2. Draft of the digi pack album. The images used will initially be tied to the representation of
the past as a comment of the bands musical style. the first image is homed to an upstairs
record shop, a small shop to comment on the lowering rate of the Vinyl selling rate which
has to date become popular because of the Arctic monkeys. Gibson’s bar (5th image)
because it’s a small venue within York that still plays rock music and has occasional band
performances. It ties into the musical style of the Arctic monkeys because of their
commitment to the older sounding bands. This seemed a logical option as it would add an
additional meaning to the overall project. The shots with no images are going to be images
that are tied to our video.
3. Poster Idea
Shot: Long Shot (landscape shot) because
sometimes bands use this so the audience
is completely satisfied with the overall product
Angle: Straight because from what I've seen
through social media, it's currently the norm seen
within Rock bands from Tonight Alive's latest
album, The Other Side (Single: The Ocean)
Characters: None (This will be a landscape shot) so
there will be no costume alongside this.
Location: Dennis Street/ Piccadilly, York
Props: None but the robots we’ll use for the music
video may be used in the shot or edited in using
Adobe Photoshop
4. Test Shots for the Digipak
All the choices for the planned digipack shots do have relevance to the Arctic Monkeys. This is
because we've seen from our research that a lot of their posters, Album shots are similar to the
shots we've chosen because they relate to their past influences of the older parts of the city, their
first album cover - Whatever People Say I am, That's What I'm Not is reminiscent of this.