Check out the Official Music Video for ‘White Jazz’ by Pop NoirΒ
Even to those who know Tokyo well, Harajuku and Shibuya can still feel like a dream. These crowded commercial districts are places where traditional Japanese iconography and international youth culture exist side by side. Every block contains arresting juxtapositions and fresh surprises. Pop Noir shot the clip for βWhite Jazzβ, their latest single, right in the middle of Shibuya, and theyβve captured the hallucinatory nature and sheer explosive energy of the neighborhood as well as any documentary filmmaker ever could.
But then the guys in Pop Noir know a thing or two about hallucinations. Twin brothers Joe and Luke McGarry have mesmerized audiences with their dizzy, shimmering, synth-spiked indie-pop since forming in the mid-β00s. Theyβre also accomplished, award-winning visual artists who specialize in matching musicians with graphics that amplify the strengths of their recordings. The McGarry twins have made memorable animated shorts for Guster, Desaparecidos, Hoodie Allen and Viceland, and theyβve guided the visual aesthetic of FYF Fest and Tenacious Dβs Festival Supreme.
A musical act with a resume like that can be expected to make intriguing videos, and Pop Noir has reliably delivered. The βWhite Jazzβ clip is a sequel of sorts to βDonβt Fool Yourselfβ, the groupβs otherworldly 2015 clip. In it, they cruise the deserted streets of Los Angeles in the early morning, singing the words to a camera in the dashboard as the city lights paint streaks on the windshield. With their deadpan expressions and moments of near-telepathic communication, the McGarrys are the stars of the video β but Los Angeles itself plays a critical supporting role. βDonβt Fool Yourselfβ captures Pop Noirβs adopted home city in all of its weird, bright, electrified color.
βWhite Jazzβ gives Tokyo the same treatment. This time, the McGarrys are pedestrians, not drivers (it would be difficult to ride through the bustling heart of Shibuya). But theyβre still side by side throughout the clip, occasionally trading glances, remaining impassive despite the spectacular surroundings. No matter how nonplussed they appear, theyβve given us plenty to see: crowded outdoor markets with t-shirts and paper lanterns, Shinto temples behind cyclone fences, giant life-sized dolls and dragon sculptures, graffiti and tall, featureless, concrete walls, and the sleek interior of Toyko underground trains. Itβs beautifully shot and wholly immersive, and itβs a perfect accompaniment to a marvelously moody song about miscommunication.






















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