4. & 5. Multicamera Video Recording
Assignment Requirements
get permission to record by a director or applied professor in charge first
work in pairs for assignment 4 & 5
not required to work with the same partner for assignment 4 & 5
every student in the class must be completely in charge of setting up the gear (including the settings in menus on the gear) for *either* assignment 4 or 5 (without help) while their partner does nothing but run one of the non-safety cameras
every student in the class must separately edit footage for both assignment 4 & 5
Assignment 4
video/audio record one piece of music (may be a single movement) at a recital or concert
use all 3 video cameras and an external audio recorder with at minimum of ORTF stereo mic setup (you may use up to 8 mics)
edit the video in Davinci Resolve
upload to Youtube and embed on your Wordpress site on a page dedicated to MUS1331 assignments
Assignment 5 - no longer required
video/audio record an entire recital or concertuse all 3 video cameras and an external audio recorder with at minimum of ORTF stereo mic setup (you may use up to 8 mics)edit the video in Davinci Resolveupload to Youtube and embed on your Wordpress site on a page dedicated to MUS1331 assignments
How to Record using Multiple Cameras
General tips
👏 visually clap (slate) three times to assist in later synching audio and video
get performers’ permission and you may need a synchronization license
use tripods (holding the camera with your hand is too shaky)
use only optical zoom (don’t use digital zoom); buy camera with 20x or more optical zoom
never stop recording on any of the cameras so aligning camera footage is easy
⏱️hold a shot for at least 10 seconds
don’t shoot like spraying a garden hose = zoom/pan only between shots
Camera settings:
format the SD card (erases all data) - explained here in the Sony a6400 manual
24fps (frames per second) will look more film-like (motion blur)
set the Record Setting to 24p 50M - explained here in the Sony a6400 manual
set File Format to XAVC S HD (this will record 1080p video rather than 4k for smaller file sizes that will be easier to edit) - explained here in the Sony a6400 manual
all cameras really need to be set to the same white balance; custom white balance or use a preset (such as “tungsten”) - explained here in the Sony a6000 manual
External Audio Recorder Settings:
format the SD card (erases all data)
uncompressed/lossless file type (AIFF, WAV)
sample rate = 48kHz (to match the camera's sample rate)
bit depth = 24-bit
use ORTF stereo microphone setup
Tips for the Zoom Fn8 (manual)
format the SD card (manual page 177)
MENU > SD CARD > Format
set the SD card to record separate tracks (manual page 25)
MENU > REC > Rec to SD1 > Track1-8 (Mono/Stereo WAV)
set the track knobs to adjust trim (preamp) rather than fader (mixing a L/R mix) (manual page 73)
MENU > SYSTEM > Track Knob Option > Trim
setup Trim Link for stereo recording so both mics have the exact same level (manual page 97)
MENU > INPUT > Trim Link
save battery by disabling outputs (manual page 114)
Typical 3 camera setup:
Cam1 = “Safety” = fixed, wide angle camera that gets everything (turn off autofocus)
Cam2 = manned camera hunting for medium & close up shots of performer(s)
Cam3 = manned camera hunting for medium & close up shots of performer(s) AND b-roll footage = timeless reaction shots (of the audience, for example)
Composition
use rule of thirds (turn on grid)
use lead space = space in front of where subject is facing
avoid placing your frame edge on one of the body’s joints
avoid too much headroom (or person looks to be sinking)
avoid too little headroom (or focus will be on the person’s chin and neck)
use a variety of Shot types (hold a shot for at least 10 seconds)
extreme long shot (XLS) = establishing shot - context for shots to follow
long shot (LS) = person from head to feet
medium shot (MS) = person from about waist up
closeup shot (CU) = person’s neck and head
extreme closeup shot (XCU) = one detail of a person
cut in = closeup shot of an object (such as the face of a watch or an instrument key)
more shot types = https://www.instagram.com/p/B6DZWA9ChDB/?igshid=pbgpx0ctas8h
Video Editing
Better performance while editing = Playback > Proxy Mode > Half (or Quarter) Resolution
tutorial = https://youtu.be/S2yxFcm-te8?t=43s
open Resolve.
choose the Media tab at bottom, then Import media (drag the audio and video files in)
Select all media, right click, select “New Multicam Clip Using Selected Clips…” and choose “Sound” as the Angle Sync
NOTE: if syncing with "Sound" does not work for another project of yours (it should work for the example files I gave you): click on each file, view the waveform, and add a "Mark In" by pressing "i" to each clip at the clap board and sync using "Mark In"
right click the new multicam clip, select “New Timeline Using Selected Clips…”
choose the Edit tab at bottom (and make sure playhead is at the beginning)
When you are done: Deliver tab at bottom and choose a preset such as YouTube (or use MPEG-4 as container, H.264 as compression, AAC for audio)
To expand multicam clip to edit cameras/audio individually (to color grade or adjust sync):
right click on multicam clip in timeline, select “Open in Timeline”
to exit expanded view: double click timeline name in bottom left (e.g. Timeline < Multicam)
Saving Resolve Projects
When you work with Resolve on your own computer, you can just click "save" and your projects get saved in a database on your own computer.
BUT, if you work on a Resolve project in a university lab or on someone else's computer, you'll want to save it in a way you can open it again on another computer ... and you'll want all the media to stay with the project!
Export Project Archive ...
File > Project Manager ...
right click on the project you want to export and choose "Export Project Archive ..."
choose where you want it saved
when asked, make sure you put a checkmark on "Media Files" for options of what you want to include in the archive
if you want to then upload the archive to Box, I suggest you right click on the archive folder and compress it to a zip file
when you are ready to work on the project again, download the zip file, unzip it, and double click on the project file in the folder (a file with the extension .drp)
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