{"title":"Searching for Soul, Reframing the Pursuit of Capital: A Comparison of Kahlil Joseph’s and Derek Pike’s ‘I Need A Dollar’ Music Videos","authors":"J. O. Jackson","doi":"10.3828/msmi.2022.3","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Abstract:Two music videos were commissioned for Aloe Blacc’s breakthrough song ‘I Need A Dollar’ (2010). The Harlem, New York version directed by Kahlil Joseph adopts a split-screen technique, depicting an unnamed man negotiating the city’s busy streets while, at the same time, framing Blacc as a directionless musician singing wistfully at the window of a dilapidated flat. Derek Pike’s Las Vegas, Nevada version, on the other hand, portrays the singer as a struggling musician traversing the desert before – unexpectedly – winning the jackpot at a casino. This article explores two main lines of argument. Firstly, I explore how institutional and industrial contexts result in two distinguishable music videos, suggesting that although both versions are created in similarly professional and commercialised settings one video is produced within a more ‘independent’ environment. Secondly, I explore how two different music videos can emphasise or de-emphasise certain elements of a song’s content and meaning, drawing from Emily J. Lordi’s theorisation of ‘soul’ to suggest that the ‘soul music’ qualities of Blacc’s ‘I Need A Dollar’ record are emphasised when practitioners adopt a more ‘soulful’ approach to music video creation (Lordi, 2020).","PeriodicalId":41714,"journal":{"name":"Music Sound and the Moving Image","volume":"16 1","pages":"53 - 77"},"PeriodicalIF":0.5000,"publicationDate":"2022-07-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Music Sound and the Moving Image","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.3828/msmi.2022.3","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"0","JCRName":"FILM, RADIO, TELEVISION","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Abstract:Two music videos were commissioned for Aloe Blacc’s breakthrough song ‘I Need A Dollar’ (2010). The Harlem, New York version directed by Kahlil Joseph adopts a split-screen technique, depicting an unnamed man negotiating the city’s busy streets while, at the same time, framing Blacc as a directionless musician singing wistfully at the window of a dilapidated flat. Derek Pike’s Las Vegas, Nevada version, on the other hand, portrays the singer as a struggling musician traversing the desert before – unexpectedly – winning the jackpot at a casino. This article explores two main lines of argument. Firstly, I explore how institutional and industrial contexts result in two distinguishable music videos, suggesting that although both versions are created in similarly professional and commercialised settings one video is produced within a more ‘independent’ environment. Secondly, I explore how two different music videos can emphasise or de-emphasise certain elements of a song’s content and meaning, drawing from Emily J. Lordi’s theorisation of ‘soul’ to suggest that the ‘soul music’ qualities of Blacc’s ‘I Need A Dollar’ record are emphasised when practitioners adopt a more ‘soulful’ approach to music video creation (Lordi, 2020).
摘要:Aloe Blacc的突破性歌曲《I Need A Dollar》(2010)获得了两部mv的委托。卡里尔·约瑟夫(Kahlil Joseph)执导的纽约哈莱姆版采用了分屏技术,描绘了一个无名男子在城市繁忙的街道上穿梭,而与此同时,布莱克则被塑造成一个在一栋破旧公寓的窗户边惆惆地唱歌的漫无方向的音乐家。另一方面,德里克·派克(Derek Pike)在内华达州拉斯维加斯的版本中,把这位歌手描绘成一个苦苦挣扎的音乐家,穿越沙漠,然后意外地在一家赌场赢得了头奖。本文探讨了两个主要的论点。首先,我探讨了制度和工业背景如何导致两个不同的音乐视频,这表明尽管两个版本都是在类似的专业和商业化环境中创作的,但一个视频是在一个更“独立”的环境中制作的。其次,我探索了两种不同的音乐视频如何强调或不强调歌曲内容和意义的某些元素,从Emily J. Lordi的“灵魂”理论中得出,当从业者采用更“深情”的方法来创作音乐视频时,black的“I Need a Dollar”唱片的“灵魂音乐”品质就会得到强调(Lordi, 2020)。