Videos are more than a way to promote songs
Artists find power to express themselves without interference as medium enters new era
Donald Glover didn’t hold back when creating the music video for This Is America, the most recent single by his rapper alter ego, Childish Gambino. The video is emblematic of its time — blatantly political in a way that appeals to social media and its love of dissectable visuals. Consider Glover’s dancing, presumably choreographed to mimic a minstrel character; the murder of choir singers, evoking the Charleston church massacre; and Death riding in on a white horse.
“It’s fun to see how people have taken to it, the interpretations,” said Larkin Seiple, the video’s cinematographer.
Political edge isn’t a new addition to the art form, but it’s difficult to imagine the recent deluge of videos exploring racial and sexual identity occurring in the MTV era.
Beyoncé’s visual album Lemonade kicked off a wave with its emotionally hefty exploration of black womanhood, followed by similarly bold videos by Frank Ocean, Janelle Monáe, Glover and others. The phenomenon is, in part, the result of political trends such as polarization and identity politics rising in online conversation, and movements such as Black Lives Matter and #MeToo. But it also owes a lot to the YouTube revolution and the freedom that video platforms grant artists.
Just ask Larry Miller, director of the music business program at New York University’s Steinhardt School of Culture, Education and Human Development. In response to the question of whether the purpose of music videos has evolved over the years, he chuckled.
“I’m only laughing out loud because yes, of course,” he said. “At one time, the purpose of music videos was to sell albums.”
MTV, the first channel dedicated to music videos, took off after its 1981 launch, and record labels used it as a promotional mechanism for new music. The buzz surrounding videos such as Madonna’s Like a Prayer, a Vatican-condemned commentary on race and religion, and Michael Jackson’s Thriller, viewed as a metaphor for sexual awakening, reminded viewers to head out and buy albums.
Television also meant advertising dollars, which translated to enormous budgets for the videos. But, sometimes, the money meant sacrificing creative control. The more that was at stake, according to several directors, the safer labels played it. Strict TV guidelines didn’t make things any easier.
Those who worked on Monáe’s Dirty Computer got a taste of this when preparing a version of the accompanying short film to air on MTV and BET. Sexual liberation is a theme throughout the album, especially in songs such as Pynk. Director Emma Westenberg made sure its video, which references female anatomy through elements like Monáe’s so-called vagina pants, reflected that.
“The imagery, because the song is so open and free, was so much fun to develop,” she said. “It’s already so clear what (Pynk) is about that the imagery came from the lyrics.”
The Dirty Computer that aired on TV was quite different from its online counterpart, said Andrew Donoho. He co-directed the narrative portion and said the team had to cut shots that included nudity and stuck-up middle fingers.
“It’s definitely something that can only exist in the here and now,” Donoho said of the online cut. “There were plenty of artists in the ’80s and ’90s that would have loved to make controversial pieces or videos that pushed boundaries, but censorship and having to cater to TV networks and labels and go through all the hands and politics, I’m sure there’s a lot of art that never got made.”
Dirty Computer shares this “here and now” quality with Frank Ocean’s videos, especially the one for his single Nikes. It critiques hedonistic pleasure by contrasting shallow joy (shots of money and the titular shoes) with harsh realities (photographs of Trayvon Martin and dead hip-hop artists). Duelling voices — Ocean’s and a higher-pitched version — mimic this juxtaposition, and his androgynous style along with glittery and angel-winged bodies add sexual fluidity.
Such videos feed our culture’s demand for art shaped by politics in today’s antagonistic environment, where the stakes feel high for both sides of every culture war.
Zia Anger, who has directed videos for Mitski and Angel Olsen, said YouTube makes it easy to figure out what fans want, giving artists a more personalized look at their base.
“There’s a certain amount of visibility involved with seeing a viewer on YouTube,” since everyone can see viewer figures and comments, Anger said. “I guess there were Nielsen ratings for MTV back in the day, but this ... is a totally different beast.”
“These days, with the advent of online, the power really is in the artists’ hands,” said Devin Sarno, vice-president of creative services at Warner Brothers Records. “They can put out a piece of content whenever they want,” and at whatever length they want.”
Beyoncé, the queen of crafting an image, surprised fans in 2016 by dropping Lemonade on the JayZ-owned streaming service Tidal and the 46-minute film version on artist-friendly HBO. Formation, the work’s most-discussed power anthem, calls on black women to stand together and features the singer in an abandoned plantation and atop a sinking police car, among other memorable images.
The video is woven into the narrative of Beyoncé navigating an environment often hostile to women of colour, which a Malcolm X voice-over expresses early on: “The most disrespected woman in America is the black woman.”
Musicians have always told stories, but these albums are inextricably linked to the accompanying images, and are far less powerful without them. “I think a lot of artists are really educated at filmmaking and interested in it as a creative extension from music,” Miller said. “I think the curtain has been drawn back. In the ’90s, not as many people knew how to make film, and now it’s so much more accessible.”
The short film route is tricky, as attention spans for online content always seem to be shorter. So the videos have to grab you. Viewers can’t look away from This Is America because of Glover’s magnetic presence the first time they watch, and the background chaos the second time. There’s so much to unpack, said Seiple, the cinematographer — and that helps give the video a viral quality.
“You can’t just shoot someone performing in a cool venue, you have to make something unique or outlandish,” he added.