longzijun | Dubtitution: Seoul Street Art @zijun01 | Uploaded 10 years ago | Updated 3 hours ago
Music, photos and video by longzijun . Download the background music mp3 (Song No. 31) from: longzijun.wordpress.com/2012/12/29/musique-de-fond-gratuite
This royalty-free song may be used for free for non-commercial purposes; just provide a credit: music by longzijun. You can also use the music for free in monetized YouTube videos (that are otherwise non-commercial in nature).
You can refer to more detailed terms of use here: http://longzijun.wordpress.com/music/free-background-music-series-terms-of-use
Dubtitution is the 31st song in the free background music series.
More Music
More Free Songs
To check out other songs in the free background music series, you can
a) Subscribe to this channel: youtube.com/channel/UCLCYZWv_6bKXeKSlVsbfnSA?sub_confirmation=1
b) Visit my free background music page: longzijun.wordpress.com/music
c) Go to this playlist: (youtube.com/playlist?list=PLC18F37A8C46DC478)
About the Video
The photos are of street art (낙서) in the Hongdae (홍대앞) district of Seoul, South Korea. This is a shopping, café and nightlife area near Hongik University. You can view the entire series of graffiti images in Google Photos: photos.app.goo.gl/gGt8iApbK8av9dsf9
If you are familiar with the graffiti artists on display, do let me know who is responsible for the artwork in the video. It would be good to give credit to the individual artists.
For more information about the photos you can see the related webpage: artjouer.wordpress.com/2015/11/20/street-art-graffiti-in-hongdae-seoul-south-korea
About the Music
The music is inspired by early eighties dub (like Sly and Robbie), but the tempo is slightly faster, the arrangement is far busier and there is less reverb. In any case, this is where the song's roots lie. I first used a more reggae-sounding drum pattern, but I wanted to move it away from the traditional Jamaican sound. Most of the instruments were recorded using a Korg M50 synthesizer, while the percussion and drum loops and some guitar sounds came from pre-recorded loops from (Sound Pool Collection 14, Sony, Computer Music Magazine).
Software used:
Music recording: Cakewalk Sonar Home Studio
Mastering: Magix Audio Cleaning Lab (this isn't really meant for mastering, but I find it can add a bit of energy to the tracks)
Video Editing: Premiere Pro
Animation (the few seconds where the 'face' starts to speak): Crazy Talk
Music, photos and video by longzijun . Download the background music mp3 (Song No. 31) from: longzijun.wordpress.com/2012/12/29/musique-de-fond-gratuite
This royalty-free song may be used for free for non-commercial purposes; just provide a credit: music by longzijun. You can also use the music for free in monetized YouTube videos (that are otherwise non-commercial in nature).
You can refer to more detailed terms of use here: http://longzijun.wordpress.com/music/free-background-music-series-terms-of-use
Dubtitution is the 31st song in the free background music series.
More Music
More Free Songs
To check out other songs in the free background music series, you can
a) Subscribe to this channel: youtube.com/channel/UCLCYZWv_6bKXeKSlVsbfnSA?sub_confirmation=1
b) Visit my free background music page: longzijun.wordpress.com/music
c) Go to this playlist: (youtube.com/playlist?list=PLC18F37A8C46DC478)
About the Video
The photos are of street art (낙서) in the Hongdae (홍대앞) district of Seoul, South Korea. This is a shopping, café and nightlife area near Hongik University. You can view the entire series of graffiti images in Google Photos: photos.app.goo.gl/gGt8iApbK8av9dsf9
If you are familiar with the graffiti artists on display, do let me know who is responsible for the artwork in the video. It would be good to give credit to the individual artists.
For more information about the photos you can see the related webpage: artjouer.wordpress.com/2015/11/20/street-art-graffiti-in-hongdae-seoul-south-korea
About the Music
The music is inspired by early eighties dub (like Sly and Robbie), but the tempo is slightly faster, the arrangement is far busier and there is less reverb. In any case, this is where the song's roots lie. I first used a more reggae-sounding drum pattern, but I wanted to move it away from the traditional Jamaican sound. Most of the instruments were recorded using a Korg M50 synthesizer, while the percussion and drum loops and some guitar sounds came from pre-recorded loops from (Sound Pool Collection 14, Sony, Computer Music Magazine).
Software used:
Music recording: Cakewalk Sonar Home Studio
Mastering: Magix Audio Cleaning Lab (this isn't really meant for mastering, but I find it can add a bit of energy to the tracks)
Video Editing: Premiere Pro
Animation (the few seconds where the 'face' starts to speak): Crazy Talk