Radiohead Helps Fans Make Crowd-Sourced Live Show DVD
Kilrah_il writes "After having a go with a Name-Your-Price album and an open-source video, Radiohead is again breaking new ground, this time with a fan-based initiative. A group of fans went to one of the band's shows in Prague, each shooting the show from a different angle. By editing it all together and adding audio from the original masters provided by the band, they have created a video of the show that is 'Strictly not for sale — By the fans for the fans,' adding, 'Please share and enjoy.' Can this be the future of live show videos?"
...sort of.
NIN unofficially released 400gb of raw, professionally shot concert footage and told the internet to turn it into a DVD, resulting in Another Version of the Truth.
Airplane Photos, Airline News, Planespotting Guides
The pay-what-you-want album was new ground, this is just Creative Commons work with some official help.
when they came here (argentina), last year, the tickets were VERY expensive... almost 100USD each... impossible to buy for many of the fans, like me :(
Wow. Very cool idea. Unfortunately it's only the lame, sucky, douchebag bands that do this sort of thing.
...but damn if stuff like this doesn't make me want to go out and buy some of their albums, even if I just give them away, to support what they're doing.
In today's world, it's nice to see people who "get it" and are finding new fans and publicity by doing something which hurts no one, by giving of themselves. I wish them continued success!
So this is exactly like the making of Bon Jovi's video for _Bad Medicine_, then?
with Awesome, I Fuckin' Shot that.
Handed out cameras to fans and let them go crazy during a show in 2006. That one was sold, however.
They could raise a fuss...
For justice, we must go to Don Corleone
I like it, worth watching.
The Whig Party, sponsor of the 1st President of the United States, are the one's that let the fans compose the album known as The Republic.
See? That wasn't toooooo hard to do, now was it? Then in 1812, the Brittish came a comin'--they burned the Whight House and shot the kin folk, so we fired our guns and the British went a runnin' down the ol' Mississippi to the Gulf of Mexicoooooo!
Then Thomas Jefferson started behaving like a Genghis Americunt with his fellow Democrats and fellow Republicans, that by the Year 1850 we got the Monro Doctrine that then led to Erie Doctrine of The Credit River Monopoly, and then all shit hit the fan with 1861 incorporating the United States, and look-out that corporation declared bankruptcy in 1933.
http://forum.nin.com/bb/read.php?52,378166 I'm sure there's more exa
and for a second there I thought kdawson submitted this article...no wait.
How is this not political bias not the nerd news, you know articles you can read where you go: I have to research more on this because its that cool!
Mark me insightful if you will, or even flamebait, but remember im just a g.d. ac
It is interesting to note that cameras weren't allowed in the venue. The tickets had a very distinct notice about that, and I personally witnessed at least one person who had to go back to the safety deposit booth to store her camera when the security guards found one in her bag entering the park. Of course there were thousands of cameras at the show, all of which must have been sneaked in. Seeing this great project and knowing the band's reputation, I assume it was the venue's idea to ban cameras. Maybe next time Radiohead will make sure this won't happen.
I skim-read this, and was disappointed on closer reading when I realized they hadn't created a 3d montage from the video shot from all the different angles :-/
Score:-1, Funny
The Black Crowes have provided direct soundboard access to all of their live concerts, which has resulted in numerous high-quality 'bootleg' distributions of some great rock concerts.
The Greatful Dead did for years.
They sure sold millions of Albums as well as bootlegs.
Rock on in Heaven Jerry Garcia.
I'd rather be riding my '63 Triumph T120.
Just like how they think they're revolutionaries because open software now has a little label and a mascot...
This kind of thing really isn't anything new. And this isn't the oasis in the desert you think it is. Radiohead wants to give away one video and that's it. They're not going to do this for every show like the Grateful Dead did.
And as for their "open album"? They already said they'd never do it again. I wonder why that is.... Hmmmmm... Even an established band is having a hard time making enough coin to cover their costs when the potential price is zero. But Slashdorks will never see it that way.
They are pandering to the fans, because they can afford to, and they know it'll make them stand out.
Bleh... NIN did it first, and better.
Eh? I thought we were talking about Radiohead here.
Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
Except they hadn't intended to.
At one of their "Alive 2007" concerts, they noticed many fans were filming the concert, so they asked fans to send in their concert footage. They paired segments of many different fan videos with the master audio recording of the concert to make the "Alive 2007" video album.
Sadly, the video isn't available in the USA. Only in PAL DVD.
... I say leave it to the experts.
I am actually a bit of a Radiohead fan and I admire the sentiment behind what they're doing - but frankly, given the choice between a paid-for live concert DVD shot by trained cameramen or a free fan-recorded "shaky-cam" version, I choose the former.
I'm middle-aged and lazy, I'm quite happy to just hand over some money and be entertained without all this interactive "by the fans, for the fans" nonsense.
If you're a musician or band, make a nice-sounding CD for me and I will buy it and enjoy it. I don't want to go through all the hassles of picking odd tracks off of it.
If I like your CD enough, I may come and see you live. You sell me a ticket, I watch you play live, have a beer or two while I'm doing it, then come out the concert venue two hours later with a smile on face having had a good time.
And if it was that good a concert and you had a proper set of cameramen doing a good job of filming it, I may even but the live DVD as a memento of that concert.
Straightforward and simple - I hand over money, you entertain me.
Gentoo Linux - another day, another USE flag.
the processed sounds of animals being put thru an industrial shredder
It sounds like you're describing a cross between the Happiness in Slavery and unreleased March of the Pigs videos.
I'd just like to echo what some others here have said.
Nine Inch Nails helped their fans with the making of their own live DVD (and Bluray, might I add) over a year ago. The ThisOneIsOnUs project has been going strong ever since it started, and to this day it's still one of the best looking and sounding live videos I've ever watched; better than most professionally recorded and released ones.
I might also add that the audio and video sources for the NIN video are much higher quality.
inb4 people telling me I just don't like Radiohead. I own all their releases on disc, so try harder.
Can this be the future of live show videos?"
Not until fans can hold cameras steady.
-- QED
May not be the future of this area but certainly will be an important step. Hopefully that will be enough though popularized.dezmembrari auto
Along the same lines, there are a bunch of youtube videos of Dave Matthew Band shows from the recent tour that have been edited together from multiple sources. http://www.youtube.com/user/ChesterCopperPot5