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Category:    Home > Reviews > Music Videos > Pop > Rock > New Wave > Soul > Freddie DeMann’s Music Video Revolution Collection – Virtual Insanity (Guthy-Renker DVD)

Freddie DeMann’s Music Video Revolution Collection – Virtual Insanity (Guthy-Renker DVD)

 

Picture: C+     Sound: C+     Extras: C+     Videos: B-

 

 

The idea of bringing music and image together is as old as the silent film era and when sound came to film, everything from Musicals to short film Soundies resulted.  As Rock Music became more popular, so did concert films, Rockumentaries and other experimental concepts that eventually led to what we now know as a Music Video.  While a plethora of such titles arrived on VHS, Beta and 12” LaserDisc in the 1980s into the 1990s, the collections on DVD have not been as numerous.  A new series called Freddie DeMann’s Music Video Revolution is aiming to change that.

 

DeMann himself became a major force behind the scenes in the industry working with some of the top acts in the business, so he has decided to cull his connections and work to bring official collections of some of the most popular and influential Videos ever made together in a series of collections.  It is an idea whose time is long overdue.

 

Virtual Insanity is the first of what looks to be many installments in the series.  Some videos are here because they are highly popular, others because they are groundbreaking, innovative and influential.  Either way, even this first DVD crosses a good cross-section of genres and those clips include some with referential links:

 

 

Artist/Song/(Director)

 

George Michael – Faith (Andy Morahan)

Michael was at his solo height when he did this song was #1 for a month, remaining his biggest hit to date.  With its black and white images, the singer finally shed his Wham! days before several controversies ended his winning streak.

 

Madonna – Material Girl (Mary Lambert)

A video that stuck with the singer longer than she wished, the images contradicted the song’s ‘greedy gal’ lyrics all the way to her Marilyn Monroe tribute.  A key Video for the megastar, it proved that Like A Virgin was no fluke and she is still having hits to this day.

 

Duran Duran – Rio (Russell Mulcahy)

http://www.fulvuedrive-in.com/review/7854/Classic+Albums+%E2%80%93+Duran

One of several Videos shot on location that became classics and early staples of MTV; this is for the title song of the band’s huge hit breakthrough album.  They never made a better one and it is one of the earliest Videos to be widescreen.

 

Billy Idol – White Wedding (David Mallet)

The New Wave singer’s angry song about nuptials in hell became a signature tune and breakthrough (audiences were not as warm to Hot In The City) and along with his snarl, Idol’s voice and clothes made him a 1980s icon.  A big hit in its time.

 

Cyndi Lauper – Girls Just Want To Have Fun (Edd Griles)

http://www.fulvuedrive-in.com/review/6416/Cyndi+Lauper+%E2%80%93+She

The all-time classic video that put Lauper on the map, taking a song with a different meaning previous sung by a man, Lauper turned it into a Pop classic that is still being references, played and remade.  This filmed video is still great and epitomizes how great the MTV era was for such work.

 

David Bowie – Let’s Dance (David Mallet)

In his commercial 1980s peak, Bowie fans were not happy with his work at this point, but the records sold and this became one of the biggest hits he ever had, all the way down to its wild Video with breaking radios, his involvement with locals in another country and disturbing portrayals of class division and poverty.

 

a-ha – Take On Me (Steve Barron)

The all-time great Video that crossed live-action, animation and rotoscoping as a couple is separated by dimensions of the real world and a black and white comic strip come to life all the way to its Altered States-inspired ending, it remains popular, a classic, was recently referenced on Family Guy and no one has dared to try imitate it.

 

M.C. Hammer – U Can’t Touch This (Rupert Wainwright)

The obnoxious peak of the rise and fall of the flashy dancer/singer before his calamitous fall, Hammer was unhappy with the cut of the Video he got and re-edited the whole thing himself.  It worked, but his 15-minutes of fame would end much faster than anyone could have imagined considering how overplayed this was.

 

Pat Benatar – Love Is A Battlefield (Bob Giraldi)

The top Pop/Rock singer of the era had already been making Videos when she made the first clip ever to have dialogue and a narrative.  She even dances (to which she later said that made as much sense as Mr. Ed the horse dancing) but this was a breakthrough and forever changed Videos for the better.  It holds up very well too.

 

Billy Joel – Uptown Girl (Jay Dubin)

The great singer/songwriter/pianists tribute to Frankie Valli & The Four Seasons was one of the biggest of six hits from his An Innocent Man album, pairing him with then-wife Christie Brinkley, including Joel dancing (everyone was doing that by this point) taking place in a garage.  Not bad.

 

Jamiroquai – Virtual Insanity (Johnathan Glazer)

http://www.fulvuedrive-in.com/review/2712/Work+Of+Jonathan+Glazer+(Director

One of the few great classic Videos since the 1980s, we covered this in the excellent Work Of Johnathan Glazer DVD you can find at the link above.

 

TLC - Waterfalls (F. Gary Gray)

Played endlessly, it is now very sad to watch the clip by the now feature film director after the tragic death of ‘Left Eye’ Lopez, this was one of the first Videos to use digital effects so extensively and unlike later Videos, the applications make sense.  Not my favorite clip or song from the band, it is a most appropriate way to end this set.

 

 

The anamorphically enhanced 1.78 X 1 image includes new HD-produced introductions by the always likable Martha Quinn, one of MTV’s first-ever VJs and she is as energetic as ever and a real plus to this release.  The videos are either shown widescreen where applicable, or in most cases, the original 1.33 X 1 image is placed in the middle of the 1.78 X 1 frame.  This is good for widescreen TVs, but this also means less definition and we also get some aliasing errors.

 

That gives us three ways we have seen Rio (it is presented anamorphic when it shows up in the Classic Albums program we covered at the above link) and covers most of the 1.33 X 1 frame on the Capitol Records sets (unreviewed) they issued a few years ago.  The Lauper and Benatar Videos are on their respective DVD collections (Twelve Deadly Cyns.. and Choice Cuts, also both unreviewed) looking a little better there, but not being as HDTV friendly.

 

The Dolby Digital 5.1 mixes vary a little in quality, but are more about pushing the music in ambient ways into the channels than being multi-channel music.  Still, that is not bad for the most part and is better than just 2-channel sound, offered here as Dolby Digital 2.0 Stereo.

 

Extras on this volume include shuffle options, an interview by Quinn with DeMann, 1983 interview with Billy Idol and behind-the-scenes featurette on the making of Benatar’s Love Is A Battlefield that is not even on her Videos DVD!

 

The upcoming sets we look forward to seeing include One Hit Wonders highlights include 867-5309/Jenny by Tommy Tutone, Mickey by Toni Basil, 99 Red Balloons by Nena, Pop Muzik by M and Too Shy by Kajagoogoo.  Other volumes like Hungry Like The Wolf and Dancing In The Streets are now available, with Black Velvet and Free Your Mind in the planning stages.  We recommend starting with this disc and hope you enjoy as much as we did.

 

 

For the home page of the order site…

http://www.musicvideorevolution.com/

 

For more discs…

http://www.musicvideorevolution.com/products.php?pactvid=6fc9b572d9c6ic5on0

 

 

-   Nicholas Sheffo


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