Top40-Charts.com
Support our efforts,
sign up for our $5 membership!
(Start for free)
Register or login with just your e-mail address
Pop / Rock 15 January, 2021

Snuttock Releases A Pixelated New Music Video "Stay (Robot Mix)"

Hot Songs Around The World

APT.
Rose & Bruno Mars
435 entries in 29 charts
Die With A Smile
Lady Gaga & Bruno Mars
660 entries in 29 charts
The Emptiness Machine
Linkin Park
226 entries in 21 charts
Sailor Song
Gigi Perez
305 entries in 19 charts
That's So True
Gracie Abrams
317 entries in 21 charts
A Bar Song (Tipsy)
Shaboozey
775 entries in 22 charts
Birds Of A Feather
Billie Eilish
831 entries in 25 charts
Si Antes Te Hubiera Conocido
Karol G
305 entries in 13 charts
Bad Dreams
Teddy Swims
229 entries in 19 charts
Stargazing
Myles Smith
467 entries in 20 charts
Blinding Lights
Weeknd
1850 entries in 33 charts
Shape Of You
Ed Sheeran
1190 entries in 30 charts
Somebody That I Used To Know
Gotye & Kimbra
1147 entries in 32 charts
Abracadabra
Lady Gaga
55 entries in 23 charts
New York, NY (Top40 Charts) Every image on your screen is an assembly of tiny dots. If you're looking at videos in high resolution, it can be easy to lose sight of this. You might forget that you're staring at a crafty assembly of pixels - points of light that can be manipulated and rearranged by a skilled videographer. That's the magic of filmmaking: the wondrous illusion created by the continuous image. But singer Bryan Lee and multi-instrumentalist Christopher Lee Simmonds of dark electronic pop group Snuttock know all about phantoms, digital and otherwise. They're technological tricksters themselves, and their long history of creating alternate mixes demonstrates their understanding of rearrangement, manipulation, and juxtaposition. In the clip for the new and appropriately-titled Robot Mix of their 2020 single "Stay," they're showing us the pixels - and, remarkably, the more granular the images become, the more fascinating they get.

The original version of "Stay" was a departure for Snuttock: a gleaming, heartfelt synthpop song reminiscent of the most romantic '80s ballads. The mix highlighted the warmth of Lee's voice and the sweetness of his harmonies, and Simmonds supported him with some of the most straightforward and hooky music in the band's deep catalog. But no follower of Snuttock could have thought they'd leave it at that. Snuttock is accustomed to pushing their songs as far as they'll go - and on the Robot Mix of "Stay," they've taken their thoroughly pleasant pop song into a strange and processed future. The hooks are still present (and huge), and Lee's vocal retains its inviting quality. Yet the groove is harder, the synths twinkle brighter, and the backing vocals feel simultaneously more ghostly and more seductive. Snuttock has demonstrated their mastery of the art of the mix, and, through the act of creative rearrangement, discovered secrets buried in their tracks.

To realize their vision for "Stay," Snuttock and director Ernie Mosteller have enlisted the actress and model Alisa Baksheeva. In the smart, stylish, thought-provoking "Robot Mix" video, she's positively otherworldly and quite possibly manufactured: she floats through these beautiful frames impassively, wearing a skin-tight red turtleneck dress that takes on a near-plastic quality. In one arresting sequence, she poses in front of a chain-link fence that's in front of a giant chemical storage tank - everything and everyone seems android-like, futuristic, thoroughly hallucinatory. Baksheeva's performance is amplified by video effects that call attention to the pixels in the frames, and, by extension, the artificial quality of this image and video images in general. Never are those pixels any larger than when Mosteller's camera lingers on Lee, who dissolves into lines, right angles, and black and white squares as he's singing.






Most read news of the week


© 2001-2025
top40-charts.com (S6)
about | site map
contact | privacy
Page gen. in 0.4939921 secs // 4 () queries in 0.0041472911834717 secs


live