Previous Entry | Next Entry

Vegas week for YouTube vidders

  • Jun. 19th, 2009 at 2:05 PM
crypto: actor glynn turman (glynn turman)
Because I'm basically watching So You Think You Can Dance on a torrent time delay, I occupied myself last night by checking out the semi-final round of the second "season" of So You Think You Can Vid on YouTube. The judges had selected 80 vidders from the 420 entries in the audition round, and assigned them one of five songs to vid (entries had to be at least 40 seconds). I watched the entries for three of the songs: Queens of the Stone Age's "No One Knows" (playlist of semifinalist entries), Utada Hikaru's "Sanctuary" (semifinalist playlist), and Frou Frou's "Let Go" (semifinalist playlist). I haven't seen the other two batches yet for Muse's "Plug In Baby" (playlist) and Radiohead's "How to Disappear Completely" (playlist).

Because not all of the semifinalists submitted vids (or else some were posted privately?), and most vids were shorter than the full length of the song, you can watch each playlist in about 25 minutes. It's pretty cool to see over a dozen vid responses to the same song, though it can get repetitive. I can't say that I saw a lot of wildly divergent interpretations of the songs, but then I didn't know a lot of the sources (which skew heavily towards movies overand I wouldn't describe the ones for the batches that I've seen so far as lyrically meaty.

What does emerge really clearly is a certain YouTube vidding aesthetic (albeit not the only or even necessarily dominant YouTube vidding aesthetic). I'd describe it as rapid cutting and lots of effects, with a tendency towards heavily working over the clips through tweaking elements such as color and saturation. I'd also mention the frequent (or at least, significantly more frequent than in the vids that I see posted on LJ) use of text (generally fragments of the lyrics) and audio from the video source (lines of dialogue).

All of this typically yields a very stylized feel to the vids, where the "hand" of the vidder is quite present and visible. That sense is exacerbated with the vidders who "watermark" their names on their vids, or in a few cases open with a brief standard intro sequence that they use on all of their vids (as a branding element, like the roar of the lion preceding an MGM movie); several post their vids under "____ Productions".

I'm sure I'm grossly overgeneralizing, and reducing the diversity of styles into a falsely monolithic "aesthetic." And while I certainly wouldn't and couldn't try to conflate the vids that I watch which come out of the LJ/DW-based vidding community into a single aesthetic, it does feel like the "traditional" vidding community operates under a somewhat different set of values and priorities than this particular YouTube vidding culture (though there's certainly overlap and crossover).

As long as I'm being reductive, it's hard for me to think of these YouTube vidders along the lines of, for instance, what [personal profile] laurashapiro  describes as "telling deeper." I'd probably instead go with something like "heightened sensation" or a phrase that emphasized stylization to describe their vids. Though these certainly aren't mutually exclusive approaches to vidding, and maybe I'm overestimating the differences or just less fluent when it comes to reading these YouTube vids.

Either way, in the meantime, I'll be rooting for elekta to advance into the next round.

Tags:

Comments

laurashapiro: "little miss pretentious believes in learning" (pretentious)
[personal profile] laurashapiro wrote:
Jun. 20th, 2009 06:31 pm (UTC)
Thanks for this. I don't know when I'll have a chance to watch these vids, but I like knowing that So You Think You Can Vid is out there. (:

"Telling deeper" is where I started, and certainly has its roots in the traditional vidding community I learned from. But many members of that community have moved lately toward more effects-driven vidding, non-narrative vidding, mood pieces, and what [personal profile] heresluck calls "lyric" vidding. I've certainly been doing more of that kind of thing lately myself -- two of my premiering vids at VVC 2009 will be in that style.

I'm most interested in vids that combine the "heightened sensation" aesthetics with the "telling deeper" narrative emphasis, but I haven't managed to make any myself yet. (:
crypto: Amy Pond (Default)
[personal profile] crypto wrote:
Jun. 21st, 2009 05:29 pm (UTC)
There's a lot of interesting stuff in the entries, but not much that I'd rec as a stand-alone vid (vs. "I'd like to see more from this vidder outside of the contest constraints"). I did like elekta's Dollhouse vid, though (I've been following her Sarah Connor Chronicle vids for a while).

The lyric vidding that [personal profile] heresluck described really does fit a lot of these vids. Though now that I think about it, many of the entries did have a central narrative, but they were often more like vids-as-fanfic (the kind where the vidder explains the story in their vid notes). In a comment to the LJ version of this post, [livejournal.com profile] liviapenn noted the popularity of constructed reality vids on YouTube, which seems connected.

And the prospect of new vids by you to look forward to always brightens my day. :)
laurashapiro: a woman sits at a kitchen table reading a book, cup of tea in hand. Table has a sliced apple and teapot. A cat looks on. (Default)
[personal profile] laurashapiro wrote:
Jun. 25th, 2009 10:14 pm (UTC)
Belatedly...
I haven't had a chance to check out elekta yet, so I was kinda waiting until I had done so to reply to this. But as the days tick by, I wanted to make sure to thank you for your enthusiastic support of my work. (:
crypto: Amy Pond (Default)
[personal profile] crypto wrote:
Jun. 29th, 2009 06:00 pm (UTC)
Re: Belatedly...
Hey, anytime! I just got my pom-poms back from the dry cleaner. *\o/*