Tumgik
franticstudio-nyc · 2 years
Text
Memphis Waltz
After watching the documentary “Muscle Shoals”, I wanted to see Fame Studios for myself. On May 15th 2021, I drove from Atlanta, Georgia to Fame recording studios and recorded a song I wrote. Afterwards, I drove to Memphis and spent the weekend looking around and decided to name the song “Memphis Waltz”.
4 notes · View notes
franticstudio-nyc · 2 years
Text
Do you like to Draw, Sketch or Doodle ?
Do you like to draw, sketch or doodle ? Who remembers "Draw Binky" ? I wanted to share the video below and explain how several of my interests converged to create it. I have been playing with Animation Desk on my iPad (I have posted other Animation Desk work in the past https://lnkd.in/ejkxxXQR ) for awhile. It has an easy interface and good range of features (brushes etc) but i don't think it's an actual professional app. The layers are little hard to handle (it's easy to delete a whole section with out a command Z LOL) As a long time fan of experimental animator Harry Smith ( https://lnkd.in/eBBppKuk ) as an inspiration, I started to create shapes, scribbles and swooshes. Some of the brushes have a little bit more expression and gestural feel depending on the speed and pressure by which they are used. I found out early that every scribble isn't interesting or pushes the animation forward. I like vintage and like a lot of creatives these days, I have an unbridled appreciation for all things mid century modern, so that influences me my decisions, for example: the selection muted of colors and the vintage paper background. The basic animation created is 4 seconds long, I render from Animation Desk ( https://lnkd.in/e7qRnNCd ) and bring into Premiere. On the time line, I run it forward backwards, sideways etc and I bring in the music. Usually its the latest composition I am working on in Garage band. This combination of animation and musical tastes results in a mashup of style. This time the music I was working on was an update of a synth track I wrote and recorded a long time ago ( before I studied at #Berklee) Its mainly a Roland SH101 ( https://lnkd.in/eBekG4dw ) with the filter tweaked and run through an Ibaneze tube screamer ( https://lnkd.in/esne7_Ai ) and i was adding some updates (like new drums) I was very happy with the sound and glad to get it out into the world. There's a part in the song were the synths really kick in and I wanted to turn up the volume visually as well. I had been thinking about the kaleidoscope filter in after effects, and thought that would be a great low tech way of altering the hand drawn animation. So I used the Dynamic link in Premiere and experimented with the kaleidoscope filter. My goal was change it from recognizable to unrecognizable and back - which turned out better than expected. I added film light leaks, textures and grit. I like integrating some film failure or texture as if it was motivating or driving the music. I added vinyl record crackle and as a last minute inspiration, I added the found video of the Art school test in the beginning - it fits my sense of humor and my love of found object art. I'm thinking about creating this into a larger work - there is still a lot more to be explored. I hope you enjoy it. # #animation #art #experimental #mcm#film #music #ipad
1 note · View note
franticstudio-nyc · 2 years
Text
Steve Martin, Chet Baker and David Hockney
Recently watching Only Murders in the Building, my appreciation for Steve Martin was reawakened. Thanks to the internet I was able to watch him in old clips on Johnny Cash, The Tonight Show and especially the Ray Stevens Show. It was fun to glimpse the infancy of the genius that would rocket him to stardom in the 70’s. Being a teenager in the seventies, “Excuse Me” was comfortably ensconced in my contributions to the high school lunch room conversation. Not a huge fan of his movies over all (a little too silly), though, I particularly liked a few — Parenthood and L.A. Story, in particular. With my curiosity piqued, I read Born Standing Up, Steve Marin’s autobiography and discovered he was an L.A. story. Growing up in Garden Grove, California he spent his youth performing magic in a Disneyland Magic Shop and then on to a small theatre at Knotts Berry Farm. After years of struggle, audiences who didn’t get him, rejection by Johnny Carson and dire financial difficulties, the act he eventually became famous for, I found out, was a finely tuned, precisely timed piece of performance art. It all seemed so casual and spontaneous to me as a casual 16 year old observer, like there had been no preparation at all. But this anti-comedy, no punch line strategy was conceived with the understanding of Tension Release Theory. This is Freud’s (and others’) view that humor is derived from a release of pent up energy. Steve Martin’s idea was “What if there was no punchline to release the tension ?” This really impressed me, especially because I am an East Coast snob and I am confident that all great thinking and art comes from our side of the country.
Let’s Get Lost Movie Poster
But recently I have been rethinking my snobbery, especially when I saw Bruce Weber’s Let’s Get Lost documentary about jazz trumpeter Chet Baker. In the movie, Baker is described to be as much a product of California as the Beach Boys later would become. “A lot of people were obsessed with Chet,” says one old friend. “He was bad, he was trouble, he was beautiful,” observes one of his many ex-wives early in the film. We can’t over estimate Baker’s cultural influence during the rise of James Dean and Marlon Brando type anti-heroes in America during the fifties. Chet Baker was also supremely gifted and maybe a genius as well. Living in Glendale, California, his mother said that he had begun to memorize tunes on the radio before he was given an instrument. At 11 years old, after “falling in love” with the trumpet, he improved noticeably in two weeks. Peers called Baker a natural musician to whom playing came effortlessly. By 21 years old he had played with Stan Getz and was in Charlie Parker’s band. As an east coaster I fell for the fable that cool jazz artist couldn’t handle the hard swing of bebop, they couldn’t keep up, they just couldn’t play as fast and as hard. But ultimately, to the west coast jazz musician, it wasn’t so much about the amount; but the quality of each note. It’s not that they couldn’t play as fast…they just didn’t want to; they had all the time in the world. It was a state of mind. Like Steve Martin, they had the space to think differently. Which brings me to David Hockney.
Bigger Splash by David Hockney
When considering California artists, David Hockney came up immediately. The acrylic paintings he did in the 60s like “Bigger Splash” went on to to define LA for decades. But I really became a Hockney fan after seeing his documentary “Secret Knowledge” about renaissance artists using lenses and mirrors to create their masterpieces. You immediately notice Hockney thinks and sees the world differently. But alas, David Hockney is not from California but from Britain, though, when he does arrive, it opens something up in him, in the same way the world opens up for Steve Martin and Chet Baker. When Hockney came to LA in the early 1960’s, he goes on to describes the experience as “…when I went to Los Angles… It was… really 3 times better than I thought it would be.” L.A. was his bigger splash and unlike his New York contemporaries Warhol and Liechtenstein, Hockney didn’t wear the mundane around his neck like a burdensome yoke but a colorful scarf to be celebrated.
I’m looking forward to the second season of Only Murders in the Building, it’s inspiring to see Steve Martin creating fresh, relevant work. The truth is, I‘m native of the Golden State, though I grew up in Chicago and now live in New York, but I don’t give my inner Californian much room these days. Today I think I will take a trip up the Pacific Coast highway.
1 note · View note
franticstudio-nyc · 3 years
Link
Check out this awesome 'Distressed Vintage style Banana Splits' design on @TeePublic!
0 notes
franticstudio-nyc · 3 years
Video
youtube
Steinway & Sons Spiriocast — Earl Rose ‘Live from Bemelmans’ Watch Party
0 notes
franticstudio-nyc · 3 years
Text
3 notes · View notes
franticstudio-nyc · 3 years
Text
1 note · View note
franticstudio-nyc · 3 years
Text
Tumblr media
Toy version of a retro futuristic concept car (designed by Syd Mead)
45 notes · View notes
franticstudio-nyc · 3 years
Video
youtube
AM GOLD - Nicole Atkins from “Italian Ice”
1 note · View note
franticstudio-nyc · 3 years
Photo
Tumblr media
Buy at: https://www.redbubble.com/i/t-shirt/They-Them-by-OffsetVinylFilm/71594470.TR8D9?utm_source=rb-native-app&utm_campaign=share-product&utm_medium=ios #theythem #they #lbgtq #them (at Brooklyn, New York) https://www.instagram.com/p/CQ6ErhFj3Ci/?utm_medium=tumblr
1 note · View note
franticstudio-nyc · 3 years
Audio
(franticstudio)
1 note · View note
franticstudio-nyc · 3 years
Audio
(franticstudio)
1 note · View note
franticstudio-nyc · 3 years
Audio
(franticstudio)
0 notes
franticstudio-nyc · 3 years
Audio
(franticstudio)
0 notes
franticstudio-nyc · 3 years
Audio
(franticstudio)
0 notes
franticstudio-nyc · 3 years
Audio
(via Not Givin Up Kind)
0 notes
franticstudio-nyc · 3 years
Audio
(franticstudio)
0 notes