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The Lounge What is on Your Mind? Top Cybersecurity Threats Earth Year 2019 | You Have Been Warned! Post 303036397 by Neo on Tuesday 25th of June 2019 01:33:24 AM
Old 06-25-2019
Quote:
Originally Posted by wisecracker
This is very aggressive. For a more serious controversial video.
Bog standard heavy metal chordwork but immensely powerful nevertheless.

(Not bad guitar harmonies 1970's style in part to break up the aggression too.)

Extreme Metal - Royalty Free Music | Motion Array
Thanks Again!

That's a great track for a video. Will definitely use "Extreme Metal" for a project sooner than later!

I'm such a noob at this... LOL

Quite often, I listen to a lot of tracks, watch a lot of video clips, and review a lot of specific effects templates without a specific project in mind, then it just all comes together when I decide do create the new project. Sometimes I pick the sound track first, sometimes I write the script first, sometimes I pick the video effects first, since I'm just a novice at this with no specific discipline at all.

Lately, as I get more experienced, I write the script first (the message), then I search for an over all effect (theme, like glitch, or corporate, or grunge, or metal) I like which is normally based on an After Effects or Premier Pro template in my collection or from Motion Array or StoryBlocks which I modify, then I modify Adobe Ae or Pr file(s) to adjust the timing to match the message and desired length, then I add the sound track and adjust the timing of the message and chip to blend in with the sound, then go for videos and images.

While all this is rendering, add the intro and outros to frame the message / theme either in Premier Pro or Camtasia.

I'm new at this, but it's really interesting to do. Motion Array pushes their new content out to YT daily, so I can lounge on the couch with my morning coffee and review all their new stuff on the big screen which looks interesting, and that all is filed away in the back of my mind for future projects.

Maybe you can create some guitar sound tracks for future videos? Smilie As long as they are royalty free, I'm good Smilie
 

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avimerge(1)						      General Commands Manual						       avimerge(1)

NAME
avimerge - merge several AVI-files into one SYNOPSIS
avimerge -o name -i file1 [ file2 [ ... ] ] [ -p file ] [ -a num ] [ -A num ] [ -b num ] [ -c ] [ -f commentfile ] [ -x indexfile ] COPYRIGHT
avimerge is Copyright (C) by Thomas Oestreich. DESCRIPTION
avimerge is a versatile tool. It can contatenate several AVI files into one. It can also be used to fix an index of a broken file and can also replace audio tracks or muxes new ones. It can read raw AC3 and MP3 files for multplexing. OPTIONS
-o name Specify the name of the output file. -i file Specify the name(s) of the input file(s) to merge into the output file. -p file Specify the name of the audio file to multiplex into the output file. The type of file can be either another AVI file or an MP3 or AC3 file. -b num Specify if avimerge should write an VBR mp3 header into the AVI file. Default is dependent on the input file (and usually correct). num is either 1 or 0. -c Drop video frames in case audio is missing [off] Only when merging multiple AVI files. Some AVI files run a little bit (usually for one or two video frames) short on audio. This means avimerge cannot keep up sync when concatinating them. The files play fine when played individually but not when merged because audio from the new file gets played back with video from the old file. avimerge will print a message like No audiodata left for track 0->0 (59950.25=59950.25) continuing .. When you turn on the -c option, the video which is too much will be dropped. -f commentfile Read AVI tombstone data for header comments from commentfile. See /docs/avi_comments.txt for a sample. -x indexfile Read the AVI index from indexfile. See aviindex(1) for information on how to create such a file. -a num Specify the number of the audio track you want to use from the input file. -A num Specify the number of the audio track you want to use in the output file. If you specify an existing track number, the track will be replaced. If omitted, the next free slot will be used. EXAMPLES
The command avimerge -o big.avi -i my_file1.avi my_file2.avi my_file3.avi merges the three input files my_file[123].avi into one big AVI-file big.avi. avimerge -o out.avi -i in.avi -p audio2.avi -a 1 merges track number 1 form in.avi to the next free track number in out.avi. You can create audio-only AVI-files using transcode -i song.mp3 -x null,mp3 -g 0x0 -y raw -a 1 -o audio2.avi -u 50 The command avimerge -o out.avi -i in.avi -p sound.mp3 merges the file sound.mp3 as an additional audio track into out.avi. AUTHORS
avimerge was written by Thomas Oestreich <ostreich@theorie.physik.uni-goettingen.de> with contributions from many others. See AUTHORS for details. SEE ALSO
aviindex(1), avifix(1), avisplit(1), tccat(1), tcdecode(1), tcdemux(1), tcextract(1), tcprobe(1), tcscan(1), transcode(1) avimerge(1) 26th January 2004 avimerge(1)
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