Tyler, the Creator shared the first glimpse of his upcoming project, “Cherry Bomb: The Documentary.” The 45-minute film is an in-depth look at the making of his 2015 album “Cherry Bomb.”
The trailer includes a handful of cameos from artists and friends, including Kanye West, Pharrell Williams, Lil Wayne, A$AP Rocky, ScHoolboy Q, among others. In the clip we see Tyler in the studio, conducting a string section, playing piano and recording verses.
Read More: The Flaming Lips New Video ‘How??’ Is a Colorful Bondage Trip – Watch
The doc was directed, shot, produced, and cut by Mikey Alfred and Illegal Civ Cinema. For fans of the rapper, it will be great insight into his process of creating an album. The first 10 minutes of the documentary will be screened at the Illegal Civilization’s tent at this weekend’s Camp Flog Gnaw Carnival, taking place at Los Angeles’ Exposition Park.
Aside from being a rapper,...
The trailer includes a handful of cameos from artists and friends, including Kanye West, Pharrell Williams, Lil Wayne, A$AP Rocky, ScHoolboy Q, among others. In the clip we see Tyler in the studio, conducting a string section, playing piano and recording verses.
Read More: The Flaming Lips New Video ‘How??’ Is a Colorful Bondage Trip – Watch
The doc was directed, shot, produced, and cut by Mikey Alfred and Illegal Civ Cinema. For fans of the rapper, it will be great insight into his process of creating an album. The first 10 minutes of the documentary will be screened at the Illegal Civilization’s tent at this weekend’s Camp Flog Gnaw Carnival, taking place at Los Angeles’ Exposition Park.
Aside from being a rapper,...
- 11/12/2016
- by Liz Calvario
- Indiewire
youtube.com
Professional wrestling and music videos have a long history, to say the least. Most timelines start in 1983, when Cyndi Lauper and Captain Lou Albano teamed up for the ‘Girls Just Want To Have Fun’ video, which catapulted both media forms into the the stratosphere. Lauper would reprise her wrestling links many more times, even going so far as to appear at multiple WrestleManias.
Ever since, a number of bands have tried their hand at incorporating pro graps into their clips, with varying degrees of success. Whether it is by including professional wrestlers in the story of the video, acting as wrestlers themselves or having tertiary performers play the roles, the similar nature of the two has proven a hit many times, if you’ll pardon the pun.
Because at the end of the day, professional wrestling and music videos are very similar. Both are in the business of storytelling,...
Professional wrestling and music videos have a long history, to say the least. Most timelines start in 1983, when Cyndi Lauper and Captain Lou Albano teamed up for the ‘Girls Just Want To Have Fun’ video, which catapulted both media forms into the the stratosphere. Lauper would reprise her wrestling links many more times, even going so far as to appear at multiple WrestleManias.
Ever since, a number of bands have tried their hand at incorporating pro graps into their clips, with varying degrees of success. Whether it is by including professional wrestlers in the story of the video, acting as wrestlers themselves or having tertiary performers play the roles, the similar nature of the two has proven a hit many times, if you’ll pardon the pun.
Because at the end of the day, professional wrestling and music videos are very similar. Both are in the business of storytelling,...
- 9/24/2015
- by John Bills
- Obsessed with Film
Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars
I’m going to start this review with a confession; I planned on doing it last weekend. Unfortunately, last weekend was Easter weekend and well, I’m not a Christian but, I honourably celebrated it as best as I could; right through from Good Friday to Easter Monday – it’s what Jesus would’ve wanted. At the time it was being streamed on the Odd Future website for free as a response to the album leaking ahead of release; a kind of damage control. Anyhow, once I’d sobered up the album was out, the stream was taken down and after a few play-throughs on Spotify my listening limit ran out.
So here I am reviewing the album thanks to a full-album-containing YouTube video because I’m that kind of music journalist. I would’ve bought it honest but overdrafts have a limit, you know? Anyway,...
I’m going to start this review with a confession; I planned on doing it last weekend. Unfortunately, last weekend was Easter weekend and well, I’m not a Christian but, I honourably celebrated it as best as I could; right through from Good Friday to Easter Monday – it’s what Jesus would’ve wanted. At the time it was being streamed on the Odd Future website for free as a response to the album leaking ahead of release; a kind of damage control. Anyhow, once I’d sobered up the album was out, the stream was taken down and after a few play-throughs on Spotify my listening limit ran out.
So here I am reviewing the album thanks to a full-album-containing YouTube video because I’m that kind of music journalist. I would’ve bought it honest but overdrafts have a limit, you know? Anyway,...
- 4/5/2013
- by Morgan Roberts
- Obsessed with Film
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