Since this isnt about music in vids but just vids, here is an alternate way to do the porch swing on El Capitan in Yosemite.
Opening and closing credits of movies taken from TV: VHS Archive Land EndCreditsFan Forever EndCreditsFan
After buying one of Jacob Collier's CD's I was curious how he created his music which is rich in harmonic blends of his vocals in perfect tune. Stumbled on the video below searching for mastering tips, but I really learned something about the creative process with current musicians who rely heavily on digital processing. Not only does the video show how Jacob creates these vocal harmonies with Logic software, but it also points to what I find is the reason most modern musicians have lost the art of coming up with an original compelling melody. Jacob demonstrates his process singing the Beatle's song "Hey Jude". Viewing the whole video I could see his approach compartmentalizes the creative process where you have to out think yourself what to do next. There's no room for riffing it seems.
I have a select few I go to for info, opinions & entertainment. Some of my Go-To videos on YouTube are: JEM Reactions Dereck Reacts https://youtu.be/Bka5hglu5sY Movie Chatter https://youtu.be/mMssI2LEoy4 BabbleTop https://youtu.be/Tn30nQAfTyk And various "Criterion Haul" type videos.
Metal Covers of various songs. Not a huge metal head, but some are rather good. I like the Two Minutes to Late Night crew, who is doing Patreon-funded weekly covers and dispersing the money collected to the musicians who have no gigs and don't have a regular income. Two Minutes To Late Night is usually a metal-themed talk show filmed live in Brooklyn, complete with bad jokes and cheesy sketches, along with hilarious covers. I like them just for the fact that they got kicked out of Comic-Con for playing loud metal covers of video game music in one of the booths. Anyways, their latest is Walking on Broken Glass, which I really enjoyed: Also check out members of Tool, Coheed and Cambria, Les Claypool, and a bunch of other people doing an insane cover of Anthem by Rush: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fULwDbZ4iSU Bonus trivia - in that video Les Claypool is playing the white Fender bass that Geddy Lee used in the original music video for the song. Alex Lifeson gave it to Les as a present.
I enjoy parkour channels on youtube. An English group of parkour athletes is STORROR. Some of these guys are just incredible athletes. Toby Segar may be the best among the (the redhead). Check out this "freezing" water challenge:
I've enjoyed these youtube videos by Robert Fripp and his wife Toyah. Who knew Fripp had such a sense of humor.
Its December which means I am watching old Australian TV commercials from the 90s and early 00s. Its something I have been doing since 2012. You also realize just how terrible modern-day commercials are.
Hi-fi advice with Paul from PS Audio Film reviews that bite with Honest Trailers Micro fish and silicon chips with Retro Recipies And non-stop ultra-filthy jokes with Jimmy Car
Somehow this video turned up in my feed and I was laughing so hard. This guy put guitar strings on his piano. Then in the next video he called a piano technician and asked him to tune it. I Put GUITAR Strings on a Piano and then Hired a Piano Tech to Come Fix it
Kevin James Sound Guy short films made me laugh.Then I came across a Mussolini documentary wich I almost vomited especially the pictures of what was left of him. I am sticking with fictional comedy instead of factual history!