Inconsolable performed by AP Macroeconomics - Austin Milner, Mia Meskil
Mia goes to the club and gets lost.
Mia goes to the club and gets lost.
La Rosa Purpurea - Accordeon Concerto- 1 Mov. I was fascinated by the idea to glue the baroque style and the modern rhythm. Strong dynamic contrasts and catchy thematic development.
Music video questioning if our loved ones who have passed on can “hear” us in the afterlife.
The video explores both the playfulness of the song and the frenetic identity crisis described in the lyrics. Jumping from one character to the next, wearing as many different hats as possible. These are the central themes of the video. On the one hand we believe that we all have an essence that is objective and transcendent, written in time and space. But on the other hand we’re also compelled to create an identity, to decide what kind of person we want to be based on our endeavours and expression and self-representation. Identivacation is poking fun at this idea and reflecting on how confusing and exhausting it can be to try to create a self.
The Mayor of Rivertown, whom they say cursed, wakes up after several weeks of unconsciousness and learns of the assassination of several members of his political party; but more serious, the death of his eldest daughter Ayanna. He quickly makes the connection with his lifelong enemy, El Commandante. His revenge must be sated. The time for politics is over...
What if you were just a regular girl trying to make it and the undermining self-critic in your head was a femme fatale who crosses over into your conscious world and pursues you relentlessly to the bitter end?
What will the fate of Captain Boris be on a bleak Christmas Eve? Will love prevail?
Dwight a 50 year old left over 80's metal rocker who's still holding onto his rockstar dreams while living at home with his mom and working as an Uber driver has a one night stand with Vivian a married lady who struggles with letting go of her wild side.
Music video by The Electric Kühl-Aid Party. Filmed at the Bay-Vu/Bay Bowl in Bremerton, WA.
No Regrets is a music video for the song No Regrets by Jack Parker. Filmed, and edited by Jack Parker and Danielle Rimbert
Guru Déë Pród offers an incredible opportunity to come take a ride in his magical van.
When you wake up, and feel like something isn't right....
Four characters inhabit cycles within cycles of contentment, discontentment, inertia, movement, desire, and betrayal. A story emerges—told through the marriage of music (Ex-Fiancée) and dance (ChrisMastersDance)—functioning as a set of nesting dolls, inviting you to uncover as many layers as you wish.
Reminiscent of the energy and mood of the track "Stamina" by the same producer, the video for Boomer Ok (radio edit) transforms a ghetto blaster into a giant gym for former sports champions. Celebrating the mechanics of bodies and objects, this video, which links sports movements and electronic components, takes us into a colorful and offbeat frenzy, while taking an affectionate look at seniors who are not lacking in energy!
Music Video for the song "It's Tough" by the Bremerton punk band The Know Nothingz. Hyperlapse, timelapse and live video taken from January 2019 until the world shut down in the Pacific Northwest. Bremerton locations include The Charleston, The Drift Inn and The Manette Saloon.
Jack confronts creatures both real and imaginary on an extraordinary animated visual rollercoaster created with some of the comic world’s finest artists. Jack emerges triumphant, reborn… and the lead singer of the best band around to boot.
A spunky group of kids burst into a paint fight to demons
Santa loses his phone and it falls back in time. He dispatches two elves to retrieve it but not before a curious little girl finds it.
"Good Mourning" is an animated music video that follows a man as he moves through the five stages of grief. The song "Good Mourning" is a string quartet that uses algorithmic music software to create melodies based off the shape of Ovarian Cancer DNA.
Brad Sample and Hollie Hammel's take on the Frank & Nancy Sinatra classic...in one shot.
This song is a feminist treatise with a funky beat. It was written during the Brett Kavanaugh hearings and Brett makes an appearance in the video. It was written and performed by California singer/songwriter Zoe FitzGerald Carter, The videographer is Joshua McClain.