As the latest step in a long-term, comprehensive project to document,
distribute, and archive the University’s rich cultural offerings to a
wider audience, Northwestern University Information Technology (NUIT)
multimedia specialists have made the School of Music’s recent
production of Threepenny Opera available for public viewing and
download.
Northwestern University Advanced Media Production Studio
(NUAMPS), a division of NUIT Academic Technologies, is collaborating
with the School of Music to record its three annual opera productions
in High Definition Video (HDV). Threepenny Opera follows last spring’s
trial collaboration on Mozart’s The Magic Flute. Continuing the
project, NUAMPS will film the February 23 performance of Tchaikovsky’s
Eugene Onegin.
“What NUAMPS is doing with the video recordings of our
productions goes far beyond archival documentation,” said Professor
Noel Koran, director of opera at the School of Music. “Their videos
bring the shows to life, and the viewer is almost transported into the
story.”
According to Harlan Wallach, architect for media technologies
and director of NUAMPS, shooting in HDV will ensure that the operas’
visual quality will continue to meet the ever-increasing requirements
of advancing exhibition techniques. Every angle of production will be
addressed with a similar eye towards evolving media formats and
distribution methods, such as the recent release of content in
iPod-compatible video.
NUAMPS takes the operas through each stage of media
development, from pre-production planning, to execution of video and
audio acquisition and editing, to final distribution via multiple
channels.
NUAMPS also offers a Web presence for the operas at http://nuamps.at.northwestern.edu/screenroom/feature_archives/feb2006feat.html,
illustrating the plan to address all components in delivering the
University’s cultural programming to a larger audience. The Magic Flute
and Threepenny Opera are available from the NUAMPS site in on-demand
streaming formats.
“We see the work we’re doing with the School of Music as a
model for broader possibilities within the University,” said Wallach.
“Northwestern presents a wide range of significant cultural activities
that we could capture and present through this type of complete media
development.”
iPod-compatible videos of The Magic Flute and Threepenny Opera
are available online through Apple’s iTunes Music Store by subscribing
to “NUAMPS Projects.” Both operas are in the NU Channel 1 Student
Television (NUCH1) rotating program lineup through Basic NUTV (http://www.northwestern.edu/nutv), and DVDs of both performances can be checked out from the Marjorie I. Mitchell Multimedia Center at University Library (http://www.library.northwestern.edu/media/).
Northwestern University Advanced Media Production Studio (NUAMPS) is a
group in Northwestern University Information Technology (NUIT) Academic
Technologies (AT).
For more information about NUIT, visit http://www.it.northwestern.edu/. For further information about NUAMPS and its video, Web and other multimedia projects, visit http://nuamps.at.northwestern.edu/.
Feb 03, 2006 | Permalink
NUAMPS Shares the Culture
As the latest step in a long-term, comprehensive project to document, distribute, and archive the University’s rich cultural offerings to a wider audience, Northwestern University Information Technology (NUIT) multimedia specialists have made the School of Music’s recent production of Threepenny Opera available for public viewing and download.
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