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by Dean Carrico / 10-22-2008
The idea of music videos these days is a curiosity, seeing how the
two major so-called “music television” stations are more interested in
reality programming filled with vacuous idiots and people who mistake
looking slutty for being fashionable.
You know, just like the people in the music videos they used to air.
But videos are still a valid extension of music, providing a story
sometimes related to the song in question, often times not. And then
there’s the opportunity to provide a face with a name, giving a little
self-gratification to the musicians (people want to be recognized for
their work. There’s a reason I put my name at the end of my articles).
Without the backing of a major label, the idea of shooting a video
and spending an obscene amount of money on film, sets, and securing
locations–money that can be better spent on things like drum sticks,
guitar strings and booze–seems almost pointless. In the early ’80s,
when MTV catered toward surburban (RE: white) youths, the network was
threatened by CBS Records president Walter Yetnikoff, who said he would
pull all his artists and tell the world that MTV refused to play black
artists. The network capitulated and we got “Thriller.”
Think about that. If not for a threatened boycott, inmates in the
Philippines might be doing synchronized dancing to “We Built This
City.” Perseverance truly pays off.
That kind of tenacity was apparent last week in the Hawai’i International Film Festival (HIFF) ‘08 Music Video Showcase.
Eight local bands including Linus, Nomasterbacks and Detego had videos
played next to established acts like The Chemical Brothers, Deathcab
for Cutie and still-crazy-after-all-these-years Bjork. There might not
be much of a chance it will make it onto the 15 minutes or so that the
two major music video stations dedicate to actually playing videos, but
it looks like they all had fun doing it.
And the crowd for last Tuesday’s event was ready to share in the
revelry, shouting for their favorites and whooping it up at familiar
sights and locations. Some of the videos were fairly amateurish
(Pimpbot shouldn’t quit their day jobs–or their night–for Hollywood
anytime soon). But a number of videos were surprisingly good,
particularly Hell Camino’s “Old Snake Road” and Aim for the Heart with
their “Long Live the Dead,” both of which went for the classic, “need a
storyline? Just add zombies!” theme. It makes sense, since most zombie
films are typically short on plot but long on visuals–like most music
videos.
Loft hosted the free event, and the sound was fairly muddled in the
cavernous space. It’s hard to enjoy a song when you feel like your
mother, complaining how you can’t understand what the singer is saying.
The crowd enjoyed it all the same, however, filling up the rows of
folding chairs and watching attentively (the smart ones showed up early
and took the plush seating on the sides, and the absolutely brilliant
ones showed up even earlier to stake out the bar, where Kona and
Sake2Me were being handed out for free). When the videos ended, Pimpbot
and Make the Change showed the crowd exactly why live is always better
than tape. Hell, they didn’t even have to dress as zombies. Click here to watch the Hell Caminos video, produced by Ghetto Pirate and Hyperspective. |