Monday 16 March 2015

Dear Moderator,

My name is Priya Sagoo and this is my A2 media studies blog; here you will find all of the work undertaken for my G324 A2 Advanced Portfolio Unit within the OCR GCE Media Studies course. 

For my advanced portfolio I chose to produce a music video to the song 'Mouthwash' by Kate Nash. 

Please use the navigation bar at the top of the page in order to access specific parts of my work, as organised into 12 categories. 

I hope you enjoy my work as much as I enjoyed producing it!

Yours faithfully, 
Priya Sagoo

Music Video

DigiPak and Magazine Advert


DIGIPAK FRONT COVER

DIGIPAK INTERIOR FRONT PANEL
DIGIPAK BACK COVER


INTERIOR PANELS 

SPINE

MAGAZINE ADVERT

Evaluation Question 1




 1. In what ways does your media products use, develop or challenge forms and conventions of real media products?

In order to understand our genre of indie Pop/Rock, we sourced music videos from artists ranging in the genre. Both Kate Nash's music videos Mouthwash and Foundations included key ideas that we would use in our own. We got key ideas from Kate Nash's 'Foundations' such as the idea of using toothbrushes, using a doll to represent her body image and a setting if her own home showing how she is in a natural state. The song ‘The Fear’ by Lilly Allen inspired us to feature an element of comedy into our coursework through our artists silly persona. We used a lot of stop motion throughout our music video, we were inspired by the Lenka video for her song ‘The Show’ which features special effects similar to ours.

Using Andrew Goodwin's 7 must have conventions; we’ve analysed our music video and concluded that we successfully included all seven conventions whilst still creating a video that is new, interesting and entertaining for the audience.

Firstly, we linked the lyrics to the song to the visuals in the video throughout the majority of its duration; this helped to amplify the meaning of the lyrics to the audience. 

Our genre of Indie Pop/Rocks conventions consist of being unconventional. This is seen in the way the artist dresses by wearing formal attire in a forest which is unconventional for the environment. This idea is further exemplified through the comedic element of the artists persona, for example she is characterised as cheeky as she skips about the forest and regularly smirks at the camera. We used woods, although audience research showed an urban environment with derelict things, but that doesn’t fit with the song so we decide to break that convention but use one that is commonly used in other types of music videos, because we wanted to show her freedom, being her natural self.

We didn’t use may intertextual references in our video, but through the stop motion of vinyl records, the video was connected to 80s music and artists, and a wide mixture of different types of people, something that inspired our artist. We featured numerous magazines in our video to display how society views women and how they are represented in magazines like ‘Home Woman’ and ‘Women’s Health’, however the artist uses these magazines ironically to suggest that she doesn’t care about being like these women and is more interested in being herself.

Using the Goodwin's convention of the notion of looking, we broke the fourth wall between the artists and the audience by having the artist look directly into the camera throughout the video, creating a relationship between her and the viewer. The notion of looking is seen in the shot of the artist looking at her reflection in the mirror, furthermore, we included so many close ups of the artists to meet the demands of the record label, another one of Goodwin's conventions.

By displaying the artist in her natural home environment, it gave the audience an insight on the way in which she lives, showing them how relatable she is to the ordinary viewer, as she leads a very normal life; exemplified by her relaxing at home on a Friday night, and by seeing her family photo albums.

We created a relationship between music and visuals by changing shots in time with the music at important points in the song to influence the mood of the video.
We portrayed iconography n the recurring image of the sky and her chic mushroom bob, unique to her personal style. These elements helped to make our video and artist recognisable to her audience easily.

Aside from Goodwin’s conventions, Voyeurism is not a convention seen in our genre and doesn’t link to the songs theme, furthermore we didn’t want our artist to be representative of they way in which today’s society sexually views women.

Evaluation Question 2


2. How effective is the combination of your music video and ancillary texts?


We made the combination of our music video and ancillary texts effective by making them clearly representative of one another. The repetitive use of the sky throughout all three media products created iconography and made each individual product recognisable collectively to the audience. 

The sky is relevant as it is representative of the idea of freedom and escapism, and is suggestive of living your life in the way you please. This makes each product, the music video, DigiPak and magazine advert relevant as they all portray the same message as the song of inner contentment. 

we used a clear image of our artist's unique hair style to create synergy between all three media texts. This reinforces the conventions of our Indie Pop/Rock genre and makes the artist clearly recognisable to the audience when seeing any of the music video, DigiPak or magazine advert.  

We kept the same theme on out DigiPak and magazine advert, linking them with clear association between the two products, creating synergy so that the audience can easily recognise our's artists product through the use of the same typography. 

We used the name of our single as the title of the album to create synergy and enable the audience to become familiar with the album and artist.



We transferred the mood and atmosphere of the song successfully into the media products using cool colour tones and casual fonts, with an artistic and modern styled layout. 

Evaluation Question 3




What have you learnt from your audience feedback?

We collected a study group of 6 of our friends, aged 17 and 18, who had completed our audience expectation interview and survey. We showed them our completed version of out music video, and these were their thoughts:

(pic)

1. Firstly, what genres of music do you listen to?
We especially wanted a range of music lovers to evaluate our music video so we would have am idea of how much our Indie Pop/Rock music video would appeal to people favouring other genres. Interestingly, we found that everyone in our study group listened to some form of Indie Rock/Pop, even if it wasn't their preferred genre.

2. What genre would you class our video in?
All but one person described our music video as Indie Pop/Rock, accept for Avneet, who said it was more like a pop video as she thought there was 'nothing indie about it' although everyone else disagreed.

3. Would you agree that our music video would fit in our genre?
Everyone agreed that it could/did.

4. Who do you think the video is aimed at?
The general consensus was anyone, mainly young adults.

5. Do you think the video matched the tone of the song?
Yes.

6. How effective is the performer?
"Fabulous", "Brilliant", "A very good actress" - A quote from herself

6.5 .... the settings?
All appropriate and well decorated, the woods being an especially relevant idea.

7. What did you enjoy about the music video?
The music video was interesting with the variety of different scenes and the stop motion. Some thought some elements were funny and that it was a feel good song and video, with Mollie portraying a positive vibe. One viewer, Miranda, thought the shots of Mollie walking in the woods was especially good. 

8. What would you change about the music video?
This question brought up much discussion. Emily, our other media student commented on how the music video didn't have much progression, not ending on a completed plot line. However, the res of the study group and us, disagreed, saying that the song didn't really have a progression lyrically, and thought that, combined with faster editing at the end would look strange and that they (the audience), preferred the longer shots at the end.

We asked a group of year 9s (aged 13-14) who absolutely loved the quirkiness of our video and the diversity of location. A class of year 11s (aged 15-16) said: good,  like the barbie bit, clapping, felt happy, change: no, watch it again yes, 9-8/10.


We showed music video director Terry Hall, a cut of our music video. He said that he loved our quirky ideas, especially the shots of Mollie spinning in stop motion. He noted we had kept a good connection with the audience and our performer with our frequent use of lip syncing and close ups. The choppy-ness of the close up of our performers lips that flip up and down really added to our theme.

Evaluation Question 4

How did you use media technology in the construction and research, planning and evaluation stages?

Thursday 5 March 2015

Music Videos that inspired us

For the evaluation task 1, we are planning on showing what aspects of which music videos inspired us in the making of our own video and used the conventions of the Indie Pop/Rock genre.

As we were using a song by Kate Nash, we looked at a number of her videos, and took inspiration from the song Mouthwash, which is the song we used for our music video, and the song Foundations, as it uses stop motion in a similar way to how we wanted to use it.

The song The Fear by Lilly Allen inspired us because the artist portrayed a similar care-free persona to the character we were hoping to create in our music video.

Finally, the clever and quirky use of stop motion in the song The Show by Lenka, gave use many ideas to use for own music video.

Here is a short video montage of the specific clips that inspired us:


Evaluation Planning: Task 4

How did yo use media technology in the construction and researchplanning and evaluation stages?

  • Youtube - watchded artists music as well as others from genre,
  • internet - allowed us to access all the information we found other than our own personal opinions of the song
  • used twitter to get feedback (eval)
  • Blogger - its advantages over piles of paper, especially if you lose your storyboard (!), how you could amalgamate all your planning and research in one place, adding links, embedding videos...
  • Digital cameras
  • iMovie
  • USBs etc to transfer data
  •  (gimp & picMonkey
  • Any challenges and how you overcame them...
  • Finally, technological convergence - how all of this is available on one Apple Mac computer...

The use of numerous media technology platforms were incredibly useful in the construction and research, planning and evaluation stages of our advanced portfolio.

We used YouTube in the construction and research stages to gain knowledge on the Indie Pop/Rock genre and our own artists personal style of music, to help make our product as realistic as possible. The internet allowed us to access this information as well as our own knowledge and information.

Blogger was a significant platform throughout all three stages of production. It allowed us to keep all our research and planning in an easily accessible place online that we could access whilst on set, making the filming process easier for us. In terms of evaluation, Blogger allowed us to refer back to information we needed to include that we had earlier documented.

PicMonkey was our chosen editing software to create our magazine advert and digipak as it enabled us to create a professional looking product, with easy interface and access to numerous styles, fonts and image manipulation layers.

We used USBs to transfer documents and data between computers at school and at home when email wasn't reliable or files were too large to transfer through any other means.

To creatively produce our evaluations, we used digital cameras and iMovie.

Challenges-lack of internet in the forest to access storyboards. We overcame by climbing to higher ground to get connection. 

Evaluation Planning: Task 2

2. How effective is the combination of your music video and ancillary texts?


We made the combination of our music video and ancillary texts effective by making them clearly representative of one another. The repetitive use of the sky throughout all three media products created iconography and made each individual product recognisable collectively to the audience. 

The sky is relevant as it is representative of the idea of freedom and escapism, and is suggestive of living your life in the way you please. This makes each product, the music video, DigiPak and magazine advert relevant as they all portray the same message as the song of inner contentment. 

we used a clear image of our artist's unique hair style to create synergy between all three media texts. This reinforces the conventions of our Indie Pop/Rock genre and makes the artist clearly recognisable to the audience when seeing any of the music video, DigiPak or magazine advert.  

We kept the same theme on out DigiPak and magazine advert, linking them with clear association between the two products, creating synergy so that the audience can easily recognise our's artists product through the use of the same typography. 

We used the name of our single as the title of the album to create synergy and enable the audience to become familiar with the album and artist.

We transferred the mood and atmosphere of the song successfully into the media products using cool colour tones and casual fonts, with an artistic and modern styled layout. 

Evaluation Planning: Task 1

In order to understand our genre of indie Pop/Rock, we sourced music videos from artists ranging in the genre. Both Kate Nash's music videos Mouthwash and Foundations included key ideas that we would use in our own. We got key ideas from Kate Nash's 'Foundations' such as the idea of using toothbrushes, using a doll to represent her body image and a setting if her own home showing how she is in a natural state. The song ‘The Fear’ by Lilly Allen inspired us to feature an element of comedy into our coursework through our artists silly persona, furthermore the video starts with a shot of the sky and trees, similar to shots used in our own video. We used a lot of stop motion throughout our music video, we were inspired by the Lenka video for her song ‘The Show’ which features special effects similar to ours.

Using Andrew Goodwin's 7 must have conventions; we’ve analysed our music video and concluded that we successfully included all seven conventions whilst still creating a video that is new, interesting and entertaining for the audience.

Firstly, we linked the lyrics to the song to the visuals in the video throughout the majority of its duration; this helped to amplify the meaning of the lyrics to the audience. 

Our genre of Indie Pop/Rocks conventions consist of being unconventional. This is seen in the way the artist dresses by wearing formal attire in a forest which is unconventional for the environment. This idea is further exemplified through the comedic element of the artists persona, for example she is characterised as cheeky as she skips about the forest and regularly smirks at the camera. We used woods, although audience research showed an urban environment with derelict things, but that doesn’t fit with the song so we decide to break that convention but use one that is commonly used in other types of music videos, because we wanted to show her freedom, being her natural self.

We didn’t use may intertextual references in our video, but through the stop motion of vinyl records, the video was connected to 80s music and artists, and a wide mixture of different types of people, something that inspired our artist. We featured numerous magazines in our video to display how society views women and how they are represented in magazines like ‘Home Woman’ and ‘Women’s Health’, however the artist uses these magazines ironically to suggest that she doesn’t care about being like these women and is more interested in being herself.

Using the Goodwin's convention of the notion of looking, we broke the fourth wall between the artists and the audience by having the artist look directly into the camera throughout the video, creating a relationship between her and the viewer. The notion of looking is seen in the shot of the artist looking at her reflection in the mirror, furthermore, we included so many close ups of the artists to meet the demands of the record label, another one of Goodwin's conventions.

By displaying the artist in her natural home environment, it gave the audience an insight on the way in which she lives, showing them how relatable she is to the ordinary viewer, as she leads a very normal life; exemplified by her relaxing at home on a Friday night, and by seeing her family photo albums.

We created a relationship between music and visuals by changing shots in time with the music at important points in the song to influence the mood of the video.
We portrayed iconography n the recurring image of the sky and her chic mushroom bob, unique to her personal style. These elements helped to make our video and artist recognisable to her audience easily.

Aside from Goodwin’s conventions, Voyeurism is not a convention seen in our genre and doesn’t link to the songs theme, furthermore we didn’t want our artist to be representative of they way in which today’s society sexually views women.

Thursday 5 February 2015

DigiPak Update



 CD Cover





















CD Back Cover


Album Magazine Advert





















We have completed 2/6 panels for our album digipak, we stuck to the conventions of our genre of Indie Pop/Rock by making our cover simplistic yet appealing to the eye. In the next four panels we are making we intend on including information about the album and the songs and photographs of the artist. For the magazine advert, we kept it as similar as we cold to the album cover to keep the clear link between the two.

Sunday 1 February 2015

Mouthwash Stop Motion: Take 1

From the image alone, it is clear that the first take of mouthwash stop motion was not successful, firstly, the stills were filmed in portrait (a rookie mistake), as well as this, the image is slightly tilted, as the photos were taken without a tripod. However these were good in helping us practice with editing together stills to create a fluid stop motion effect.
Better luck next time hopefully.

Media Photoshoot

What we get up to in A Level Media 




More stop motion!

Monday 19 January 2015

Harry Potter Tour

On the 15th on Jan we went to visit the Harry Potter studio in Watford where we learnt the ins and outs of the production of all eight Harry Potter films. As well as touring the studios, so we could see all the sets, props, costumes and more, we had a media lesson in which our knowledge on filming and shot types was extended.






Thursday 15 January 2015

A Very Rough Cut

In order to receive feedback from Terry Hall (previous post) we had to create an incredibly rough cut to give him a general idea of what kind of video we wanted to create; here's what we made:

Tuesday 13 January 2015

Music Video Director Feedback

We recently showed rough cuts of our music video to director Terry Hall in hope of some constructive feedback on what we could do to improve our shots as well as inspire some new ideas. Today we skyped with Terry so that he could give us his feedback, and this is what he told us;

  • We need to maintain the visual style and tone of the video, but maybe using a majority of still frames. 
  • We need to ensure that we include a lot more lip syncing shots to ensure we create a relationship between the artist and the viewer. 
  • In our stop motion shots of our actress on the steps outdoors, Terry suggested that we layer shots to create two or more of the actress in one shot. 
  • To stick with the theme of stop motion, the director suggested that we should make our regular shots 'choppier', which will hopefully contribute to the quirky vibes of the video.

This White Stripes video uses a similar technique to our test with the girl on the steps. Interesting to see how the idea develops throughout. Has moving camera at the end:



http://youtu.be/K4dx42YzQCE
PES is one of the best stop frame directors:
https://www.youtube.com/user/PESfilm/videos

A few ideas and techniques on this that we could use:
https://vimeo.com/46287665

This Kate Nash video has a few elements of stop frame in it that is probably worth looking at for how to include them in our video:
https://vimeo.com/35289310