Articles from: Music

Thru You

James Theophane Theo 11 March, 2009 11:37:AM

Thru You is some guy’s (KUTIMAN) fantastically executed album based on you tube clip edits.  The only thing that could make this more awesome is if this ran on the fly, generating the clips based on algorithm.  Great work though.

We’ve all gone donk crazy

Simon Gill Dr Gill 01 February, 2009 20:48:PM

OK that’s a slight exaggeration - donk has been doing the rounds on the ground floor ’stezzer’, but to little critical acclaim and to be honest it won’t be making its way into my record bag any time soon.

However with over 3,750,000 views and over 14,000 comments for this one song alone, the Blackout Crew have certainly caused an emotional reaction out there. In my, admittedly, romantic view, the fact that rave music continues to live on some 20 years after its inception, showing the inventive nature of the repressed working class grasping for their next chemical fueled hit of musical ecstasy at the weekend, cheers me up no end. As does how Donk and its white-boy Eminem inspired MCs continue the potent cultural connection between the North West of England and the downtrodden Motorcity of Detroit, Michigan (see Northern Soul if none the wiser).

And it’s good for us London based agencies to remember the UK isn’t a homogeneous nation of robots who each morning love a tasty bowl of muesli, a cup of cappuccino or similar from one of those high street coffee shops before gifting their “friends” on Facebook, chatting for hours on IM and then indulging in some brand worship on the marketing web.

Now where did I leave that other chip…

Footnote: You’ve got to love Wikipedia and it’s ability to keep expired ravers like myself up to date with the UK music’s myriad sub-genres of popular music.

Where have all the ideas gone?

Simon Gill Dr Gill 19 January, 2009 17:26:PM

The cover for LBiQ4

LBiQ4 - Death of the big idea?

In our jaunt through LBiQ 4 and it’s exploration of ideas; big and small, traditional and new, it’s clear completely new ideas are increasingly hard to find – if they ever existed in the first place. “There’s nothing new under the sun”, after all, as some crusty old fool once said. (I think we can be fairly sure he didn’t work in advertising.) As the web grows up, and is no longer the brave new world of unchartered possibilities it used to be 10 years back, we need to look back and recognise the patterns that were formed during that period of innovation, to identify the successes, and the failures, and to work with and from these in order to keep advancing.

In the thrust for The New it is important not to lose sight of a few simple facts. Check this year’s hot work: quizzes, games, viral films, soap operas, blogs and scrolling banners. Nothing new there, per se – these formats are now established, in some cases almost traditional - but all are succeeding today in 2008 by combining creative thinking with brand messages in novel and interesting ways that match and resonate with the passage of time and the changes that are happening in the world at large. 

Just as David Gunn says there are only 12 types of advertisement, a creative writing teacher might inform us of only 14 ways to start a novel, or seven types of plot; and a musician teaches us that there are only a set number of chords; we can surmise there are a limited number of interaction models in digital, a set number of viral types, and a comparable set of methods for online advertising.

So let’s stop sticking our noses up at ‘just another’ video site, or in-search-of viral film, or interactive scrolling banner, and look a bit deeper. There are ideas a plenty in the digital world - ideas that creatively stretch the main brand promise, trigger the all-important emotional hook, and ensure they are bloody well executed. Inventing new forms of communication is hard, and it’s not necessarily the job of a commercial creative. Don’t be afraid to use what you know already. It’s easier, simpler, and usually much more effective, to focus on mixing and matching known quantities in order to find creative digital ideas that work. 

Want some inspiration on finding big brand ideas? Take a read of Brand Marketing Manifesto, in which a feisty future-looking John Grant sets out a thesis for ideas and creates a framework based on eight cultural streams: innate emotional hooks that exist deep within our psyche and can be found in centuries of literature, film and music.

Me? I’m off to write a book on the 10 different types of viral. Stay tuned.