Monday, November 4, 2013

You Oughta Know: New Artist TDel2







It is truly a pleasure here at The Crew Scene to discover new talent and to share that talent with our readers. This week’s feature artist is the amazing TDeL2, and we are so excited to share his music with you! TDeL2 is the fresh and spirited musical project of Tony DeLuca. Tony creates evocative, electronic indie rock, and we cannot get enough of his new single, “Fearless Youth.”


Tony’s earliest memories of music include bopping out drum patterns on empty coffee tins at his aunt’s house as a pre-schooler.  He began piano lessons at age 5 and loved playing contemporary pieces by the Beatles, Elton John, and Billy Joel. Tony’s father gave him an acoustic guitar for Christmas at age 10, and Tony began teaching himself to play. He eventually learned drums and bass as well. He is now a full-fledged multi-instrumentalist, and his musical talent seeps through the songs on his debut release, “Barnegat.”

During graduate school, Tony began writing songs in his tiny apartment with a Roland keyboard and a Squier Stratocaster. After receiving an audio interface as a gift from his girlfriend, Tony started creating more complex tracks utilizing both audio and midi and began experimenting with recording techniques.

The debut full-length album from TDeL2, "Barnegat," will be released in early November on Monkey Records. Tony recorded, mixed and produced the entire album himself in 2013 at his home studio. The album was mastered by Shawn Hatfield of Oakland, California-based Audible Oddities (Natasha Bedingfield, Shakira, Helios, ESKMO, Mike Taylor, The Innocence Mission). The album is mostly instrumental with occasional lyrical interludes.

Tony’s mission with each carefully crafted song on his album is to move his listeners through dynamic sound. You can find Tony online at the links below. Don’t miss this truly talented up and comer!


Tuesday, August 13, 2013

Figuring out file formats

   

This past week, I spent sometime exchanging photo and graphic files to use for marketing and creating our social media platforms for a web series we have in production.

My EP was requesting various types of files, .tif, ,jpg in hi-res and as a producer, I am embarrassed to say,  I had no clue what was the right thing to send to her.

Luckily, I came across this video to help me figure it out!




      


In-depth Information on: .PSD .TIF. .JPG .PNG & .EXR File Formats from Kert Gartner on Vimeo.

Thursday, August 1, 2013

The Last of Us OFFICIAL FAN FILM








Check out this film based on the popular video game "The Last of Us" - an Iron Horse Cinema Production


Synopsis: 

Joel, a ruthless survivor with few moral lines left to cross, lives in one of the last remaining Quarantine Zones. These walled-off, oppressive cities are run by what’s left of the military. Despite the strict martial law, Joel operates in the black market of the city, smuggling contraband for the right price.
Joel is asked by a dying friend to look after Ellie, a fourteen-year-old girl with courage beyond her years. What starts out as a simple job to deliver Ellie to another Quarantine Zone, soon transforms into a profound journey that will forever change Joel and Ellie.
As Joel and Ellie struggle to persevere, they must learn to trust each other and work together in order to survive the realities of this new world.

At its core, The Last of Us is about the bond that forms between Joel and Ellie – it is the story of love, loyalty, and redemption.




For more on "The Last of Us" :

Indiegogo Campaign: http://www.indiegogo.com/projects/the-last-of-us-official-fan-film

Facbook page: https://www.facebook.com/pages/The-Last-of-Us-Fan-Film/145656695635825




Wednesday, July 24, 2013

A chat with writer/director Jason Michael Brescia about his new indie feature “Bridge and Tunnel”







The Crew Scene had an opportunity to catch up with filmmaker Jason Michael Brescia as he just wrapped his second feature "Bridge and Tunnel" - a cynical comedy that follows a group of friends in their twenties transitioning into various aspects of adulthood.




Congrats on wrapping your second feature! How was the creative and production process different for “Bridge and Tunnel” than it was for “The Newest Pledge”, seeing as “Bridge and Tunnel” is a comedy with more serious undertones?

Thank you. I think the biggest difference between the creative processes that went into the making of “The Newest Pledge” and “Bridge and Tunnel” came from age and experience. I began writing “The Newest Pledge” as a college senior, and I was only twenty three years old when the film wrapped. Looking back on it I was just a college kid who wrote about when he knew and had no “real world” experience. In the period in between wrapping “The Newest Pledge” and going into production on “Bridge and Tunnel” I spent two years gaining some really unique life experiences that I feel carried the project through its creative development. 



You’ve talked about how you came home from California - I’m sure high off of the success of your first film and it struck you how much the people and town changed. For most of us who have moved away, come back to changes and we usually write it off as a sucky part of adulthood. What was it about this homecoming that inspired you to write “Bridge and Tunnel”?

Actually, when I came home from California there was little success to be “high off of.” I moved back to Long Island in February 2011 but The Newest Pledge” didn’t get a distribution deal until February 2012. The period of time in between my move and the sale of the film was an incredibly difficult one for not only me, but for the entire team that helped put “The Newest Pledge” together. The difficulties and dilemmas of self-worth that I was going through helped me to empathize with my peers who were going through their own, slightly more common twenty-something problems. I didn’t return home and look down on my friends with financial issues, debt, relationship problems, unemployment, and a general feeling of being lost; I was one of them.



The man himself - writer/director Jason Brescia



During the writing process, you mentioned that there were certain issues that you didn’t realize affected our generation until you were doing research for the film. What were those issues and how did they affect how you developed your characters?


I think my generation was given a road map to success at a young age. Graduate high school, don’t join a gang, don’t do drugs, go to college, practice safe sex, perhaps enroll in some sort of graduate, legal, or medical program, and a shiny six figure job would be waiting for you at the end of the rainbow. But over the course of our young lives so many things have changed; we were teenagers on September 11th, 2001 and had to cope with that while also coping with other unrestrained teenage emotions. Many of us graduated high school and went off to fight in foreign wars we understood little about. Many of those not fighting overseas worked their butts off to get a college degree, and even took on mounds of student debt to get an education fit for our society, only to have the entire global economy go into a tailspin in late 2008, when many of us were either young professionals, or just graduating college. It’s been a unique life for those of us born in the 1980’s, and Bridge and Tunnel isn't the sort of film that’s going to cry or complain about it, it’s simply going to show you what life is like for some of us.



                   
Which character do you connect with the most? Did you draw on your own experiences for that particular character?

All of the characters in the script come from some part of me. I love and hate all of them equally.


The cast on set




How will audiences connect with the characters and their struggles while trying to settle into adulthood?

There are certain moments for all of the characters that I believe many, if not most audiences will be able to identify with. These characters won’t be up for beatification anytime soon, but many of their struggles, temptations, and vices are entirely human and there’s something striking about that, even when it’s presented as a comedy.




One situation you couldn't escape while filming on Long Island was Superstorm Sandy. Were you able to incorporate the effects of Sandy into the film?

“Bridge and Tunnel” takes place over the year 2012, so naturally Sandy plays a pivotal role in the story. We shot a scene in Long Beach, New York amidst some of the wreckage, and it was a very sobering experience for the cast, crew, and me. As a Long Island native I’m still getting used to some of the effects the storm had on our home. It was weird this past Spring, watching as the trees bloomed and noticing a little less shade in certain places than there was the year before, or heading down to some of our favorite summer communities like Long Beach, Island Park, or Freeport, and noticing some of our favorite establishments have been destroyed. At some point we’ll plant new trees, open new restaurants, and build new boardwalks, but psychologically I’ll never forget those weeks.





You and your team were able to partially fund the film with a successful Indiegogo campaign with some pretty cool perks, I must say. What were your tactics in promoting the campaign in order to reach your goal?

I think the tactic that works best is to annoy everyone you know constantly until they’re eventually nice enough to give you some of their hard earned money. Then it’s your job to make sure whatever it is you’re trying to do doesn't suck, so that you can look these people in the eyes the rest of your life and not feel ashamed of some piece of crap you wasted their money on in exchange for a T-Shirt.






Now that you are in post, what are your next steps? What is your distribution strategy? Do you intend to screen theatrically?

Post production should be complete in late Fall 2013. I hope that the film is distributed in 2014, and a theatrical run, however small, would be something that I could never take for granted.









Another congrats on being the “Official Selection” of the 2013 Workers Unite Film Festival! What other festivals are you considering?


I haven’t thought too much about a festival strategy yet, though some of the other producers have been working on that for some time. I submitted our script to the 2013 Workers Unite Film Festival because I believed in what the festival stood for, and felt as though the characters in “Bridge and Tunnel” could relate to the foundation that the Workers Unite Film Festival was built on.





You have already had some success in indie film making. Your very first feature was screened at several festivals and distributed by Lionsgate. What do you say to other indie film makers trying to achieve even modest success?

If you want to go anywhere in the realm of indie film making you must first learn to love work and loathe sleep. Work hard. If you think you’re working hard then work harder because somewhere out there somebody you’ll probably never meet but might one day hear about is working harder than you to achieve the exact same goal that you’re working towards right now. Work harder than that person or get used to reading about them doing the things you always wished you’d be doing. Sleep less, make your day longer. If you think you’re getting the right amount of sleep then you’re sleeping too much. If you think you’re not sleeping well then don’t sleep at all. Sleep is for the weak. Coffee is your only real friend.





For more on Bridge and Tunnel - 

Facebook: www.facebook.com/BridgeandTunnelMovie 
Website: www.bridgeandtunnelfilm.com


To follow filmmaker Jason Michael Brescia 

Facebook: www.facebook.com/JasonMichaelBrescia






Monday, July 22, 2013

Artist to Know - R &B Singer Curtis Fields









How amazing is this guy?! I was watching "The View" this morning and was absolutely blown away by this kid playing on his this soulful single "Opposites Attract" Iphone! 

The Montgomery, Alabama native planted his musical roots singing gospel, and continued to develop his singing career while attending Fisk University as a "Fisk jubilee Singer". He's shared the stage singing backup for R&B singers like John Legend and Eric Robertson

Like all of most of us in the industry with the talent - but no resources or money to try achieve the level of success we've dreamed - Curtis is a true inspiration to those of us who don't want to give up the chase but don't know how or what to do to keep going. 

Watch his introduction to the world (called one of the 9 Most Memorable Moments at the "BET Awards" ) below.









For more about Curtis - visit his website: thecurtisfields.com



Friday, July 19, 2013

Bobby V talks to "The Crew Scene" about new EP, Peach Moon












From breaking out into a solo career back in 2005 with his hit single, “Slow Down”, Bobby V became a household name in R&B.  After releasing Dusk Till Dawn last October, Bobby felt like something was missing. In between touring and working on his new EP, Peach Moon, Bobby V made time to dish on details about the recording process, learning to play the piano, and what the “Back to Love” movement is really all about.

Read excerpts of our interview below and listen to it in full.

On using more live instrumentation on his upcoming EP… 

Bobby V: I’ve always had live instruments on my album. It was more or less keys and guitars but that’s it. But now I’m pushing the envelope even farther by having live drums, live horns, live violin, and we’re just really developing a groove for Peach Moon.

On a release date…

BV: We haven’t set one as of yet. I been working on this project since January and it’s so tough because…this kind of music right here is a totally different transition, subject matter, production wise. Because I put so much time, so many blood, sweat, and tears to it, I just don’t want to throw it out there and it get lost in the sauce. I want people to appreciate this music because I put so much into it.

GP: Since we last spoke on my radio show, has the love bug hit you yet?

BV: I get bit by the love bug all the time. You know there’s so many beautiful young ladies in the world and I get bit, I just got to find the right catch.














Contributor Georgette Pierre is an on-air personality, writer, and Executive Producer of her own radio show "Off the Record with Georgette Pierre". 

Check out her website www.georgettepierre.com 
Twitter: @GeorgettePierre




Wednesday, July 3, 2013

"Off the Record" with hip-hop violinist Damien Escobar








Entering the Julliard School of Music at the age of 9, violinist Damien Escobar has already received critical acclaim alongside his brother Tourie, for their work, collecting two Emmy awards, selling over a million copies of their album, performing for two past Presidents, and even placing third on season three of America’s Got Talent. So what does one do after they seemed to have accomplished it all? Keep rising to the top. With his solo mixtape out called Sensual Melodies, Damien Escobar, better known as Dame Esco, stops by to talk his journey to greatness, his philanthropic efforts, and his mixtape Sensual Melodies. Plus I run down the OTR (Off the Record) Report including personal tidbits and pop culture news that will be sure to make you blush…maybe.

Listen to Off the Record with Georgette Pierre Wednesday July 3rd at 6 pm EDT/3 pm PDT.

Subscribe to the free podcast on iTunes and now stream it free on the tunein radio app.