kagablog

July 28, 2008

koos kombuis - reconciliation day

Filed under: koos kombuis, music — ABRAXAS @ 12:54 pm

ABOUT THE VIDEO

Music videos are probably the most important way bands market their albums. They’re giant, arty adverts. Which means they’re also expensive, and that every second of the final video product takes hours of shooting, and weeks of planning.

So they’re not traditionally made by websites, who’re better known for short clips of cats going to the toilet, or wobbly live music videos shot by some drunk dude with a cellphone camera.

But our professionally shot music video for Koos Kombuis’ politically charged new single, “Reconciliation Day” is different. This is broadcast quality stuff.

The song mourns the death of celebrated musician Taliep Petersen, and the failure of the new South Africa to deliver a better life for all. It’s taken from Koos’s controversial album, Bloedrivier, the original acoustic version of which was recorded by Channel24 in Koos’ lounge, back in 2007.

The video was filmed in a school hall and shows Koos singing “Reconciliation Day”, while the party on the dance floor below descends into chaos and violence.

“A production of this size – two days, multi-camera, dozens of extras, post-production – would usually cost tens of thousands of rands. The resources required are fairly staggering,” says the video’s director, filmmaker Richard Finn Gregory.

So did Channel24 throw money at the problem?
“What money? You don’t need much money to make a music video when you have the right friends,” says Channel24 editor Jean Barker.

Instead of splashing the cash, Koos put a call out on his 24.com blog, asking his fans to be extras in the video. Replies came in from dance students, school kids, professionals and artists. Channel24.co.za partnered with sister-paper Die Burger’s multimedia department to get it done at minimum costs. Friends of Channel24 pitched in, among them musicians Anton Marshall, Anthony Theunissen and Gerrit Aalbers, make-up artist Lily Bloom and wardrobe pro Cathi Trevor. Professional actors gave up two Saturdays to work free of charge. Even extra lighting equipment was donated, by Kinetic.

“In the end, there were over 60 people involved - most of them doing it purely for love - and, okay, a free signed Koos Kombuis CD,” Jean Barker says.

The video is currently exclusive to the web.

watch the video here

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