Sedona Videos

SpriteBat wrote on 3/10/2014, 10:42 PM
222
Tags:
Width: 720
Height: 480
Duration: 02:16
Format: x-ms-asf

I was in Sedona last weekend and I filmed a few short videos of the scenery. It was cloudy and rained most of the time, but it is still a beautiful place. I hope these videos can show that, even if they are a little shaky.

  The background music is a quick project I made before that weekend. It is just a simple mandolin duet that is all improvised.   Thanks for watching and listening. Oh, and I will probably upload something else later this month. Stay tuned.

Comments

Sandro_Glavina_Channel wrote on 3/11/2014, 7:01 PM

GREAT JOB IN VIDEO !!!! ciao da sandro

Last changed by Sandro_Glavina_Channel on 3/11/2014, 7:01 PM, changed a total of 1 times.

Sandro Glavina is an italian composer, named L'Uomo e L'Ombra. The choice of the name derives from the title of the album "L'uomo e l'ombra" of the band "Abstract Music Nuova Esistenza", an experimental group founded by Sandro Glavina together with his friends in the mid-70s.

In the period 2009-2022, L'Uomo e L'Ombra has done 84 albums. The compositions of Sandro Glavina are partly influenced by progressive rock. Sandro has developed a personal style with many experimentations and actualizations. He offers music beyond borders by intertwining different styles in crossover with each other. Prog, psychedelia, classical, post-rock, jazz, pop are some of the influences that dissolve in ambient atmospheres, citations of contemporary music and minimalist nuances. Sandro Glavina aka L'Uomo e L'Ombra plays the music using VSTI synthesizers, keyboards and adds some loops. Sandro isn't a professional musician, composes and plays music just for fun, but his works reach a good outcome, pleasant to listen. L'UOMO E L'OMBRA

https://www.jamendo.com/artist/495948/l-uomo-e-l-ombra/albums

https://www.reverbnation.com/luomoelombra/songs

https://www.facebook.com/luomoelombra/

   

DNLuce wrote on 3/12/2014, 4:49 PM

I honeymooned there in 2001!  Is that Oak Creek?

My only suggestion for the video is to slow it down.  The brain does an INCREDIBLE amount of image processing that the camera and editing software can barely come close to.  It's natural that people treat the video camera like another eye, but the reality is it's much less forgiving.  My worst habit is treating it like a telescope.  I go back to look at my footage and it's 50% tight in and zooming out.

 

Charles Kuralt used to have a sunday show called On the Road.  At the end of the show there was a segment of just video with the idea being, "let the picture tell the story."  I think of that when I remind myself to let the subject of the video create motion, not the camera.

 

Thanks for posting your video.  Nice audio too.

mohnysh wrote on 12/23/2015, 1:31 AM

Wow
Its cool
awesome
nice 
love your work
i am Impressed Love with love mohnysh
5*****