Howler Monkey by Meier & Erdmann by Víctor Doval


Official videoclip for the track Howler Monkey by Meier & Erdmann Released on the Moniker Eggplant Label (http://ift.tt/2ggzIX4). Video created by Victor Doval (http://ift.tt/1nYHP7y).

The video shows a landscape created synchronously with the music. The generation of the visuals is based on the sound spectrum. The diverse frequency bands have been used to algorithmically define the visual parameters such as geometries, materials and lightings.
Through this sonic analysis and spectral decomposition each element and texture of the track has been visually processed.
The whole sequence has been created in a procedural way where the definition of every part has been based on mathematical integrations.
To manage all this data flow I worked with Processing and Blender. The Blender add-on Sverchok has been the cornerstone in the creation and transformation of the geometry.

The initial idea came from the understanding of music as a temporal journey, a changing landscape that is perceived via the ears. The track Howler Monkey written and performed by Meier & Erdmann invites the listener to travel through the subjective/individual and the abstract.
The harmonic evolution of the track is associated with a 24 hour time lapse experienced in 290 seconds. From sunrise to sunrise the video offers a dreamy trip that opens doors for contemplation and to emotions the track might evoke.

Check Meier & Erdmann’s album – The ‚Howler Monkey‘ LP: http://ift.tt/2oR3yJG

Check my other procedural works and gif experiments: http://ift.tt/2p1DIjf

Check Meier & Erdmann on soundcloud: http://ift.tt/2oT0MUp

IDAC by Casimir Nozkowski


Screenings:
2016 Hot Docs Film Festival premiere
2016 Rooftop Films
2016 Vassar Filmfest
2016 Iron Mule Film Festival
2017 Sarasota Film Festival

Synopsis: When I was leaving for college, my aunt Dana told me I had a cousin I’d never met who was matriculating in the same year as me. We shared classes and had friends in common but for some strange reason I never introduced myself. All during college, and then into the real world, through a decade of overlapping connections, we never met. This film is an examination of that hesitation and an attempt to understand why I never made the easiest connection in the world… until it was too late. Through archival footage and re-enactment of the era in question, IDAC is ultimately a documentary about what was happening on an unconscious level and how distant a relative can be even when they’re right in front of your face.

Written/Directed/Edited by Casimir Nozkowski
Music by Alexander Strung
Sound Mix by Tod Chapman
Color Grading by Phil Choe @ Nice Shoes
Featuring Hannah Bos, Amanda Duarte, Erin Edmison, Josh Henderson-Cox, Greg Glassman, Thomas Nozkowski, Joyce Robins
Thank you Miranda Beverly-Whittemore

Production Notes: I’ve made over 100 short films, many of which examine issues of family, the blurry line between fiction and non-fiction and the sometimes disturbing, sometimes hilarious ways our memories fail us. IDAC is an autobiographical documentary which is a genre my movies (or at least parts of them) often fall into. The key with autobiography in my opinion is to avoid being sentimental at all costs. This does not mean you can’t be funny or can’t be authentic and personal – it’s just that it being your story does not automatically make it interesting. On top of that, IDAC also considers the way we dream and the way dreams can invade our everyday life – which is another subject matter that can easily steer a film awry. So making IDAC was exciting because once mindful of all these pitfalls, there was an enormous feeling of restraint that coursed through the documentary’s production. My hope is that people who see my film IDAC recognize familiar moments and feelings from their own lives: memories they can’t quite explain, people they think they know and dramatic, life-defining events that upon further scrutiny don’t exactly add up as neatly as they once thought.

See more of my films at vimeo and at casimirnozkowski.com

Mile 19 by Big Pup Film


Some people run for exercise and others for competition, but Johnnie Jameson runs to heal. Whether it’s the barista at your coffee shop, the valet parking your car, or the mailman who comes to your door, there are extraordinary people behind every ordinary job. Johnnie is one of them.

For more information visit: www.mile19.com

Featuring: Johnnie Jameson
Director, Editor: Vincent DeLuca // Big Pup Film
Producer: Jemma Davis
DP, Editor: Karee Maxson // Big Pup Film
Associate Producer: Trevor Hall
Additional Camera: Zach Gouz
Music Supervisor: Dan Gross
Audio Post: One Thousand Birds
Sound Supervisor: Andrew Tracy
Sound Design/Mix: Calvin Pia
Production Managers: Ethan Downing, Hayley Pappas
Colorist: Gabriele Turchi
Visual Effects: Sam Sullivant
Production Secretary: Timothy Miller

Music By:
„I Ain’t the Same“ – Alabama Shakes
„Be My Girl“ – El Goodo
„Man on Fire“ – Edward Sharpe & The Magnetic Zeros

Carry Illinois-„Electric Charm“ by Carry Illinois


„Electric Charm“ from Carry Illinois‘ „Electric Charm/Sea Inside“ 7-inch Vinyl released November 2016.

Credits:

Designer and Animator: Yukai Du (http://ift.tt/1grR6ry)
Producer: Bliink (http://ift.tt/2l0uNMh)

http://ift.tt/2oWSOq1

Creative Production


http://www.yukaidu.com/

Music/Lyrics © Lizzy Lehman Music (SESAC)

Expedition 50 Soyuz MS-02 Landing

Expedition 50 Soyuz MS-02 Landing The Soyuz MS-02 spacecraft is seen as it lands with Expedition 50 Commander Shane Kimbrough of NASA and Flight Engineers Sergey Ryzhikov and Andrey Borisenko of Roscosmos near the town of Zhezkazgan, Kazakhstan on Monday, April 10, 2017 (Kazakh time). via NASA http://ift.tt/2oqwnvB

Unbounded (Official video by Morgan Beringer) by Max Cooper


From the new album ‚Emergence‘ out now: http://ift.tt/2eb3XTR
Discover more about Emergence: http://ift.tt/2gEHavh

Max Cooper
“This chapter comes towards the end of the Emergence story, after all of the physical world around us has been established by following through the action of the simple building blocks of nature. I wanted to finish the LP with the progression left open-ended, the laws of nature being unbounded and any particular consequences impermanent and ever changing.

The best way to present this seemed to be with an infinite fractal zoom, where we experience delving into a system that seems to have no end. But the problem was that I really don’t like most fractal zoom videos, as it’s a technique that has been much overused, and often relies on the same methods of synthesis which have a particular recognisable aesthetic.

Luckily for me someone got in touch to suggest Morgan Beringer’s work to me, which I loved, so we started chatting about video ideas, and it seemed that Morgan might be able to pull off a new way of the presenting the unbounded zoom! Safely to say, he did an amazing job with this, with his warping saturating abstraction and hints of traditional fractals.”

Morgan Beringer
“The main structure of the video ‚revolves‘ around an infinite spiral/zoom effect that is realized using an animated form of the Droste effect, combined with my trademark style of abstract visuals that continuously move in somewhat unpredictable manners. It is the first time I have combined both and a lot of experimenting and trial and error was employed before I found a combination that worked best.

When combined, the overall theme of an unbounded form was expressed via both the chaotic structure of the form and the infinite motion of the spiral. I found this also reflects the contradictions that quickly appear when considering absolutes, infinities, and any such theoretical extremities that are not empirically experienced. The contradiction being that we must always ‚assume‘ that unbounded structures are indeed unbounded, and while we might explore short journeys down these roads, the end of the spiral is never reached and the moving forms never solidify. The fact that the form of the spiral remains constant during the video (though the angles change and the colors change, etc.) helps to reflect that we rely upon bounded structures to represent unbounded structures.

Beyond that overall theme I also added further details to echo these ideas, such as the grid appearing at various times to remind us that despite the appearance of an infinite/chaotic motion there is in fact a very defined structure that we get small glimpses of every now and then. The addition of several lighting effects also nods back to the main concept in that they try to remind the viewer that this is a flat video. Just light on a surface, synthetic light even, despite it’s attempt to convey an unbounded infinite.

So the final result hopefully giving us little glimpses of what an infinite or unbounded concept/structure might entail, flights of thought or fantasies almost, but also reminding us that these concepts are never fully understandable or attainable in physical reality beyond these short moments.

My favorite moment within the song is when, for a few short moments, the rhythm extends beyond its established structure and we are left ‚floating‘ somewhat before it comes back to ground us. Again, demonstrating that we need the established structure before we can break it, and that even when it is broken or expanded upon, we only get a few brief moments before adapting to the change/new structure.”

Follow Max Cooper
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Follow Morgan Beringer
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Guadalupe Plata | Qué He Sacado Con Quererte by NYSU


Produced by: Adisar Media. Starring: Silvia Vacas / Dop: Dani Meré / Art Director: Raul Lopez Serrano / VFX: Fake Studio / Make-Up Artists: Elizabeth Wic & Estefania Montero Navacerrada / Label: Everlasting Records / Production Manager: Hugon Catalán Fernández / 1stAC: Pablo Pascual / 2nd AC: Andy Pulido Thanks: Palmira, Paula Hassel, Luciano Firmo, Miguel Roldan, Jose Luis Lara Romero and Adisar Media.