Each cam has its own audio fading in and out just loud enough to bring attention to that specific part without overpowering the main track. That was one of my favorite parts of making this, and I'm glad it got noticed and was enjoyable to you!
@@Splooie010If you're talking about the one that I included, no, I actually didn't use any of the audio from that. I muted that one unlike the rest of the cams because it had a weird echo effect in the audio when I lined up the hands with the flo audio so I just decided not to use it. I'm glad you loved it though!
As someone looking to emulate your style for a multicam of my own bands show, is there any tips you could give? How did you get the audio/visual to line up between clips of different runthroughs? What editing software did you use? Would you like credit for inspiration? Thanks!
I used Adobe Premier Pro to edit because my school offers it to film students, which is very helpful. The audio in Premier Pro shows different levels when you look at each clip, so you can typically line things up just by looking at audio levels. When they're not as perfect about tempo, which is quite common with anyone that's not a top 12 drum corps, you sometimes have to mess with speed, which gets a little bit finicky and annoying but it's still fun. I will say focus a lot on your coloring because that contrast and vibrance adds to the overall energy and feeling of the multicam a lot more than you'd think, and matching color from cam to cam makes it feel like a more cohesive unit. As for credit, I wouldn't feel offended if you didn't credit me, but I definitely won't say no lol so thanks for that offer! Another person I'd check out is Marble Films and Entertainment (purple logo), he taught me how to make multicams and he has some really good ones of my school that kind of have the same feel to them. (He also got 5th at state in the UIL film festival for 6A Texas High Schools with one so he's pretty good at it lol) I hope all of this yapping on my part helps you a bit. I'd love to see it when you're done!
@@Frame27Productions Thank you and I'll definitely check him out, I'll link it here when I finish, maybe in 2 weeks? Thanks for all the help I really appreciate it
This production blows my mind every time I see it.
w editing holyyy
Amazing! Wish there was a way to buy something of this quality for all Corps each season.
Love this Production 💙
this is dope!!!
wow!
i love how you got the sound of each specific instrument to stand out while showing that cam how did you do that?
Each cam has its own audio fading in and out just loud enough to bring attention to that specific part without overpowering the main track. That was one of my favorite parts of making this, and I'm glad it got noticed and was enjoyable to you!
@@Frame27ProductionsLove this too! Wonder if you also used audio from the 360 drum major cam?
@@Splooie010If you're talking about the one that I included, no, I actually didn't use any of the audio from that. I muted that one unlike the rest of the cams because it had a weird echo effect in the audio when I lined up the hands with the flo audio so I just decided not to use it. I'm glad you loved it though!
This multi cam is a other universe work, congratulations ❤❤❤
W multicam!!
Absolutely amazing!
Awesome to watch! 🤩
Fire
Slayyyy
As someone looking to emulate your style for a multicam of my own bands show, is there any tips you could give? How did you get the audio/visual to line up between clips of different runthroughs? What editing software did you use? Would you like credit for inspiration? Thanks!
I used Adobe Premier Pro to edit because my school offers it to film students, which is very helpful. The audio in Premier Pro shows different levels when you look at each clip, so you can typically line things up just by looking at audio levels. When they're not as perfect about tempo, which is quite common with anyone that's not a top 12 drum corps, you sometimes have to mess with speed, which gets a little bit finicky and annoying but it's still fun. I will say focus a lot on your coloring because that contrast and vibrance adds to the overall energy and feeling of the multicam a lot more than you'd think, and matching color from cam to cam makes it feel like a more cohesive unit. As for credit, I wouldn't feel offended if you didn't credit me, but I definitely won't say no lol so thanks for that offer! Another person I'd check out is Marble Films and Entertainment (purple logo), he taught me how to make multicams and he has some really good ones of my school that kind of have the same feel to them. (He also got 5th at state in the UIL film festival for 6A Texas High Schools with one so he's pretty good at it lol) I hope all of this yapping on my part helps you a bit. I'd love to see it when you're done!
@@Frame27Productions Thank you and I'll definitely check him out, I'll link it here when I finish, maybe in 2 weeks? Thanks for all the help I really appreciate it