Saturday, 21 November 2009

My ideas for the Cd cover and Magazine Advert for our bands Album

For our promotinal package i think it would be best to have a running theme throughtout them that links them and makes them instatntly noticeable to its audience.

when i researched ablum art for this genre of music i found that the majority of them use similar style, using abstract art, lots of colour and a brand band title.

some examples of pink floyds album art, who are known for the album art.


journey has a motif of a scarab beetle, although we won't use this as we want to create a original image for our band.
previous journey album art.











i would like to use some abstract photography as album art then continue it to the Print ad. i think this would apeal to the target audience because its the creativity of the music that interests the audience.

Development of my own Individual idea for Pop Promo

we want to use a mixture of Narrative and perforamnce as this is a common and well known method for rock type genre music video. this means the audience will get to see the band and get the meaning of th emusic and lyrics through the narrative we are showing.

it will start of with the band for the intro
for the first verse there will be narrative following the lyrics.
instrumental - more band footage
back to narrative
the band will be shown for the chorus
then the next chorus will show the band
for the second verse there will be more narrative this will not follow the lyrics but the characters will notice each other
band shown for one chorus.
characters meet again and fall in love.
fade to black for end of song

this is a rough plan of how the music video should look.

research into our chosen bands star construction and Audience

journey star construction has mainly been about the band as a whole and not individuals. this may have something to do with the changes in members.

Current members
Neal Schon – guitar, vocals (1973–present)
Ross Valory – bass, vocals (1973–1985, 1995–present)
Jonathan Cain – keyboards, guitar, vocals (1980–present)
Deen Castronovo – drums, percussion, vocals (1998–present)
Arnel Pineda – lead vocals (2007–present)

Former members
George Tickner – guitar (1973–1975)
Gregg Rolie – keyboards, harmonica, vocals (1973–1980)
Aynsley Dunbar – drums, percussion (1974–1978)
Robert Fleischman – lead vocals (1977)
Steve Perry – lead vocals (1977–1998)
Steve Smith – drums, percussion (1978–1985, 1995–1998)
Randy Jackson – bass, backing vocals (1985–1987)
Steve Augeri – lead vocals, guitar (1998–2006)

Touring members
Prairie Prince – drums, percussion (1973–1974)
Mike Baird – drums, percussion (1986–1987)
Jeff Scott Soto – lead vocals (2006–2007)
Session musicians
Stevie "Keys" Roseman – keyboards (1980)
Larrie Londin – drums, percussion (1985–1986)
Bob Glaub – bass (1986)







the reason we decided to use th ejourney song for our cover song was because it was a good solid track with lyrics and a good beat, also because it was really familiar in Britain some people had heard of them but not alot. The x factor winner joe mcelderry has now brought out a cover version that got the song noticed by the British public and then with the American teen musical drama "glee" and there use of the song. the song has now been made a chart topping track.

Research of our bands previous marketing campaigns and similar more well known bands.

our chosen band The Martells are a local band so this means that their previous marketing is almost none exsistent, so i will look at some marketing from journey because it is the song we are using.

This is an example of a poster print advertisment. although not for an album it still gives us an idea of the type of advertising we may want to take inspiration from. This poster is advertising a concert with main emphasis on the time and date and the American and British background of the bands.



This is a advert for their music on Amazon although not specifically for the album, it is mentioned with the album art. this tells the consumer everything they need to know. what album art to look for? what the band look like? where to get their music?

Research for our chosen Band

our chosen band is a local band from Ipswich called "The Martells". http://www.themartellslive.com/index.html. The band is made of 4 people Gary Nunn, Sandy Sutherland, Pete Wolfe and John Wright. The band that we are making a pop promo for cover songs by a range of artists dating back from the 1950's right up to the present day, as this is the case i am going to research a few of the bands that the martells cover. This is so that we can identify the genre of music and target our promotional package to their audience.

Pink Floyd
Pink Floyd is an English rock band who earned recognition for their psychedelic music in the late 1960s, and as they evolved in the 1970s, for their progressive rock music. Pink Floyd's work is marked by the use of philosophical lyrics, sonic experimentation, innovative album cover art, and elaborate live shows. One of rock music's most critically acclaimed and commercially successful acts, the group have sold over 200 million albums worldwide, including 74.5 million certified units in the United States, making them one of the best-selling music artists of all time.

Ronan Keating
Ronan Keating is an Irish singer-songwriter who has had many record breaking hits as a solo artist, and with Boyzone. The genre of music he tends to write/sing include Pop, ballad, dance pop, folk rock and country.

Journey
Journey is an American rock band formed in 1973 in San Francisco, California, with former members of Santana. The band has gone through several phases, but its strongest commercial success came in the late 1970s to the early 1980s. During this period, they had hits with a series of power ballads and rock songs, including "Don't Stop Believin'", "Separate Ways", "Faithfully", "Any Way You Want It", "Open Arms", "Send Her My Love", "Wheel in the Sky", "Who's Crying Now", "Stone In Love", "Lovin,' Touchin,' Squeezin;'", and "Lights". The group enjoyed a successful reunion in the mid-1990s with a major Grammy-nominated hit, "When You Love a Woman." Throughout Journey's three decades of existence, their albums have achieved gold status twice, platinum status three times, multi-platinum plateau eight times, and Diamond once. These include seven consecutive multi-platinum albums, stretching from 1978 to 1987. They had 19 Top 40 singles, six of which reached the Top 10 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart. Their signature song, "Don't Stop Believin'", is the top-selling catalog track in iTunes history, at more than three million downloads.

Group Discussion

We have decided to use a mix of narrative and performance for our pop promo. We decided this because we think there is potential to use the lyrics as a narrative base.

Journey — Don’t Stop believin

Just a small town girl,
livin' in a lonely world
She took the midnight train goin' anywhere

Just a city boy,
born and raised in south Detroit
He took the midnight train goin' anywhere

A singer in a smokey room
A smell of wine and cheap perfume
For a smile they can share the night
It goes on and on and on and on

(Chorus)
Strangers waiting, up and down the boulevard
Their shadows searching in the night
Streetlights people, living just to find emotion
Hiding, somewhere in the night.

Working hard to get my fill
Everybody wants a thrill
Payin' anything to roll the dice,
Just one more time
Some will win,
some will lose
Some were born to sing the blues
Oh, the movie never ends
It goes on and on and on and on

(Chorus)

Don't stop believin'
Hold on to the feelin'
Streetlights people

Don't stop believin'
Hold on
Streetlight people

Don't stop believin'
Hold on to the feelin'
Streetlights people


we have now given ourselves group roles

Art Director: Hannah
cinematographer: Muhaimin
Editor: Laura

job roles include;
Art Director
• Organize filming with band.
• Organize plot, synopsis.

Cinematographer
• Camera work
• Storyboard

Editor/director
• Edit final piece
• Location finder
• Costume
• Props

My Initial brief ideas for a pop promo for our chosen song

Now i have researched other pop promos i have drawn inspiration from them and have chosen some pop promos that have some of the same ideas as myself.

i have chosen this video for a scene when the character is in the narrative of the story then enters a place which gives the oportunity to show artist performance.
this video is "Hot N Cold" by Katy perry and the part where i am focused on is at 1:02 of the song. i think this is a good example of Narrative mixing with artist performance.



this video is a good example of the type of shots that we will use. this is the orginal video but with the remix song.



i like this video for the use of stills with the photography, however i don't think we would have enough time to organise something like this.

Middle School in Stop Motion from Cosmo Scharf on Vimeo.

Analysis of Music Promotional package (pop video, CD & Advert)

i am going to look at Panic at the disco and how they designed their promotional package for the album "Pretty odd" using semiotics to anaylise this DIGIPACK.

This is the feautured single from the album "Pretty odd"



Denotations;
-set some woods. lots of grass, trees and nature.
-the band
-the band as children
-old men

Connotations;
-the woods show the freedom of the video, as nature is where people can truely be themeselves.
-showing the band in the video having fun, shows the audience that they are fun people not uptight or worried about what people think.
-showing the children coming from the band shows that there letting their inner child play.
- the old men in the video is shown to be the band grown older, this goes with the lyrics "things are going to change, back thats ok with me". showing that things are going to change but they will always be who they are.

altogether the overall feeling i get from the music video is about letting your inner child out. i think that this is a good example of a pop promo for a indie band, as it is unuasl, quirkie, .also i good example of a stylised music video because it is clear that it very thought through, with the sets, props, costumes, cinematography and effects.

This is the the CD cover from the album "Pretty odd"



Denotations;
-flowers, butterflies, birds, fruit and blue skies. Nature
-"pretty odd" in a banner center page
-brown border with golden details.
-tarnised unkept type of effect on the CD Cover.

connotations;
-the nature is a recurring theme throughout the digipack,
-"pretty odd" as a name for a album already gives a certain feel to Digipack
- the brown border and the effect thats used on the whole cover give the idea of an old silent movie. it could tell the audience that they want things how they used to be, where you have fun without gadgets and gizmos from the 21st century

On this album there is no Artist name, this could be because it is aimed at its fans, so they don't need to put their name on it because there fans would recognise the album art.

This is a print Advertisment for the album "Pretty odd"



connotations;
-same art as album cover
-band name-is in brand, font and style.
-text

Dennotations;
-the same album art makes it pratical for their consumer because when they see the album in stores, after seeing the advert they don't need the name on the album cover because they know its panic at the disco.
-panic at the disco amoung its fans have a brand style of font. so this lets the consumer know the artist with a glance.
-the text on the print tells the consumer the main details about the release of the album also letting its fans know about deluxe album from their website encouraging them to visit the website and find out more about the band and their other albums.

looking at these 3 products can give us some ideas for our promotional package. i think there is a recurring theme through all three products, this goes with the genre of music and the style of the band and album. this is a good idea to have a link making them instantly known as a joint product.

Analysis of pop promos

to give me some ideas for my pop promo and also to get a better understanding of how effective they can be i am going to analyse some pop promos that i found on youtube.

i have decided to analyse a variety of different styles of pop promos this is why i have chosen "You came out" by We have band and "November rain" by Guns'n'roses.

1. "You came out" by We have Band.
Directed by David Wilson in very special collaboration with Fabian Berglund and Ida Gronblom from Wieden + Kennedy. Produced by Blinkink. Shot over 2 days and stop frame animated from 4,816 still images without a single moment of video footage.
the site listed below shows all the still images from this video.
http://www.flickr.com/photos/39167181@N06/sets/72157619291516296/

i chose to analyse this pop promo because i think it is an excellent example of a artistic pop promo, this is the type of video you could watch just for the video its self as it does stand as an individual piece seperate from the song.

This is a very stylised video which makes it obvious that alot of thought has gone into the production of the video.



2."November rain" Guns'n'roses
written by lead singer Axl Rose and released in June 1992. The music video for this song, also released in 1992, quickly became the most requested video on MTV, and won an MTV Video Music Award for Best Cinematography. It features a sweeping orchestral backing and is one of Guns N’ Roses’ longest songs.

i decided to anaylise this pop promo because is is narrative based that i think helped made this hit a classic, because most people remember this song for the video.

What makes a good pop promo?

Making a good pop promo all depends on the genre, and what that genre means to its audience. The pop promo is an advert for its artist or for the song so the pop promo has to interest its target audience.

here is some good examples of different styles of music videos.

"Frontier Psychiatrist" by The Avalanches



The Avalanches are an electronic, Alternative Dance, Breakbeat, Plunderphonics music group from Melbourne, Australia, best known for their live DJ sets and debut album Since I Left You. I think that this music video relates to their target audience because The Avalanches music is about mixing other songs together, so the mixing of unrelated visual texts go with the style of the artist meaning it is a great example of a pop promo promoting the artist.

"Everybody" by Rudenko



"Everybody" is a dance/house single by Russian DJ Leonid Rudenko. The song features vocals from Charleene Rená. This is a common dance pop promo feauring slim figured females, wearing little clothing and with the use of choreography. i think that is a good way to promote the artist because it targets a male audience because they will watch it for the females.

pop promo style, forms/conventions and representation
there are many different styles to pop promos depending on the genre of music. each genre has its own style, forms, conventions and represents people and things differently. here are some examples.

Hip-Hop has some of the most obivious uses of representaion. Most of these music videos include woman, normally dressed in clothes leaving little to the imagination. Many music videos show woman to be inferior and are merely used as a sex object or Male gaze. Men are represented as superior to woman by making them the center of attention. They portray themselves as having every thing they want money, cars and women are commonly seen in these types of videos. This gives the impression that if the consumer was to behaviour or aspire to be the artist then the consumer could have whatever they wanted. A hip-hop music video is very distinguishable from other genres as they look stylised and very expensive. Either by shooting in a studio with lots of lighting and props or shooting in new york or V.I.P nightclubs.


Rock/Indie music videos are alot more diverse from one to another although you can place them into 2 main groups. the performance pop promos where the majority of video is band performance that are either very stylised false looking, it is obivous that the performance has been made for the video or a more real look that is more real using less technical shots and aren't so clean cut. Then they also tend to use Narrative stories that has some cuts of the band performance but mainly follows a story. 2 good examples of this type of video is Guns'n'Roses "November rain" and Hoobastank "Reason". The representation of the artists tends to be that they are performing because they love performing not for the lifestyle and publicity that goes along with being in the public eye, although this will always play a big part in it. The artist are represented as anything they want, and seem to look less manufactured by the record labels. This links into the idea behind the genre, of rebeling and being yourself.


Classicial pop promos vary in type this is because the genre has a small target audience that are made of predominantly upper or middle class. this has caused the different styles because they want to broaden there audience, an example of this is Catherine Jenkins. The artists within this genre are represented as well mannered individuals dressed modestly but classy.

History on the development and evolution of pop promos



A music video is a short film or video that accompanies a complete piece of music/song. Modern music videos are primarily made and used as a marketing device intended to promote the sale of music recordings. Although the origins of music videos go back much further, they came into their own in the 1980s, when MTV based their format around the medium, and later with the launch of VH1. The term "music video" first came into popular usage in the early 1980s. Prior to that time, these works were described by various terms including "filmed insert", "promotional (promo) film", "promotional (promo) clip" or "film clip".

The first use of music videos can be traced back almost 90 years with the experiments of Oscar Fischinger in Germany in the 1920’s and then in USA in the 1930s with his abstract synchronisations such as Komposition in Blau (1935) or with his later work on Disney film, Fantasia (1939).

Animation artist Max Fleischer introduced a series of sing-along short cartoons called Screen Songs, which invited audiences to sing along to popular songs by "following the bouncing ball". Early 1930s cartoons featured popular musicians performing their hit songs on-camera in live-action segments during the cartoons.
The early animated films by Walt Disney, his Silly Symphonies, were built around music. The Warner Brothers cartoons, even today billed as Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies, were initially fashioned around specific songs from upcoming Warner Brothers musical films. Live action musical shorts, featuring such popular performers as Cab Calloway, were also distributed to theatres.

With the invention of the video jukebox the Panarom in the 1940‘s, watching music videos were more widely available. Films of up to 8 minutes were used to showcase the talents of singers from Billie holiday to Bing Crosby. The panarom died out quickly after the war after a 7 year life span.



In the 1960s, the idea was resurrected in France with the Scopitone. Which unlike its predecessor had more variety and choice, that made it more popular and by the time it reached USA in mid 1965, around 1000 machines were installed. The US films were mainly produced by a company called Harman-ee and cost on average of £8000 to make. With the use of unnatural colour and fantasy sets produced an artificial-looking world. As in the French films, they were highly suggestive in sexual content often bordering on pornographic. However also like its predecessor the Scopitone was short lived and failed to fully adapt to changing times. The Scopitone died out at the end of the 1960s.

In 1964, The Beatles cemented their newfound international fame by starring in their first feature film A Hard Day's Night, directed by Richard Lester. Shot in black and white and presented as a mock documentary, it was a loosely structured musical fantasia interspersing comedic and dialogue sequences with exciting and innovative musical sequences. The musical sequences furnished the basic templates on which countless subsequent promo clips and music videos were modelled and it has exerted a huge influence on the style and visual vocabulary of the genre. They then continued to produce music videos for there other music videos.

The growth in importance in promotional clips started with The monochrome 1966 clip for Bob Dylan's "Subterranean Homesick Blues" filmed by D. A. Pennebaker was featured in Pennebaker's Dylan film documentary Don't Look Back. Deliberately eschewing any attempt to simulate performance or present a narrative, the clip shows Dylan standing in a city back alley, silently shuffling a series of large cue cards (bearing key words from the song's lyrics) in time to the music, while his friends Allen Ginsberg and Bob Neuwirth converse in the background. The cue-card device has been imitated in numerous other music videos.

Many "song films"—often referred to as "filmed inserts" at that time—were produced by UK artists so they could be screened on TV when the bands were not available to appear live. Pink Floyd were pioneers in producing promotional films for their songs including "Scarecrow", "Arnold Layne" and "Interstellar Overdrive", the latter directed by Peter Whitehead, who also made several pioneering clips for The Rolling Stones between 1966 and 1968.

By 1967 a number of bands were creating early music videos for their songs. One of the first was the pioneering clip made by The Masters Apprentices for their 1967 single "Buried And Dead", which used candid stage and studio footage of the band combined with specially filmed fantasy sequences.

After 1969, the independent music movie clips came out of fashion with psychedelic music and style. In the late 1960s and early 1970s, bands preferred performing in TV shows which themselves became visually more attractive.

The promotional clip continued to grow in importance, with television programs such as The Midnight Special and Don Kirshner's Rock Concert mixing concert footage with clips incorporating camera tricks, special effects, and dramatizations of song lyrics. The film of the Woodstock Festival, and the various concert films that were made during the early 1970s, such as Joe Cocker's Mad Dogs and Englishmen and Pink Floyd's Live at Pompeii concert film used rhythmic cross-cutting.

During late 1972–73 David Bowie featured in a series of promotional films directed by pop photographer Mick Rock, who worked extensively with Bowie in this period. These clips are important landmarks in the development of the music video genre in the 1970s, and they are also notable because they were made by a professional photographer rather than an established film or TV director, and because Rock was given total creative control over the clips.

In the United Kingdom the long-running British TV show Top of the Pops began playing music videos in the late 1970s, although the BBC placed strict limits on the number of 'outsourced' videos TOTP could use. Therefore a good video would increase a song's sales as viewers hoped to see it again the following week. In 1980, David Bowie scored his first UK number one in nearly a decade thanks to director David Mallet's eye catching promo for "Ashes to Ashes". Another act to succeed with this tactic was Madness, who shot on 16 mm and 35 mm, constructing their clips as "micro-comedic" short films.



Video Concert Hall, created by Jerry Crowe and Charles Henderson, was the first nationwide video music programming on American television, predating MTV by almost three years. The USA Cable Network program Night Flight was one of the first American programs to showcase these videos as an artform. Premiering in June 1981, Night Flight predated MTV's launch by two months.

In 1980, New Zealand group Split Enz had major success with the single "I Got You" and the album True Colours, and later that year they joined Blondie in becoming one of the first bands in the world to produce a complete set of promo clips for each song on the album (directed by their percussionist, Noel Crombie) and to market these on video cassette.

In 1981, the U.S. video channel MTV launched, airing "Video Killed the Radio Star" and beginning an era of 24-hour-a-day music on television. With this new outlet for material, the music video would, by the mid-1980s, grow to play a central role in popular music marketing. Many important acts of this period, most notably Adam and the Ants, and Madonna, owed a great deal of their success to the skillful construction and seductive appeal of their videos.

Two key innovations in the development of the modern music video were the development of relatively inexpensive and easy-to-use video recording and editing equipment, and the development of a number of related effects such as chroma-key. The advent of high-quality colour videotape recorders and portable video cameras coincided with the DIY ethos of the New Wave era, enabling many pop acts to produce promotional videos quickly and cheaply, in comparison to the relatively high costs of using film. However, as the genre developed, music video directors increasingly turned to 35 mm film as the preferred medium, while others mixed film and video. During the 1980s, music videos had become de rigueur for most recording artists. The phenomenon that was famously parodied by BBC television comedy program Not The Nine O'Clock News who produced a spoof music video "Nice Video, Shame About The Song". The genre was also parodied by Frank Zappa in his satirical 1984 song "Be In My Video", and its increasing dominance was critiqued by Joe Jackson in his 1980 song "Pretty Boys".

In this period, directors and the acts they worked with began to explore and expand the form and style of the genre, using more sophisticated effects in their videos, mixing film and video, and adding a storyline or plot to the music video. Occasionally videos were made in a non-representational form, in which the musical artist was not shown. Because music videos are mainly intended to promote the artist, such videos are comparatively rare.

In 1983, the most successful and influential music video of all time was released—the nearly 14-minute-long video for Michael Jackson's song "Thriller." The video set new standards for production, having cost US$500,000 to film. That video, along with earlier videos by Jackson for his songs "Billie Jean" and "Beat It", also was instrumental in getting music videos by African American artists played on MTV; earlier, such videos were rare because MTV initially conceived itself as a rock-music-oriented channel, although musician Rick James was outspoken in his criticism of the cable channel, claiming in 1983 that MTV's refusal to air the music video for his song "Super Freak" and clips by other African-American performers was "blatant racism".

The Canadian music channel MuchMusic was launched in 1984.
In 1985, MTV launched the channel VH1 (then known as "VH-1: Video Hits One"), featuring softer music, and meant to cater to an older demographic than MTV. MTV Europe was launched in 1987, and MTV Asia in 1991.

Another important development in music videos was the launch of The Chart Show on the UK's Channel 4 in 1986. This was a program which consisted entirely of music videos (the only outlet many videos had on British TV at the time), without presenters. Instead, the videos were linked by then state of the art computer graphics. The show moved to ITV in 1989.
In 1986, Peter Gabriel's song "Sledgehammer" used special effects and animation techniques developed by British studio Aardman Animation. The video for "Sledgehammer" would go on to be a phenomenal success and win nine MTV Video Music Awards.
In 1988, the MTV show Yo! MTV Raps debuted; the show helped to bring hip hop music to a mass audience for the first time.



In December 1992, MTV began listing directors with the artist and song credits, reflecting the fact that music videos had increasingly become an auteur's medium. Directors such as Michel Gondry, Spike Jonze, Mark Romanek and Hype Williams all got their start around this time; all brought a unique vision and style to the videos they directed. Some of these directors, including, Gondry, Jonze and F. Gary Gray, went on to direct feature films. This continued a trend that had begun earlier with directors such as Lasse Hallström and David Fincher.

The earliest purveyors of music videos on the internet were members of IRC-based groups, who recorded them as they appeared on television, then digitised them, exchanging the .mpg files via IRC channels. The website iFilm, which hosted short videos, including music videos, launched in 1997. Napster, a file sharing service which ran between 1999 and 2001, enabled users to share video files, including those for music videos.

By the mid-2000s, MTV and many of its sister channels had largely abandoned showing music videos in favor of reality television shows, which were more popular with its audiences, and which MTV had itself helped to pioneer with the show The Real World, which premiered in 1992.

2005 saw the release of the website YouTube, which made the viewing of online video faster and easier; MySpace's video functionality, which uses similar technology, launched in 2007. Such websites had a profound effect on the viewing of music videos; some artists began to see success as a result of videos seen mostly or entirely online. The band OK Go may exemplify this trend, having achieved fame through the videos for two of their songs, "A Million Ways" in 2005 and "Here It Goes Again" in 2006, both of which first became well-known online.

The 2008 video for Weezer's "Pork and Beans" also captured this trend, by including at least 20 YouTube celebrities; the single became the most successful of Weezer's career, in chart performance.

In 2007, the RIAA issued cease-and-desist letters to YouTube users to prevent single users from sharing videos, which are the property of the music labels. After its merger with Google, YouTube assured the RIAA that they would find a way to pay royalties through a bulk agreement with the major record labels. This was complicated by the fact that not all labels share the same policy toward music videos: some welcome the development and upload music videos to various online outlets themselves, viewing music videos as free advertising for their artists, while other labels view music videos not as an advertisement, but as the product itself.

MTV itself now provides streams of artists' music videos, while AOL's recently launched AOL Music features a vast collection of advertising supported streaming videos. The Internet has become the primary growth income market for record company-produced music videos. At its launch, Apple's iTunes Store provided a section of free music videos in high quality compression to be watched via the iTunes application. More recently the iTunes Store has begun selling music videos for use on Apple's iPod with video playback capability.

Following the shift toward internet broadcasting and the rising popularity of user-generated video sites such as YouTube around 2006, some independent filmmakers began recording live sessions to present on the Web. All of these swiftly recorded clips are made with minimal budgets and share similar aesthetics with the lo-fi music movement of the early nineties. Offering freedom from the increasingly burdensome financial requirements of high-production movie-like clips, it began as the only method for little-known indie music artists to present themselves to a wider audience, but increasingly this approach has been taken up by such major mainstream artists as R.E.M. and Tom Jones.

Friday, 2 October 2009

Brief

Album Promotional package

we have been asked to produce a promotional package for the release of an album, that should include a music promo video for an album track. we must also include two of the following;
  • a webiste homepage for the band;
  • a cover for its release as part of a digipak (CD/DVD package);
  • a magazine advertisement for the digipak (CD/DVD package).



we have decided to complete a cover of a CD/DVD package and a magazine advertisement for our chosen band.

To successfully complete the task, as with our coursework in the AS year, I will be working in a group of four or less, taking on different roles and responsibilities and one main role.

I should consider the institution it would be most suited to and the possible TV channels and websites my music video could be distributed on. I should also consider the feel of the whole package and make sure that all three pieces of work that I produce link together in some way or another, and are not three separate products.