Saturday, March 24, 2012
Tuesday, March 20, 2012
Photography
Lately I have been getting into photography a lot more seriously. That means I've stopped being safe and only using the functions I know how to use (aperture and exposure) and started experimenting with things like shutter speed. I've also started using manual focus again after realising that my new camera has a very cool extreme close up for focusing purposes.
You may remember that a long time ago I posted some photos from the "Swell" sculpture exhibition that is held every year along the beachfront at Currumbin, on the Gold Coast. That was the start of the photography bug. This is the next step for me. I didn't go and buy the fanciest camera with the biggest lens. I got one that was right for me, after lots of research. The Canon 7D doesn't do what I want it to do the most: be portable enough to fit in my video camera bag. I sacrificed a few mega pixels, a viewfinder and the ability to sneer at people who don't have a 7D and got a compact Sony NEX-C3 instead. Entry level camera for that range. I figured if the hype wore off, I wasn't going to be that much out of pocket. Plus, I did enough research to realise that Sony also have a video camera which uses that same kind of lens, making it an obvious option for my love of compact gear. Which is to say- my love of not lugging heavy things about with me.
I'm not going to talk about which settings I've used for each photo, because to be perfectly honest I was experimenting. I believe art is created with passion and the ability to break the rules. Technical ability will not replace artistic merit for me. And for me, this is art. I would encourage anyone to ignore the rules and do something they love to do just for the sake of doing it.
I've posted my favourite photos in this blog. They're from either a Sony Cybershot TX5, Canon Powershot or Sony NEX-C3. I challenge you to be able to tell me which is which. None of these have been edited in Photoshop but they have been cropped so they look wider. The videographer in me prefers a wide screen version!

Great action shot at the Pannawonica Rodeo in 2011.
Out of the several events I saw on the day, this photo turned out the best. I like the way the bull is about to lunge forward to knock the rider off his back. It only took a few seconds for the rider to fall onto the ground so I was lucky to be able to get this shot as they came out of the gates.

Burned out car off one of the dirt roads behind Back Beach in Karratha.
My friend and I took a wrong turn to get to Back Beach when we first moved here. We ended up on a track that would have led to the industrial estate, had we continued our journey. Satisfied with our photos of a few burned out cars, we turned back the way we came.

A recent sunset looking over the back highway in Karratha.
I was busy watching a documentary when my partner came and told me to look at the sunset. Glancing out the sliding glass doors, I could already see it was pretty. After the ad break started I took my camera outside, only to be gobsmacked by what the sunset actually looked like!
This is the water dragon who ate my lunch with me, then stopped for a photo.
I went back to the Gold Coast to visit my parents in January and decided to go to my favourite park and have some coffee and food there. Something made me take my camera, I sort of knew I'd get some really good photos. This is my favourite one.
Monday, January 24, 2011
How to make a song: Sarah style... Part II
Here's an updated version of my song. Still working title: Mind Games. Not really sure what to call it, actually.
Mind Games by phoebeashmore
Anyway, who cares about that part. Here's the part that I think is exciting...
I recorded all the guitar parts as electric now, so it sounds more rock. I also programmed the drums properly, which actually took a few hours to do. When I say a few hours I do include coffee breaks in that. So real time probably about an hour. Whatever. I added a bit more synth to make it sound like a siren before the synth break/bridge.
And. I added some nice "Oooh Oooh"s to the track as my backing vocals. Which I recorded properly and they're keepers. I use a Rode NT-2A which I set to cardioid pattern with the roll-off switch set to 80. That's because the room isn't soundproofed and the road outside is noisy. Works really well on those settings for me. I also use a pop shield but I don't have a shock-mount for the mic. It's just on the arm it comes with.
Having trouble trying to create a lead guitar part for the key change part before the last chorus. Everything I try sounds cool when I just play along but when I record it, it seems to clash like red wine and milk.
Blah blah finished. Here's the track:
Sunday, January 16, 2011
How to make a song: Sarah style...
Okay, I'm going to do something relatively useful with this blog. I'm going to use it to demonstrate how I make a song. But I'm going to have to start with a semi constructed song otherwise it would be incredibly boring and you'd stop reading after about 4 seconds. Which most people will still do anyway.
The song I am working on has a working title of "Mind Games" but has been called several other names in the past. It's a song that is nearly 5 years in the making and started off as a spoof of The Veronicas. Here's that spoof:
It's pretty bad, hey? But it actually has a really good pop foundation, which I have used in the new version. What I started with was the drums, because obviously I already had the chord structure from "Key Change". And that song was written while very drunk, on an out of tune Behringer guitar made of cardboard. The beats were made in Fruity Loops and so was the synth.
For this new version I have thrown together a basic beat in Reason using Redrum. When I go back and edit drums I will probably play them in using my Dr Rhythm 606 as a controller. Makes them sound more live and can quantise them later if they're slightly off beat. I also did a rough bass line as a guide, which has been replaced by real bass in this version I'll demo below. So, using the beats and the guide bass I did a whole pile of acoustic guitar parts. I do acoustic guitar because if everything sounds good on acoustic, it will usually sound pretty epic on an electric guitar. Sometimes I make the lead parts into piano or synth or whatever instead of keeping them as guitars. I just noodle about for a few takes and keep the bits that I like and delete the bits that are stupid or don't fit.
Finally, I do a rough guide vocal. Now, these are generally 99% in tune, but I am naughty and I don't bother to warm up and I always do them in one take. Warts and all for demo vox. This song is placed within the centre of my range so it's pretty easy to sing and doesn't sound out of tune that much. Most people can't tell when it is anyway.
So that's where I'm at now. I've done my rough vocal and a quick backing part for the middle 8, just to remember what I want it to sound like.
Here's my first demo:
I'll update this in about a week or so. However long it takes me to record an electric guitar for the rhythm part. This is a song I'm actually going to work on properly, I usually just stop at the demo phase, which is what I just posted.
Peace. xx
Tuesday, November 2, 2010
Cracks in the Pavement
This is a new version of another old song. I rarely write new stuff these days, still trying to find my creativity. Have a weird feeling that it might be packed in a box somewhere, or run away with the man in the moon. If you see it, send it back.
Anyway.
I found a really crappy version of this during a long boring hard-drive clean up. Which made it totally worth it, by the way. I never wrote the verses for it; or if I have written verses for it, I did not sing them and have long since lost the paper they were written on. Or someone threw them away. More likely. Because I like to leave things everywhere... (This is a note for the ladies. Do not date me, for I am messy and I do not like to be told to tidy up)
So this is a one take demo. Meaning. Everything I recorded I did in one take to see how it sounded. I did, however, program the drums properly. Because drums are super awesomely fantastic and they also change the whole mood of the song. That's how awesome they are. Drummers are Gods/Goddesses. I hate drummer jokes. Bass player jokes are another matter...
Again, strangely, blogger doesn't allow audio files so it's shoved in a lo-fi 4:3 ratio (horridhorridhorrid) video shell. With really bad audio compression. Sorry.
Enjoy. Or not. That's your prerogative and you'll have to work through it. Something. END.
Friday, September 3, 2010
This is Goodbye Video
I thought I would link the video I just mentioned in my previous blog. It's (obviously) called This is Goodbye and I filmed it on a Kodak zX1 mini camcorder on a day out in Brisbane. I was waiting to go to a meeting about the Cine Sparks festival so used the opportunity to play with it a little. There are no options for anything other than a point and shoot style of filming, but that's what you get when you want convenience as opposed to a huge bag of great video gear!
I'd been playing about with This is Goodbye in Logic to just learn more of the advanced tools in it, as I'd already recorded this song for an EP years ago (and was never truly happy with it as I didn't have any production input- just sat and played guitar and sang) and could have picked another song to record, but it felt right to pick this one. Pretty happy with how the new demo turned out. I'm changing the vocal lines slightly and have come up with some fantastic harmonies (well I think they're fantastic, I suppose it's debatable) to put in the last choruses.
Anyway. This is the video. I used a really basic colour matte with an opacity of about 15% to add in a great orangey yellow tinge to it, giving it an almost nostalgic look.
Burn Like Water
Hi. I haven't blogged in a while for a few reasons. Mostly because no one bothered to read it and those that did were my friends who heard it in person anyway. I've also renewed my obsession with audio and although I've vastly tweaked my Burn Like Water vocals and guitars, they have not changed in the video version. I'd like to redo the video so that it is a little more exciting and a lot more "live" instead of done on green screen. Finally, I've been busy storing up multiple folders worth of rejection emails from employers who are very happy to point out that they want experience but whose companies do not bother to offer work experience or internships. This nonsense has got to stop. But anyway, that's a diatribe for another blog.
I uploaded the final version on to YouTube a while ago, but never got around to actually linking a blog to it. So I'll do that now.
Annoyingly it keeps the tag on it, but you can see it on YouTube without the tags if you search Phoebe Ashmore. You can also see my other video, This is Goodbye, that I made in one day on a trip to Brisbane. It was filmed exclusively on a blog type mini camcorder- the Kodak zX1. I'm ok with how this whole thing turned out. It taught me valuable lessons regarding how to handle myself when the project falls to bits. Let's just say crying DOES help, it's almost cathartic in a way and lets you let go of the emotions you've built up from frustrations. It also lets you move on with the project. So don't ever deny someone having a bit of a teary about their work. Especially if it's such a personal piece, like mine was. That song is about a really hard break up for me and although I wished I hadn't used it many times over the course of the project, I'm glad I did because it helped me get over the break up in a twisted kind of way.
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