September 2014

Hercules and Love Affair "My Offence [NSFW]" (Matt Lambert, dir.)

Taking perhaps the worst curse word out there and turning it into a symbol of power — that's the underlying theme behind this clip from Hercules and Love Affair and director Matt Lambert, who blur the lines between music video and documentary much like the way the NYC gay nightlife icons featured here blur the lines between taboo and acceptance. Paris, it seems, has never stopped burning.

Andy Butler, Hercules & Love Affair: "My initial idea was to conceptualise the song through a series of filmed interviews with performance artists who explore profanity and gender in their work but I was not aiming at the fusion of music, video and documentary. When I talked to Matt for the first time he mentioned the idea of combining the two formats - music video and documentary. Fast forward 6 months to when I previewed the early edits and it kind of blew my mind"

Matt Lambert, director: "I spoke to some of the people who appear in the video for over an hour. Each of them had a different answer and different relationship to the word 'cunt' as well as the appropriation and reclamation of profane language as a means of pushing culture forward. Language, especially when dealing with issues surrounding identity, defines people's realities whether they choose to embrace or ignore language.”

1349 "Slaves" (Arnt Heggli, dir.)

With the release of their sixth full-length, Massive Cauldron Of Chaos, looming on the horizon – September 29 via Indie Recordings for seekers of specific information – and threatening to do away with our current Indian summer for good, the Oslo four-piece have braved the possibility of getting buried beneath tons of ancient rubble by descending into the grimmest mines of Kongsberg in the South-Eastern lands of Norway to record a video directed by Arnt Heggli for the track Slaves.

Eraserheads "1995" (Erik Matti, dir.)

This post-heavy video unfurls like a poster collage featuring Filipino band Eraserheads who are apparently...

a) Famous enough in the Phillipines to warrant an Esquire Magazine cover and tie-in for this video

b) Releasing new music after a 10 year break

... but you don't need to know any of that to dig the kaleidoscopic video.

Blonde "I Loved You" (Jack Laurance, dir.)

Shot on location for two days in Mexico City and From The Director: 

"I was interested in contrasts. Being 'bad' vs being 'good'. Total freedom vs the trappings of fame/celebrity, and all the vacuousness that goes with it. All framed within a little story about two best friends who drift apart. 

The idea of contrast really drove the way we told that story. Art direction and colour were obviously a big part of this. DOP Ben Kitchens really did a fantastic job. 

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