I’ve just spent 8 minutes and 39 seconds on watching Ruby skateboarding on her scythe, and it was the most amazing time in my life. Ruby is the definition of girlboss and no one will convince me otherwise
if you set the timing of an animation up to have keyframes on full beats it ends up going with almost literally _all_ music. Similarly music can be set up to have combinations of sequences going at once with individual sequences ending in the right places, as long as there isn't too much difference in the intensity you can time it to visual input and your brain interprets the parts that match as the "main" ones and you end up with a bit of music that goes well enough with most visual sequences, it's not nearly as effective as going the other way around and matching visual to more distinctive audio since the way your brain interprets visual is all about fudging things to make them work and the way your brain interprets audio is all about picking out every single last tiny little detail that fails to match perfectly but you can get "eh, good enough" for most anything that's been set to a timing sequence. as a general rule almost any visual effect will pass a first glance parse as long as the lighting mostly matches but the timing on audio needs to be down to the frame _at minimum_ because your ears are automatically paying attention to timing in enough detail to catch the difference caused by the distance between them. not kidding about the "tiny details" btw, we usually gloss over most of it because living in even a small town is something of a sensory overload experience let alone a major population center but if they're paying attention most people can pull up fine details and information association to a level where they can identify posture and often even facial expressions from the sound of a person breathing.
Ruby's Playlist:
3:28 Ruby running late to the dead fantasy gee animation
Ok now I need to see a RWBY Ninjago Weekend Whip video that was so perfect.
The switch from Frank Sinatra to the caramel dance and the test drive ost in how to train your dragon to the crab rave XD
I’ve just spent 8 minutes and 39 seconds on watching Ruby skateboarding on her scythe, and it was the most amazing time in my life. Ruby is the definition of girlboss and no one will convince me otherwise
Ok but free bird, bury the light, and crab rave were perfect for this
my way was chef's kiss
Free Bird goes absolutely nasty with RWBY combat for sure
Me playing music while gaming
(its free bird)
Lets goo good to see the animation again ^^
Omg the Frank Sinatra and Caramelldansen absolutely through me off guard but I am all here for it! RWBY Caramelldansen where ya at!
I liked the frank sinatra song and the last one. There was one in the middle I enjoyed too.
Bury The Light and The Only Thing they are the most that combine
Fuck, I'm getting old.
Yes you are 💯👍
Me in my dreams
Nice dreams you have
I feel like there’s more music than in the description of the video just me 🤨
Well would you look at that
What about light em up?
Reread the title
if you set the timing of an animation up to have keyframes on full beats it ends up going with almost literally _all_ music. Similarly music can be set up to have combinations of sequences going at once with individual sequences ending in the right places, as long as there isn't too much difference in the intensity you can time it to visual input and your brain interprets the parts that match as the "main" ones and you end up with a bit of music that goes well enough with most visual sequences, it's not nearly as effective as going the other way around and matching visual to more distinctive audio since the way your brain interprets visual is all about fudging things to make them work and the way your brain interprets audio is all about picking out every single last tiny little detail that fails to match perfectly but you can get "eh, good enough" for most anything that's been set to a timing sequence. as a general rule almost any visual effect will pass a first glance parse as long as the lighting mostly matches but the timing on audio needs to be down to the frame _at minimum_ because your ears are automatically paying attention to timing in enough detail to catch the difference caused by the distance between them.
not kidding about the "tiny details" btw, we usually gloss over most of it because living in even a small town is something of a sensory overload experience let alone a major population center but if they're paying attention most people can pull up fine details and information association to a level where they can identify posture and often even facial expressions from the sound of a person breathing.
so cool
Is this a Monty Oum animation clip? Where is this from?
th-cam.com/video/u8Y1VX3hhb4/w-d-xo.htmlsi=I-7JKiRe6049GS9G it's my red like Roses animation I did a while ago