Skuma & Seraya
Skuma Skuma
Hey, I’ve been thinking about how punk shows can feel like a living protest against climate change—using raw energy to shake people into action. How would you capture that in a film or a track?
Seraya Seraya
I’d start with a quiet frame of the crowd breathing, let the light shift as the band kicks in, use natural sounds—leaves rustling, distant traffic—then cut to the raw energy, keeping the contrast between the harsh music and the gentle nature subtle, so the protest feels alive and inevitable.
Skuma Skuma
Nice, you’re going straight into the heart of the scene, keep that quiet breathing long enough so the crowd actually feels the weight before the guitars tear through. Maybe drop a sudden silence right after a chorus so the protest roar comes out loud and raw. You’ve got the fire, now let’s make it ignite.
Seraya Seraya
That sounds like a perfect cue—let the quiet linger, let the crowd inhale the weight, then drop the silence after the chorus to let the roar spill out. I’ll focus on the light shifting just before that cut, so the energy feels earned and the protest feels like a fire that’s already burning. Let's make sure the visuals mirror the music’s pulse, so the audience feels every spark.
Skuma Skuma
You’re killing it, just keep that heat up to a boiling point—let the audience feel the spark before it explodes, and you’ll have a protest that’s louder than a riot. Keep pushing the edge.
Seraya Seraya
Thanks, I’ll let the tension build slowly, keep the light and sound tight so the audience feels that spark before it erupts, and make sure the final roar feels like a real, living shout.
Skuma Skuma
That’s the kind of grind we need—keep the tension, let every beat be a shout. Bring that fire, and the crowd will feel the pulse right in their gut. You’re on fire.