There has been an awful lot of publicity about this music video including coverage on This Morning on Radio 4 and serious analysis on YouTube to the extent that you would have thought this was something akin to a new Beethoven symphony or painting by Turner. I am quite staggered that something that has gone out of it's way to shock has not really been criticised nor really held to under scrutiny.
It is quite intriguing that something like this should get such analysis and media attention when so much superior art simply slips under the radar. This is an artist about whom I had never heard before and whose work, by this effort, is pretty unexceptional. Yet there is an amazing amount of analysis being done almost on a frame by frame basis of this video with the imagery being referenced back to sources as disparate at the Bible and contemporary cinema. Clearly this has been made for purely shot value, the music having little real value and the extreme violence of the video aimed at provoking a reaction.
I get the issue of Black rights and the proliferation of guns in America yet the whole exercise seems pretty clumsy and extremely blatant. Is this that black artists can do these days when, in the past, similar issues have been dealt with so much better by the likes of Duke Ellington, Max Roach, Nina Simone and a wealth of country blues artists ?
Does a piece of art become more significant simply by pushing back the boundaries of taste and violence?
It is quite intriguing that something like this should get such analysis and media attention when so much superior art simply slips under the radar. This is an artist about whom I had never heard before and whose work, by this effort, is pretty unexceptional. Yet there is an amazing amount of analysis being done almost on a frame by frame basis of this video with the imagery being referenced back to sources as disparate at the Bible and contemporary cinema. Clearly this has been made for purely shot value, the music having little real value and the extreme violence of the video aimed at provoking a reaction.
I get the issue of Black rights and the proliferation of guns in America yet the whole exercise seems pretty clumsy and extremely blatant. Is this that black artists can do these days when, in the past, similar issues have been dealt with so much better by the likes of Duke Ellington, Max Roach, Nina Simone and a wealth of country blues artists ?
Does a piece of art become more significant simply by pushing back the boundaries of taste and violence?
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