Thank you Cilllian, glad you like it. The original music we used for the BBC broadcast was by Aaron Coupland 'Appalachian Spring' (I think by YoYo Ma). Then when it came to making an international version, DeWolfe did a brilliant job of replacing it with their library version: American Collections theme American Dreams DWCD 0358 trk 500 (@03.33 dur 1.15)
And do it, he did. Every one of these landscapes has about it an immediate sense of the place. This shortcoming on the part of photography does seem to make sense when compared with the vitality of these paintings. It must be something to do with the interpretation that is going on - the act of discernment and the truths of tone it brings.
What is the music on this clip? Very beautiful & suits the footage perfectly
Thank you Cilllian, glad you like it. The original music we used for the BBC broadcast was by Aaron Coupland 'Appalachian Spring' (I think by YoYo Ma).
Then when it came to making an international version, DeWolfe did a brilliant job of replacing it with their library version: American Collections theme American Dreams DWCD 0358 trk 500 (@03.33 dur 1.15)
And do it, he did. Every one of these landscapes has about it an immediate sense of the place. This shortcoming on the part of photography does seem to make sense when compared with the vitality of these paintings. It must be something to do with the interpretation that is going on - the act of discernment and the truths of tone it brings.
Also how the lens distances the viewer
Where can one find this to watch it?
vimeo.com/manage/videos/224710854 - this might work!?
This link is better: @t
I've now found the right one: vimeo.com/ondemand/116394
Apologies!
Have you seen Clyde Butchers work?
No I haven't, but I've just looked him up! Interesting work: in the tradition of Ansel Adams? Though he seems to use not v naturalistic lenses...
I don’t care for the music - too big too dramatic