The video for Monsoon, directed by Joe Alexander, follows Mark and her late mother’s travels through India. Speaking to Fader, the singer said “When I wrote "Monsoon," I always imagined the music video being shot in India. The song had so much to do with my time in India with my mother as well as leaving her in India during the monsoon season to visit my family in NY. It really was a dream come true when I was given the opportunity to shoot in India."
London Alley's Courtney Phillips directs the new Zac Samuel, Moon Willis collaboration, 'Never Letting Go' ft. Taya. Tyre burns and wheelies fill the screen from a young biker gang speeding across London, as our lead struggles between young love and biker life.
Ditmas may be in refence to the Brooklyn neighborhood, but the view finds us in the lovely fields of the Kiev countryside with a horse-whispering warrior and a folk-turned-rock band performing in the round.
Alex Southam, director:: "The Cossack character (Evgeniy) in the video is a genuine cossack raised within a cossack community - part of his work now is to break and train horses so was the perfect subject for our film. Whilst the shoot was pretty brutal and unforgiving - particularly for our hero - we captured something really special, no more so than the moments in the final third of the video where our hero finally becomes one with the horse."
Britpop legends Blur are back and this first video shows that the fellas have definitely been keeping up with the trends, or they're just really into Chinese Line Dancing. Behold, an interpretive dance by the Phoenix Fly Line Dancing Group of San Francisco.
Taken from Jay Sean’s latest EP, Naroop uses a filmic touch to portray the double meaning of Jay Sean's current release, ‘Jameson’. In love with the whisky and a woman of the same name, the video shows the consequences of Jay submitting to his two addictions, as he eventually comes shoulder to shoulder with who he has become.
What starts as a dopey love story — hey, let's take a selfie — filled with way too many audio device placements turns out to just be a music video within a music video about a woman who'd rather literally enter the screen of said music video. Confused? Just watch. Thank me later.
Mr. Lynch's second music video has arrived, this time for Storm Queens summer hit 'Look Right Through'. Filmed at Cadogan Hotel, Knightsbridge (famous for Oscar Wildes arrest) Works as the perfect backdrop for this sexy, old school style vid. Laurie's successful combination of 50s fantasy and humour only adds to the impressive footwork.
The camera glides like a ghost through a moment in time at a motel. There's a missing girl, a fugitive and a twist, but it's more about the technique of long tracking shots that makes this feels a bit like the sequentially interconnected multiversal masterpiece Slacker, but with everything happening nearly all at once.