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Steps to create your own music video By Olivia Andrews Music has always attracted people since generations. If you are one who loves music, you may wish to create a album or video of your own. Creating a album needs some DVD’s or CD’s, video capturing software, video editing software, good imagination, time and patience.
Useful tips:
1. You should use or video from a CD or DVD you have purchased and not you have downloaded.
2. Always pick a song that matches with your prospective video clips. Action clips won’t go right with romantic songs.
3. Never put entire episode to instead choose best parts of the episode and combine them together such that one flow to the other. You can also imagine TV previews as shown on the television.
4. Creativity counts a lot in making a good video.
Steps to make the video:
1. The first and most important thing is to plan the video you wish to make. If you plan well everything will go right and you will get some good results. You should pick any song that you like and at the same time the song should have an anime feel. It’s not necessary that you choose pop or rock but anything that could be really rocking.
2. Video that you are going to make should have matching to it. Most of the rock times have a mix of mild verse and explosive chorus. After you have selected the tune, you should decide that which of the video clips will go right
New CD - The London Piano Quartet - Alan Bush Chamber Music
The Trust are delighted to announce the release of a new CD of four chamber works by Alan Bush, representing the early and late phases of the composer's career. All the works are unpublished and none of them have been recorded previously. Two of the early works on the CD - Phantasy for Violin and Piano and Quartet for Strings and Piano (two movements only) - had their first public performances in December 1924 in Hampstead Town Hall, London, with Bush playing the piano parts. The Sonata for Cello and Pianoforte, written about 60 years after the other works, is along with Bush's Sonata for Organ Op.122 (1987), thought to be his last work.
The music is performed on the CD by the London Piano Quartet, formed in 2000 by Norma Liddell, Elizabeth Turnbull, David Kennedy and Philip Fowke, all distinguished performers in their own fields. The Quartet has quickly made a name for itself through the players' relaxed style and informative presentation. It has premièred and recorded works by other British composers in addition to a concert repertoire of piano quartets by many major composers.
The CD is accompanied by an excellent, very informative sleeve-note by Timothy Bowers, who studied composition with Bush at the Royal Academy of Music and is now himself a well-known composer and professor at the RAM. The Trust owe him another debt of gratitude in that Dr. Bowers prepared the manuscript edition of the Sonata for Cello and Pianoforte, used by the artists on this CD.
The works featured on the CD are:
The artists:
Norma Liddell (violin)
Elizabeth Turnbull (viola)
David Kennedy (cello)
Philip Fowke (piano)
The CD is available from:
PO Box 609
Watford
Herts
WD18 7YA
Tel 01923 803001
Price:£9.99 plus £1.25 p&p
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The Frank and Hilda Stokes and Marjorie Meyer Memorial Prize for Sight-Reading
To mark the Trust's appreciation of generous donations made to the Trust by the children of Frank and Hilda Stokes and Marjorie Meyer and to commemorate the long and close friendship that their parents had with Alan and Nancy Bush, the Trust has established an annual prize of £100 for sight-reading for students at the Royal Academy of Music.
In June 2003 the first award of the prize was made to Sergey Rybin. Born in Siberia, Sergey studied at the Moscow State University of Culture and Arts, later joining the staff as a Professor of Piano. He began his studies on the RAM Piano Accompaniment Course in September 2002 where his professors are Malcolm Martineau and Colin Stone. Since then, Sergey has given various public performances at London venues as well as concerts at the RAM. He has been the recipient of a number of other RAM prizes.
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with tune.
3. Next you need to pick your video which is going to be very time consuming. You can import selected MPEG or AVI format into the CD’s you have purchased. Many software programs are also available that could help you in doing so or you can use a video capture card to get same results. After importing all the clips, you should slice them appropriately.
4. Use editing programs such as Adobe Premier and Pinnacle to slice the song lyrics. These editing programs will import the along with the video so that you can preview your work.
5. Lastly you need to burn your work into a CD to save it for future.
For more information visit our recommended website music-future.com Olivia Andrews, writer of music-future.com
is a freelance journalist and has written many reviews on subjects such as finance, education, health, entertainment, music, gifts, crafts, travel, apparels and mobile phones.
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