
Don't waste your time poking around the app for other song options, because there aren't any. Once you've captured the Superzoom, the app adds in a few notes of dramatic music for the playback. It eliminates the awkward unevenness that comes with trying to simultaneously hold the record button with one finger and focus in on a specific point with the other. Really, it's a lot like Boomerang, but it gives you an intense zoom effect instead of a funky bounceback. To capture a Superzoom (yes, you should use it as a noun), you can simply tap and hold to record or tap just once to record a three-second clip automatically. Unlike Boomerang, it's not available as its own app - at least not yet. When you open Instagram, the new functionality presents itself a lot like Boomerang, as one of the camera modes you can choose within the Stories screen. If you haven't had a glimpse of the Superzoom feature yet, let me first make sure you understand the basics. It turns out that you can't, but I don't think I'm too mad about it. So, of course, when I could finally download the new version of the app, one of the first things I checked was whether or not you can change the music that comes included with Superzoom. 26 update: The new camera feature lets you zoom in on whatever you want, and adds ~dramatic~ music to your work of art.

Without the iconic "dun-dun, dun-dun" moment, Jaws could have been just another shark movie - it's the crescendo of the creepy score that often cues us to scream at the unsuspecting character in a horror movie, "No! Don't go in there!" We need the audio to match what's happening on-screen, which is one of the many reasons I'm pretty psyched about Superzoom, one of the features that comes with Instagram's Oct. Intense music is key to pretty much every high-drama moment ever captured on film.
