How Elon Musk Is Changing the Twitter Experience
Posted in: UncategorizedNearly six months after buying Twitter, Mr. Musk has made tweaks that have altered what people see on the platform and how they interact with it.
Nearly six months after buying Twitter, Mr. Musk has made tweaks that have altered what people see on the platform and how they interact with it.
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As any creative director, video editor or live human being already knows, music can make or break a project. All the production value and creativity in the world doesn’t matter if the tone of your cue is off or – even worse – if it just sounds cheap or poorly made. If you’re one of the gifted few with the budget to tap a major artist for your commercial, skip this article and get to it. The rest of us turn to a sonic smorgasbord of production music companies and sound libraries offering tracks in every genre and quality. It’s daunting, but you can find something if you know how to look.
A good litmus test for choosing a production music library is whether they offer alternate mixes and stems for their tracks. Not every music library has them, but they are invaluable for the success of your project in multiple ways.
What are stems, you ask? They’re individual audio tracks that make up a full song, usually divided into specific instruments (like drums, bass, guitar, vocals, etc.). When a production music library separates these components into individual files, it makes it possible for you to customize the mix of a track or remove certain elements altogether. And all of it can be done within the video editing software you’re already using to cut the spot.
Alternate or “alt” versions of a music cue are pre-edited versions already created by the library. These additional opens often offer variations in the length, tone or arrangement of the track.
Having worked on both the client and vendor side of this process, I’ve found these tools incredibly useful but often underutilized.
Here’s why I specifically look for stems and alt versions on projects:
Stems and alt versions simply make the lives of commercial and promo editors easier. They provide a far greater amount of creative control, so you can make the music work for you. Otherwise, you’re stuck trying to find a track that perfectly fits your project’s length, tone and emotional beats simply by chance.
This guest post was written by Rab Bradlea, the East Coast Music Supervisor for ALIBI Music, a leading provider of music and sound effects for license in advertising, trailers, promos, programming, video games and all other forms of multimedia content. Prior to joining ALIBI, Bradlea had spent close to a decade in video production and editing, working extensively on short films, trailers, TV spots, sales reels, podcasts and web content, projects for which he also provided music supervision.
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