Showing posts with label Nima Nourizadeh. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nima Nourizadeh. Show all posts

Friday, January 4, 2008

Best Music Videos of 2007

2007 will be remembered as a year that offered simply way too much good music to keep track of. Alongside the good tunes came some equally brilliant music videos.

This list contains 15 of the best music videos of 2007, and was compiled by me (Melissa Robot) and no one else. Thus, it reflects my own personal favorites from the past year. I have no idea what the co-bloggers picks for favorite music videos of 2007 would be. For all I know they sit around watching videos of Billy Ocean all day. Oh wait, I guess I'm the one that's been watching 'Get Outta My Car' non-stop for two days straight. Anyway... For once I'm going to refrain from my typically epic reviews and allow these videos to speak for themselves. I recommend that you watch all of them.

15.


SHITDISCO - OK
Directed by Price James

SHITDISCO's video for 'OK' features pop-up book puppetry that somehow manages to sync up with the song to near perfection. A cute and innovative concept for a video that completely blew my mind the first ten times I watched it.


14.

To My Boy - Model
Directed by squarelips

'Model' is the first To My Boy video I ever laid eyes on, and it sold me on them completely. The colorful clockwork motif compliments To My Boy flawlessly, right down to Jack and Sam's matching belts. Click here to read my full review of To My Boy's music.

13.

GhostHustler - Parking Lot Nights
Directed by Pete Ohs

Is that a Nintendo Power Glove I spy? Those things seem to be resurfacing everywhere lately. This video clearly exhibits the most practical usage of the classic Nintendo Power Glove. Look out for my absolute favorite punch-to-the-face (occurring immediately after the sub-par breakdancer finishes executing enthusiastic uprocks and coffeegrinders on a Nintendo Power Pad).

12.

Spoon - Don't You Evah
Directed by Jeff Nichols
Keepon developed by Hideki Kozima and programmed by Marek Michalowski

Oh wow do I want one of those little Keepon robot things. It's just so cute. Not to mention that it dances to Spoon's music beautifully. As a dance journalist I must note that the cinematographer has captured little Keepon's quality of movement on film exquisitely.

11.

SoftLightes - Heart Made Of Sound
Directed by Kris Moyes

Kris Moyes has succeeded in keeping the painstaking art of stop motion animation alive and well in the video for 'Heart Made Of Sound'. This super cute video looks like it must have taken eons to make. Kris Moyes also directed the video for the SoftLightes' 'Microwave Song', which can be found here along with more information about SoftLightes.

10.

Dan Deacon - The Crystal Cat
Directed by Jimmy Joe Roche

I would probably include any Dan Deacon video in a top 15 list based solely on that weird little prancing dance he does and the face he makes whilst doing so.

9.

Hot Chip - Ready For The Floor
Directed by Nima Nourizadeh

If you knew how much I adore this Hot Chip video you'd probably ask why I've placed it at #9 and not #1. Seeing as the video has only been floating around since December and is for an album that has yet to be released, it will likely be included on next year's list too. Read my full review of 'Ready For The Floor' here.


8.

Architecture in Helsinki - Hold Music
Directed by Kim Gehrig

There is just something pretty wondrous about a bunch of Australian hippie nerds jumping on trampolines in brightly colored ponchos. The editing is stellar as well.

7.

Beirut - Elephant Gun
Directed by Alma Har'el

I'm fairly certain that most people watch this Beirut video and think to themselves 'Whoa, Zach Condon has a mustache and people happen to be dancing and there is a lot of confetti fluttering around and then suddenly he is at the ocean and his mustache has disappeared and he plays his trumpet while standing in the water'. I can't help but take a closer look at JoAnn Jansen's ballet influenced contemporary choreography. It looks very West Side Story-esque to me at times and leaves me wondering if Jerome Robbins might be choreographing Beirut videos were he still alive today.

6.

Van She - Cat and the Eye
Directed by Krozm

I adore Van She and I love love love all of the music videos the guys from Krozm have directed. What I like most about 'Cat and the Eye' other than the bizarre costumes, is mainly the way the camera never stops panning right or left, circling around, or focusing out and back in. The effect is dizzying, and somehow it almost feels as if you're the one moving. Read more about Krozm and Van She here.

5.

Jens Lekman - Sipping On The Sweet Nectar
Directed by Marcus Söderlund

This Jens Lekman song tugs at my heart strings and the video reminds me of when I would find myself in scenic locations having epiphanies about life. The cinematography is absolutely gorgeous and Jens is flying a plane and singing at the same time. Does life get any better? 'Sipping On The Sweet Nectar' also happens to be the only Jens Lekman song that reminds me slightly of Barry Manilow. I probably shouldn't disclose that, since everyone seems to be disgusted by Barry Manilow.

4.

Omnikrom - Été Hit
Directed by Jérémie Saindon

I'm not sure exactly what it is that makes me love this video to the extent that I do. It could be the catchy as hell song by Montreal's Omnikrom. It could be the spinning neon Rubik's Cube heads. Or it could very possibly be Linso Gabbo's colorful plaid shorts that truly make this video great.

3.

Damn Arms - Homewrecker
Directed by Krozm

Krozm seem to have a penchant for including heads with strange features and inanimate objects as heads in the videos they direct. It never gets old for me, especially in Damn Arms' 'Homewrecker', where various shapes for heads are interchanged and when removed, show nothing to be beneath them.

2.

Bat For Lashes - What's A Girl To Do
Directed by Dougal Wilson

'What's A Girl To Do' might just be the most amazing single take video I have ever seen. It features a beautiful girl riding a bike down a dark forest-y road, accompanied by a gang of hoodie sporting, animal masked beings that appear at every chorus to clap their hands (or paws) and perform choreographed tricks before disappearing once again behind Natasha Khan. Dougal Wilson's creative vision for the 'What's A Girl To Do' video is just absolutely flawless in every possible way.

1.

Of Montreal - Heimdalsgate Like A Promethean Curse
Directed by The Brothers Chaps

If there is one music video that I will remember 2007 by it will be Of Montreal's 'Heimdalsgate Like A Promethean Curse'. Upon seeing this video for the first time in early 2007, I thought it was the most random and bizarre video I had seen in a good while. My reaction was a mixture of 'wtf' combined with wonder and awe. Every time I watch it, I sit around and ponder what sort of mind it took to come up with every little last character detail seen in the video. Upon closer inspection (just two days ago) I discovered that the video was directed by The Brothers Chaps. Yup, that would be the guys who have brought Homestar Runner to us for all these years.

My favorite parts of 'Heimdalsgate Like A Promethean Curse' are 1. The sheet ghost in the audience and 2. When Kevin Barnes sings that he is 'in a crisis' and at that moment he is kneeling inside of some strange red object with a worried expression on his face. Every second of the video happens to be pretty amazing, really.

So there you have it. Those were my personal 15 favorite music videos of 2007. Hopefully 2008 brings us some more visual stunners.

Wednesday, December 5, 2007

Hot Chip - Ready For The Floor


While Hot Chip have not been out of the picture for long, somehow it feels like it's been eons since we last heard anything from our favorite synthesizer wielding Brits. Loyal Hot Chip fanatics (myself included) have been patiently awaiting the release of their third album Made in the Dark, set for a February 5th release date here in the U.S. We've still got some waiting to do, but at least there is a brand new Hot Chip video to keep us at bay. The new video, directed by Nima Nourizadeh is for Hot Chip's forthcoming single Ready for the Floor. It is nothing short of a quirky, colorful, and visually stunning treat.

Nima Nourizadeh is yet another one of my favorite video directors these days. His videos are always attention grabbing and surreal. Taking a look at Nima Nourizadeh's videography, I realized that some of my favorite videos he directed in the past also happened to be for Hot Chip. I still watch the videos for Over and Over and Playboy at least once a month, no matter how many millions of times I have heard those songs. Nima Nourizadeh's latest vision does not disappoint. I am still shocked at how inconceivably giddy I became as a result of watching Ready for the Floor. It was as if a joyous explosion of nerds, synthesizers and brightly colored paints took place in my heart.

Aside from the beautiful art design and camera work, I am absolutely in love with the dancing in Ready for the Floor. Small, syncopated movements isolating various parts of the body are performed by the expressionless dancers. While I'm no stranger to post-modern Fosse inspired choreography, I had never seen it performed in conjunction with Hot Chip until now. The minimalistic choreography works perfectly juxtaposed with the costumes, backdrop, camera work and synthesizer heavy, New Order inspired beats.

The movement quality of the band members should also be taken note of. In opposition to the small, controlled movements of the dancers in the video, singer Alexis Taylor jogs and flails his arms around in attempt to regain balance. The other four members of Hot Chip can be seen laying on a spinning floor, crouching down while covering their ears, and struggling to fit through changing shapes. The band members also attempt to keep their balance as they flail around while leaping from one object to the next. I might be crazy for making this comparison, but these movements remind me greatly of a genre of post-modern dance called 'Release Technique', which basically translates as 'following the least path of resistance'. Anyway, enough over-analyzing... here's the video!



By the way, you can pre-order Hot Chip's third release Made in the Dark now on Insound. The album will be released on DFA Records/Astralwerks here in the U.S. You can also stream the forthcoming single Ready for the Floor over at Hot Chip's myspace page. I hope it makes you as giddy as it makes me.

Just because I love Hot Chip so much, here is the song plus a few remixes to tide you over until early February:

Hot Chip - Ready for the Floor (zshare)

Hot Chip - Ready for the Floor (Extended Version) (zshare)

Hot Chip - Ready for the Floor (Soulwax Dub) (zshare)

Hot Chip - Ready for the Floor (Jesse Rose Remix) (zshare)