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Directores de los VideoClips

Esta bueno en este topic poner info relevante a los directores d los clips de los peppers, e ir actualizando en este post.




Charlie
Director: Omri Cohen

Info: site- http://www.omricohen.com

Código:

On March 6, 2007 the Chili Peppers announced a contest for someone to direct a video for the song "Charlie" through their YouTube channel.[2] The video winner has been chosen, however, the song being released as a single is still unknown.
...On March 6, 2007 the Chili Peppers announced a contest for someone to direct a video for the song through their YouTube channel. On June 2, it was announced on the website that the winner was chosen and was informed, but the official announcement to who won was announced on June 18.[1] The winning video was released on their YouTube page. The winning director is Omri Cohen.The video is apparently of the band as kids as they travel through California in a red hippie van. Along the way the pick up an Indian, and end up at Venice Beach.



Hump de Bump
Director: Chris Rock

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Christopher Julius Rock III[5] (born February 7, 1965)[6][7] is an American comedian, actor, screenwriter, television producer, film producer and director. He was voted by Comedy Central as the fifth greatest stand-up comedian of all time.[8]


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The video was shot in late December 2006, and was directed by Chris Rock. The video takes place at a city block party (On the set of Everybody Hates Chris) with Chris Rock as himself, being kept out of his own block party by a security guard (Craig Robinson), while the band is playing the song at the party. Rock agreed to direct the video only if "They were the only white people in it."

The video leaked to the internet on March 9, and it officially first premiered in Australia on March 13, on Channel Seven's Sunrise program [3] and in America/Canada on March 14 on Total Request Live.[4]

Desecration Smile
Director: Gus Van Sant

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The music video was shot and released in February 2007 and directed by "Under the Bridge" director Gus Van Sant. It was shot entirely in one take with one camera and featured the band huddled together singing all the way through.

There is also an alternate version of the band singing and playing their instruments by the ocean cut together with parts of the official video.


Snow ((Hey Oh))
Director: Nick Wickham

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....in an interview, Tony Kaye, who also directed the video for "Dani California," told MTV he would be directing the video for the song. However, his footage wasn't used (pictures of this shoot can be seen here). Instead, Warner commissioned director Nick Wickham to shoot a new video showing the band at the 17 October and 18 October 2006 shows at Izod Center in New Jersey, along with black and white film of fans at the parking lot and lines at the live show. This video, which premiered early November 2006, can be watched on the band's official YouTube channel, here.




Tell Me Baby

Director: Jonathan Dayton and Valerie Faris

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The music video for "Tell Me Baby" was directed by Jonathan Dayton and Valerie Faris, a directing duo that has worked on many other Chili Peppers videos. Flea has stated "It is the best [video] we ever did."[1] For the video, Dayton and Faris interviewed and auditioned people who originally came to California to achieve some sort of fame and people who play music just for the sake of playing music. During the callback for the auditioned people, their second audition was filmed and the members of the Chili Peppers surprisingly entered the room during auditions to join in playing along. The music video for Tell Me Baby is to represent how awkward auditions are and how hard it is to make it in the music business. It also shows the lighter more enjoyable side of music if you make it or when you're just playing for fun.


Dani California
Director: Tony Kaye


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Tony Kaye (born 1952, London, UK) is a director of films, music videos, advertisements and documentaries.

Kaye is a prolific director of music videos, including the video for "Runaway Train" by Soul Asylum, which won a Grammy Award; "Dani California" by Red Hot Chili Peppers; "What God Wants" by Roger Waters; and "Help Me" and "God's Gonna Cut You Down" by Johnny Cash.

His only feature film to date is American History X (1998), a drama about racism. Kaye was not happy with the film as released, claiming that co-star Edward Norton re-edited the film to give himself more screen time.[1] He attempted to remove his name from the credits and use the traditional pseudonym Alan Smithee. After the producers, New Line Cinema, told him to pick a different name, he chose Humpty Dumpty.[2] The Directors Guild of America ultimately denied Kaye the right to remove his name from the production, on the grounds that he had placed ads in Variety magazine attacking the film, thus violating Guild rules regarding the right to invoke the Smithee pseudonym. Kaye proceeded to sue the Directors Guild and New Line Cinema, claiming they had violated his First Amendment rights. Despite Kaye's disowning of the film, it proved commercially and critically successful.

In 2005 and 2006, Kaye was attached to a feature film called Reaper, but left the project after several months due to creative differences.[citation needed] He is currently completing his second feature film, Black Water Transit.

Kaye has also made documentaries, including a self-financed documentary on anti-abortion campaigns in the United States, Lake of Fire, which opened in Toronto to widely positive reviews in September 2006.


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The music video for "Dani California" premiered on MTV on April 4, 2006. Directed by Tony Kaye (who was only accepted after initial choice, Mark Romanek declined), director of American History X, the video is a quasi-chronology of the evolution of rock music; the band performs the song on a stage, but in a variety of outfits representing important figures and movements in the history of rock music.[4]

Flea affirmed that "[The band] mainly did eras, not actual people: rockabilly, British Invasion, psychedelia, funk, glam, punk, goth, hair metal, grunge, and ourselves being the sum of all those parts."[4] The video finishes with the Red Hot Chili Peppers as themselves again, occasionally flashing back to the imitated artists featured earlier in the film. While the band's appearance was intentionally generic in each scene, obvious nods were made to certain specific artists, including Elvis Presley, The Beatles, Jimi Hendrix, George Clinton and Bootsy Collins, David Bowie, Sex Pistols, The Misfits-era Glenn Danzig, Mötley Crüe, and Nirvana.[9]

The video received seven nominations at the 2006 MTV Video Music Awards, but only won the award for Best Art Direction, failing to win its six other nominations for Video of the Year, Best Group Video, Best Rock Video, Best Direction, Best Editing and Best Cinematography. The video was also nominated for an MMVA for best international video.


Fortune Faded
Director: Laurent Briet


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Wiki:
"Fortune Faded" is a song by the Red Hot Chili Peppers. It was released in 2003 as a single, to coincide with the release of their Greatest Hits album. The song, along with "Save the Population" (another song from their Greatest Hits), was recorded at The Mansion and produced by Rick Rubin. A music video was also produced.



info:
Sitio de Laurent relacionado con Fortune faded

Can't Stop
Director: Mark Romanek

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Mark Romanek (born September 18, 1959) is an award-winning American music video director who has also moved into directing theatrical films.


Info: Romanek Site

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The Mark Romanek-directed music video for the single features all four of the band members doing seemingly random and excessively abstract actions such as holding lots of water bottles or attempting to balance buckets on their heads.
It begins with the camera swooping perilously through a yellow tube to Anthony Kiedis, wearing glasses,and is subsequently followed by the foursome running through a hall with light fixtures attached to their backs. The band engages in various activities, such as: wearing a giant purple hippopotamus mask, playing with rubber balls, jumping, abstract scenes with boxes, buckets, water bottles, trash cans, flying through the air, pink foam peanuts, plants, playing guitar in a room full of empty blue chairs/room with lamps turning on and off. At the conclusion stands a lone sign printed in white letters arranged with the phrase "Inspired by the 'One-Minute Sculptures' of Erwin Wurm".

At certain segments of the video, one can see guitarist John Frusciante playing an orange Toronado, which is unlike his style due to the fact that he only plays vintage guitars (the Toronado being under five years of age). Frusciante later affirmed that he was instructed to play the guitar by director Mark Romanek as it blended well with the color scheme used in the video, he also admitted that he never actually was playing the guitar.[6]

Inspiration for the video was attributed to Austrian artist Erwin Wurm.[7] The lighting was positioned in order to provide a clean-cut, contemporary atmosphere which would integrate with the video's concept.[7] Orange was chosen to be the backsplash color by Romanek. His creative hand attempted to mirror Wurm's abstract "One Minute Sculptures", by having the band perform random scenes, which seem to fit no purpose. However, in retrospect, they were not intended to be anything more than arbitrary actions, fitting with the ideas expressed in Wurm's work.



Otherside, Californication, Road Trippin', By the Way, The Zephyr Song
Director: Jonathan Dayton and Valerie Faris





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Jonathan Dayton (born 7 July 1957 in Alameda County, California) and Valerie Faris (born 20 October 1958 in Los Angeles County, California) are an award-winning team of music video directors, also husband and wife who received critical acclaim for their feature film directorial debut, 2006's Little Miss Sunshine.


Info: Jonatahn
y Valerie


Sobre Californication:
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Californication is a unique video in that it takes the form of a video game from the point of view of the player. The video itself bears resemblance to many games, including Tomb Raider, Grand Theft Auto, Crazy Taxi, Panzer Dragoon, SSX, Resident Evil, Tony Hawk's Pro Skater, and the railcar level of Donkey Kong 64.

The following statistics are presented for each member of the band at the beginning of the video.
/ Anthony Chad Flea John
Strength 18.9 19.8 19.2 18.6
Stamina 19.2 19.4 19.5 19.2
Agility 19.6 19.2 19.3 19.5
Charisma 19.5 18.8 18.5 19.6
Rhythm 18.8 19.9 19.8 18.9
Vocals 20.0 - - -
Drums - 20.0 - -
Bass - - 20.0 -
Guitar - - - 20.0

Guitarist John Frusciante starts off on the Hollywood Walk of Fame. He bumps into a celebrity, and jumps over three security guards, then picks up an asterisk. The action pauses and cuts to a shot of the band playing on top of a hill for a few seconds. This happens each time a band member picks up an asterisk, which is the logo of the band.

Chad Smith, the Chili Peppers' drummer, is seen snowboarding down Mount Tahoe (although he has never ridden a snowboard in real life). He falls into a ravine, but lands on a train.

Lead singer Anthony Kiedis starts off swimming in an ocean off the Channel Islands, passing sharks and swimmers and picks up an asterisk. He gets out riding a shark and lands in his car. The registration plate on the car says "GERMS", which is a reference to The Germs, the band that Kiedis listened to as he grew up.

Flea, the bassist, is seen in Muir Woods, and is about to pick up an asterisk, but he can't get past a bear guarding it, although he helps it out by kicking down a hunter about to shoot it. He goes on a mine-cart ride, and goes to another asterisk, but it's guarded by a pregnant teen (Dani of Dani California and By the Way, also mentioned in this song as "getting high on information"). He then gets surrounded by a horde of lumberjacks, but he jumps on top of a tree and sees all the other trees fall.

Meanwhile, John goes to a movie set, and ducks and weaves through a sci-fi film, a porno, and stops in a set apparently filming a biographical film about Leonardo da Vinci (John has an interest in da Vinci and his works). He sees a theorized flying machine being used.

Chad is meanwhile seen snowboarding on the Golden Gate Bridge, using it as a grind rail.

Anthony is in the same scene, driving around San Francisco. He drives underwater, and then jumps through the hole of a giant doughnut (A reference to Randy's Donuts shop in LA) His car falls off a cliff and he lands on a giant dragonfly, being harnessed by Flea, who rides it to the sky, where John is riding the da Vinci flying machine, and Chad is doing snowboarding tricks. Anthony eventually falls off, and lands in a poppy field, and the flowers grow huge, but he finds an asterisk.

Much later, there is a big earthquake, and a city is falling apart. All the band members narrowly escape death from falling buildings and car crashes. The video ends with all the band members falling into the center of the earth, finding a cube, touching it, and turning from computer graphics to real people. (Flea falls through an asterisk while falling to the center of the Earth)

The video is directed by the prolific husband-wife directorial team Jonathan Dayton and Valerie Faris.

There is a link between this video clip and the experience of relapsing into a drug addiction that Anthony describes in his book, Scar Tissue:

"... The chase is always exciting. There are cops and bad guys and freaks and hookers. You're diving into a big insidious video game, but again, you're being tricked into thinking that you're doing something cool, since the price is always bigger than the payoff. You immediately give up your love and your light and your beauty, and you become a dark black hole in the universe, sucking up bad energy and not walking around putting a smile on someone's face..."


Sobre Otherside:
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The video was directed by Jonathan Dayton and Valerie Faris in a black-and-white/monochrome Gothic style similar to Robert Wiene's The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari, all influenced by German Expressionist art. Elements of Cubism and work by the graphic artist M. C. Escher are also seen in the video.

A cartoonish story line is juxtaposed upon the song; that of a young man's dream sequence. The band members appear dressed in black in unusual locations, with props intended to appear as surreal instruments. Throughout the video Anthony Kiedis with his short, platinum hair is seen in a castle tower. His stage persona is different and quite dark when compared to his more energetic performances in other videos. John Frusciante plays a rope down a long corridor as if a guitar, although reluctant wanting just to play his guitar normally. Flea is hanging on telephone wires and playing them as if they were a bass guitar, and Chad Smith is up on a tower with a rotating medieval clock that serves as his drum kit.

Jonathan Dayton: "We did look at Caligari, and we looked at a lot of German Expressionist film. But it was also very important to avoid 'Caligari.' It was both inspiration and something to work around, because it has such a strong, specific style, and there have been other videos that have completely ripped it off."

Valerie Faris: "We didn't look at 'Calagari' all that much, really. We did, but then we just left it. We did look at a lot of the works of the futurist artists from the '30s, and the illustrations of the surrealists and from cubism. We were inspired more by paintings than by films…"


Sobre Road Trippin':
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"Road Trippin'" is one of the few Red Hot Chili Peppers songs not to feature drums in any way. As such, Chad Smith only appears briefly at the end of the video, arriving in a boat.


Sobre By The Way:
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The frenetic video was directed by Jonathan Dayton and Valerie Faris, a couple who has collaborated with the band to create music videos on numerous other occasions. It is not a visual verbatim demonstration of the lyrical denotations, but rather a story all its own.

The video starts off with Anthony calling for a taxi. He gets in the taxi and a cabbie realizes he has Anthony as his passenger and puts a copy of the "By the Way" single into the CD player to please him, making Anthony smile mildly. Suddenly, the cabbie begins to be out of control as he lip-synchs the song loud and clear and begins to accelerate the taxi faster and faster and drive rambunctiously throughout the streets of L.A. after locking the car door, which makes Anthony uncomfortable and apprehensive. Anthony attempts to call on his cell phone, but the cabbie brakes so hard Anthony loses grip of his cell phone and the cabbie snatches it and throws it out of the window. The cabbie drives Anthony even more crazy as he drives the car in a cloud of dust and backs up under a bridge [Fans might think that it is the bridge that Anthony talked about in the song, "Under the Bridge"]. While under the bridge, the cabbie pulls out flare sticks and begins to torture him through awkward dancing while Anthony finally pages Flea and John, who are having lunch in a cafe, which says "Help! I've been kidnapped." At first John and Flea thinks it a hoax so they ignore the first message, then when Anthony pages them for the second time, Flea and John set out on Flea's Ford Bronco to find Anthony once again with the crazy cabbie in the taxi and begin a wild chase and even having some road rage. Anthony soon sees them, and breaks out of the taxi window and jumps in Flea's truck with a sigh of relief as the Chilis drive on another road to escape the cabbie. At the end, Chad calls for the taxi, and the cabbie realizes that he is a member of the Chilis too, so he drives off [the window that was broken was not shown intact] with him.

* If you look closely, you can see the word "Jammin'!" on the cabbie's shirt.
* The bridge that Anthony gets driven under may be the one he sang about in the song, "Under the Bridge" where he struggled with drugs and almost ended his life.
* The book that Anthony holds in his hand at the beginning is Lexicon Devil which is a biography of his earlier influence, The Germs.


“ It’s kidnapping… A cab driver kidnaps me and just goes haywire through the town; he’s a fan, but he’s kind of a (pause) obsessive, compulsive, psychologically misarranged fan, and he sees me and starts enjoying himself a little too much and my friends have to come and rescue me. ”

Anthony Kiedis – The Making of: By the Way; Greatest Hits.

The fast and often jerky camera angles used in the high speed chase sequences are based on the 2000 Mexican film Amores Perros in which all the characters are linked by a car crash at the beginning of the film, before the crash is an almost identical high speed car chase sequence.


Sobre The Zephyr Song:
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The music video, released on December 3rd, 2002, was directed by Jonathan Dayton and Valerie Faris. The couple has collaborated with the band on numerous other videos. It is generally suggestive and reminiscent of a kaleidoscope, by utilizing the same circular and intertwining figures in order to illustrate the psychedelic feel the band was aiming for.
“ John [Frusciante] and Flea wanted something incredibly, just kind of obscure and psychedelic. Finding true psychedelia in this day and age is really hard to do, because everyone wants to rely on computers and all the stuff that really doesn't know how to find the core of psychedelia. So I had my reservations, but, uh, there are some moments in this video where I think it's captured[1] ”

Scar Tissue, Around The World
Director: Stéphane Sednaoui

Scar Tissue:
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The video for "Scar Tissue", was directed by Stephane Sednaoui, who also directed the video for Give It Away.

The opening shot is of John Frusciante driving, a metaphor for Frusciante's return and ascension to musical leadership of the band (he does not drive in real life). But the four of them are battered, beaten, and bandaged. They are traveling in a rusty wreck and playing broken instruments on the comeback trail. The video ends after an emotional thirty second Frusciante guitar solo at the moment of sunset, with John tossing the broken guitar from the car.


Around The World:
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A music video was made for the song, directed by Stéphane Sednaoui, who had previously made videos for other Chili Peppers songs such as "Breaking the Girl", "Scar Tissue" and "Give It Away". The latter in particular, with its unique, chaotic visual style, is similar to "Around the World". The video was featured on Making the Video.


Love Rollercoaster
Director: Kevin Lofton

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Their version appeared on the soundtrack of the animated film Beavis and Butt-head Do America. There was also an animated music video that was made for the song, featuring Beavis, Butt-head, and the band riding an amusement park roller coaster, intercut with scenes from the film. The song is played early in the movie itself, when Beavis and Butt-head arrive in Las Vegas. In the dance hall scene, a fictional funk band is shown performing the song live (the one appearing on the background of the single cover).


Mas Info: En KevinaTv->KevinaTvInfo ->Reel:
http://www.kevina.tv
+info:Here
AndHere


My Friends (1st version)
Director: Anton Corbijn

Código:
Anton Corbijn (pronounced [kɔrˈbɛin]) (born May 20, 1955) is a photographer and director from Strijen, the Netherlands. He is also well known for directing music videos, including Depeche Mode's "Personal Jesus" (1989) and the award-winning video of Nirvana's "Heart-Shaped Box" (1993), as well as directing the award-winning Ian Curtis biopic Control.

He is widely acknowledged by the music industry, mainly for being the creative director of the visual output of prominent bands like Depeche Mode and U2, having handled the principal promotion and sleeve photography for both for more than a decade.


Site: http://www.corbijn.co.uk

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...The surreal music video depicts the band in many incarnations on a small boat, stranded in a large stretch of treacherous water. This video was directed by Anton Corbijn. Anthony Kiedis admits that he thought this video wasn't very good, as it wasn't realistic.



Warped, Aeroplane, Coffee Shop, My Friends (2nd Version)
Director: Gavin Bowden

My Friends (2nd version)

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They had a second video recorded for the song, directed by Gavin Bowden, where they were in a studio. The latter can be seen on their Greatest Hits DVD and on the band's YouTube account, although many fans still prefer the original version.


Aeroplane:
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... It was the third single released from the album and a music video accompanied its release. Although the song was left off the band's Greatest Hits CD, the music video was included on the accompanying DVD.
In the music video, the band are seen with some girls on trapezes, in a pool, and even on steps (despite their habit of blowing bubble gum throughout the video.)
The song features Flea's daughter Clara and the rest of her kindergarten class singing in the song's outro. They were also featured in the music video dressed as aeroplanes.

Children who sing on Aeroplane (also known as "The Aeroplane Kids")

* Clara Balzary
* Bailey Reise
* Askia Ndegéocello
* Vishos Natidino
* Nadia Wehebe
* Sarabeth Kelly
* Matthew Kelly
* Phillip Greenspan
* Perry Greenspan
* Matthew Deyo
* Veronica Twigg
* Remy Greeno
* Jaclyn Dimaggio
* Heyley Oakes
* Nikolai Giefer
* Taiana Giefer
* Nina Rothburgh
* Sheera Ehrig
* Jade Chacon


Coffee Shop:
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"Coffee Shop" is a song by the Red Hot Chili Peppers from their 1995 album, One Hot Minute. It is the fifth track on the album and was released as its fourth single with a promotional music video in 1996.


Soul to Squeeze
Director: Kevin Kerslake

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The music video for "Soul to Squeeze" was directed by Kevin Kerslake and features Chad, Flea and Kiedis in a stereotypical circus. The circus includes various "freaks" including "The Conehead", a reference to the film the song appeared in playing in and amongst all the acts. It is shot in black and white. Though John Frusciante does play guitar in this song, he is not visibly featured in the video as he had quit the band in 1992. In the video someone in his likeness wears a large black hat and can be seen at the end of the table in the video.

Originally, the video was supposed to feature the band playing spliced with footage from the film Coneheads, but The Chili Peppers refused this idea. Another scrapped music video idea had the band playing in the desert after a car accident. This version was meant to have a connection to the afterlife.

Código:
Kevin Kerslake is an American music video director. He has directed videos for Stone Temple Pilots, Filter, 311, Faith No More, Green Day, Depeche Mode, The Smashing Pumpkins, Papa Roach, Nirvana, Rise Against, The Offspring, and many other bands.

His most recent work is directing the video for Atreyu's Becoming the Bull off of the album Lead Sails Paper Anchor.


Mas Info: kevin's page
y mas


Behind the Sun
Director: Charlie Paul

Código:
...A video was also made in 1992 combining animation and footage from the "Higher Ground" video. Guitarist Hillel Slovak plays the sitar in this song.


Mas Info donde labura Charlie (en ItchFilm):
Here



Breaking The Girl
Director: Stéphane Sednaoui

Código:
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The music video was released in 1992 and was directed by Stéphane Sednaoui, who had previously made the video for the song "Give It Away". It makes heavy, experimental use of vibrant colors, with the background and costumes changing constantly. The Chilis themselves also adopt surreal appearances and behavior, with Kiedis for example having an overall Princess Leia-esque look, complete with robes and a "donut" hairstyle. The "Breaking the Girl" video is one of only two videos to feature Arik Marshall (who briefly acted as a replacement for guitarist John Frusciante) the other video being for "If You Have to Ask" - though he didn't play on either track. The video also features a brief cameo by River Phoenix, who was good friends with members of the band. The woman in the video is played by model/actress Patricia Velasquez.

The song was put on their Greatest Hits compilation, but the music video was not put on the DVD. The most likely explanation is that it featured Arik Marshall rather than Frusciante, who had quit the band early in 1992.




Suck My Kiss
Director: Gavin Bowden

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Plum Productions officially announced the addition of director Gavin Bowden to the roster today. Well established in the music video world, Bowden has directed clips for Red Hot Chili Peppers, Rage Against The Machine and Matchbox 20. Most recently, Bowden directed a series of interstitial spots dubbed The Courier that aired on CBS and featured the Pontiac Torrent SUV. He's currently in pre-production for a Wal-Mart spot.

Info:
here
AndHere

Under the Bridge
Director: Gus Van Sant

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Wiki:
Gus Green Van Sant, Jr.[1] (born July 24, 1952) is an American film director, photographer, musician, and author. He was nominated for the Best Director Academy Award for his 1997 film Good Will Hunting. He currently lives in Portland, Oregon.

His early career was devoted to directing television commercials in the Pacific Northwest. Openly gay,[2] he has dealt unflinchingly with homosexual and other marginalized subcultures without being particularly concerned about providing positive role models.

His filmography as writer and director includes an adaptation of Tom Robbins' novel Even Cowgirls Get the Blues, which features a diverse cast (Keanu Reeves, Roseanne Barr, Uma Thurman, and k.d. lang, with cameos by William S. Burroughs and Heather Graham, among others); and My Own Private Idaho, also starring Reeves as well as the late River Phoenix (Van Sant also planned to direct a biographical film about Andy Warhol with Phoenix in the lead role, but canceled the project after Phoenix's death). He is perhaps best known for directing Good Will Hunting.

He wrote the screenplays for most of his early movies, and wrote one novel, Pink. [3] A book of his photography has also been published, called 108 Portraits.[4]


Give It Away
Director: Stéphane Sednaoui

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Stéphane Sednaoui (born in Paris, France) is a French photographer and director.
...Sednaoui achieved success as a fashion, journalist and advertising photographer before his photographs of entertainment celebrities brought him further attention in the early 1990s. Among his subjects were Bjork, Madonna, Kylie Minogue, Claire Danes, Liv Tyler, Courtney Love, Salma Hayek, Richard Pryor, Robert Mitchum and Billy Wilder. From the early 1990s he also directed music videos.

A compilation of Sednaoui's music videos and short films, the Directors Label "Work of Director: Stephane Sednaoui" was released on DVD in September 2005.

Site: http://www.stephanesednaoui.com

Show Me Your Soul
Director: Bill Stobaugh


Taste the Pain
Director: Alex Winter

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Wiki:
Alexander Ross Winter (born July 17, 1965) is an English/American actor, director, and film writer, known for his role as "Bill S. Preston" in the 1988 film Bill & Ted's Excellent Adventure and its sequels and spin-offs.



Knock Me Down
Director: Drew Carolan

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Wiki: The video[1] was directed by Drew Carolan, who also directed Higher Ground.


Higher Ground
Director: Drew Carolan - Bill Stobaugh
Drew Carolan:

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Drew Carolan was born and raised on the Lower East Side of New York City. He has been creating photographic works since 1973. His attraction to art started when he discovered graffiti in the early 70's. Writers like Super Kool 223, Stay High 149 and Dino Nod were superheroes to him.

Drew served as a photographic assistant to photographer Richard Avedon from 1983 to 1985 and helped him complete the book titled In The American West. Drew also worked as a photographer for MTV Networks in the 1980's, and his work has appeared in numerous publications including Interview, SPIN, Rolling Stone, Elle, Vogue and The New York Times.

As a director and producer, he has created many ground-breaking music videos, PSA's and documentary films. Most notably, his work with the Red Hot Chili Peppers, B-52's and Living Colour have been seen around the world.

Drew served as the line producer for David La Chapelles' documentary RIZE, which debuted at the Sundance Film Festival in 2005. He is now producing another music-based documentary titled A TASTE OF HEAVEN, based on the life of New Orleans gospel legend Rymond Myles.

Recently, Drew just completed a book of photographs entitled MATINEE featuring portraits of the kids who frequented the Hardcore Matinee's at CBGB's in the early 1980's. He has also been photographing the surf culture in California since he moved there in 1994.

+ Info:
here
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Jungle Man
Director: Lindy Goetz - Ron Sedgwick - Jim Hancock

Código:
"Jungle Man" is a song by the Red Hot Chili Peppers. It is the first track from their 1985 album, Freaky Styley. The song was written by Anthony Kiedis, and is about his best friend, the band's bassist Michael "Flea" Balzary. It was released as a single, and in the same year and there was a music video released for this song. The video features many different clips of live performances of the song edited together with the album version of the song playing on top.


Sobre Lindy Goetz:
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Lindy Goetz became the band’s manager and, as a result, they played more live shows than ever. Time on the road was tough in the band’s little van, and they often stayed in seedy hotels between gigs. ‘What Is This?’ wasn’t fairing as well in the stormy musical seas. It therefore was no surprise, that in January 1984, Sherman was dumped for Hillel-they’re old pal.
...The guys then learn that Lindy Goetz, their manager since 1984, decides it’s time to retire.

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Catholic School Girls Rule, Fight Like a Brave & Universally Speaking
Director: Dick Rude

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"Catholic School Girls Rule" is a single from the 1985 album Freaky Styley by the Red Hot Chili Peppers. The song is loosely based on a girl who attended a local Catholic school that singer Anthony Kiedis had a brief fling with.[1] A video for the single has been made and directed by longtime friend [b]Dick Rude[/b][2], but was often not aired or edited because of a nude scene, and because it also featured Kiedis singing from on a cross.[2] The video has only aired once on television making its only appearance on the Playboy Channel. The song has only been played live twice since 1987 though was recently played on April 19, 2007, which was the first time the band has played it since 1991 and only the second time with John Frusciante and Chad Smith.

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The video for the song features Doug Wilson, who plays a deranged concertgoer who attempts to return a book to vocalist Anthony Kiedis, who left the book in his taxi in the video to "By the Way". The book he is returning to Kiedis is "Lexicon Devil", which is the biography of Darby Crash, the late frontman for the late 70's punk band The Germs. The music video was directed by longtime friend Dick Rude who also directed the video for "Catholic School Girls Rule" and the live DVD Off the Map.


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http://www.dickrude.biz/_pages/about_dick.htm


Site: http://www.dickrude.biz

True Man Don't kill Coyotes
Director: Graeme Whitler
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A video was made for "True Men Don't Kill Coyotes". However, as few people heard the song, fewer people saw the video.

The clip, which used a lot of fluorescent colours, showed the band playing the song on a cartoonish desert-like scenario. In the beginning of the video, a farmer character pours a radioactive-labeled liquid substance into a patch of desert in front of a crudely assembled Hollywood sign. From this the entire band bursts from the ground, and begin to perform the song.

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* 1984: "True Men Don't Kill Coyotes" - Director: Graeme Whitler
* 1985: "Jungle Man" - Director: Lindy Goetz - Ron Sedgwick - Jim Hancock
* 1985: "Catholic School Girls Rule" - Director: Dick Rude
* 1987: "Fight Like a Brave" - Director: Dick Rude
* 1987: "Me & My Friends"
* 1989: "Good Time Boys"
* 1989: "Higher Ground" - Director: Drew Carolan - Bill Stobaugh
* 1989: "Knock Me Down" - Director: Drew Carolan
* 1989: "Taste the Pain" - Director: Alex Winter
* 1990: "Show Me Your Soul" - Director: Bill Stobaugh
* 1991: "Give It Away" - Director: Stéphane Sednaoui
* 1991: "Under the Bridge" - Director: Gus Van Sant
* 1992: "Suck My Kiss" - Director: Gavin Bowden
* 1992: "Breaking The Girl" - Director: Stéphane Sednaoui
* 1992: "Behind the Sun - Director: Charlie Paul
* 1993: "If You Have to Ask"
* 1993: "Soul to Squeeze" - Director: Kevin Kerslake
* 1995: "Warped" - Director: Gavin Bowden
* 1995: "My Friends" - Director: Anton Corbijn
* 1996: "Aeroplane" - Director: Gavin Bowden
* 1996: "Coffee Shop" - Director: Gavin Bowden
* 1996: "Love Rollercoaster" - Director: Kevin Lofton
* 1999: "Scar Tissue" - Director: Stéphane Sednaoui
* 1999: "Around the World" - Director: Stéphane Sednaoui
* 2000: "Otherside" - Director: Jonathan Dayton and Valerie Faris
* 2000: "Californication" - Director: Jonathan Dayton and Valerie Faris
* 2000: "Road Trippin'" - Director: Jonathan Dayton and Valerie Faris
* 2002: "By the Way" - Director: Jonathan Dayton and Valerie Faris
* 2002: "The Zephyr Song" - Director: Jonathan Dayton and Valerie Faris
* 2003: "Can't Stop" - Director: Mark Romanek
* 2003: "Universally Speaking" - Director: Dick Rude
* 2003: "Fortune Faded" - Director: Laurent Briet
* 2006: "Dani California" - Director: Tony Kaye
* 2006: "Tell Me Baby" Director: - Jonathan Dayton and Valerie Faris
* 2006: "Snow ((Hey Oh))" - Director: Nick Wickham
* 2007: "Desecration Smile" - Director: Gus Van Sant
* 2007: "Hump de Bump" - Director: Chris Rock
* 2007: "Charlie" - Director: Omri Cohen

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