Nirvana - Smells Like Teen Spirit
Nirvana were a band from Seattle, Washington who rose to fame in the early 90s in large part to their studio album 'Nevermind' which featured perhaps their biggest hit 'Smells Like Teen Spirit'.
The band consisted of drummer Dave Grohl, bass guitarist Krsit Novoselic and frontman Kurt Cobain.
Technical Aspects
Mise En Scene
The music video is set in a school gymnasium and is filled with everything you ordinarily expect to see in it, a basketball hoop, crowd seats etc.
Camera Work
Sound
The genre of the music played in the video is grunge, which is rather slurred and this is mirrored by the visuals.
At times during the song the lyrics are shouted which again incites chaos, the crowd cheer harder and more aggressively.
Editing
Kendrick Lamar - Alright
Kendrick Lamar is a rapper from Compton, California. Born in the late 80s he's writes often about growing up in an era rife with crime, corruption and the constant reminder that the threat of death is always waiting around the corner.
Technical Aspects
Mise En Scene
Props such as the police's cars and guns highlight their power and authority in the video, something which resonates throughout the video up until the dramatic climax where the subject of the film is shot a policeman who does so coldly with no remorse, this is highlighted by his emotionless expression and the fact that the act is carried out simply with his hands and without the prop of the gun which is a metaphor for the ease in which he murder's Kendrick's character.
Camera Work
The production is peppered with close-ups of props, in particular the camera focuses on the prop of the policeman's gun. It does toward the middle of the video and near the end of the video to highlight the impact of the police's physical authority in the street.
Sound
The production is peppered with close-ups of props, in particular the camera focuses on the prop of the policeman's gun. It does toward the middle of the video and near the end of the video to highlight the impact of the police's physical authority in the street.
Sound
The name and chorus of the song are extremely fitting, especially at the time the track dropped. It was during a time of racial and political unrest as essentially african americans were being unjustly murdered by the police.
The track ends in a similar fashion to the intro, Kendrick speaks as an ambient instrumental plays in the background which is effective as it contrasts with the upbeat tone of the song and reinforces the seriousness of the production.
One of the most apparent pieces of editing in this video is that the subject character is levitating throughout the video, this give the character a 'spiritual like' presence which with the theme of the video with young black men dying is apt.




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