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Top 20 Memphis Music Videos of 2016 (Part 1)

2016 was a good year for music videos by Memphis artists, musicians and filmmakers alike. I resist making a ranked list of movies in my year-end wrap up, but I know the crowd demands them, so every year I indulge my nerdery by ranking the music videos that have appeared in the Flyer’s Music Video Monday blog series. Since I sometimes go back into the vault for MVM posts, this competition is limited to videos that were uploaded since my Top Ten of 2015 post. (This proved to be a source of disappointment, since Breezy Lucia’s brilliant video for Julien Baker’s “Something” was in the top five until I discovered it had been uploaded in 2014).  Last year, I did a top ten. This year, there were so many good videos, I decided to do a top 20.

Eileen Townsend in Caleb Sweazy’s ‘Bluebird Wings’

A good music video creates a synergy between the music and the action on the screen. It doesn’t have to have a story, but arresting images, fascinating motion through the frame, and meticulous editing are musts.   I watched all of the videos and assigned them scores on both quality of video and quality of song. This was brought the cream to the top, but my scoring system proved to be inadequately granular when I discovered seven videos tied for first place, five tied for second, and three tied for third, forcing me to apply a series of arbitrary and increasingly silly criteria until I had an order I could live with. So if you’re looking for objectivity, you won’t find it here. As they say, it’s an honor to just be on the list.

20. Light Beam Rider – “A Place To Sleep Among The Creeps”
Director: Nathan Ross Murphy

Leah Beth Bolton-Wingfield, Jacob Wingfield have to get past goulish doorman Donald Myers in this Halloween party nightmare. Outstanding production design breaks this video onto the list.

Top 20 Memphis Music Videos of 2016 (Part 1)

19. Richard James – “Children Of The Dust”
Director: George Hancock

The Special Rider got trippy with this sparkling slap of psilocybin shimmer.

Top 20 Memphis Music Videos of 2016 (Part 1) (2)


18. Preauxx “Humble Hustle”
Director: FaceICU

Preauxx is torn between angels and his demons in this banger.

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17. Faux Killas “Give It To Me”
Director: Moe Nunley

Let’s face it. We’re all suckers for stop motion animation featuring foul mouthed toys. But it’s the high energy thrashy workout of a song that elevates this one.

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16. Caleb Sweazy “Bluebird Wings”
Director: Melissa Anderson Sweazy

Actress (and former Flyer writer) Eileen Townsend steals the show as a noir femme fatale beset by second thoughts.

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15. Matt Lucas “East Side Nights/Home”
Director: Rahimhotep Ishakarah

The two halves of this video couldn’t be more different, but somehow it all fits together. I liked this video a lot better when I revisited it than when I first posted a few months ago, so this one’s a grower.

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14. Dead Soldiers ft. Hooten Hollers “16 Tons”
Directors: Michael Jasud & Sam Shansky

There’s nothing fancy in this video, just some stark monochrome of the two combined bands belting out the Tennessee Ernie Ford classic. But it’s just what the song needs. This is the perfect example of how simplicity is often a virtue for music videos.

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13. Angry Angles “Things Are Moving”
Director: 9ris 9ris

New Orleans-based video artist 9ris 9ris created abstract colorscapes with vintage video equipment for this updated Goner re-release of Jay Reatard’s early-century collaboration with rocker/model/DJ Alix Brown and Destruction Unit’s Ryan Rousseau.

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12. Chris Milam “Tell Me Something I Don’t Know”
Director:Chris Milam

Milam and Ben Siler riffed on D.A. Pennebaker and Bob Dylan’s groundbreaking promo clip for “Subterranean Homesick Blues”, and the results are alternately moving and hilarious.

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11. Deering & Down “Spaced Out Like An Astronaut”
Director: Lahna Deering

In a departure for the Memphis by way of Alaska folk rockers, the golden voiced Deering lets guitarist Down take the lead while she put on the Major Tom helmet and created this otherworldly video.

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Tune in on Monday for the Top Ten of 2016!

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Film/TV Film/TV/Etc. Blog

Music Video Monday: Richard James

Music Video Monday gonna slow it down a little this week.

Richard James’ reputation as one of Memphis’ punk wild men is well deserved. By the end of his raucous garage sets, he can end up singing from atop the bar, or preaching punk aphorisms while prone on the floor. But his song “Children of the Dust” shows a much chiller side of the Special Rider—an echoy slab of one-man bedroom psychedelia.

“The song came out of watching movies late at night,” he says. “It is named after the 1995 movie that starred Sidney Poitier and inspired by classic, European, horror films like Tombs of The Blind Dead. ”

For the video, Memphis filmmaker George Hancock captured footage of James on the banks of the Mississippi, and then layered on altered landscapes to create a dreamscape.

Music Video Monday: Richard James

If you would like to see your music video on Music Video Monday, email cmccoy@memphisflyer.com

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Film/TV Film/TV/Etc. Blog

Music Video Monday: Process of Suffocation

It’s Music Music Video Monday. Let’s get metal. 

On their Facebook page, Memphis metal band Process of Suffocation are clear about their genre: TOTAL DEATH METAL. King Cadaver and Baphomet pound out brutal rhythms and buzz saw ruffs designed to do one thing: melt faces. Not only that, but King Cadaver’s menacing growl delivers the vocals (“VOKILLS”) entirely in Spanish! What’s not to love? 

The music video for “El Libro Nigro” was directed by Kyle Baker and George Hancock. A Satanic priest (Jeff Dodson) gets more than he bargained for when he picks the wrong pair of victims (Katie Lapsy and Kate Hite) for his sacrifice. I guess that’s just an occupational hazard when you work in the Satanic temple. 

Music Video Monday: Process of Suffocation

 If you would like to see your music video on Music Video Monday, email cmccoy@memphisflyer.com