Paul R Johnson
September 19th, 2016, 02:39 AM
Not really a question, but a rant! I'm in a tribute band, and it was suggested we record the next show at a large 1400 seater theatre. Great idea but while I have a business that does lighting sound and video, my people are already busy on the normal show. I said we could easily hang a laptop on the digital desk and record all the show sources, 23 of them. However, we needed to get someone in for the video. I could edit their footage later. One day before, the video people let me down, so I have just one spare body and he gets the central pit camera, the rest are unmanned and locked off. I grab the four go pros and go pro Chinese things we have laying around and this brings the number up to 7. Not all can be mains powered so we adjust the set list to put the vital songs into the first half of each 60 minute set, and we rebattery in the interval. In total we had a real mix of formats but bar one camera that was soft throughout, decent images. The sheer number of clips though is daunting and as the cameras drop out at different points when batteries fail, cards fill up and one tape ended, getting these into a synced timeline is going badly. On top of this the audio has to be done too, and as this also involves three separate sections this won't align with any of the video because they're different lengths. The small cameras on stage have dreadful audio being so close to the sources so that it may as well be a different song sync wise. It has taken me over a day so far just to get all the sources into the edit machine and I've not looked at sound yet! I'm also certain quite a few of the wanted songs came just after the majority of batteries died looking at clip lengths. One of the real gopros seems to somehow have got out of sync with its picture and sound, and one locked off wide shot got kicked and isn't wide now after a crop to fx it.
Just shows that proper planning is vital. I have a Pentax DSLR I have never use for video as I hate them, but I discovered on its first video outing that it has a time limit. Never gave it a thought. It shut down thirty seconds into the show. Annoyingly, that 30 secs looked good, after the wasted images of people coming in as. Had to start it early. The cheap Chinese 4K on its first outing looks damn good reduced down to 1080, but only got 35 mins on its new battery. What a weekend!
Just shows that proper planning is vital. I have a Pentax DSLR I have never use for video as I hate them, but I discovered on its first video outing that it has a time limit. Never gave it a thought. It shut down thirty seconds into the show. Annoyingly, that 30 secs looked good, after the wasted images of people coming in as. Had to start it early. The cheap Chinese 4K on its first outing looks damn good reduced down to 1080, but only got 35 mins on its new battery. What a weekend!