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Edirol VJ Challenge: European VJ Competition to Win a V-8 and P-10 -

Edirol are having a competition at the London International Music Show:

EDIROL are throwing down the gauntlet to the continent’s best VJs and challenging them to perform a live set at this year’s London International Music Show (LIMS) between 12th and 15th June. As well as the honour of winning the first EDIROL VJ Challenge the best VJ will also win two incredible prizes in the form of the new V-8 mixer and the new P-10 visual presenter (worth a combined £1899 RRP).

VJs from Europe are welcome to enter and Edirol Europe will select nine finalists to play live at the show. Each of the finalists will receive a free pass to the whole of LIMS and then compete for the title and prizes. EDIROL will also provide all the equipment the VJs need to perform, including the V-8 Video Mixer and the P-10 Visual Presenter. Three finalists will appear on the Friday, Saturday and Sunday at LIMS with the best winning the gear, simple as that! For online registration and more information go to www.ediroleurope.com

Bjork’s New Video; Contest to Make Videos for Bjork and Modest Mouse

That’s not special effects. Bjork has actually learned how to make her head levitate.

I have to admit, I was a bit disappointed by the new video for Bjork’s latest single, Earth Invaders. I loved the initial imagery: an organic, swirling background, textures mapped over Bjork’s eerily floating head, and marching figures dressed like trees and branches. Somewhere in the execution, the concept falls a bit short, though. The dancers tend to look like dancers, and the stylized movements (jazz dance? Alvin Ailey?) miss the violent underside of the song. My significant other pointed out that floating, singing heads are a bit of a music video cliche. And then there are moments of disappointment, like when Bjork’s head appears in front of a pristine, mountainous landscape, looking like some sort of ad for bottled Icelandic spring water.

Enough of what I think. What do you think? Think you can do better? Think you’re more awesomely visually talented than Bjork’s inner circle of friends. Great news: you’ve got a shot at making her next vid.

Bjork provides the lyrics, photos, photos of the costume as used for album cover, and audio to the track Innocence. You shoot a video. If you’re a winner, you get to use the original costume in the video, and collaborate with Bjork herself on the finished work. Why? Because, as the website says, “We just love the sculpture!!!”

Innocence is to be made as video [Links to contest page, Bjork.com]

Bjork isn’t alone, either. Modest Mouse and Apple have a green-screen contest for producing their video. (via TUAW) All of this is clearly promotional gimmick, but hey, it’s a lot better than sealing a band in an inflated bubble. That’s just … weird.

Following suit with other green screen promotions, Apple and Modest Mouse want you to do something with this footage of the band. Unfortunately, they don’t appear to be doing anything cool, like pretending they’re getting squashed by something giant or doing fake lightsaber battles, so I’m not sure what you’re supposed to do with this.

What I find interesting is that artists haven’t quite gone all the way with the participatory concept. I’m not one of those people who thinks artists need to open-source all of their music if they don’t want to. But if you are going to invite participation, why not go all the way? Why not provide free access to the material for use? Why not let fans choose which video they like best?

Actually, let’s spell this out. In my ideal world, artists:

1. Open up video production to fans, and let fans decide which are cool.
2. Hire live visuals for their tour. No DVDs. Great visualists alone. Music videos can be live.
3. Make videos so awesome they make the rest of us look bad.
4. (Repeat.)

Of course, if any of you do win this and get to hang out with Bjork, send us some Polaroids or something. We salute you.

Closing thought: if the official video doesn’t do it, Icelandic papercut animator Birta produced this unusual take on Earth Intruders, with this … um … creature, looking like he/she escaped from outtakes of Yellow Submarine. In a good way.

Earth Intruders by Birta [Free video -- no need to pay iTunes]

Papercut art character, or new Olympic mascot? You decide.

VJKungFu.tv Ramping Up New Content: AV Challenge, Lemur Intro. DIY Projector Mount

By Jaymis

VJ Kung Fu LogoVJKungFu.tv launched almost 6 months ago now, and while Momo isn’t drowning the interwebs in new content, what’s showing up is something CDMo is definitely lacking as a VJ site: Original video content. Of particular interest is their high quality go-anywhere DIY Projector Mount, first steps in Quartz Composer, and some intro videos to VJing with the Jazzmutant Lemur (as extensively covered from a musical perspective on CDM).

Their latest initiative: AV Challenge #1, to create source material to be used beatbox-style for a future challenge.

The last competitions/challenges featured on CDMo were from the now-defunct DVGuru. I hope VJKungFoo doesn’t go the same way!

Slooooooooow Motion: DVGuru’s 2nd Challenge Winner

By Jaymis

The video speaks for itself really. I don’t know if it was shot specifically for the DVGuru Challenge, but it hardly matters, because the results are beautiful, and double extra bonus points for the Boards of Canada soundtrack.

I want a Phantom so badly it hurts sometimes.

DV Double Dipping: DVGuru’s Inaugral Video Contest

By Jaymis

While you’re shooting that new footage (or reorganizing the old stuff) to submit to iStockVideo, you may like to keep something in mind: Green.

dvguru-trophy

Green is the theme for DVGuru’s first video contest. In putting this together they’re hoping to fill the void left by the demise of WeeklyDV.

Word: Green
Due Date: Monday, August 7th (two weekends to work)
Winners will be announced soon thereafter.

Prizes? This is just a test run to see what kind of reaction we get, so no prizes this time. Maybe in the future but I make no promises.
Time limit? The shorter the better I suppose, but there really is no hard time limit to speak of.
Now go out and create!

I personally think putting up a prize - no matter how token - will result in more entries and more fun stuff to watch, so in that spirit CDMotion has offered to sponsor the competition. We’ll see how that pans out, but in the meantime:

Green!