Get the Promonews daily round up

User Accounts

Get the Promonews daily round up

Echo Lake’s Young Silence by Dan Nixon

David Knight - 4th Feb 2011

In the space of a few days this video for new fuzzy-guitar merchants Echo Lake by Brighton-based filmmaker Dan Nixon has gone viral in a big way, and its not hard to see why.

In the space of a few days this video for new fuzzy-guitar merchants Echo Lake by Brighton-based filmmaker Dan Nixon has gone viral in a big way, and its not hard to see why. Dan's video for the band's Young Silence (out on Feb 14) has strong similarities with Radiohead laser-mapping video for House Of Cards by James Frost from a couple of years ago - but clearly wasn't made with expensive pro-level laser LIDAR scanners. In fact it was done with the ingenious leftfield application of new mainstream technology - the Microsoft Kinect. Dan shot this band performance video using a Kinect as a camera, and then spent several weeks after that transforming the digital footage by hand using "custom applications developed in Cinder" and publicly available Kinect hacking files. Responding to questions about the likeness between his vid and the House of Cards video <br/>on the thread under his Vimeo link, Dan says: "It uses the same basic idea - although I hadn't seen that video in full until yesterday. What the House of Cards video did (from what I can tell) was use two different techniques to measure data and then map it in a point cloud. What this video does is use the Kinect to get that depth data and then map it into a point cloud... "So yeah, depth data mapped in a point cloud is the same. They also did some really cool things with particle effects too I noticed. I did some stuff with how the point cloud's points are coloured." Er, quite straightforward really.

Dan's video for the band's Young Silence (out on Feb 14) has strong similarities with Radiohead laser-mapping video for House Of Cards by James Frost from a couple of years ago - but clearly wasn't made with expensive pro-level laser LIDAR scanners. In fact it was done with the ingenious leftfield application of new mainstream technology - the Microsoft Kinect.

In the space of a few days this video for new fuzzy-guitar merchants Echo Lake by Brighton-based filmmaker Dan Nixon has gone viral in a big way, and its not hard to see why. Dan's video for the band's Young Silence (out on Feb 14) has strong similarities with Radiohead laser-mapping video for House Of Cards by James Frost from a couple of years ago - but clearly wasn't made with expensive pro-level laser LIDAR scanners. In fact it was done with the ingenious leftfield application of new mainstream technology - the Microsoft Kinect. Dan shot this band performance video using a Kinect as a camera, and then spent several weeks after that transforming the digital footage by hand using "custom applications developed in Cinder" and publicly available Kinect hacking files. Responding to questions about the likeness between his vid and the House of Cards video <br/>on the thread under his Vimeo link, Dan says: "It uses the same basic idea - although I hadn't seen that video in full until yesterday. What the House of Cards video did (from what I can tell) was use two different techniques to measure data and then map it in a point cloud. What this video does is use the Kinect to get that depth data and then map it into a point cloud... "So yeah, depth data mapped in a point cloud is the same. They also did some really cool things with particle effects too I noticed. I did some stuff with how the point cloud's points are coloured." Er, quite straightforward really.

Dan shot this band performance video using a Kinect as a camera, and then spent several weeks after that transforming the digital footage by hand using "custom applications developed in Cinder" and publicly available Kinect hacking files.

In the space of a few days this video for new fuzzy-guitar merchants Echo Lake by Brighton-based filmmaker Dan Nixon has gone viral in a big way, and its not hard to see why. Dan's video for the band's Young Silence (out on Feb 14) has strong similarities with Radiohead laser-mapping video for House Of Cards by James Frost from a couple of years ago - but clearly wasn't made with expensive pro-level laser LIDAR scanners. In fact it was done with the ingenious leftfield application of new mainstream technology - the Microsoft Kinect. Dan shot this band performance video using a Kinect as a camera, and then spent several weeks after that transforming the digital footage by hand using "custom applications developed in Cinder" and publicly available Kinect hacking files. Responding to questions about the likeness between his vid and the House of Cards video <br/>on the thread under his Vimeo link, Dan says: "It uses the same basic idea - although I hadn't seen that video in full until yesterday. What the House of Cards video did (from what I can tell) was use two different techniques to measure data and then map it in a point cloud. What this video does is use the Kinect to get that depth data and then map it into a point cloud... "So yeah, depth data mapped in a point cloud is the same. They also did some really cool things with particle effects too I noticed. I did some stuff with how the point cloud's points are coloured." Er, quite straightforward really.

Responding to questions about the likeness between his vid and the House of Cards video
on the thread under his Vimeo link, Dan says: "It uses the same basic idea - although I hadn't seen that video in full until yesterday. What the House of Cards video did (from what I can tell) was use two different techniques to measure data and then map it in a point cloud. What this video does is use the Kinect to get that depth data and then map it into a point cloud...

In the space of a few days this video for new fuzzy-guitar merchants Echo Lake by Brighton-based filmmaker Dan Nixon has gone viral in a big way, and its not hard to see why. Dan's video for the band's Young Silence (out on Feb 14) has strong similarities with Radiohead laser-mapping video for House Of Cards by James Frost from a couple of years ago - but clearly wasn't made with expensive pro-level laser LIDAR scanners. In fact it was done with the ingenious leftfield application of new mainstream technology - the Microsoft Kinect. Dan shot this band performance video using a Kinect as a camera, and then spent several weeks after that transforming the digital footage by hand using "custom applications developed in Cinder" and publicly available Kinect hacking files. Responding to questions about the likeness between his vid and the House of Cards video <br/>on the thread under his Vimeo link, Dan says: "It uses the same basic idea - although I hadn't seen that video in full until yesterday. What the House of Cards video did (from what I can tell) was use two different techniques to measure data and then map it in a point cloud. What this video does is use the Kinect to get that depth data and then map it into a point cloud... "So yeah, depth data mapped in a point cloud is the same. They also did some really cool things with particle effects too I noticed. I did some stuff with how the point cloud's points are coloured." Er, quite straightforward really.

"So yeah, depth data mapped in a point cloud is the same. They also did some really cool things with particle effects too I noticed. I did some stuff with how the point cloud's points are coloured."

In the space of a few days this video for new fuzzy-guitar merchants Echo Lake by Brighton-based filmmaker Dan Nixon has gone viral in a big way, and its not hard to see why. Dan's video for the band's Young Silence (out on Feb 14) has strong similarities with Radiohead laser-mapping video for House Of Cards by James Frost from a couple of years ago - but clearly wasn't made with expensive pro-level laser LIDAR scanners. In fact it was done with the ingenious leftfield application of new mainstream technology - the Microsoft Kinect. Dan shot this band performance video using a Kinect as a camera, and then spent several weeks after that transforming the digital footage by hand using "custom applications developed in Cinder" and publicly available Kinect hacking files. Responding to questions about the likeness between his vid and the House of Cards video <br/>on the thread under his Vimeo link, Dan says: "It uses the same basic idea - although I hadn't seen that video in full until yesterday. What the House of Cards video did (from what I can tell) was use two different techniques to measure data and then map it in a point cloud. What this video does is use the Kinect to get that depth data and then map it into a point cloud... "So yeah, depth data mapped in a point cloud is the same. They also did some really cool things with particle effects too I noticed. I did some stuff with how the point cloud's points are coloured." Er, quite straightforward really.

Er, quite straightforward really.

In the space of a few days this video for new fuzzy-guitar merchants Echo Lake by Brighton-based filmmaker Dan Nixon has gone viral in a big way, and its not hard to see why. Dan's video for the band's Young Silence (out on Feb 14) has strong similarities with Radiohead laser-mapping video for House Of Cards by James Frost from a couple of years ago - but clearly wasn't made with expensive pro-level laser LIDAR scanners. In fact it was done with the ingenious leftfield application of new mainstream technology - the Microsoft Kinect. Dan shot this band performance video using a Kinect as a camera, and then spent several weeks after that transforming the digital footage by hand using "custom applications developed in Cinder" and publicly available Kinect hacking files. Responding to questions about the likeness between his vid and the House of Cards video <br/>on the thread under his Vimeo link, Dan says: "It uses the same basic idea - although I hadn't seen that video in full until yesterday. What the House of Cards video did (from what I can tell) was use two different techniques to measure data and then map it in a point cloud. What this video does is use the Kinect to get that depth data and then map it into a point cloud... "So yeah, depth data mapped in a point cloud is the same. They also did some really cool things with particle effects too I noticed. I did some stuff with how the point cloud's points are coloured." Er, quite straightforward really.

David Knight - 4th Feb 2011

Tags

  • New Promos
  • Promos

Popular content

Feedback

Problem with this page? Let us know

Credits

Production/Creative

Director
Dan Nixon

Camera

Director of Photography
Dan Nixon, Dom Jones

Misc

Post
Dan Nixon

David Knight - 4th Feb 2011

Related Content

Industry News

Promonews logo

Music video creativity everyday.

promonewspromonewstvpromonews.tv
Submit your video