An animated rotoscoped side-scrolling video for the instrumental track “Remind U’ by Stephen ‘Flying Lotus’ Ellison directed by Winston Hacking.
It’s good. You’ll like it.
An animated rotoscoped side-scrolling video for the instrumental track “Remind U’ by Stephen ‘Flying Lotus’ Ellison directed by Winston Hacking.
It’s good. You’ll like it.
The video for ‘Keep Moving’ by Australian-American electronica trio Bronson (Thomas George ‘Golden Features’ Stell, Harrison Mills and Clayton Knight).
Make of it what you will.
A very impressive cover of The Police’s ‘Walking On The Moon’ performed by musicians Tom Drevett and Mathieu Terrade (respectively) on drums and the Harpejji K24 – a unique 24-string, 12-fret instrument with an 5-octave range.
A perfectly synched bluegrass cover of Michael Jackson’s ‘Bad’ by incongruous genre remixer There I Ruined It.
And if you liked that, you might also care for this swing cover of Nirvana’s ‘Come As You Are’.
A thrilling tale of epic mundanity: song by Elliot Mason (from his album ‘Life Is Like A Movie’), animation by Justin Mason.
Nimble-fingered guitarist Luca Stricagnoli taps out a very impressive cover of Mozart’s ‘Rondo Alla Turca’, replicating the harpsichord notes on the fretboard.
Previously: Acousticoolio
Digital animations interpreting the trills, squads and coos of birds recorded during a visit to the Amazonian jungle by Austalian artist Andy Thomas, who tells Colossal:
I am fascinated with the idea of generating digital art that references the beauty and complexity of nature. I hope this piece will encourage people to research the many amazing varieties of birds that call the Amazon home, and remind us of how fragile and important this place is to us all.
Previously by Andy Thomas: Eye Candy: Synthetic Nature
Radiohead’s ‘Creep’, Dolly Parton’s ‘Jolene’ and ‘Paint It Black’ by The Rolling Stones, ‘medieval-ised’ by practitioners of a musical genre known as ‘bardcore’.
Full playlist here.
(Photo:: Hulton Archive/Getty Images)
A suitably trippy video by our favourite UK animator Cyriak Harris for this apocalyptic track by veteran US art rockers Sparks (from their new album ‘A Steady Drip, Drip, Drip’).