Sixty minutes of music therapy.
Laetitia Tamko (Vagabon) meditates on self-empowerment through movement and colored dreamscapes.
Birds is about a young woman’s escape from her own, mystical side, our relation to nature and about experiencing a contact with it beyond what we are capable to understand rationally.
"Above the Hiding" explores the journey to living a more authentic life.
A single day: from the tender break of dawn to the darkest night. One out of many days to come? Quite possibly the very last. A long farewell, an ultimate goodbye to a life we have grown to hold dear. Leading to a head-on dive into a new reality, into a new state of being.
This Wes Anderson inspired music video is filled with a comedic irony that develops a short story about letting go. Paired with Cavern Company's indie alternative single "Enough?" from their "So This Is Happiness EP" the lighthearted video keeps a high energy and delightfully entertaining feel from start to finish.
Two struggling fighters - a master and his student. A story of persistence, commitment, following your dream, and never giving up. Ever.
"My Baby's Gone" Steelwind's first single off their upcoming album, Blue, releasing June 2019.
Director J. Logan Alexander's music video "Tie Me To The Bed" for Los Angeles-based artist Joe Sparrow" is a descent into lust and desire, exploring the shadows of powerlessness and losing control.
Gary Clark Jr. is heading down the road of life and looking back to where he came from. Shot in black and white super35mm, 'Pearl Cadillac' showcases moonlight as the image of a mother's love.
Set in a futuristic supernatural world, Mike Jawz (Mike Muscala) takes on the evil nemesis and his underground crew, and tries to recapture the heart of his vigilante partner and love of his life (Albreuna Gonzaque). Along the way, the tables could turn in this 1940's film noir inspired music video.
Originally, Saci Pererê is an important character of the Brazilian folklore. In the original version he is a young one-legged black kid who smokes a pipe and wears a red cap that supposedly gives him magical powers. He is well known for being a prankster and extremely difficult to catch even with only one leg.
Although Saci is a playful, childlike, folklore character in Bahia (BaianaSystem state), the terms “Saci” or “Sacizeiro” are commonly used to refer to panic or drug abuse. “This creates a very thin line that is dangerous and destroys Saci's possibility to establish himself as a force, a light spirit of joy and typical inventiveness of the Brazilian imagination, which is linked to our ancestry”, completes the Bahian band.
"Our Saci Pererê is contemporary, urban, and bringing the protagonist closer to this image in which he has superpowers is an important analogy to this folk being and to our tradition".
These superpowers flirt a lot with the current artistic movement that occurs in Bahia today. Communion of love. BaianaSystem concerts are one of the best shows currently in Brazil. Full of energy, dance and circles that open and are driven by ordinary people who at that time represent the SACI. With superpowers or not, all of us Brazilians have a little of SACI inside.