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Match the band/artiste with the genre of music most commonly associated with them:

Match the band/artiste with the genre of music most commonly associated with them:. Match the band/artiste with the genre of music most commonly associated with them:. MUSIC INDUSTRY AND PROMOTION. Starter: Media Language.

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Match the band/artiste with the genre of music most commonly associated with them:

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  1. Match the band/artiste with the genre of music most commonly associated with them:

  2. Match the band/artiste with the genre of music most commonly associated with them:

  3. MUSIC INDUSTRY AND PROMOTION

  4. Starter: Media Language • We give labels to things in order to classify them, to make clearer the meaning we are trying to convey.

  5. Table Chair Donkey

  6. In using a name or a label which our audience has used before we evoke a meaning for our audience. • This is the meaning which we intend to evoke. • This is DENOTATION

  7. However, in using a name or a label which our audience has used before, we evoke not only the meaning we intend but also a varying range of personal memories of other occasions when this word or label has been encountered. • These memories or thoughts which we inspire by using these labels is what we call • CONNOTATION

  8. At the denotative level this is a photograph of the movie star Marilyn Monroe.

  9. At a connotative level we associate this photograph with Marilyn Monroe's star qualities of glamour, sexuality, beauty - if this is an early photograph… but if it is one of her last photographs we may also associate it with her depression, drug-taking and untimely death.

  10. My Grandparent’s Wedding

  11. A photograph of my grandparents’ wedding denotes them: they are unquestionably defined in the picture. For my grandmother the picture evokes many memories and it is invariably a trigger for much character description. For me, her grandchild, all the resonances are second or third hand and for most people "reading" this image the text must be "open" to speculation merely. The connotations, on the other hand, are stimulated by factors such as the viewer’s prior knowledge or experience of the characters portrayed.

  12. So, in a movie, an insert shot in a kitchen of a knife denotes a domestic implement designed for cutting. However, if the music is moody, the mis-en-scene is dark and gloomy, or possibly thunder and lightening can be seen outside the kitchen window and two characters are having a ferocious argument in the kitchen, then, by including a close-up shot of the knife, the connotations are as a possible weapon of violence or even murder.

  13. What we see and the meanings associated with what we see are often very different. We use the term denotative to refer to the actual process of seeing an object and we use the term connotative to refer to meanings associated with what we see. Denotationrefers to the basic interpretation of the light hitting our eyes, but connotation refers to the meanings we then associate with what we are seeing. Knowing this is crucial to understanding the significance of images, whether they be static photographs, moving video, or animated graphics.

  14. This picture denotes (we could say depicts, shows, presents) a sunset, (or possibly sunrise) over the water on a tropical island. This is unarguable! However, its connotations, the emotions it may suggest or provoke, could be a combination of many things depending on the reader: peace and calmness; oneness with nature; an impossible dream; a memory of a holiday. These are generally positive connotations …..

  15. …but think about the film “Castaway” – in this case the connotations of the sun setting over a vast expanse of water may be very different for the “reader” of the text if they have spent four traumatic years trapped on an island!

  16. So, you now understand the difference between DENOTATION – what you actually see and CONNOTATION – what you associate this image with. Different audiences may make different associations depending on the cultural influences they have experienced.

  17. Preferred and Oppositional Readings • If you make the connotations that the producer of the media text meant you to make, then this is called a preferred reading • If you make different connotations from those which the producer intended you to make, then this is called an oppositional reading

  18. I am a 15 year old girl and I have stretch marks on my thighs, I hate it and it's really getting me down. Is there anything I can do to get rid of them? None of my friends seem to have them? Preferred Reading: Audience: Teenage girls “I can identify with this problem.” “I am interested in the answer because I have similar worries.” Oppositional Reading: Audience: Teenage boys “This is funny!” “What a stupid problem!” “Why doesn’t she get a life?!”

  19. Preferred Reading (what the producers intended): Audience: 1959 “This is really scary.” “The special effects were great.” “You could really believe that this woman turned into a wasp”. Oppositional Reading: Audience: 2005 “This is really pathetic.” “The special effects were really weak”. “It was so bad it made me laugh”.

  20. What is the oppositional reading of this advertisement (i.e. the one that some audiences may make which is not that intended by the producers)? What is the preferred reading for this advertisement (i.e. the one that the producers of the image intended)?

  21. Producers will spend time, effort and money to try to ensure that audiences make their “preferred reading” of a text. This is especially true when it comes to newspapers (including photographs) and advertisements.

  22. Summary • What is meant by DENOTATION? • What is meant by CONNOTATION? • What is a preferred reading of a media text? • What is an oppositional reading of a media text?

  23. Learning Intention: To analyse and evaluate the effectiveness of debut album covers. To begin to plan the promotion for your own band. Media Controlled Assessment Today you need to: analyse an existing media product to conclude how it appeals to a target audience.

  24. How to achieve your target grade …

  25. Music and Image How important is the image of an artiste? • Communicates important messages to the audience • Look is associated with a style of music • Audiences can idolise bands and singers, seeing them as sex symbols or fashion icons.

  26. What do these debut album cover images have in common?

  27. Music Posters Music Posters are a common component of any marketing strategy. They appear in magazines, on billboards, as fly-posters, on buses, in calendars and on bedroom walls. Some posters have become very famous, and iconic images have helped retain the popularity of existing and legendary artistes.

  28. How important is a strong visual image to the success of a band or artiste?

  29. How are the band Green Day and their music represented on this promotional poster? • Refer to: • font • image • colour • album title • Who is the target audience of this album cover: • age • gender • life style • values

  30. How are Rhiannaand her music represented on this promotional tour poster? • Refer to: • font • image • colour • album title • Who is the target audience: • age • gender • life style • values

  31. Music Posters All popular music posters are about promotion. They fall into three main categories: • Promotion of a single or album release. • Promotion of a tour or live appearance. • General fan posters of an artiste or band. Most music posters are carefully constructed to communicate certain messages about the particular artiste or band. Images may consist of an album cover artwork, photos, graphics and text. You need to deconstruct this and analyse the messages they contain. You also need to evaluate how the poster promotes the artiste.

  32. Independent Task • How is the artiste and their music represented? Comment on … • font • image • colour • album title • Who is the target audience of this album cover? Comment on their: • age • gender • life style • Values

  33. Now you’ve annotated, deconstruct it: • What is the type of poster and what is its purpose? • How is the band/artiste represented in the image? • How is the music of the band/artiste represented in the image? • If the band/singer is absent, why? • How are graphics used on the poster? • How has the image been constructed (layout)? • What are the main colours? What are their connotative meanings? • What symbols are used? What do they say about the artiste? • Who is the intended audience? • How effective do you think the poster is at promoting the artiste?

  34. How to achieve your target grade …

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