The Kid's Table
This blog is dedicated to music videos; whether they be new, old or even feature-length.
Saturday, October 23, 2010
"Stay Up Late" Talking Heads
Friday, October 15, 2010
"The Cell" (dir. Tarsem Singh, 2000)
Monday, October 11, 2010
"Scream" Michael and Janet Jackson (dir. Mark Romanek)
Having over the weekend seen Mark Romanek's kind of masterful (I hate using that word because I'm wanting to avoid hyperbole) new film, Never Let Me Go; I felt it was appropriate to take a look at one of his most classic videos. Of course, this video has to be the absolute farthest from his ethereal and haunting third feature. It was famous for being the most expensive video of all-time at the point of its release and came only a few years after the child molestation accusations against Jackson. So what do you do to combat all the negative media coverage and potentially career-ending scandal? You go into a spaceship goddammit!
Jackson usually came up with the concepts for his videos; this time to though he left it up to emerging music video-visionary Romanek. Being what had blown everybody away from this guy was Nine Inch Nails' groundbreaking yet uber-controversial and disturbing Closer video, this had to be a risky choice. You needed something rather upbeat and feather-light to remind people of Jackson the entertainer and not the creepy potential-pedo whom was magically changing colors. The concept behind this is essentially that Jackson, to escape the media, goes up to his magical spaceship with his sister where they play pong and flippantly observe art. The video is pretty damn silly and a bit of a relic of its time; that being said though Romanek was truly onto something aesthetically.
The big accomplishment is truly that the video is pretty much aware of its own ridiculousness; its wear the fakeness and plastic feeling of its setting on its sleeve. It's understood that while being a song about the frustration that comes with dealing with the vulture-like media, at the end of the day it's still a vapid pop song. Romanek is never intending to homage 2001 : A Space Odyssey here; if anything it's a celebration of how ridiculous it really is to be a celebrity.
Sunday, October 10, 2010
Crystal Castles, the Canadian electronic duo released their aptly-titled second album Crystal Castles II earlier this fall to much hype and excitement because well duh, Crystal Castles I was awesome and shit. Anyway, the video (the first of which comes off the new album to my knowledge) is here.
Baptism employs the whole lo-fi aesthetic that's all the rage these days, even though the band themselves would never reach a fidelity below "high". The particular style is no doubt thanks to the influence of Eric Wareheim (one half of Tim & Eric) who has slowly been taking the indie music video scene by storm with efforts such as Major Lazer's Hold the Line and MGMT's The Youth. The actual video though (unless otherwise noted) isn't directed by Wareheim but it becomes quite noticeable when you really fixate on it.
The video for Baptism clocks in at 2 minutes and 50 seconds; over a minute shorter than as the song appears on the album. Crystal Castles would never be considered a progressive electronic band; it's not as if there's no artistry within their music, it's just that they make up for lack of length with actual depth within their sound. No song may be as long or groaningly self-referentially titled as Daft Punk's Too Long but there's just as damn much going on. This applies to the video as well; it's brevity gives itself the image that its handling of strange imagery is just obligatory; but it's actually quite powerful.
The female half, Alice Glass, who seems to almost be going for a darker-Karen O. dances rapidly but not enthusiastically against projected images; some of them herself and some of her fellow bandmate. The effect is not necessarily surreal, but it is hypnotic. It doesn't try too hard to wow you or be about something but in its abbreviated form it compliments the song perfectly.