ACL 2021 - The Year’s 10 Best Music Videos

A Closer Listen

When music videos migrated from television to the internet, they found a brand new audience thirsty for innovation.  This year’s crop includes live action and animation, split screen and stop-motion, scripted and choreographed: a cornucopia of sight and sound.  If there was any doubt about the strength of the video industry or its potential for growth, these directors dispel it.  We’ve been collecting the best of the best throughout the year, and now we’re eager to share them with you: many appearing on this site for the first time!

And now, A Closer Listen presents its picks for the Top 10 videos of the year, plus a bonus album-length film that includes every track on the LP.

Video Album of the Year:  Sonae, Summer (LAAPS) Director:  Jennifer Trees Trailer:  Jan Hoehe

The partnership between Sonae and Jennifer Trees was first an installation, then a video album: the natural successor to Ron Fricke’s Qatsi trilogy.  In these images, climate change is no longer a theory, but a frightening reality; the split screen images provide evidence of an enduring apathy that threatens to set the world ablaze.

WEAKNESS OF THE FLESH Directors: Kevin McGloughlin + Jacob Jonas Choreographer: Jacob Jonas Featuring: Emma Rosenzweig-Bock Music & Sound Design: Max Cooper Vocal: Samad Khan Cinematographer & Color: Shaun Boyte Animation & Edit: Kevin McGloughlin Assistant Editor: Joy Isabella Brown

How?  How did the directors find dozens of identical siblings, some ten times taller than others, some a hundred?  How did they get the dancers to stick to the ceiling?  How did the tallest dancer roll without crushing her sisters?  These mysteries may never be answered.  A return to our chart for director and artist, “WEAKNESS OF THE FLESH” is another triumph in a history of triumphs.

La Nuée Directed by Vincent René-Lortie Music by Simon Leoza Produced by Telescope Films Executive producer – Samuel Caron Producer – Élise Lardinois Production Manager – Félix Cayer More credits found on Vimeo.

It’s hard to make a short-form video with a surprise ending, but that’s what the production team has accomplished here.  We won’t write any spoilers; suffice it to say that the video is incredibly powerful, and that the sound design is as important as the song.

Alba Music: Oh No Noh Character Design + Animation (Cassette): Anne Brüssau Screenplay, Editing: Markus Rom Color Correction: Richard Syhre

We knew we were going to include this video from the first moment we saw it.  This plucky little cassette just wants to make music of its own, and nothing will stop it, even the dreaded unspooling. An entire music room comes to (human-free) life in endearing fashion; and it has a happy ending!

AVA Music by Janek Murd Designed, Directed & Animated by Joosep Volk & Maido Hollo

A gorgeous late-season surprise from this Estonian team, “AVA” is a bright-toned reflection on the cycle of life.  The colors are exuberant, the movement perfectly synched.  Could life really be this wonderful?  For three minutes, we believe.

Transformotion Music:  Manu Delago Camera – Johannes Aitzetmüller Video editor – Jeb Hardwick Environment recordings by Michael Reisigl

“Transformotion” is the best video of an already strong set from Environ Me, which is close to becoming a video album of its own.  It also answers the aural question, “What is the difference between the sound of footsteps on leaves, dirt and snow?”  Honoring legendary Coldcut videos “Natural Rhythms” and “Timber”, the video highlights the manner in which the percussion is created, opening a window into the compositional process.

SATELLIKE Director:  Roman DeGiuli Music:  Tristan Barton, “The Watch”

These are not images of earth from above, but interactions of rare pigments, powders and oils, providing a beautiful illusion of geography and flow.  The colors are just as striking as the Asian landscapes which inspired their genesis.

OMEGA II Director:  Thomas Blanchard Music: Sébastien Guérive Dancer : Alice Regnouf Production : Sébastien Guérive

Past, present and future mingle in “OMEGA II,” which includes a number of startling techniques that make Alice Regnouf seem like a singular version of a Thai dance troupe.  The splicings are sublime, the connection with nature revelatory.

The Prey Direction and Animation: Páraic Mc Gloughlin Music:  Monolink Performance: Carla Cervantes Caro & Sandra Lee Camera: Javier Zarza Bardet, Páraic Mc Gloughlin, Peter Martin, Brian Lawler, Patrick Lawler Co-Produced by Steffen Linck

Yes, there are lyrics, we know … but we couldn’t pass up the chance to showcase the second of the McGloughlins as the first was included above.  The combination of dance, masks, rapid splices and orbital images produces a melange of images sharp and smooth, the irony being that the human element makes the strongest impact.

Ani Kuni Music:  POLO & PAN Staging: MAY (Vincent Gibaud, Margaux Rosiau, François Sibiude) Art direction: Noemi Ferst, Benjamin Moreau Production: Werlen Meyer

Yes, the video WAS inspired by Sesame Street!  Watching it brings a pleasant nostalgia, a reminder of innocence, the suggestion that simple, happy times are still available.  And if it makes you want to dance, well then, go right ahead!

Riptide Director: Alison Group Music:  MONO

The dystopian world created in this video is so compelling and immersive that we can imagine it getting picked up for a longer-form work, perhaps even a Netflix series.  The story is heartening and heart-rending all at once, a master class in expansive brevity.  The music doesn’t even appear until 3:32, but when it does, the drama builds and finally explodes.  Is there a Season Two?

Richard Allen

Tue Dec 07 00:01:25 GMT 2021