Support |
Perhaps this is a bit black and white... but: If the music is really sucking, it can be a real help to have some visual element going and distracting your audience. If the music is really good, it can really suck to have some visual element going on and distracting your audience. The random collision of "your sounds" with "someone else's" visuals, can create happy accidents. It can also overwhelm the inner-landscape that the visuals or the music alone would have created. If you invest in synchronizing the audio and visuals to create a piece, that leverages both sound and vision, then you have something new and different. The whole is more than the sum of the parts. And you know it succeeds on those terms when you feel the one element fails without the presence of the other. Now, it's THIS what I would like to experience more. David UNDO