Jamiroquai - Virtual Insanity is pretty impressive when you find out how they filmed it.
Asklemmy
A loosely moderated place to ask open-ended questions
Search asklemmy π
If your post meets the following criteria, it's welcome here!
- Open-ended question
- Not offensive: at this point, we do not have the bandwidth to moderate overtly political discussions. Assume best intent and be excellent to each other.
- Not regarding using or support for Lemmy: context, see the list of support communities and tools for finding communities below
- Not ad nauseam inducing: please make sure it is a question that would be new to most members
- An actual topic of discussion
Looking for support?
Looking for a community?
- Lemmyverse: community search
- sub.rehab: maps old subreddits to fediverse options, marks official as such
- !lemmy411@lemmy.ca: a community for finding communities
~Icon~ ~by~ ~@Double_A@discuss.tchncs.de~
DANCING πΊπ WALKING πΆπ· REARRANGING FURNITURE πͺποΈ BABS IS π΅ SHOPPING ποΈ I LET THE BIRD OUT OF THE CAGE π¦ π
Was the first one that came to mind for me.
Aha - Take On Me ...such a mesmerizing video. A girl reading a comic is sucked into a world in between the two realities. Really cool artistically and you can't help but wish you could see more of the story.
Heard the song so many times, never watched the music video
That was great :)
Christopher Walken is so good in Weapon of Choice that he made me like the song https://yewtu.be/watch?v=wCDIYvFmgW8
This was the first one I thought of too.
Did you know that Christopher Walken used to be a professional tap dancer? The parts of the video where he's doing that are 100% him.
Ok Go, just about any of their videos are worth watching, even if you don't care about their music
Dire Straits Money for Nothing was amazing at the time. Turn Down for What is amazing in its own way. Smashing Pumpkins Tonight, Tonight. Michael Jackson had a few good ones.
Fun fact: the Director of the "Turn Down For What" video ended up directing "Everything Everywhere All At Once".
And the extremely underrated βSwiss Army Manβ featuring a fart-propelled Harry Potter raft.
One of the Daniels directed βThe Death of Dick Longβ, which might be the best mystery movie Iβve ever seen. Go in blind mister and, hands down, you wonβt be disappointed if you like mystery movies.
Labyrinth.
Sure, they call it a movie, but it's really just an hour and a half long David Bowie video.
I don't think anyone has appreciated what Coldplay did with their MV for The Scientist. In which Chris Martin really had to learn to sing the song backwards for the MV.
Here's what Director Jamie Thraves said on his interview with MTV way back on 2003
"I had this idea that I wanted to do a story that's tragic but starts off happy and ends happy, and the video is about rewinding to that happy ending,"
Thraves needed to find a new way to tell a narrative story that moved forward even as the action moved backward.
"The original idea was a straight narrative without the lead singer in the video," said Thraves. "But Chris wanted to be in the video and he was really excited to learn how to sing the song backward."
"He got a tape of the song recorded backward and he listened to it over and over. He's a very passionate guy, so he got really into it. What we learned later on is about the problems with phonetics, because you have to be very careful with the lip movement so that when you end on a sound your mouth is formed in the right way."
I think this would be always the most impressive music video in my book, ALWAYS. The dedication Chris Martin put man, I cant even think how he learned all of that.
nah, The Scientist will always take a backseat to Drop by The Pharcyde which did the same thing, but years earlier in 1995 (and a rap track no less)
like it's not even a competition in my mind
From Yesterday by 30 Seconds to Mars is like a whole short film and they went to China to film it. I remember it being a bit of a deal at the time.
Basically every OK Go music video, This Too Shall Pass is particularly impressive.
Sledgehammer by Peter Gabriel is pretty impressive the amount of work that must've gone into it.
The face morphing at the end of Black and White by Michael Jackson was cutting edge special effects at the time and it holds up well today (better than the rap verse breakdown in the song itself....)
R.E.M. - Imitation of Life. The entire song happens in a few seconds, with all parts at the same time. The video keeps rewinding, each time showing one of the parts.
Impressive, maybe!? Crazy? Absolutely! The Avalanches - Frontier Psychiatrist
Beastie Boys - Sabotage My favorite music video of all time, probably
Iβm convinced Ok,Go is a music video band that made music to go with their videos.
Turn Down For What?
Same directors as Everything everywhere all at Once.
A few directed by Ritchie Cunningham, he often collaborates with Aphex Twin and BjΓΆrk.
Prodigy's "Smack my bitch up" That video just had excellent camera work and a surprise twist at the end.
Pretty much all videos of Daft Punk's "Discovery" Album.
Jamiroquai "Virtual Insanity" Simple setup, but great execution.
A few from Peter Gabriel come to mind as well.
Impressive?
An Unkindness - Anything EASILY.
Why? Shot by one dude, all the instruments and vocals are one dude, shot through multiple seasons, and then you realize the lines on different season are keys on a piano/keyboard, playing the song.
Fuckin masterpiece.
Runner up: Turn Down for What, directed by the directors of Everything Everywhere All At Once.
I quite like Around The World by Daft Punk (directed by Michel Gondry of Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind fame). I guess "impressive" isn't the primary word I'd use to describe it but thought it was worth a mention
Edgar Wright directed a music video featuring Noel Fielding which was guided by the same idea that birthed Baby Driver (and it shows)
Jungle's Back on 74 features some absolutely exquisite choreography.
Slash ft. Myles Kennedy and the Conspirators' Driving Rain would be boring if it wasnβt done exclusively with puppets.
Gojira's Another World is a fun (depressing) Interstellar-inspired animation.
Do the Evolution by Pearl Jam is definitely the most impressive that I've seen.
It's Thom York stumbling through historical scenes of his life and career looking old and tired. It took me a hot minute to realize what I was watching but as soon as it hits you it's inescapable and heartbreaking.
It's not "impressive" in the same sense as take on me, Californication, or money for nothing... but in terms of really augmenting the music with a well conceived visual storytelling mechanic? Top notch.
Johnny Cashβs cover of Hurt by NiN
The video is beautiful, but the story, and timeline of cashβs later life, is heartbreaking.
Itβs not flashy, itβs not in your face, but it evokes feelings in most people, and tells a story.
First thing to come to mind is Childish Gambino - This is America. It's fairly simple on its face. Some people and a few props in a large empty warehouse. It mostly relies on Donald's presence but the filmography and post FX is pretty impressive.
Honorable mention to Radiohead - Paranoid Android just because it's cool.
Quite a few Ok Go videos.
This one involves drone footage, a fucktonne of choreography, an entire school of Japanese children and a horde of Honda handlebarless e-scooters. https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=u1ZB_rGFyeU&pp=ygUmSmFwYW5lc2Ugc2Nob29sIGRyb25lIG11c2ljIHZpZGVvIGJhbmQ%3D
Some of the ones that first came to mind are already mentioned, but I still wanted to include
It's quite dark, but it still gives me shivers every time I watch it.
wild boys by Duran Duran cuz of the time it was made
Porter Robinson & Madeon - shelter
https://youtu.be/fzQ6gRAEoy0?si=5tH9QomRfDje2QbR
Join me, fellow weebs!
They got a pro anime studio to make it. You can feel the caring of the father even though he's only in it a few seconds.
Everytime, I forget that I'm watching a video clip for a song and not a movie.
Might be one of my favorite modern music videos (assuming you count a decade-old music video as "modern").
The wintergatan marble machine is boring but I'm fascinated with it every time I watch and listen lol.
Sledgehammer by Peter Gabriel is iconic, the claymation and dedication is insane for a music video from that time period
It's okay to envy by Takayan is impressive for how it plays with the subtitling, trust me turn on Closed Captions for this and enjoy
Loretta by Ginger Root for how perfectly it captures an atmosphere and aesthetics of those late 80s/early 90s East/South East Asian music videos, it's a vibe - plus him playing all members of the band/accompanying orchestra is also impressive in its own right
just a few off the top of me head