The interview went well. Laura molded the stills and video into a tight, cohesive package--but not without incident. Three of our brand new, right out of the box compact flash cards failed to write the avi files--and of course one of those cards was the one in the main, head on camera. Which is exactly why we always, always try to have backup and multiple options.
At each stop of the roadshow, Nikon invited guest photographers to join us for an event shoot on the first day. There were usually about 15 guests, and they get to participate in the shoot, observe how Laura and I work, and ask us questions.
In Denmark, one of the guests was Nicolai Brix, a young aspiring documentary videographer. He works a day job in order to pay the bills, but his real passion is making documentaries. That probably sounds familiar to a lot of you. Nicolai showed up with a Nikon D3s in hand, rigged with a monopod and an external microphone, and set about capturing a number of clips at the cycling event, mostly of me and Laura working. He worked hard at it all day, even doing an interview with me. Nicolai went home and produced a nice documentary short, which you can view at http://vimeo.com/8875882.
The next day I saw Nicolai at the presentation, and he had brought me a book that I told him I was looking for. He went to the trouble to find it and bring it to me. That brand of kindness is something to be cherished.
The cinemax in Copenhagen held an amazing crowd. They had so many questions, were so hungry to discus the process that we flat ran out of time--after a 7 hour session.
As usual we were scrambling to get everything broken down and into the truck so we could board the bus, hurry to the airport and head to the next city--this time Helsinki.
In Finland we were up and out early. We had scouting to do, and a huge setup to install in a fairly short amount of time, plus we had to drive to the town of Turku, 3 hours outside of Helsinki.
Turku Fast Forward from Lasse Pettersson on Vimeo.
Even with a full crew helping us it was going to be tight. Music videos aren't produced in a snap.
We rigged 2 overhead cameras--one for stills, one for video at the back of the room. We installed a slider (link to cinevate atlas here) camera in front of the stage. A camera jib on the side. Three more with long lenses on the edge of the dance floor on heavy tripods. Then we lit the bands dressing room.
We were shooting a music video with the Backyard Babies for their new release Abandon. They rocked the place, literally. The connection between band and audience was crazy cool and we had to capture that.
This band has been together for 20 years and they are tight. One hardworking rock band.
Heading into the club we listened to three very inebrriated Finns who staggered along on the way inside the club struggling to read the sign in the front window of our bus--one of them looked plaintively at his friends and managed “I thought we were seeing the Backyard Babies tonight, who the F@%$ is this Nikon Roadshow?.”
The band played a strong set, and by the time they finished and we broke down it was nearly 200 am. Three hours travel time back to Helsinki.
Soon we were slip sliding through the center of Finland on a full blown bus, rigged as an edit suite , as always Laura is in control of the first edit and we’re right in the thick of it. She's laying down the audio track and organizing the video while I handle the stills and the imaging.