Tuesday, 5 July 2016

Research (Independent Reading): Steve Archer 'How To Study Music Videos'


 "Pessimists often complain that music video television has made pop superficially image-based. But my description of MTV and music video in MediaMag 6 failed to address what is still its most central and significant element, beyond the control of MTV, Viacom and Motorola: the appeal and power of pop sounds!


I’d like to suggest that the sounds are the basis of a process of visualisation that serve to enhance, not restrict, the original pop sound effect. Pop music theorist Andrew Goodwin claims that a good music video is:


"..a clip that responds to the pleasures of music, and in which that music is made visual, either in new ways or in ways that accentuate existing visual associations."

(Dancing in the Distraction Factory 1992)

If we accept the theory that pop songs on their own are not enough to create sufficient meaning and pleasure in the audience, the ‘added value’ of star image created by CD covers, live performance and music videos can be enough to inspire the consumer to buy into the whole intensely romantic myth of it all – and therefore actually buy the pop music. 


Certainly, the whole music business is sustained by the few star guarantees of profit in an unstable market. This maybe explains the somewhat fetishistic behaviour of fans who will buy the CD even if they can easily get the tracks for free on some P2P provider – we want all the packaging, the sacrosanct details in the booklet, the assurance it really belongs to us, not just the ‘stacking up’ of sounds that is the song itself. 


However, I am keen to keep these sounds as the primary pleasure and driving force of the music industry. This focus, therefore, is reflected in the order of my ‘Top Five Things to Look for’ when deciding if a music video is any good. 


Five things to look for …


I’ve turned the ideas in Goodwin’s book, Dancing in the Distraction Factory, into checklist form for you to test out on the current crop of music videos. 


At number 1 ... 


‘Thought Beats’ or seeing the sounds in your head


The basis for visualising images comes from a psychological process called synaesthesia, where you picture sounds in your mind’s eye. This idea is absolutely central to understanding music video as they build on the soundtrack’s visual associations in order to connect with the audience and provide that additional pleasure. 


To use this approach you need to start with the music, sorting out the way the song works, taking into account the way it has been stacked up with sound. To begin, lyrics don’t need to be analysed word for word like a poem but rather considered for the way they introduce a general feeling or mood. Very rarely do song lyrics have a coherent meaning that can be simply read off; but they are important in at least creating a sense of subject matter. So key phrases or lines (and especially those repeated in the chorus) will have a part to play in the kind of visuals associated with the song. 


Here, Roland Barthes’ theory of the ‘grain of voice’ is relevant – this sees the singing voice more as an expressive instrument, personal, unique even, to the singer, like a fingerprint, and therefore able to create associations in itself. The voice of a song may even possess trademarks that work hand-in-hand with the star image – so Michael Jackson’s yelp is a trademark sound that immediately sets him apart from other singers.


Finally, if songs are stories, then the singer is the storyteller and this obviously makes music videos stand out on TV, as they feature a first person mode of address rather than the invisible ‘fourth wall’ of television narration. 


Goodwin interestingly compares pop singers to stand-up comics in the way the personal trademark or signature dominates the performance. The music – or arrangement of the song, including instrumentation, the mix and effects, including samples – generally works with the lyrics and grain of voice. Generally we can look at key sounds, like the tempo (or speed of the song) and structure of the song in terms of verse and chorus. To give an example of how instruments can create visual associations, the slow twang of the steel guitar could create geographically-based visual associations from the Deep South of the US – a desert plain, a small town, one road out, men chewing tobacco … We all share a memory bank of popular culture imagery (intertextuality), a sense of shared cultural history without which these references would make no sense. Places, people, feelings, situations leading to mini-narratives – all these can be summoned from the sounds of popular music. 


These visualisations can arise from more personal, individual responses, sometimes even tied to a place or part of your own autobiography, the specific details of your life story and emotions. A combination of these shared and personal images tied to the words and instrumentation form the basis of music video creativity. 


At number 2 … 


Narrative and performance


Songs rarely tell complete narratives; we are used to studying them with other visual texts like film. The narrative fuzz in songs affects the way stories are used in music video representations of a song’s meaning. So, often we get the suggestion of a story, a hint at some kind of drama unfolding. 


There is another important reason why music videos should avoid a classic realist narrative, and that is their role in advertising. 


Music videos need to have repeatability built in to them. We need to be able to watch them repeatedly in a more casual way, with a looser approach to their storytelling. I’d suggest that more important than narrative is the way that performance is used in video clips, a point I’ll look at again in number 3. Often, music videos will cut between a narrative and a performance of the song by the band. Additionally, a carefully choreographed dance might be a part of the artist’s performance or an extra aspect of the video designed to aid visualisation and the ‘repeatability’ factor. Sometimes, the artist (especially the singer) will be a part of the story, acting as narrator and participant at the same time. But it is the lip-sync close-up and the mimed playing of instruments that remains at the heart of music videos, as if to assure us that the band really can kick it. 


Remember that pop music is a romantic art, all about truth, talent, and magic, so we need to believe in the authenticity of the performance first and foremost. The supposed individual and original qualities of these performers leads me to my next point, the source of all profit in the business … the star!


At number 3 … 



The star image

The music business relies on the relatively few big name stars to fund its activities; it usually fails to connect with popular audiences – only about one in ten acts put out by the industry actually makes any money. Therefore, what we can describe as the meta-narrative of the star image will have an important part to play in the music video production process. 


Meta-narrative is a term that describes the development of the star image over time, the stories that surround a particular artist. 


Michael Jackson – a mini case study


(Note : this article was written before Jackson's death)


Michael Jackson’s meta-narrative has been a long, sometimes difficult journey and one he has lost control of in recent years. 


There have been a few crucial moments in Jackson’s meta-narrative of pop stardom. The first was the successful move from being one of a group – even if acknowledged as its central talent – as child member of The Jackson 5, to becoming a solo artist. 


He was then able to negotiate one of the most successful solo careers ever through developing both his trademark sound and image. The ground-breaking music videos for Thriller and Beat It were an important part of this mega-stardom. 


At some point in the 90s, though, this meta-narrative took a wrong turn and his unique ‘star image’ became ‘freakish’ and self-indulgent; we are reminded that this child star has never grown up. Thus, the Jackson talent, his natural birthright it seems, becomes the reason for his adult weirdness. His younger self – black, funky, energetic – is constantly held up to condemn his current abnormality – withdrawn, of no ethnicity, over-produced to the point of ceasing to exist. And yet, all this means he is still talked about, the object of mass media fascination and so, in a very real sense, still a star. Whether the most recent allegations of child abuse will finally render that stardom invalid remains to be seen.


Meta-narratives of star image are not simply a matter of manipulation, but a dialogue or negotiation of what the music business asserts about their star, and what we accept! Still, in each new video, Michael Jackson tries to regain control over his meta-narrative but he can’t just switch off all the different associations he’s accumulated during his career, whether good or bad. So music videos can best be seen as one of the most important ways that the image of the artist is ‘managed’. 


At number 4 … 


Three ways in which music videos relate visuals to the song


We can identify three ways in which music videos work to support or promote the song. These are illustration, amplification and disjuncture and I find them extremely useful in attempting to generalise the effects of individual music videos. 


• Music videos can illustrate the meaning of lyrics and genre, providing a sometimes over literal set of images. Here, then, is the most straightforward technique and the classic example of visualisation, with everything in the music video based on the source of the pop song. 


• However, as with all advertising, the most persistent type of video adds to the value of the song. Amplification is seen as the mark of the true music video Auteur, the director as artist, and an increasingly common way to view music video creatives (VH-1’s Best 100 Videos clearly placed Spike Jonze in the Auteur category with his work always amplifying the original song’s meaning and effect, usually through surreal humour). Crucially, though, and what separates it from disjuncture, is the fact that amplification music videos retain a link with the song and work to enhance or develop ideas, rather than fundamentally changing them.


Disjuncture is a term used to describe those music videos that (normally intentionally) seem to work by ignoring the original song and creating a whole new set of meanings. This is quite a radical technique and used by arty bands in order to assert their difference and originality. Usually, disjuncture videos of this type don’t make a lot of sense and may be based on abstract imagery. For example in Spike Jonze’s video for Daft Punk’s ‘Da Funk’ we see a man with a dog’s head and his arm in a cast walking round New York, ignored by all, with dialogue completely unrelated to the song itself. Sometimes though, disjuncture videos are just bad, ill-conceived and self-indulgent mistakes. 


And finally at number 5 ... 


Technical aspects of music video


The last really essential aspect of music video to study is technical. This includes camerawork, movement and angle, mise-en-scène, editing, and sound. 


It is important to remember the more general features of music videos already mentioned when trying to work out the technical effects, especially those which are post-production, effects. Broadly, the technical conventions can be summed up as follows: 


1. Speed! 


Speed is visualised by camera movement, fast editing (montage) and digital effects.


Camera movement is often motivated by running, dancing and walking performers.


Fast-cutting and montage editing creates a visually decentred experience necessary for music video consumption, with the images occasionally moving so fast that they are impossible to understand on first viewing and thus need to be viewed several times (repeatability). 


Post-production digital effects – a staple of music video where images can be colorized, multiple split screens appear, and so on, all to complicate and intrigue, providing pleasure again and again. 


Not all camera movement is about speed though and some use slow pace through dissolves or static shots. This kind of editing – like Sinead O’Conner’s ‘Nothing Compares 2 U’ – is striking and effective in setting the song apart from the hustle and bustle of most pop activity. 


2. Meat! 


The meat of most music videos is the cut to the close-up of the singer’s face. This is because the voice is seen as the most important part of pop music. 


3. Beats! 


Often, the video will try and represent the music through the use of the cut to go with the beat or key rhythm. This is called 'cutting to the beat'.


4. Lighting and colour 


...may also be used to emphasise key moments in the song, using methods from lighting live performances for dramatic effect. Colour may be used to show a development in the song, going from colour to black and white or vice versa when the chorus comes in. Equally, any change in the mise-en-scène or camerawork can signal the same type of thing.


5. Mise-en-scène 


Obviously the setting for music videos is important, often to guarantee the authenticity of the clip rather than anything else. So mise-en-scène for many music videos is the concert hall or rehearsal room to emphasise the realness of the performance or the grit and practice that goes into attaining star quality. Increasingly, CGI is used, especially for dance songs, which don’t rely so much on being ‘real’ like rock, soul and rap acts."


Steve Archer : Media Magazine 2004

Saturday, 2 July 2016

Research: Features Of A Music Video (Independent Work)

During the lesson we analysed 3 music videos of our choice from the Promonews website, which provides updates on the latest music videos and showcases new directing talent. We had to choose from the 7 genres that the music videos were categorised into and the genre I chose was Indie as this is one of the genres I listen to regularly.


The areas we focussed on was the Use of the Camera (shot types, angles, movement, composition, number of cameras/types of camera), Use of Editing (length of shots, transitions, pace, artist's screen time, fade-in/outs?), and Use of Mise-en-Scene (lighting, make up, acting ability, location, props, artists performance).

Mystery Jets - 'Bombay Blue' - Directed by Tobias Ross-Southall







The main premise for this video seems as though it is to show the home town of one of the band members (none of the other band members appear in the video), however he isn't shown performing, instead interacting with the locals and towards the end of the video travelling to an old water temple and jumping in. To build up excitement for the solo and last chorus the pace of the editing picks up significantly with very quick cuts before the man jumps off the roof of the temple in time with the guitar solo. The location is an important part of the video and so is established straight away with very cinematic aerial and extreme long shots taken with a drone around the outskirts of the city showing the vast landscape and even some of the wildlife, along with more above the city later in the song. Additionally the use of Mise-en Scene also helps to make it very clear that the videos is set in some part of India, as most of the people in the video, especially the women, can be seen wearing traditional Indian clothing and make-up.

One of the most common features of this video, which is used a lot in music videos for songs in the genre of Rock or Indie, that I have noticed from my own research, is editing the video so it is in slow motion, either all the way through like the video above (after the first establishing shot, the drums in the song start at the same time the video cuts to the next long shot which is when the rest of the music video is slowed), or in the climax of the song, which is usually a solo, most commonly by a guitar.

Mount Moriah - 'Precita' - Directed by Fidel Rui-Healy










This music video follows two people running away from a cop after they've gotten into trouble/stolen something, which is clear from the use of Mise-en-Scene, for example, when the male character is first introduced, the camera is zoomed into his stomach (to mimic a close up shot) where it looks as though he has been stabbed or shot, the camera then zooms out into a mid-shot framing the man's wound and his facial expression showing pain whilst the camera, in addition to him wearing a pair of brightly coloured tights as a balaclava which burglars are known to wear. He is later joined by the female character carrying a bag with a red smoke bomb who appears to be his accomplice as she tries to help him up when he trips, which can be seen when the camera is zoomed out as a long shot to show this. additionally, because for this video only one camera was used and was a one-shot style video, the actors are being constantly focussed on despite them moving around a lot, through crabbing and tracking movements, it is emphasised to the audience that the character are under pressure to get away.


In this video, just like the Misery Jets video for Bombay 'Blues', the video footage has been edited during post-production into slow motion and is used throughout. Also, like all of the music videos I have chosen, this one has the band name and title of the song credited at the start of the video which seems to be very common among quite recent music videos of any genre.
Also, another thing this music video has in common with nearly all music videos is that it consists of a lot of close ups. This is because they help emphasise the emotions of characters in the video and also props that are relevant in the narration of the song and lyrics.

The 1975 - 'A Change Of Heart' - Directed by Tim Mattia





This song is about someone's girlfriend telling him her feelings and problems with the relationship to him. Mise-En-Scene plays ,a big part in the production of this video; the girlfriend has the make up of a mime artists which actually correlates to the song itself as she is expressing her feelings in the same way that mime artists use exaggerated movements and facial expressions to express emotions to an audience; the boyfriend is compared to a clown (because he is letting himself go and she cant take him seriously) in the video as he is wearing the appropriate make up, is dressed in clown like shoes, and this is also shown through his actions. For example, in one section of the video there are a few over the shoulder shots allowing the audience to see their facial expressions, both of them are together looking happy until he makes a flower  shoot water at her face leaving her upset and angry with him. Other props in the video include a bowler hat, an albino rabbit (the type that would come out of a magicians hat), popcorn, toy gun, umbrella and a raincloud, all of which highlight the theme. To continue with this theme of the video it is set at  carnival an they are surrounded by lots of rides and fair ground stalls in the two shots and long shot that we see of them dancing together.


This video has a lot of similarities with other videos, the first being that only the main singer of the band/group has the most screen time - or in this case the only screen time -  in a music video. This is common amongst most music videos for songs which were by multiple artists whether is modern groups/bands like The 1975 and One direction or older ones such as Guns n' Roses and Queen. The reason this is common is because the audience and fans are more likely to have a connection with the singer as they are the frontmen of the band in addition to the fact that the band's image, what they are all about and represent is promoted through the singer's style, fashion, attitude etc.
Another thing that this music video shares with others is that it is recognisable to the band's style of videos. A lot of The 1975 music videos are either black and white or filmed at night with dark lighting, and all of the band members usually wear black jeans, leather jackets, and dark clothes. Other artists such as Sia have very recognisable videos too, for example, in all of her videos she is never features in them or if she doe she has very little screen time, instead the music videos will focus on contemporary dancers performing choreographed routines that narrate the song.
Additionally, this music video like many other contains lots of movement as the camera usually follows the singer, which is done by lots of panning, tracking and arcing (horizontally) around him.




Through this research task I have learnt a lot about the different styles, as well as the different conventions of music videos and how to convey the themes, tone, emotions of characters, and narrative of a song through the use of the camera, editing and Mise-en-Scene. All this information will help me during pre-production of my own music video when planning and brainstorming ideas.