| Animusic 2 - A New Computer Animation Video Album | 
enlarge | Director: Wayne Lytle Studio: Animusic Category: DVD
List Price: $19.95 Buy New: $16.93 You Save: $3.02 (15%)
New (9) Used (2) from $16.93
Avg. Customer Rating: 73 reviews Sales Rank: 3433
Format: Ac-3, Animated, Color, Digital Sound, Dolby, Full Screen, Surround Sound, Widescreen, Ntsc Rating: Unrated Number Of Items: 1 Running Time: 40 Aspect Ratio: 1.33:1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2 Dimensions (in): 7.1 x 5.4 x 0.6
UPC: 821143115297 EAN: 0821143115297 ASIN: B000CBWPXC
Theatrical Release Date: 2005 Release Date: November 14, 2005 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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| Customer Reviews: Read 68 more reviews...
Fantastic! November 19, 2008 Animusic 2 is as good or better than the original Animusic - which was incredible! Each of the 8 music videos is unique and engaging. My students are already asking for an Animusic 3 - I hope Mr. Lytle creates one!
Another great collection November 11, 2008 Wayne Lytle and his team present another great portfolio of music animations - the kind of thing you might get if Pixar animated Rube Goldberg doing Fantasia. These 8 pieces cover a wide range of looks and sounds, from the classic visual and artistic styles of Resonant Chamber to the massive, brooding temple of Heavy Light, to Fiber Bundles' organic imagery. Although parts of Animusic 1 reappear here, these scenes not only do well in themselves, they go well beyond the complexity of that earlier set.
Except for a piece from Mussorgsky's "Pictures at an Exhibition," these all present Lytle's own musical compositions. Although they vary, many show influences from Emerson, Lake, and Palmer and other music from that era. Lytle updates the sound, though, suffusing each piece with a happy energy. That cheerful tone comes through especially in Fiber Bundles - its bio-inspired geometries remind me of H.R. Giger, but with a bouncy charm wholly opposite Giger's brooding nightmares.
Extras on this disk help stretch out the animations' relatively short playing time. I found the director's commentary informative and enjoyable, the "multi-view" renderings less so. Wide-screen aficionados will be happy to see every piece done in their format as well as full-screen - redone, really, so that each version work properly as a visual composition. These enjoyable shorts have a place in any collection of animations or computer graphics, but I'm sure they'll appeal to far wider audiences than just those.
-- wiredweird
Great show but poor render quality October 13, 2008 This DVD is outstanding, no doubt about it. These guys are geniuses! My only complaint (and reason for the 3-star rating) has to do with the DVD quality. If you play it in big screen (LCD 40" or more) with 720p or better, the DVD looks pixelated. Not good quality. Just 853 X 480 pixels! -Even the demo they let you download for free at their website has better image quality than the DVD. I got the demo and was very expectant that the DVD had a better quality but it dissapointed me. They should release a blue-ray version or something. I love all the extras they included, including both full screen and wide screen versions, angles and lots of material of the production process which is fascinating. However, they packed too much material in a single DVD and had to sacrifice the size and resolution of the actual videos. I would have preferred less bonus materials and better quality videos.
Continues the great quality of the first, May 22, 2008 This DVD is just as good as the first DVD - Animusic. Our family loves it.
Catchy tunes and complex animation May 21, 2008 Good starting point for conversations about instruments and music with young children. The songs stay in your head and you don't mind which is a good thing, especially when the kids want to watch in regularly.
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