Music Video of the Day: Poison Arrow by ABC (1982, dir. Julien Temple)


I normally don’t talk about the thumbnail used on a video. However, It would be perfectly natural for someone to look at that thumbnail and think they are about to watch a music video remake of Casablanca (1942) with Martin Fry playing Bogart. It’s not too far off. I would add that it also seems to take place in a lost Rainer Werner Fassbinder film.

When I watch this music video I get the distinct feeling that I am missing previous chapters in this story of three different guys that become enraptured with the same woman. This also isn’t too far off. I haven’t listened to the whole album, called The Lexicon of Love, but I know enough to say that I am kind of missing other installments in this tale. Wikipedia tells me that while it is not a concept album, it does have repeated themes that revolve around heartache. This also makes sense seeing as several of the songs off of the album have names like The Look of Love, All of My Heart, and Valentine’s Day. A longform music video was even made called Mantrap. Still, you don’t have to have heard the whole album, or have seen the other music videos that were made for songs on the album in order to enjoy this one.

I mentioned before that there are three different characters who try to get the same woman, but I have to admit that I thought they were the same person till I read the Wikipedia article on the song. It comes across as a guy spotting a woman that he knew while watching a play, disguising himself as a singing telegram to confront her backstage, and then she comes to his nightclub where he confronts her again, only to be literally reduced to a little nothing in her life. I have no doubt that these are supposed to be three different people. I also believe that they had Martin Fry play all of them for a reason. It seems to me that the music video visually hints to the audience that the three different characters come from the same place while the song itself has all three men singing the same song that asks her to shoot the “poison arrow” to their heart. The combination of the two binds them visually and audibly. I’m not sure about the beginning and the end. I could guess, but I’ll just leave that to you. I could be completely wrong about the whole thing.

In the end, it doesn’t matter that much. It is one of the best music videos of the era whether you get exactly what they were going for or not. Director Julien Temple did an excellent job here. It’s no wonder he has done more than a hundred of them. It’s also not a surprise that when ABC decided to make a return recently, they brought Julien Temple back to direct their new music video.

As is often the case, I come to the end of one of these posts, and just as I am ready to leave, I decide to do one more Google search only to find something else worth mentioning. Since I am stubborn, I often stick it at the end where/when I found out about it anyways. Does the woman look familiar? She didn’t to me, but it’s Lisa Vanderpump who would be in several other music videos–including one for Lady Gaga–and the TV Show, The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills.

Enjoy!

Music Video of the Day: Message of Love by The Pretenders (1981, dir. Mark Robinson)


In the late-90s I was very dissatisfied with the state of music. As a result, I turned to older bands whose music I hadn’t explored. Numerous VH1 top-artists’ lists helped me to discover all kinds of bands I had never heard of before. One of those bands was The Pretenders. It was mainly Chrissie Hynde’s voice that I fell in love with, but the songs were excellent as well. I figured it was time to feature one of their music videos. There was no particular reason I chose this one. I am pretty sure that the music video for Brass In Pocket is their most well-known.

There isn’t that much to the music video. There are two interesting parts I noticed. The first is the opening when they all step forward from the darkness to reveal themselves. The other part is when they face each other at the microphone to hum towards each other. It reminded me of that part of the music video for ABBA’s Waterloo when Agnetha Fältskog and Anni-Frid Lyngstad turn to sing towards each other rather than facing the audience. You see this again in ABBA’s Knowing Me, Knowing You music video. Other than those things, it is shot like you are sitting-in on a studio recording of the song. It does make things more intimate, but it also makes it difficult to say much about it other than that it is great song.

According to VH1, this was the 19th music video to air on MTV.

The director of the music video was Mark Robinson. I can find that he at least directed around 20 music videos, including several more for The Pretenders. However, his IMDb page leads me to believe that there are more, and that he may still be working in music videos today.

Enjoy!

Music Video of the Day: The Warrior by Scandal (1984, dir. David Hahn)


Happy Birthday, Lisa!

I first saw this back in the early-2000s when it was played on VH1 Classic. I was hooked instantly. It seemed to take forever to end up on YouTube. It is near the top as one of my favorite bizarre 80s music videos. Patty Smyth on the other hand was not happy with it, saying in the book I Want My MTV:

“When I saw the video, I was crestfallen…I had no idea it would look like an off-Broadway production of Cats.”

I am glad she didn’t realize it would look the way it does. I don’t want to live in a world where I can’t see Patty Smyth in ridiculous hair and make-up, move in to do battle with a guy who has just fought off dancers in post-apocalyptic costumes, including appearing to have snapped a woman’s back in half. Seriously, is that what happened to the lady in pink? The music video sure makes it look like it. Even Smyth reacts like it happened. It wouldn’t be the strangest thing I have noticed while re-watching an 80s music video. If you pay close attention to the one for Karma Chameleon by Culture Club, then you’ll notice there is a split second where two guys appear to be stuffing a corpse into a wicker basket.

There are even crazier music videos featuring dance–*cough* Bonnie Tyler *cough*–but I hope this will do. It was also shot by Daniel Pearl, who others might not know by now, seems to have shot every music video under the sun, as well as The Texas Chain Saw Massacre (1974).

It was directed by David Hahn who appears to have directed this music video, and nothing else. Did Patty Smyth blackball him? I highly doubt it, but I wouldn’t have put it past her. You might not know this, but before Van Halen went to Sammy Hagar, they asked her to front the band. You can read about that here. I get why she didn’t take the job. Among other things, she said, “If I had done that, I never would have written ‘Sometimes Love Just Ain’t Enough.'” Still, I can hear her in my head belting out songs like Why Can’t This Be Love? and Humans Being.

Ken Walz produced it, who you might recall producing I Know What Boys Like by The Waitresses.

That’s it! I hope you have a great birthday, Lisa.

Music Video of the Day: The Final Countdown by Europe (1986, dir. Nick Morris)


It’s Election Day! If this song can work for waiting on a burrito, then it can work today.

As for the music video, it’s your standard mid-80s concert video. They do a good job of capturing “the final countdown” itself visually, as well as that come-to-our-concert thing that was prevalent in 80s hair-metal band music videos. The concert footage was shot at two concerts at Solnahallen in Solna, Sweden on the 26th and 27th of May, 1986. They also shot some additional footage during sound checks for those concerts.

Director Nick Morris has done around 40 music videos.

Fiona O’Mahoney produced at least 19 music videos. Sadly, according to a memorial site, she passed away in 2010. It also looks like she and Nick Morris got married.

I hope you enjoy this music video on what is otherwise a very serious day.

Music Video of the Day: Two Tribes by Frankie Goes To Hollywood (1984, dir. Godley & Creme)


Well, you probably all knew this was coming. It was a no-brainer. I had this picked out many months ago. It has nothing to do with Twitter going down last night amidst that Wikileaks dump or anything like that. I’m young enough to have only taken part in five US presidential elections, but have been around for numerous other ones. I can’t remember a more vicious one than the one currently coming to what may or may not be its’ end.

What can I say about this music video that it doesn’t already do an excellent job of getting across to the viewer? The version below is even more graphic than the one above. From what I understand, it is closer to the way the song was originally released. Neither of them pull any punches, so be forewarned.

The directors of the music video are Godley & Creme AKA Kevin Godley and Lol Creme. I knew of them as musicians, but didn’t know they directed music videos. They are probably best known for their song Cry, and the great music video that goes with it. What you might not know is that because of them, this music video has ties to Guardians of the Galaxy (2014). Godley & Creme were once part of a group called 10cc. One of their big hit songs was I’m Not In Love. That’s the song Peter Quill is listening to in the hospital at the beginning of the film. That also means Disney is just a couple of degrees of separation from a music video where Ronald Reagan bites Konstantin Chernenko’s ear in a wrestling match. I love connections. I also love that after tomorrow’s really obvious song for Election Day, I can return to writing about some lighter music videos for awhile.

There’s nothing more I want to say. Enjoy!

Music Video of the Day: 99 Luftballons by Nena (2009, dir. Philippe Rouget)


Let’s bring Nena forward to 2009 from where we last left her off in 2002. With the release of Nena feat. Nena, she came back in the spotlight as a solo artist. The story is simple. She did well during the period of time between 2002 and 2009. She even started her own record label called The Laugh & Peas Company in 2009. I assume in order to commemorate that, she decided to make yet another version of 99 Luftballons–complete with a whole new music video. I guess every time there’s a milestone in Nena’s career, we are going to get a new version of 99 Luftballons. I have no problem with this.

Now that a little backstory is out of the way, let me say that I love this version. The original was good. The English version was quite terrible. The 2002 version was a nice retrospective, but it never felt like Nena. Just because the times change, it doesn’t automatically mean you have to radically change your sound to fit-in. This version is the original, but updated without changing her sound. I’m assuming that the reason she sings a few parts in French is because of the War in Iraq. It also ties the shoe-throwing incident with George W. Bush to the shoe-banging incident with Nikita Khrushchev by having them shown back-to-back.

One subtle thing that I want to point out, now that we’ve reached the fourth and final version of this song by Nena, is one word that is easily missed. According to Wikipedia, critic and musician Scott Miller said in his book, Music: What Happened?, something that I would have missed otherwise. It’s that the song has always used the word “kriegsminister.” It’s a German word that translates to “War Minister.” He said it suffers from the inclusion of that word. I’m not sure why. I’m sure there’s some context for that statement that isn’t on Wikipedia, but I just see it as an Easter Egg to pick up on. The last War Minister in the U.S. was Kenneth Claiborne Royall. He is famous for having been appointed to defend some Nazis that had come ashore on Long Island. He did his job essentially, but Roosevelt wanted them to be executed–the sooner the better. It still happened, but he did his best to defend against them being quickly tried and executed behind closed doors by taking it all the way to the Supreme Court. It’s kind of similar to the events Bridge of Spies (2015) is based on. He was later appointed to be War Minister by Harry S. Truman. Truman being the one who dropped the bombs that helped end WWII. The office of Minister of War ended in 1947. That’s the year when people tend to agree the Cold War started because it is when the Truman Doctrine was introduced. I don’t see the issue there since it ties in heavily with the meaning of the song, but I am probably missing something. Maybe it’s because he would go on to forced retirement in 1949 because he refused to desegregate the Army.

I like the music video quite a bit. Go ahead and put aside it showing what the lyrics mean for a minute. A good portion of what you are seeing is heavily focused on the catchy riff of the original, and not being ashamed of what Scott Miller called an “embarrassingly out-of-place disco funk interlude.” The power of the song has always been that it is a lot of fun, you can belt out the lyrics, and dance to it to your heart’s content. Yet, if you actually listen to the lyrics, they are in direct contradiction to the way the song sounds and makes you feel. For me, that is one of the reasons the song has long-lasting appeal rather than having just been a catchy hit-song from 1984. I only bring up Scott Miller because the Wikipedia article on the song does, and I happen to disagree with those particular opinions.

There are other versions of this song by other artists, including a music video for Goldfinger’s cover. However, I am done with 99 Luftballons for now. I have another music video picked out as a capstone before Election Day in the United States. Enjoy!

99 Luftballons versions:

1. 99 Luftballons by Nena (1984, dir. Bert van der Veer)
2. 99 Red Balloons by Nena (1984, dir. Bert van der Veer)
3. 99 Luftballons by Nena (2002, dir. Marcus Sternberg)

Music Video of the Day: 99 Luftballons by Nena (2002, dir. Marcus Sternberg)


I guess I should bring Nena forward from 1984 to 2002 first.

While often considered to be a one-hit wonder, they did have some success with a few other songs in German. However, you know how these things always go. One minute you are on top of the world, then your lead singer is caught with their underarms unshaven, the follow-up songs/albums don’t do well, and ultimately internal differences cause the band to come to an end.

I’m not kidding about the shaving bit. Apparently it was big news when Nena toured the UK in 1984 that her armpits weren’t shaved. A woman from continental Europe without shaved armpits is totally unheard of said no one except of course by British red-top press at the time. In response, she shaved them, and has kept them shaved ever since. She even brought it up in her mémoires when she said, “Can a girl from Hagen, who dreams of the big wide world and is in love with Mick Jagger, have no idea that girls can’t under any circumstances have hair under the arm? Yes she can. I simply had no idea!” I can’t wait to see the nonsense people wrote after watching Wrecking Ball by Miley Cyrus. Taking one look at that, and thinking that it generated so much buzz makes me see an animated GIF in my head of Cyndi Lauper face-palming with a poster of Wendy O. Williams of The Plasmatics behind her and holding a picture of Dale Bozzio of Missing Persons. The music video even references this armpit thing around three minutes and twenty-three seconds by giving us a clear shot of her shaved armpits.

Nena is one of those bands like Alice Cooper where people tend to think that they are seeing a solo artist when in fact the lead singer just happens to share the same name as the band. Nena the band disbanded in 1987. Nena herself went on to a solo career, but it didn’t quite come together till 2002 when an album was released to celebrate a 20th anniversary (I’m not sure what the starting date is here). That explains the existence of this music video. The album that was released was comprised of newly arranged versions of her hits from the 1980s. That brings us to 2002.

The first thing you’ll notice about this song is that it is the German version, not the English one. You’ll also notice that it is more like something you would expect from Sheryl Crow, Shania Twain, or another female pop-singer of the era. I certainly get making it sound nostalgic, but updating the sound kind of bothers me. It just doesn’t sound right to my ears.

I get pairing it with images that start empty and melancholy, then progressively get more empowering from the middle finger bit onwards. I am not sure what the deal is with the colors other than that they act as a reference to the multi-colored balloons and smoke from the original music video. If you are familiar with her songs, then you’ll notice she is walking by their titles that are on the boardwalk railing. You’ll also notice that the last song is 99 Luftballons followed by the name Nena. It’s a nice touch that I certainly missed the first time around. I was too distracted by the merry-go-round at the beginning that made me think of the cover of Dave Matthews Band’s album Under The Table And Dreaming and the black guy who is doing the Limp Bizkit Rollin’ thing with his arms. I guess since Nena is still around today it is appropriate since she has kept Rollin’ Rollin’ Rollin’ Rollin’ Rollin’.

Director Marcus Sternberg appears to have been doing music videos since the mid-90s. They seem to be mostly with European bands–probably German ones.

Enjoy!

99 Luftballons versions:

1. 99 Luftballons by Nena (1984, dir. Bert van der Veer)
2. 99 Red Balloons by Nena (1984, dir. Bert van der Veer)

Music Video of the Day: 99 Red Balloons by Nena (1984, dir. Bert van der Veer)


I can’t write a lot because I’ve had a hard day (I always write these posts the day before they go up). Thankfully, this is the perfect music video to do since there isn’t much to say.

Yesterday I spotlighted the German version of this song. Despite having taken around three years of German in school, I cannot translate the lyrics to the song. Luckily, I don’t have to. You don’t have to read any of this to be able to understand why this is a terrible version of the song and music video. Listen to the music video at around two minutes and thirty seconds when she says the line, “super high-tech jet fighters.” It sounds rushed, like they were trying to fit it in with the music. This was not a direct translation, and you can tell. You can hear they were trying to make this more for an English-speaking audience without actually changing the music to fit the different lyrics. You’ll notice the difference if you listen to something like The Beatles’ I Wanna Hold Your Hand and the German version Komm, Gib Mir Deine Hand. It’s a different language, but it still sounds right. Granted, it is a simpler song, but you get my point.

The visual differences are minor, but interesting. The biggest difference is that they move the end of the music video to the beginning. They cut certain sequences and replace them with concert footage. They also rearrange the order of certain scenes. The gist is that they cut between the original video and concert footage to hide anytime she is lip-syncing the original lyrics. My favorite examples are at the beginning when they have her in slow-motion and later when they cut her concert footage short just after she starts to say ninety-nine in German, which is neunundneunzig. The mouth moves close enough if you cut soon enough.

One of best things about both the original version and this one is what happened during a charity event VH1 Classic once ran for Hurricane Katrina relief. The idea was that people who donated would get to choose what music videos they would play. According to Wikipedia, someone made a $35,000 donation if they would play this and the original continuously for an hour. They did so between the hours of 2:00 and 3:00 pm EST on March 26, 2006.

Enjoy comparing the two!

99 Luftballons versions:

1. 99 Luftballons by Nena (1984, dir. Bert van der Veer)

Music Video of the Day: 99 Luftballons by Nena (1984, dir. Bert van der Veer)


Back in the mid-2000s I took a class on the history of Jazz & Rock. At some point our teacher brought up that until the late-90s or so, Ritchie Valens’ La Bamba was really the only song sung in a foreign language that made it big in the United States. He’s right on average, but that didn’t stop the students of the class from instantly rallying off song titles at him such as Oye Como Va by Santana. I waited till it died down a bit to bring up this song. This song is a little different. It made it big here in German, but was also recorded in English. The English version is universally disliked by people and the band. That makes it not only a song that made it big in German here in the States, but one that we rejected in English. That’s kind of amazing. As I recall, he hadn’t even heard of the song. However, I can’t be too hard on the guy. He gave me a story that I take any excuse to repeat. He was in New York City during the birth of punk rock. He lived just a short distance from CBGBs while living with his girlfriend. He says he was such a Jazz Snob that he refused to walk the couple of blocks it would have taken to witness the beginning of groups like The Ramones. He said it was one of his greatest regrets of his life. Now to the music video.

First off, there are actually four different music videos for this song that I am aware of at the moment. Even the music videos for the German and English ones are different enough to be worth discussing on their own. It’s not like the differences between the original and director’s cut of Nirvana’s Heart-Shaped Box that just adds a little additional footage. It’s more like the differences between the original, explicit, and director’s cut of Miley Cyrus’ Wrecking Ball. Plus, the lyrics are not the same in English as in German, which increases the different experience of watching it, in addition to the differences in the visuals.

All that said, the music video is pretty simple. It’s a protest song against nuclear war. To borrow from Wikipedia: The song is about 99 balloons that are mistaken for UFOs, pilots are sent to investigate, they find that they are only balloons, and they decide to shoot them down anyways that in turn, leads to a 99-year war. It’s rather bleak when you know that information. It stands in stark contrast to the sound of the song. The music video hints at this throughout, till we see what appear to be minor nuclear explosions behind them. Up till then, it is simply Nena herself walking through what looks like the result of logging a forest. Yet, as we go further on, it appears more like the aftermath of a war. Then we see the aforementioned explosions behind the band who they cut back to on occasion during the music video. In the end, Nena releases a red balloon into the air.

The inspiration for the song ties back to songwriter Carlo Karges seeing thousands of balloons released at a Rolling Stones concert in West Berlin in June of 1982. He thought about what would happen if East Berlin saw them on their side and mistook them for UFOs. Of course it’s always worth mentioning the infamous incident that occurred on September 26th, 1983 with Stanislav Petrov that could have brought us to nuclear annihilation anytime you talk about nuclear protest songs–especially this one. You can read a nice write-up about the song here and the Wikipedia entry about the Petrov incident here.

Bert Van Der Veer directed the music video. He appears to have only directed two music videos, but given they were for Nena and Frida, I expect he did many more in Europe. You can find numerous film and TV credits for him over on IMDb. You can also find numerous articles, YouTube videos, and even an entry on Wikipedia. But they are all in Dutch.

Enjoy!

Music Video of the Day: Elected by Alice Cooper (1972, dir. Hart Perry)


It is prime time to do this music video now because of the election. That’s why you’ll find numerous videos of Alice Cooper performing the song this year. However, even if this wasn’t an election year, this one is not just a fun election related music video to do. It is important considering this was made in 1972. I don’t mean that there weren’t music videos around then. There most certainly were. But this one is different. It probably would have gone completely over my head had I not stumbled upon a quote on the mvdbase entry for this music video.

“Here’s my take on the whole video history thing. I might have to take a little credit for the bit of attention that the ‘Elected’ video has gotten because I always tried to make a very big deal out of making sure this was always mentioned in all of Alice’s biographical material. Music videos (or promo clips as us old timers referred to them before the advent of MTV) have been around before rock ‘n’ roll even reared its ugly head. Most, if not all of these “videos” were of the artist performing a song — maybe with a backdrop if they got fancy. In the 60’s, the Beatles and a few other bands made some videos that were a bit more like the ones we know of today. They were made specifically as promotional vehicles for the current single. The ‘Strawberry fields’ video was very psychedelic and showed the Beatles running around in a park — frontwards and backwards. There were others by the Who and the Stones, etc. as well.
“The thing that stands out about the ‘Elected’ video is that there was no performance or lip-synching which was very unusual. It also was possibly the first video that had a storyline. And, the most subtle yet significant thing, was the editing. The editing was done in a quick, choppy fashion which ultimately came to be what MTV was most cited for. After people noticed MTV was a force to be reckoned with, commercials and TV shows (Miami Vice) started to pattern themselves to look like MTV with this editing style.” [Brian Renfield Nelson, Alice Cooper band member, Sept. 1995, quoted from Alice Cooper Trivia]

He’s right. If you look at 1970’s music videos by ABBA, then you will see some interesting stuff going on. For example there’s quick cuts, a moving camera, it isn’t just them all by themselves the entire time, etc. However, you’ll notice that while ABBA is lip-syncing, no one is doing that in Elected. Also, even though ABBA videos have artsy stuff going on, there isn’t really a story there. You can see more of one in Take A Chance On Me, but that was 1978. Plus, it is still made up largely of a performance. There’s no performance of the song going on in Elected. The song is played over what could be clips from a film, except there’s no time when it cuts back to Alice Cooper playing.

It is a bit of an unfair comparison in quality because Alice Cooper had Hart Perry and ABBA had famed Swedish director Lasse Hallström, but the differences between Elected and the ABBA music videos highlight why it was so revolutionary. It has the band, it is live-action, it uses real sets rather than just a backdrop, it has a storyline, it has no lip-syncing, and it has no re-creation of a performance. I looked through the 129 music videos I have done prior to this, and I couldn’t find a single one that met all those characteristics. I know there must be one out there, but I haven’t hit another one other than Elected. There were a couple that came close like Self Control by Laura Branigan, but even that had her lip-sync a few lines. The same for Pressure and We Didn’t Start The Fire by Billy Joel.

Probably the most prominent thing that Hart Perry is known for is being the cinematographer on the documentary Harlan County U.S.A. (1976).

That’s the only member of the crew I could find.

I am not sure if the music video is cut short, but I do know the line about him not caring about people’s problems is missing from the music video as it is posted above.

Enjoy!