Cut may refer to:

  • The act of cutting, the separation of an object into two through acutely directed force

Contents

Mathematics [link]

Computing [link]

[edit] Film and television

Music [link]

Games and sport [link]

Geography [link]

Schools [link]

Trade unions [link]

Other uses [link]

See also [link]


https://wn.com/Cut

Cut (transition)

In the post-production process of film editing and video editing, a cut is an abrupt, but usually trivial film transition from one sequence to another. It is synonymous with the term edit, though "edit" can imply any number of transitions or effects. The cut, dissolve and wipe serve as the three primary transitions. The term refers to the physical action of cutting film or videotape, but also refers to a similar edit performed in software; it has also become associated with the resulting visual "break".

History

Due to the short length of early film stock, splicing was necessary to join together segments into long-form. Actuality directors spliced together reels prior to shooting in order to record for longer periods of time. Narrative directors, on the other hand, preferred shooting for shorter lengths, editing together shot footage. In either case, film was cut (and subsequently joining the cut segments) in order to remove excess footage, focusing attention on significant elements.

Cut (Hunters and Collectors album)

Cut is the seventh studio album by Australian rock band, Hunters & Collectors. It was mostly produced by American Don Gehman with the group and issued by White Label/Mushroom on 5 October 1992. It reached No. 6 on the ARIA Albums Chart and No. 17 on the New Zealand Albums Chart. The band were nominated for Best Group at the 1992 ARIA Music Awards and Album of the Year for Cut in the following year.

"Where Do You Go" was co-produced with Nick Sansano and released as a single in September 1991, prior to commencing the rest of the album with Gehman, but it was included on Cut. Subsequent singles were "Head Above Water" (July 1992), "We the People" (September), "True Tears of Joy" (November), "Holy Grail" (March 1993) and "Imaginary Girl" (August), all appeared on the ARIA Singles Chart Top 100.

Background

Hunters & Collectors' seventh studio album, Cut, was recorded from late 1991 and into 1992. The line-up of the group was John Archer on bass guitar; Doug Falconer on drums, backing vocals, programming, percussion and tape loops; Jack Howard on trumpet, keyboards and backing vocals; Robert Miles on live sound and art design; Barry Palmer on lead guitar; Mark Seymour on lead vocals and guitar,; Jeremy Smith on French horn, keyboards, guitars and backing vocals; and Michael Waters on keyboards and trombone.

First (David Gates album)

First is the first solo album by David Gates of Bread. The musicians include: Jimmy Getzoff, Jim Gordon, Jim Horn, John Guerin, Larry Carlton, Larry Knechtel, Louie Shelton, Mike Botts and Russ Kunkel. Suite, Clouds & Rain is definitely worth a listen as Gates experimented with his sound.

Track listing

All tracks composed by David Gates

  • "Sail Around the World"
  • "Sunday Rider"
  • "Soap (I Use The)"
  • "Suite: Clouds, Rain"
  • "Help Is on the Way"
  • "Ann"
  • "Do You Believe He's Comin'"
  • "Sight and Sound"
  • "Lorilee"
  • First (EP)

    'First' is the debut EP of Singaporean singer, Ferlyn G. It consists of a total of three tracks and was released on January 2, 2015.

    Background

    In 2014, Ferlyn announced that she will be leaving Skarf and releasing a solo EP in 2015 before Chinese New Year. After a series of teasers, the EP was released on January 2, 2015, during a press conference at Bugis+ in Singapore. The music video for both Xīn fàng kāi (心放开) and Luv Talk was released through iGlobalStar's official YouTube channel on January 2, 2015.

    Composition

    Ferlyn worked with various well known composers and singers such as Gen Neo from Noizebank and Mint from Tiny-G. The promotional tracks, Luv Talk and Xīn fàng kāi (心放开) is a fun pop tune and is about having a crush while the second track, Bùjiàn bú sàn (不見不散) about the experience during a breakup.

    Music video

    The music video for the promotional track, Luv Talk and Xīn fàng kāi (心放开) begin on a deceptively melancholy note with a teary Ferlyn perched on a bridge and dramatic piano instrumental playing behind her, the song soon ramps up the atmosphere with a full brass tone and hip rhythm. The story flashes back to an unpleasant conversation Ferlyn has with an unknown man. However, after being down, she transforms herself into a new self with a change in make up and outfit.

    First (Kandersteg)

    The First is a mountain of the Bernese Alps, overlooking Kandersteg in the canton of Bern.

    It summit can be reached by trail from Adelboden or Kandersteg.

    References

    External links

  • First on Hikr

  • Podcasts:

    PLAYLIST TIME:

    The Cut

    by: Peter Hammill

    Everything out of order
    everything too well produced
    from the conjuror's hat –
    let's turn on the juice
    to grind the cutting plane, the blade that gives an edge,
    to scale the mountain; to fail upon the mountain ledge.
    Half-way up is half-way peaking,
    the stroboscope locks the lathe;
    I look around for a switch in phase...
    the disco boom stands firm, the eight-track's in, the rage
    licks the present, quickly flips the future page.
    Check the deck: no marked cards,
    no sequentialled straight or flush...
    the dice won't still the blood-line rush.
    Run the star-flood night, the cut-throat blade is stropped;
    race your shadow... race in case your shadow stops.
    Everything so out of order
    no bias on the playback head;
    papers for the border –
    all the tape is read,
    the future burns my tongue, the noise-gates all are shut,
    breathe the vacuum, believe there's reason in the cut.
    Incipient white noise,
    the stylus barely tracks,




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