VidThreeNorth
No longer a newbie, moving up!
- Joined
- Oct 21, 2016
- Messages
- 1,300
- Reaction score
- 269
- Can others edit my Photos
- Photos NOT OK to edit
I don't generally like typical music videos. I have been seeing them for years and there is very little that is new to me or even conceptually difficult. From a creator's perspective, live performances are more interesting.
For most of my own videos, I have only had "one chance to get it right" usually without even having seen a particular performance before. That can be exciting or frustrating. But the flip side is where you can "rehearse and rehearse" and still having things go wrong.
In recent years, I have watched a lot of Korean productions, both from the music industry and TV dramas. I cannot say that I am a great fan of all the Korean stuff I have seen. Some has been really good, but on the other hand, I don't like a lot of what I see. The first basic criticism I have is that they do not use enough tripods. I think this happens because they are rushed. It is faster just to handhold stuff. But the results can make me sea-sick.
Still, a lot of productions are pretty "gutsy". I have seen quite a few "magic" transitions and "tracking the talent" that have been very well done.
[2020-12-02 21:40 rewrote the first four paragraphs to make sense.]
I will post a couple of "live" clips here, and I hope to find some behind the scenes related vids for them. I found one of the latter so far, but I am looking for another. For this pair, I still don't know if they are "one take" live or "multi-take" live. You might doubt if the first one can be done in a single take. I think it could be done, but I still doubt that it was.
[2020-12-02 21:43 Having watched the "behind the scenes" clip again -- actually a few times now, it was clearly multi-take, and I think specifically at least three takes.]
As for cameras, clearly, if it was a "one take", then there were at least two cameras. I doubt that there were more than three at the most. Still, even with a "multi-take" production, I think they probably had two cameras. Anyway, have fun trying to figure it out.
"[IU] '시간의 바깥 (above the time)' Live Clip",
posted Nov 18, 2020 by "이지금 [IU Official]", [Length 5:05]
""
Here's a "behind the scenes" video. Unfortunately, it is focused on the performer rather than on the production, but you do get a glimpse of the camera work -- literally only a glimpse.
"[IU TV] The Curious Case Of IU",
posted Nov 26, 2020 by "이지금 [IU Official]" [Length 7:48]
""
For most of my own videos, I have only had "one chance to get it right" usually without even having seen a particular performance before. That can be exciting or frustrating. But the flip side is where you can "rehearse and rehearse" and still having things go wrong.
In recent years, I have watched a lot of Korean productions, both from the music industry and TV dramas. I cannot say that I am a great fan of all the Korean stuff I have seen. Some has been really good, but on the other hand, I don't like a lot of what I see. The first basic criticism I have is that they do not use enough tripods. I think this happens because they are rushed. It is faster just to handhold stuff. But the results can make me sea-sick.
Still, a lot of productions are pretty "gutsy". I have seen quite a few "magic" transitions and "tracking the talent" that have been very well done.
[2020-12-02 21:40 rewrote the first four paragraphs to make sense.]
I will post a couple of "live" clips here, and I hope to find some behind the scenes related vids for them. I found one of the latter so far, but I am looking for another. For this pair, I still don't know if they are "one take" live or "multi-take" live. You might doubt if the first one can be done in a single take. I think it could be done, but I still doubt that it was.
[2020-12-02 21:43 Having watched the "behind the scenes" clip again -- actually a few times now, it was clearly multi-take, and I think specifically at least three takes.]
As for cameras, clearly, if it was a "one take", then there were at least two cameras. I doubt that there were more than three at the most. Still, even with a "multi-take" production, I think they probably had two cameras. Anyway, have fun trying to figure it out.
"[IU] '시간의 바깥 (above the time)' Live Clip",
posted Nov 18, 2020 by "이지금 [IU Official]", [Length 5:05]
""
Here's a "behind the scenes" video. Unfortunately, it is focused on the performer rather than on the production, but you do get a glimpse of the camera work -- literally only a glimpse.
"[IU TV] The Curious Case Of IU",
posted Nov 26, 2020 by "이지금 [IU Official]" [Length 7:48]
""
Last edited: