Music Video of the Day: Spice Up Your Life by Spice Girls (1997, dir by Marcus Nispel)


Are you tired?

Are you bored?

Are you stuck in a go-no where life?

Are you living in a dystopian future that was apparently inspired by Blade Runner?

Well, don’t worry.  Spice Girls are here!

One thing that I like about the Spice Girls is that you could always sing along to their songs.  The other thing I like about them is that, regardless of how simple their music may have been, their music videos were almost always ludicrously overproduced.  That’s the case here, where Spice Up Your Life is transformed into an anthem for revolution.

Spice Up Your Life was directed by Marcus Nispel, who has subsequently directed a few features film that I didn’t care much for.

Enjoy!

Music Video Of The Day: Dance Again by Selena Gomez (2020, dir by ????)


For the record, even under lockdown, I’m still dancing.

Of course,  now, I have to either go do it in the backyard or clear some space in the living room.  But that’s okay.  It’s not important where you dance.  Instead, it’s just important that you do it.

Enjoy!

Music Video Of The Day: Fiori di Chernobyl by Mr. Rain (2020, dir by Enea Colombi)


Today’s music video of the day comes to use from Italy.

Don’t ask me to explain what all is happening in the video.  I’ll just say that it I appreciate the ominous atmopshere and the feeling of doom the permeates nearly every minute of this video.  This is a video to haunt your dreams.

Enjoy!

Music Video Of The Day: The Turn Of A Friendly Card by The Alan Parson Project (1980, directed by ????)


The Turn of a Friendly Card is the title track off of the Alan Parsons Project’s 5th studio album.  On the album, the track runs for 16 minutes and it’s split into five different suites.  The version that is featured in the music video is considerably shorter.

When this video came out, MTV was very young and music videos were still viewed as being mostly a curiosity.  Like a lot of videos from that era, this is a very simple video, just some photographs of a casino in Europe and then some money and some cards.  The members of the band don’t even appear in the video.  Within a few years after the release of this video, this type of simplicity would disappear as MTV become more popular and videos became more overproduced.

Enjoy!

Music Video of the Day: Heartbreaker (At The End Of Lonely Street) by Dread Zeppelin (1990, directed by ????)


Yesterday’s music video of the day was Dread Zeppelin’s Immigrant Song.

Today’s music video of the day is another video from everyone’s favorite cover band.  This one is for Heartbreaker (At The End of Lonely Street).  I have no idea who directed it.  I don’t know if the song was a hit when it was released.  I don’t know if anyone but me cares.  But sometimes, you just need to see a Led Zeppelin song covered by a 300-pound Elvis impersonator.

Am I alone in this?

Enjoy!

Music Video Of The Day: Under The Boardwalk, performed by Bruce Willis and The Temptations (1987, directed by ????)


Today is Bruce Willis’s birthday!

Everyone knows that Bruce Willis is the film star who, late in his career, turned out to be an unexpectedly good character actor.  Quentin Tarantino once said that Willis as one of the only modern stars who seemed as if he could easily step into an old gangster movie or film noir and not seem like he was out of place.  Tarantino was right.

What is often forgotten is that, early on his career, Willis also pursued musical stardom.  He released two albums of R&B covers, the best known of which was the first, The Return of Bruno.  Released by Motown, The Return of Bruno was critically dismissed as being a vanity project but Bruce got the last laugh when the album exceeded expectations commercially and Willis went on to appear in movies like Pulp Fiction and 12 Monkeys.  Meanwhile, his critics had to settle for appearing in Rolling Stone.

When the album was released in 1987, HBO aired a concert film of Willis performing.  The video above is taking from that concert film and it features Bruce singing Under The Boardwalk with The Temptations.  Willis’s cover of Under The Boardwalk did not chart in the U.S. but it was hugely popular in the UK, where it reached the second spot on the charts.

Enjoy!

Music Video Of The Day: It’s Over Goodbye by Fran O’Toole and The Miami Showband (1975, dir by ????)


This was from a television appearance that the band did, shortly before  lead singer Fran O’Toole, trumpeter Brian McCoy, and guitarist Tony Geraghty were murdered by members of the loyalist Ulster Volunteer Force on the night of July 31st, 1975.  At the time of the murder, the band was traveling home to Dublin after having performed in Northern Ireland.