http://encyclopedia2.thefreedictionary.com/music+video
Music video, videotaped performance of a recorded popular
song, usually accompanied by dance or a fragmentary story and sometimes
employing concert footage. Typically three to five minutes long, music videos
frequently include quick cuts, stylizations, fanciful and often erotic imagery,
and computer graphics.
Originally vehicles for promoting singles, most music
videos are in the rock idiom. Although many examples of the genre feature the
macho rock stars and scantily clad dancers that have become cultural clichés,
certain music videos are notable for their cutting-edge techniques and artistic
innovations, and some of their directors have achieved auteur status.
The music video form was popularized by the MTV cable network (est. 1981) and
began to have wide popularity and influence in the early 1980s. By the 1990s
many hundreds of videos, representing a cross-section of musical forms—from
traditional to experimental rock, heavy metal to hip hop—were being produced
yearly. Although music videos have usually been aimed at a teenage audience,
many videos of ballads or "soft rock" songs are now directed at an older group
of viewers. Since shortly after their inception, the style and content of music
videos have strongly influenced advertising, television, film, and popular
culture as a whole.
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