The Strange World of Early Music Videos

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 15 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 185

  • @JamesGilbert_
    @JamesGilbert_ 2 месяца назад +104

    Hey, film student here. We learned about "The Little Lost Child" in an editing class a few months back, and I was completely unaware of how far back the concept of images and music had gone and definitely didn't expect to see it in a RUclips video. Nice work.

    • @zombwomb
      @zombwomb Месяц назад +1

      off topic: love ur pfp. awesome album

  • @krisfrederick5001
    @krisfrederick5001 2 месяца назад +268

    I want my Polyphonic TV

    • @oar5926
      @oar5926 2 месяца назад +9

      I read that in Sting’s voice on Money For Nothing lol

    • @flazzorb
      @flazzorb 2 месяца назад +13

      I want my
      _(I want my)_
      I want my P T Veeeee

    • @ChristChickAutistic
      @ChristChickAutistic 2 месяца назад +2

      I heard that in Sting's voice too, lol!

    • @TheAlexmynameis
      @TheAlexmynameis 6 дней назад

      Sting was not in Dire Straits.​@@oar5926

  • @bmac4
    @bmac4 2 месяца назад +79

    It has to be cathartic to be able to use Steamboat Willy unedited now that its in the public domain

    • @SlapstickGenius23
      @SlapstickGenius23 Месяц назад +2

      At least Steamboat Willie is now PD in the US. We Aussies have to wait until 2042 for Ub Iwerks’ whole tenure to become PD!

  • @mojoblues66
    @mojoblues66 2 месяца назад +99

    "St. Louis Blues" looks like the first modern music video to me.

    • @CaptainTedStryker
      @CaptainTedStryker Месяц назад +13

      I would agree because the film was made to feature the song. It wasn't a film that had music added like the earlier examples.

    • @caseysmith544
      @caseysmith544 Месяц назад +4

      as well as 1928 or 1929 short Waiting for A Train staring Jimmie Rogers who died in 1934. Cab Calaway had one short with all 3 parts of Minne the Moocher, Kicking the Gong Around, and the third part I forget the name with small transition bits for the songs.

  • @Madkid73
    @Madkid73 2 месяца назад +60

    Did a “Whoop” when you said there would be seven episodes. Great stuff!

  • @vinylarchaeologist
    @vinylarchaeologist 2 месяца назад +32

    I wrote an essay on this topic when I was in film school: many of the pre-WWII Vitaphones were being shown across the USA on a sort of jukebox, which even predated the use of jukeboxes for audio-only records. Fascinating stuff.

    • @augustosolari7721
      @augustosolari7721 Месяц назад +2

      And then you have the scopitone and the cinebox in Europe, which were actual video jukebox and thus the real origin of the videoclip.

    • @Tadfafty
      @Tadfafty Месяц назад +1

      Jukeboxes predate Vitaphone. There were cylinder jukeboxes.

    • @vinylarchaeologist
      @vinylarchaeologist Месяц назад

      @@Tadfafty Holy sh*t you are right. Just found a picture of a cylinder jukebox online. What a strange machine.

  • @augustosolari7721
    @augustosolari7721 Месяц назад +13

    Pieces of musical performances are not videoclips, per se. In your case, I would investigate the influence of the visual jukebox machines like the scopitone and the cinebox. The Scopitone, introduced in France in the late 1950s, was a visual jukebox that played short films featuring popular songs. These machines were primarily found in bars and aimed to attract patrons with vibrant, Technicolor films. Each film typically lasted about three minutes and often included creative storytelling elements, making them visually engaging for an audience that might not be directly focused on the screen.

  • @DBSouza1993
    @DBSouza1993 2 месяца назад +39

    4:46 Oh shit.. For a moment I thought I was in a Vsauce video hahaha
    Wonderful essay video, as always

    • @knziejay
      @knziejay Месяц назад +3

      I thought it's was him for a second, but it wasn't. 😅
      Any bald guys with a beard and glasses looks just like Vsauce.

  • @user-ff4fb6vd6v
    @user-ff4fb6vd6v 2 месяца назад +43

    Black American blues/rock artist here. I LOVE your videos so much! 💜 They’re filled with so much information and always inspire me to dive deeper into American and Black American culture.
    Thank you for addressing the dark parts of American history that so many people try to ignore. I can’t wait to see more of your future videos! You’re amazing! 🎸

    • @HoosierDaddy2a
      @HoosierDaddy2a 2 месяца назад +2

      Where can I find your stuff?

    • @user-ff4fb6vd6v
      @user-ff4fb6vd6v 2 месяца назад +1

      @@HoosierDaddy2a hey! So sorry for the late reply. (I live in Japan currently), and I literally just started getting more equipment while practicing the guitar more so when I finally start recording it will be on this channel. (I used to rap because I felt that was the only thing, now, nothing against hip hop, but I LOVE rock so much, so I’m trying to making my culture/ America proud by going back to our roots and more positivity, I’m originally from Mississippi) I’ll leave a comment again here when I finally upload 👍🏼

    • @sharonjefferson5944
      @sharonjefferson5944 2 месяца назад +1

      I hope that you talk about what I believe they called Soundies

    • @user-ff4fb6vd6v
      @user-ff4fb6vd6v 2 месяца назад

      @@sharonjefferson5944 Good idea! I will incorporate that!

  • @robmortimer4150
    @robmortimer4150 2 месяца назад +5

    A series about the music video by Polyphonic?! … amazing

  • @noviatoria2436
    @noviatoria2436 2 месяца назад +8

    Hell yeah, love when you do series like this and Axe to Grind. Fantastic documentaries they are

  • @ingridfong-daley5899
    @ingridfong-daley5899 Месяц назад +2

    One of the most amazing marriages of film and sound is the opening credits to "Vertigo"--between Saul Bass's trippy visuals and Bernard Herrmann's spectacular score, it's like seeing a 2-minute art film before the Hitchcock movie even starts.

  • @PeanutSpring3
    @PeanutSpring3 2 месяца назад +8

    I really hope Mike Nesmith is brought up with his pioneering videos like Elephant Parts.

  • @CasualSpud
    @CasualSpud 2 месяца назад +21

    Would an illustrated song be closer to Karaoke than a music video?

  • @ChubbyChecker182
    @ChubbyChecker182 2 месяца назад +9

    There was a "DJ Set" to 40,000 music fans in Heaton Park, Manchester in 1919....maybe the first ever mega "rave" (albeit with classical / opera music 😊).

  • @kingcon2k11
    @kingcon2k11 2 месяца назад +6

    Funny you'd include Arca, I'm directing an hr long vid for their next project rn where I'm aiming to push the boundaries of what a music video can be. Excited for the rest of this series

  • @caseysmith544
    @caseysmith544 Месяц назад +3

    Waiting For a Train the Music Stroy by Jimmie Rodgers in 1928 or 1929 looks like one of the early music videos promoted as a music short, he was the first country/bluegrass artist to make it big without the help of exclusively Nashville a big recording hub for bluegrass. the RCA and Western Electric for sound pioneered the Video Music that the Who with Tommy, the Wall with Pink Floyd, and Heavy metal helped make famous.

  • @readymade83
    @readymade83 Месяц назад +2

    This is going to be a great series, I feel like he's touched on some of these topics in the past and just putting them all together at this point will be cool.

  • @mastermavrick
    @mastermavrick 2 месяца назад +3

    Cool new series, can't wait for the next episode. And it makes me wonder... do we want to be obtuse and go on with the mix of music and puppetry hawkers in ages past to now.

  • @mattmadolah
    @mattmadolah 2 месяца назад +4

    St James infirmary animation was my guess. Its one that clung to my mind like Felix the Cat.
    Animations that inspired me to be an illustrator. Visual Animation is as warm in my heart as Music

  • @welcometonebalia
    @welcometonebalia 2 месяца назад +4

    Great idea for a series, thank you.

  • @Sneakycat1971
    @Sneakycat1971 2 месяца назад +4

    Scopitone is a type of jukebox featuring a 16 mm film component. Scopitone films were a forerunner of music videos. The 1959 Italian Cinebox/Colorama and Color-Sonics were competing, lesser-known technologies of the time one year before the Scopitone in France.[1]
    Scopitone machine
    Based on Soundies technology developed during World War II,[2] color 16 mm film shorts with a magnetic soundtrack were designed to be shown in a specially designed jukebox. The difference between the Panoram and the Scopitone jukebox was that with Panoram the 16mm films were black and white with optical sound and there was no selection among the 8 short films in the jukebox, whereas Scopitone featured color (in the US produced films Technicolor), with Hi-Fi magnetic soundtracks, with selection available between all 36 Scopitone films in the Scopitone Jukebox. Scopitone films, like Soundies, featured recordings that performers lip synced to, with at least one exception; Billy Lee Riley was recorded live performing the song "High Heel Sneakers" in his Scopitone. [3]

    • @deementia6796
      @deementia6796 Месяц назад +1

      That's what I think as well, that Scopitone could be considered the 1st actual music videos, as they were promotional clips designed to sell make money for the exhibitor who had the video jukebox on site, and also promote the musicians that were featured in the video. Nancy Sinatra's "These Boots are Made for Walking" is probably the most famous of the Scopitone videos. Before that, most of the "music videos" were created as shorts for the movie theaters, either for animation or interludes between features to play along with newsreels.

    • @Solitaire001
      @Solitaire001 Месяц назад

      @@deementia6796 One thing that was good about Scopitones is that they preserved the performances of artists, including many who were better known in Europe than in the U. S.

  • @mayonice2270
    @mayonice2270 2 месяца назад +1

    im so so excited for this, im a huge fan of you, music and film. ive had a fastination for music videos since a child and i think as a medium theyre absolutely underrated

  • @gmenezesdea
    @gmenezesdea 2 месяца назад +3

    Here in Brazil a lot of people believe the first music video was Humberto Mauro's 1964 short A Velha a Fiar, a film whose scenes portray, in live action, the verses of a nursery rhyme. The thing is, Mauro had been making this kind of film since the 1940s.

  • @angelagokool9514
    @angelagokool9514 Месяц назад

    In his song, "Walking in Memphis," Marc Cohn mentioned someone named W.C. Handy. "Put on my blue suede shoes/And I/Boarded the plane/Touched down in the land of the Delta Blues/In the middle of the pouring rain/W.C. Handy/Watching over me/Yeah, I've got a first-class ticket/But I'm as blue as a boy can be." I didn't know who that was, until you mentioned him. Thanks for explaining that reference! And thanks for the video! It's very informative.

  • @sheilaross1449
    @sheilaross1449 2 месяца назад +1

    Oooh my. I am very pleased about this. I saw Ashes to Ashes by David Bowie on a black and white TV when I was 5 years old and it turned me into a video hound from then onwards.
    Looking forward to the whole thing.

  • @nicholasvertucci2054
    @nicholasvertucci2054 Месяц назад +1

    A music video is a clip used to promote a song. If story based It can last up to 12 minutes before it becomes a "short film". Performance videos of that length weren't made for promotional purposes. The first legitimate one was likely British and produced sometime between 1960-1963. Or you can just give the Beatles the credit for "Paperback Writer".

  • @JosephGallagher
    @JosephGallagher Месяц назад +1

    What a great way to announce a series, truly. Hahaha, I thought "A huevo 😎" at the end 🇲🇽

  • @toastnjam7384
    @toastnjam7384 Месяц назад

    I recall a Local L.A. Station had a half hour program showing recent music videos in the late 70's early 80's. That's where I first heard of Cheap Trick. I vaguely remember it showing older music videos.

  • @anthonyklecha6002
    @anthonyklecha6002 Месяц назад +1

    I’m amazed that you didn’t discuss Fantasia, considering it’s basically the first music video compilation, which was derived from those silly symphonies shorts you discussed.

  • @mccaine1
    @mccaine1 2 месяца назад

    Fantastic! I love these deep dives into the history of popular media. Thank you for your work!

  • @Solitaire001
    @Solitaire001 Месяц назад

    For myself, I consider something a music video as long as: (1) it features music, and (2) it features images that illustrate the music. In some cases it can be abstract images like in "Fantasia."

  • @greenjoseph4
    @greenjoseph4 2 месяца назад +2

    Oh my goodness I am so excited for the rest of this series…

  • @zyxaqc
    @zyxaqc Месяц назад +1

    Being a vtuber fan has evolved my definition of what a music video can be. If still images can tell a story, I qualify that as a music video.

  • @unchillada5858
    @unchillada5858 Месяц назад

    Oh nice, a series! I really hope Kenneth Anger's work is included when we get to the 60s-70s

  • @dinekevinke2268
    @dinekevinke2268 2 месяца назад +4

    Great video! I cant wait for the next one!

  • @creaturesofunity1109
    @creaturesofunity1109 7 дней назад

    Polyphonic ❤‍🔥 Thank you for the knowledge! Hit Record is sick I love it !

  • @78s_TheArtists_AndTheHistory
    @78s_TheArtists_AndTheHistory Месяц назад +1

    We needed at least a mention of Al Bowllys recordings with Pathe 😭

  • @Jaziem
    @Jaziem Месяц назад

    I'm loving this series. I had to come back to watch it here on YT to clear it out of my to Watch list though. 😂

  • @KendrickOcean
    @KendrickOcean 2 месяца назад +4

    I love polyphonic ❤

  • @00011011100
    @00011011100 Месяц назад +1

    After watching this, I immediately started watching the list of 106 original MTV music videos.

  • @YouTubeCensor
    @YouTubeCensor 2 месяца назад +2

    0:30 Black and white is the opposite of Technicolor.

  • @BrianRandall-v8c
    @BrianRandall-v8c Месяц назад +1

    Before MTV there were shows that aired new music videos. MTV just made it so that every artist wanted to make music videos.

  • @dstinnettmusic
    @dstinnettmusic Месяц назад +1

    My answer to that beginning was old cartoons.

  • @Wiencourager
    @Wiencourager Месяц назад

    The first attempts at adding sound to movies in the 1900-1920 period were often musical numbers, the early attempts could barely sustain synchronization between sound and picture for more than the few minutes of a popular song, comic songs with accompanying on screen action were common subjects. In many case the sound on a record survives but the accompanying film footage is long lost. Often they took a popular record of the day and filmed visual accompaniment to match the song. I have a record with a 1907 date that has a label pasted over it for the film company , it also has a large arrow showing where the projectionist would line up the phonograph needle to start the synchronization.

  • @hanschristianbrando5588
    @hanschristianbrando5588 Месяц назад

    They've been filming songs ever since sound movies. And don't forget Scopitone (a sort of video jukebox).

  • @zeitok8
    @zeitok8 Месяц назад

    Interesting, I am very interested in the topic since I grew up finding music through television, music videos, concerts, etc., for me the difference is very clear, the images produced and or edited intended to keep the music company are music videos , no matter the technique. or format, the difference is music videos from films and as part of larger narratives and as individual productions to accompany songs or musical pieces selected outside of a broad narrative (films), either for promotion or simply as artistic intention. When MTV came out, music videos were already very common in Europe, the United States and Japan, as far as I know.

  • @chuckz2934
    @chuckz2934 2 месяца назад

    Love it. Great work as always 🙏🏼

  • @RainaEmms
    @RainaEmms 2 месяца назад +1

    Watched it on Nebula. Here for the like. Can't wait for the next ep!\

  • @num1shinfan
    @num1shinfan Месяц назад

    Spooney Melodies
    Is what I always counted as the first music video. Because it wasn't just a musical performance or a peice of music in a wider work. And it wasn't just music set to imagery. It was that plus cuts of performers playing the song as well. It is a stand-alone, purposely made music video.
    Really surprised it wasn't mentioned

  • @joshuagibson2520
    @joshuagibson2520 2 месяца назад

    What a great presentation this was.

  • @leokimvideo
    @leokimvideo 2 месяца назад +1

    A music video clip that to me is one of the best is the Sia video for Chandelier. It is a surprisingly complicated 'simple looking' video that pulls you in and never gets boring. No matter how many times you watch it your going to not look away. Björk's Army Of Me is another stand out for all sorts of other reasons.

  • @macsnafu
    @macsnafu Месяц назад

    Right. It's important to define what a 'music video" is before you can point to the "first" one!

  • @PrettyboyAshtun
    @PrettyboyAshtun Месяц назад

    crazy how far these ideas were already in motion so many centuries ago.

  • @ALurkingGrue
    @ALurkingGrue Месяц назад +3

    I really hope the Monkees are brought up and Mike Nesmith.

  • @malfattio2894
    @malfattio2894 2 месяца назад +6

    I'm afraid to say that the early history of sound films is a lot more complex than what you mentioned here. Contrary to what you will often read online, sound films of songs with perfectly synchronised, amplified sound were a thing as early as about 1908 (the amplification bizarely using compressed air or other mechanical means rather than vacuum tubes). The limiting factor with these films was the audio quality, cost and practicality in terms of splitting the soundtrack of a film across multiple records.

  • @Jason_TCR
    @Jason_TCR 2 месяца назад +1

    love me a polyphonic series

  • @thatpaulschofield
    @thatpaulschofield 14 дней назад

    I am from the MTV generation. I was 11 years old when MTV launched in 1981.
    This is the first time I have ever heard a music video defined as anything other than a short film or video to promote a music recording. If it was not created to promote the recording featured in the short film, I would not consider it a music video.

  • @LynnHermione
    @LynnHermione 2 месяца назад +4

    You're telling me the original music video was... a lyrics video

  • @Mavisdundundunnnmanston
    @Mavisdundundunnnmanston 6 дней назад

    I'm incredibly disappointed you didn't mention King of Jazz. They are at least the first compilation of music videos

  • @bernhardkrickl3567
    @bernhardkrickl3567 2 месяца назад +2

    Imo for a music video the music comes first. You have a song, or piece of music, that already exists and was created to stand on its own. Then you produce a video as a way to enhance the experience of this piece of music. The video may tell and refine the story already in the lyrics, it may add a story, it may just try to match the mood of the music, it may just show the musicians, whatever. But it should be a video as you said, i.e. moving pictures, not a collage of still images. If I understand the term correctly, still images or more abstract art shown to accompany music are sometimes called "visualizers". Then there's also the lyric video which I would distinguish from the music video because its primary concern is to show the lyrics, not to enhance the experience of the song.

  • @seanshea8596
    @seanshea8596 Месяц назад +1

    7:25 WHAT is this amazing Music Typewriter I see here? any names?

  • @JustforNow-ty5zt
    @JustforNow-ty5zt 2 месяца назад

    5:18 I never expected to see the thumbnail of a Man Carrying Thing video in a Polyphonic video.

    • @SamAronow
      @SamAronow Месяц назад

      Man Carrying Polyphonic

  • @jsimon
    @jsimon Месяц назад

    If you were to ask what the first music video was or how to define it, I believe it should be any visual production created in an effort to support an earlier made audio track's sales. Many of the examples given here were either made to go along with products or were lifted after the fact. The Bessie Smith film is probably the earliest proper example. In the modern age, I'd argue The Beatles were way ahead of the curve with "Penny Lane" and "Strawberry Fields Forever".

  • @TheTrumpReaper
    @TheTrumpReaper Месяц назад +2

    13:52 What is that cartoon that shows the "Isle of Jazz"? Disney?

    • @Solitaire001
      @Solitaire001 Месяц назад

      Per Wikipedia It was a Disney Silly Symphony Short named "Music Land" that was released in 1935. It features the Isle of Jazz and the Land of Symphony. It's the story of a romance between the son of the King of the Isle of Jazz and the daughter of the Queen of the Land of Symphony. The short is available to view on RUclips. Bit of Trivia: The short was written by Pinto Colvig, who the original voice of Goofy.

  • @yobruddah8920
    @yobruddah8920 2 месяца назад

    I remember my first time reading MTV's justification for giving the very first Lifetime Achievement VMA to the Beatles, which was that they "essentially invented the music video," and immediately calling BS. Now yes, music and video go way back (the earliest piece of synchronised audio-visual that we have, and probably the first ever made, is not of talking or street noise but of two dudes dancing to violin music) but even excluding the early technicality edge cases there's no real definition for "music video" you can craft that will let you tear out everything until you're down to 'Strawberry Fields Forever.' Even if you want to restrict it down to a thematically relevant promotional video for a single by a musical act then something like 'Travelin' Man' by Ricky Nelson gets there first before even their first single released to radio, let alone stuff like 'Penny Lane.'
    The VMAs just wanted to validate themselves as an awards show by giving something to the Beatles and that was the first idea they came up with. Which...I mean, they're the Beatles. You can do better than that.

  • @midchris
    @midchris 2 месяца назад

    I always thought of Sinatra singing I’ve got you under my skin it was like this demo take I believe but it was shown in tvs and other things

  • @welcometonebalia
    @welcometonebalia 2 месяца назад

    Great idea, thank you.

  • @spooley
    @spooley 2 месяца назад +3

    MTV gets too much credit, The NewMusic on CityTV in Toronto started in 1979 and arguably did it better until it aged out

    • @juniorjames7076
      @juniorjames7076 2 месяца назад +3

      Yeah, I would like to see more coverage of pre-MTV precursors.

    • @pun_dimen
      @pun_dimen Месяц назад

      @@juniorjames7076 Interesting idea for a video!

  • @Petch85
    @Petch85 2 месяца назад +1

    ok... the first MV is just as hard to pin down as the last MV.

  • @Steinwelt
    @Steinwelt 2 месяца назад

    Finally another Polyphonic Series :)

  • @isaacness2647
    @isaacness2647 2 месяца назад

    Illustrated song is closer than a totp performance at least for me

  • @Sneakycat1971
    @Sneakycat1971 2 месяца назад +4

    A soundie is a three-minute American musical film displaying a performance. Soundies were produced between 1940 and 1946 and have been referred to as "precursors to music videos".[1] Soundies exhibited a variety of musical genres in an effort to draw a broad audience. The shorts were originally viewed in public places on "Panorams": coin-operated, 16mm rear projection machines. Panorams were typically located in businesses like nightclubs, bars, and restaurants. Due to World War II, Soundies also featured patriotic messages and advertisements for war bonds. More adult shorts, such as burlesque and stripteases, were produced to appeal to soldiers on leave.[1]

  • @fromchomleystreet
    @fromchomleystreet Месяц назад

    The erroneous but popular idea that the modern music video as we now understand it began with the advent of MTV is myopically American-centric. In August 1981, MTV, and by extension the US, arrived very late to the music video party that had already been going for some time, globally speaking.
    The first video shown on MTV was the Buggles’ “Video Killed the Radio Star” by British band the Buggles. But by that point, the video and the single it accompanied were already more than two years old. Music videos had been a standard part of the promotion of singles for years at that point in Europe and Australia. Of the first ten music videos broadcast on MTV, six are British.
    The “second British Invasion” that occurred in the early eighties - whereby new British bands dominated the American charts again, as they hadn’t done since the 60s - resulted in part because when MTV started there was an enormous supply of British music videos available to them, and relatively few American ones, and they needed to fill their schedule. It took American acts a while to catch up to what (to them, but not to the foreign bands with which they were competing) was a new way of doing business.

  • @allanr9163
    @allanr9163 2 месяца назад +3

    If we're talking actual music videos and not videos-that-also-have-musical-numbers, probably the stronger case is actually for the Beatles.
    They recorded what could be recognized as proper modern music videos to send to stations once touring/traveling became too much of a burden for them. Paperback Writer and Rain are two specific examples that come to mind (IIRC, they were a favour to Ed Sullivan but other stations received copies as well)

  • @PadmeP
    @PadmeP 2 месяца назад

    I wonder how similar this series will be to the 1986 BBC History of the Music Video by John Peel and John Walters.

  • @raycochrane3971
    @raycochrane3971 9 дней назад

    From the early 70s in Sydney, Australia, Saturday morning TV shows were set up & did nought but play music videos, frequently segments of things like Mad Dogs & Englishmen, live concert songs by Wishbone Ash etc. with an occasional interview or in studio performance. Sounds Unlimited which later became Sounds, Tubes was another. Flashez on the public broadcaster in the after school hour etc. MTV wasn't a serious thing here and it was, well & truly a concept, apart from the program length, usually two or three hours here until all Saturday morning with Beat Box and midnight until dawn with RAGE, that was explored without the Corporation Culture. Like so many things the US takes its involvement in something as the beginning & end despite, history or reality. Nevertheless, you videos recounting a somewhat jaundiced history, are good.

  • @singlesideman
    @singlesideman Месяц назад

    No, it has to do with intention, the function of the work, and a context of many others doing the same, and strictly speaking, there is a first music video, and it is 'Video Killed the Radio Star'. There's no reason for this video. A music video has to be a standalone film made expressly to accompany a song or other piece of music, and frankly, it has to be commercial and made to promote the song, and be one of many made by others for that same purpose. You might be able to count the short film made to accompany 'Bohemian Rhapsody' or some of the same made in the sixties like the one for 'Sunny Afternoon' by The Kinks or the ones by The Beatles, but again, they weren't conceived as music videos, which are a whole commercial art form conceived by multiple people simultaneously as a way to promote commercial music which occurred for the first time during the birth of MTV. A handful of promotional music films preceding that doesn't really count. They're outliers. No one knew what a music video was when these short music promotional films were made during the sixties because music videos didn't exist yet. 'Video Killed the Radio Star' was the first video. It was conceived as being a part of what was then a new commercial art form, part of a canon of similar examples.

  • @resilientcomposer
    @resilientcomposer Месяц назад +1

    Dude, are you from Canada?

  • @HarvestStore
    @HarvestStore 2 месяца назад

    Great video.

  • @brandonpage7087
    @brandonpage7087 Месяц назад

    Nice to finally see you Polyphonic, & I gotta say, that you look absolutely nothing like I pictured, lol. All kidding aside, though, lol, I am looking forward to the rest of this series.

  • @Totally_Not_A_Pigeon
    @Totally_Not_A_Pigeon Месяц назад

    4:46 for a second I thought you were Vsauce. :)

  • @iquemedia
    @iquemedia 2 месяца назад +2

    i literally did a spit take when you said _SEVEN_

  • @gettyfanatic8860
    @gettyfanatic8860 2 месяца назад

    I want to see the next episode

  • @pauldecoster
    @pauldecoster 18 дней назад

    Was minstrelsy prominent in Canada as well?

  • @lawrenrich-nf3ni
    @lawrenrich-nf3ni Месяц назад

    Good new series

  • @tylerhackner9731
    @tylerhackner9731 2 месяца назад +2

    I want my polyphonic tv

  • @Obsessive_cartoon_drawer
    @Obsessive_cartoon_drawer 2 месяца назад

    I love this

  • @michaelrochester48
    @michaelrochester48 Месяц назад

    MTV indeed showed videos by black artists in the beginning but only black artists that were specifically rock artists because they did show John Butcher axis and Joan Armatrading and a couple others because they identified as ROCK artists and not RnB or Soul artists…

  • @qwe.2739
    @qwe.2739 2 месяца назад +1

    yes

  • @gatorsniper
    @gatorsniper 2 месяца назад

    14:20 is this from RKS free fall?

  • @fad23
    @fad23 2 месяца назад +1

    I thought of soundies

  • @DaMoocH916
    @DaMoocH916 Месяц назад

    I left once I realized this video considered video musical accompaniment the same as music promotional videos. They aren’t. And the suggestion that they somehow serve the same purpose is incorrect.
    Perhaps the Victorian opera paintings are music videos.
    Or perhaps media is widely ranging.

  • @ZOB4
    @ZOB4 2 месяца назад

    Hey, make sure you're taking care of you. I know you have to do what you have to do, but it looked like that mid-roll ad took a toll on you.

  • @ben5515
    @ben5515 2 месяца назад +1

    Big Yap, we know you want it to be Bob Dylan.

  • @johnarnehansen9574
    @johnarnehansen9574 2 месяца назад

    What about the first feature length film?..

  • @GABRIEL_CRAFT
    @GABRIEL_CRAFT 2 месяца назад +3

    No mention of Beatles 1965 - We Can Work it Out ? ... Well I guess strawberry Fields was much more like a video we imagine today 😊

    • @kristianmandell5194
      @kristianmandell5194 2 месяца назад +2

      Well, he did say that this was the first episode of 6 or 7. Maybe he is going to mention it later

  • @teceneka
    @teceneka Месяц назад

    Would Fleischer's 1924 Song Car-Tunes be music videos? Came before Steamboat Willie and the bouncing ball coinciding with lyrics is still seen today

  • @alexkuhn5078
    @alexkuhn5078 Месяц назад

    What qualifies a specimen as a music video? How about it being video as opposed to film?

  • @danielvazquez2923
    @danielvazquez2923 Месяц назад

    What's that cartoon at 0:40

    • @teceneka
      @teceneka Месяц назад +1

      1933 Betty Boop in Snow White, from the Fleischer's