The Amazing CUE CALCULATOR!

February 17, 2010

Hey all, thought I’d make a quick post about an EXTREMELY nifty little utility my Dad whipped up -

Say your scoring a film. You’ve got a 23 second cue to fill with beautiful music. Need to know the exact number of bars/beats/what tempo/meter to compose it for? WANDER IN HAPLESS DISARRAY NO LONGER!

Simply input the exact number of seconds, and tempo you would like it at. BAM. instantly displays the Beats Per Measure and its corresponding Measure numbers for the entire duration you entered. heres a snapshot

Amazing!

as you can see this also takes full advantage of the SMPTE time code method in minutes, seconds, and frames. It even offers solutions at + or – .3 seconds if you want to leave some wiggle room :)

this is a really useful tool that should be in every film composers desktop dock!

updates soon, will make this available pronto

-Spence

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scoring-pano

Creating the underscore for a film can be a very time-consuming endeavor. The time frame for production isn’t really set in stone, rather, it’s more relative to the production of the film itself. I’m sure it’s no surprise to anyone that movies get delayed all the time, nor should the reasons why escape anyone. Since the score is the last step in making a film, production delays explicitly control the composers’ schedule. If a composer feels he is being jerked around, or being asked to compose an unreasonable amount of work in an unreasonable amount of time he has two options; Quit (if the contract permits), or suffer.

There are two key-terms here, the score and the cue. The score is the entire music for the film, the cue is an individual moment of music. Those are just two definitions I felt I had to get out of the way. Typically, for most film composers in Hollywood, writing 2 minutes of music a day can be considered a success. With that in mind, one could reason that if you were scoring a typical 90-minute movie, you could probably expect to take 6-8 weeks to compose the music. This number varies remarkably from composer-to-composer, this is just an average time frame.

Most of the time the composer enters the process during post-production of the film, after shooting and editing is done, when it’s locked in. Why, you ask? First of all, it comes down to the cue itself. How can you can time a timpani hit to strike at the exact moment of a gunshot in the film? The answer; the film already has to exist lol.

Anyway, So now you know, the composer enters typically in post-production. Soon after he/she receives a copy of the film to score, the composer will attend whats called a spotting session. This is a meeting between the project leaders of the film, notably the director, and producer. This is where ideas about the score and the film are discussed and passed around, and decisions are made as to the nature of the music. The composer then takes the rough-cut of the film, goes home and writes up his spotting notes. These are a list of cues and notes about whats happening in the film and what music should/could accomodate. This is when the composer gets down to business, and starts actually composing. The music editor prepares the technical aspects of synchronizing the music with the picture during this stage. The composer is probably freaking out about the deadline at this point, as it pretty much controls his/her life. Once the composing begins, many other things start to happen; the orchestrators come in and do their stuff, studio musicians are scheduled to record at the studio which also has to be booked and so on.

Sketch of a film score

Here I will demonstrate an ideal schedule for the entire process.

  • Week 1: The composer receives the rough cut, attends the spotting session, and the music editor prepares timing notes.
  • Weeks 2-5: Composing begins, gives rough copy of music to the orchestrator who orchestrates it, and sends to the copyist.
  • Weeks 7-8: Dubbing music with sound effects and dialogue.
  • Week 9: Film goes to lab for answer prints and color correction.
  • Week 12: Film is delivered to theaters for wonderful fun time for all :)

Obviously, this is the ideal, but often not the reality. Stuff happens, and it doesn’t always go so smoothly. I hope you gleaned at least a few tidbits from this article, this is the first in a series I’ll be writing about Film Scoring in general, as well as other subjects I’m studying at Berklee. Follow my blog for more articles about stuff I learn in class!

-Mooquu

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Back to Berklee For The Spring

Hey Everyone, just thought I’d post about current events here at Berklee College of Music
Starting up Intro to Film Scoring today, though it’s not for Film Majors it’s still the first class in a line of major-specific courses in film scoring, which is VERY exciting Someone emailed me this morning asking of the [...]

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How To Connect M-Audio Trigger Finger To Reason 4.0

I had some trouble with this today so I thought I would post about it. I’ll try to make this as simple and short as possible.

First, connect your Trigger Finger.
Open Reason, go to Preferences.
Once Preferances is open, click the Top Drop-down box.
select Keyboards and Control Surfaces.
In the new window, for Manufacturer:, select M-audio.
for Model, select [...]

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anyway [...]

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How to get accepted to Berklee College of Music

Hi all! If you or your child is going to be applying to Berklee, here are some things to consider.

They tell you to have at least two years of private instruction on your voice or instrument for a reason. The audition process is not exactly grueling, however you definitely should know your stuff.

I wont go [...]

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Music Theory – Modal Tensions

Here is a brief list of musical tensions by mode, which are considered a logical extension of tertiary harmony.Tensions are referred to by a “T” and next to it would be it’s related interval based on the scale/mode. Example; the 2nd degree of a C Major scale (Ionian mode) or the note D, would [...]

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Signed up for Sound Collage Contest

Here is the link

http://learningcenter.berklee.edu/Contests/Sound_Collage_Contest_09/
I’ve downloaded the samples and am ready to rock. The deadline is Nov 6th for submission, and I will see all of you there.
Still sick, feel like death. will post new article soon, stay tuned!
-Spence

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