I'm ageing, in the way, out of the loop generally, and dunno who Keith Urban is (but as a student of urban studies, I certainly haven't seen anyone in the city come up to me and say, "Hi, I'm Keith, and this metropolitan area is me. Welcome"). I was referring to Empire of the Sun, co-formed by Luke Steele, the vocalist (Perth) from The Sleepy Jackson and Nick Littlemore, the producer/instrumentalist (Sydney) of PNAU (pronounce it like "gnaw"). Both are exquisitely schooled in pop music of the 1970s and earlier 1980s (and by this everything from country/western, Jeff Lynne, The Moody Blues, China Crisis, The Lotus Eaters, Ian Thomas, Lindsey Buckingham, even Sunscreem) without trying to play up the kitsch or retro re-creation cards. One might think this is easy to pull off ("oh, let's sound like
this today"), but this is like saying one can pull off Weegee, Trevor Key, or Russell Lee without looking like they're trying to emulate or ape any of their work.
Empire of the Sun's promotional music videos so far play with vivid colour themes, some built around different colour temperatures to effect different circumstances, though clearly these come at the cost of going the digital post-production route (which is a bit disappointing). The siting of each music video location are a photographer's gold mine: Shanghai and a desert in México. They should have had the chance to shoot a 35mm widescreen music video in Kodachrome (or perhaps 4 side-by-side strips of super 8mm laid onto a widescreen 35mm format, with each of the four side-by-side components juggling and telling a different aspect of the story all at once), but oh well.
At the risk of earning some untoward glances from others on APUG, that silly question of "which might you prefer: a compromise of vision or of hearing," silly because no one gets to pick and choose, and it's not like we sign up for it should either occur I have always responded with, "That's silliness, but probably vision." The reasons are one-way: I "see" music (uhm, go synaethesia) in "colour", so a loss of vision would still allow me to visualize, albeit at the expense of having to put down my camera (though the results of the Steveland Morris approach from the 1983 "Kannon Camera" advert shown on Saturday Night Live could nevertheless yield some intriguing results). Absent of sound, I would lose both sound and the associated vision thereof. The challenge would then be to try to generate synaesthesia of "sound" from the visual work I'd produce. This would be infinitely harder to do.
<giggles> A profoundly deaf person like me last heard pop music in 1974, and really, I don't concern myself with it.
But... who is the "certain vocalist from Perth and a certain Sydneysider producer"? There are thousands that collaborate/conspire in music. Presently everyman Keith Urban is about (assisting the Victorian Bushfire Appeal cause), attracting a legion of screaming, camera-wielding twenty-somethings.