Thursday 29 December 2016

Digi pack advert research 3: "Only by the light" Kings Of Leon

This image shows us the advert for the Kings of Leon album 'Only by The Night'. The advert contains the same image from the album cover which helps the audience to clearly recognise both the advert and the album cover creating synergy between the two, linking them together.

The images they use are very abstract and creates an active audience making you wonder what it is about. The name of the album is matched to the images on the cover and add with the owl being present. The image further links to the idea of night with having a night vision effect on the photos.

Above the image the band name is clearly displayed and the use of the white font on a black background makes this easily visible as it creates a contrast between the white font and the background that makes the white title even more eye grabbing. The name of the album is also shown which follows the conventions of an album add.


The release date of the album is also shown and again the use of a large font makes this stand out to the audience letting them know just from a glance when it comes out, this follows the purpose of add very well as an add is made to be eye grabbing and give you the essential information you need which this add does. Social media links are also present on the add at the bottom letting the audience know where they can go for extra information.

Tuesday 27 December 2016

Digi pack advert research 2: "Wasting light" Foo Fighters

This is the advert for Foo Fighters newest album at the time of this magazines release, the magazine is known as The World, the add showcases the album cover on the back of the magazine. As you can see from the picture to the left, the images they use are colourful pictures of the bands heads with a vibrant texture which blends the colours together and stands out in contrast to the dark, black background making your eyes draw straight to the heads and the band’s name.
Because both the image and text stand out, they have a strong relationship and draw the reader of this magazine to have a look through the pleasing style of the image and the text which is showcasing what is happening in an extreme and over the top way as seen by the text all being in capital letters.

From the text placement, we can see they go to a great effort to make the band’s name stand out on the page as the artist’s name is the main selling point as their name makes them recognisable. The buzz words used on the page “Out now” are effective as it tells the reader that the album is out and that they can get it now. These are the main things people will want to see in an add as it is straight to the point and telling people what is happening, what it’s called and who is releasing it. From the texts’ colour we can gather that the white is the most important colour as it stands out in contrast to the massive, black background and is easy to spot, more so, than the blue text at the bottom of the page. They included the extra information about the album including who mixed it and produced it as well as their main  the single from the album  ‘ROPE’ which is clearly the song they are most proud of. 

This advert has some great iconography to represent the band as the images are only showing the band members faces because they are so well known and don’t need to be seen with instruments to establish they are a rock band as the name of their band accompanied by the looks their faces have symbolize their rock personas. The images in general is trying to get across that these band members are legends in the rock community and that they know it and are aware of the impact they can cause. Of course they are following a popular trend of the band members being the main center of attention to be more visually appealing to their audiences and attract more people through their band’s image as well as the music which can expand who listens to their music.

Overall the band provides good publicity for their own gain, which leads them open to any new form of audience to explore their music and come to their own judgment, as they don’t display the gritty rock typical look which would drive others away and are steering towards different people by showing a colorful background you might not see on most rock covers.


Digi pack research 2: "American idiot" green day


We can see the front of the digipak for Green day's 'American idiot'. The band’s name is written in a huge font and in white writing to make it stand out on the black background creating contrast, this showing the importance of the band and the album name which is  in red for the same effect of making it stand out. The black background is a very conventional look for the rock genre. The black look is also very popular with the band's and genre's demographic, which will have been likely to have played a part in making the background black due to the research they would of conducted. The image displayed on the digipak shows somebody holding a heart-shaped grenade, which has a red liquid dripping from it, which can easily be interpreted as blood. Although the images on the cover do not reveal the meaning of the songs. This front cover album which consists of three main colours, red white and black amplifies the theme of anger and rage. Red is a colour of passion, unity and love but at the same time could also be seen as a colour of rage, destruction and bloodshed, whereas white could be used to represent peace and tranquillity, the background consists of black, which allows the contrasting colours to stand out more, although the black background could be argued that it creates a sense of loneliness as well.

As the album is mostly politically motivated, it is only natural that the band would also use the images on their album art to portray the same message they do in their lyrics. The heart shaped grenade can represent many things. For example, the grenade represents war, Americans fighting in the war. The heart can also represent the passion the soldiers have for their country and the pride they have fighting for it.). Another way which the image can be viewed is that the heart-shaped grenade represents the heart of the American public, it's very delicate but if tampered with can be very dangerous, and the white forearm representing the American government, the message which Green day are symbolizing is that the government have the heart of the public gripped firmly in their hands, the grenade means that the government have the power to destroy the heart at just the pull of a pin. The back of the digipak shows the conventional song listing along with record labels and parental advisory.

As mentioned before, parental advisory has been included in the digipak, this is because Green day
are known for being a very controversial band and some parents may be offended having their children listen to their product due to some of the lyrics and language in a few of the tracks, however in attempt to sell more albums, the parental advisory is left on the back to try to avoid the beady-eye of parents ( the store did put stickers on the front of the album ). Alike most bands, the record label is displayed on the bottom left of the digipak, this sticking to the convention of the location of the record label logo. The track listing is in white writing, again to make it stand out on the black background however it isn't in as big as a font as the band’s name for the obvious reason that they'd be no space.

Wednesday 21 December 2016

Digi pack advert research : The Killers " Day & Age "


This advert for The Killers’ album Day & Age is particularly stylized, using the album art and stylistic font to catch the eye of the audience. The artists’ name is significantly large, taking up most of the top half of the page following the convention of a music add.

This is followed by the dark bold font of ‘Day & Age’, which highlights the name of the album. The bright bold font of the information at the bottom of the screen is contrasted by the black background, which in turn contrasts with the vivid color of the album art drawing the viewers eye.

The typeface used on the main image is the same as that used for the bands logo which is featured on everything from album covers to the websites. This focuses on the strong brand identity which the band have built up. The style of the typeface is also notorious of the alternative rock genre, which identifies with the target audience. However there is an underlying tone of a retro era - more of a sixties vibe in terms of the typeface itself. The font is also made up of the same pixels as the background image itself, which keeps the same texture running throughout the advert and looks aesthetically pleasing.


 The gutenberg design principle is put into effect here, with the artist’s name taking up a large part of both the primary optical area and the strong fallow area. Both the weak fallow and terminal areas at the bottom of the page are in black, drawing the reader’s attention to the top of the page where the most important information is, along with the bright and colorful artwork of the album.

The font choice that this magazine advert uses as the release date and information is extremely simple but is traditional in suiting the genre conventions. This font is a bold sans serif style font which although simple is very eye catching when used with the white on black color choices. This font also appears to have a fixed width which makes the space between lettering even and more aesthetically pleasing. Unlike most magazine adverts advertising a new album release, this one has no reviews on it from any big publishers, magazines or newspapers. This gives the impression that the band don't care what critics think but rather what you the listener thinks which seems to be a popular convention within this genre.

The gutenburg design layout

The Gutenberg Diagram
The Gutenberg diagram describes a general pattern that the eyes move through when looking at evenly distributed, homogenous (parts or elements that are all of the same kind) information.

The pattern applies to text-heavy content. Think pages in a novel or a newspaper or adds.

The Gutenberg diagram divides the layout into 4 quadrants.


  • Primary optical area located in the top/left
  • Strong fallow area located in the top/right
  • Weak fallow area located in the bottom/left
  • Terminal area located in the bottom/right


The pattern suggests that the eye will sweep across and down the page in a series of horizontal movements called axes of orientation. Each sweep starts a little further from the left edge and moves a little closer to the right edge. The overall movement is for the eye to travel from the primary area to the terminal area and this path is referred to as reading gravity.

Naturally this is for left to right reading languages and would be reversed for right to left reading languages.

The Gutenberg diagram suggests that the strong and weak fallow areas fall outside this reading gravity path and receive minimal attention unless emphasized visually in some way.

Important elements should be placed along the reading gravity path. For example placing logo or headline in the top/left, an image or some important content in the middle, and a call-to-action or contact information in the bottom right.

Designs that follow Gutenberg are said to be in harmony with natural reading gravity.

The claim is these designs improve reading rhythm, by being in harmony with the natural reading rhythm, as well as improving reading comprehension, but there’s little empirical evidence to support the claim.

I plan to use this and incorporate it into our add to emphasise certain parts of information

Digi pack research: Mumford & Sons "sigh no more"


Friday 9 December 2016

2nd draft of advert

This is the second draft of the advert we have produced, we have changed the text , the images and really worked on trying to develop between synergy between it and the music video. We have even looked at it in different colours.

We got alot of feedback on these adverts and we found that people loved the different colours we had used and suggested maybe doing a bunch of adds in different colours. Other positives we found people liked about our add was the photos we used for it. We also got feedback telling us to make the album name more clearer as it was not obvious from a glance at it.







Tuesday 6 December 2016

1st draft of advert















This was the feedback I got from flickr about my inital add I had made. I am going to improve my add by using their feedback to construct a better add.

Monday 5 December 2016

Todorov

Lately I have been coming through narrative theorists and recapping them and I've noticed that mine and Caity's music video does not follow Todorov's theory fully. Todorov's theory states that all narratives start

  • in a state of equilibrium 
  • go into a state of disequilibrium 
  • end when a new state of equilibrium has been achieved.   
Our video right away starts in a state of disequilibrium and no state of equilibrium is achieved, leaving the audience without a complete story. 

Friday 2 December 2016

Research: Bastille promotion package

Bastille (On digipacks written as BĪ”STILLE) are a British indie pop band formed in 2010. The group began as a solo project by lead vocalist Dan Smith, but later expanded to include keyboardist Kyle Simmons, guitarist and bassist Will Farquarson, and drummer Chris Wood. The name of the band derives from Bastille Day, which is celebrated on 14 July, Dan Smith’s birthday is also on this day and has admitted to getting inspiration and naming the band from this. Bastille have won several music awards and landed many nominations, including ones for Brit Awards, Billboard Music Awards, World Music Awards, and Grammy Awards. Bastille has sold over 8 million records worldwide. Across the band’s social media you get the sense that the band are also music fans first and foremost and that love of music is something they share with their fans.

In February 2013, ahead of the release of their debut album, the band's fourth single, Pompeii was released to huge demand, this is the song that brought Bastille further into the public eye charting at number 2 in the UK.  Their first studio album ‘Bad Blood’ was released in March 2013 and debuted atop of the UK Albums Chart.



There are no images of the band on the front cover, suggesting that the band’s ‘brand’ is not dependent on, or even linked to, their physical appearance. Also follows conventions of rock artwork – image is ambiguous, ‘arty’ and juxtaposed with red text and name of album has dark, sinister connotations.

Thursday 1 December 2016

Rough cut 4



This is the latest version of our music video, there are many changes such as changing the colour's in flashback sequences and adding vignettes to to soften shot edges.