The music video for Modest Mouse's Dashboard is not made of traditional ingredients, like lighting and production values; it is instead made of awesome.

I have no special, behind the scenes knowledge of the filming of music videos, but I imagine it is filled with a variety of existential dilemmas. Like: "Oh, crap, the cameraman is drunk. Do we refilm or pretend the spinning around dizzily and passing out on the floor effect is what we were going for?" Or: "The lead singer is summarily refusing to skip happily through a field filled with dead bunny rabbits. Doesn't she realize that scene is essential to communicate the theme?" Or: "How many strippers *can* we get for $50,000?"

See, most music videos (in my admittedly lacking experience) exist to showcase the *music.* The video part of the equation is just a means to get bodies into HMV. But the minds behind this one said, "But lo! We already *have* a song, such that people like Karen can hear it on the radio if there is in their possession an FM receiver of some description. Let us bestow upon the audience a music *video* for a change. And let it be mind blowingly amazing!"

And verily, it did come to pass.

The Dashboard video is a four minute movie with an unusually fitting soundtrack. It's got plot, it's got character, it's got suspense, it's got action, it's got breathtaking special effects. It's got, I don't know, ruminations on the human condition, why not, and it's gotta be just about hand crafted for genre fans. (Which, isn't that all of us around here?)

I've seen it many, many times by now, and every time I notice something new. (I mean, I didn't properly appreciate the foreshadowing until the second time through.)

 
There's a higher rez copy up here, or click on the youtube thing to watch.



The band also has another cool video for their song Ocean Breathes Salty, which falls short of awesome only because I am not so fond of the background music.
 
The music video for Modest Mouse's Dashboard is not made of traditional ingredients, like lighting and production values; it is instead made of awesome.

I have no special, behind the scenes knowledge of the filming of music videos, but I imagine it is filled with a variety of existential dilemmas. Like: "Oh, crap, the cameraman is drunk. Do we refilm or pretend the spinning around dizzily and passing out on the floor effect is what we were going for?" Or: "The lead singer is summarily refusing to skip happily through a field filled with dead bunny rabbits. Doesn't she realize that scene is essential to communicate the theme?" Or: "How many strippers *can* we get for $50,000?"

See, most music videos (in my admittedly lacking experience) exist to showcase the *music.* The video part of the equation is just a means to get bodies into HMV. But the minds behind this one said, "But lo! We already *have* a song, such that people like Karen can hear it on the radio if there is in their possession an FM receiver of some description. Let us bestow upon the audience a music *video* for a change. And let it be mind blowingly amazing!"

And verily, it did come to pass.
The Dashboard video is a four minute movie with an unusually fitting soundtrack. It's got plot, it's got character, it's got suspense, it's got action, it's got breathtaking special effects. It's got, I don't know, ruminations on the human condition, why not, and it's gotta be just about hand crafted for genre fans. (Which, isn't that all of us around here?)

I've seen it many, many times by now, and every time I notice something new. (I mean, I didn't properly appreciate the foreshadowing until the second time through.)

 

Watch it on youtube, or download a higher rez copy.

 

The band also has another cool video for their song Ocean Breathes Salty, which falls short of awesome only because I am not so fond of the background music.
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