mark IIs, the render times are taxing and causing me to reevaluate the process.

It is not unusual for a typical post to take 3 days to put together. Here’s a break down on the last post.

Day one:

Shoot and upload video to my computer. Place both A&B footage of the recorded songs in the FCP timeline and render.

Day two:

Edit and remove unwanted raw footage from the b-roll camera footage. Synchronize the clips together with the better audio recorded from the digital recorder.

Create all the title slides for the two music-only videos and then export self-contained .mov files out of FCP for compression to the web.

Create main interview video by adding edited interview footage over one of the finished music-only videos.

Export that video to a .mov file from FCP.

Day 3:

Convert all .mov files to a working web ready file using the On2 Flix .flv converter. This process takes a while because I export two different file sizes for use on the Common Chords site and the Zero Comments site. I also use the double pass option for better quality.

Edit and caption the still images for the photo that will appear in the paper.

Write and submit the story to the editors.

After the story is edited, I format and upload the information to the blogging software for publishing on the web.

Day 4:

Sleep and then back to the daily grind.

rlh