Friday, February 8, 2013

Flaming Lips and Beck car ads: A Sellout or a Step up?

On the morning of Superbowl Sunday, I stumbled upon two on-line car commercials that stood out for me. One ad featured the band The Flaming Lips and the other invlolves the musician Beck.

In one ad, cult favourite rockers The Flaming Lips and their song "Sun Blows Up Today" score a Superbowl ad for the Hyundai Santa Fe. The spot is a face-paced montage depicting an adventurous young family-of-six sitting at Sunday breakfast and discussing the escapades of thier “epic playdate” – also the name of the spot – involving skateboarding, visiting a museum, going to a petting zoo, doing yoga, and being chased by a biker gang.


 
And while The Flaming Lips have contributed their song “Do You Realize?” to previous ads for Mitsubishi and Range Rover, this Hyundai ad has the Oklahoma City-based band providing the carnival atmosphere akin to their live performances.

In the other ad, which has not aired as of yet, alt musician Beck has collaborated with an orchestra of 170 musicians to cover David Bowie's classic “Sound and Vision” from the 1974 classic album Low.
According to Alan Cross' blog, the campaign for the Ford Lincoln is called "Hello,Again" and all the music for these spots feature artists who "transform classic works into entirely new, fresh, original creations."

Working with acclaimed music director Chris Milk on the music for the spot, Beck and the musicians perform the track within a multi-directional sound environment, on a specially constructed circular stage. Milk has directed videos for Kanye West and Gnarls Barkley.

Beck posted on his website that the performance “will experiment with the possibilities of perspective and sound movement surrounding the audience. It will be recorded using 360ยบ equipment and shown online February 10th.”

A question does linger: are Beck, Flaming Lips and others of their ilk selling out to the big auto companies? The quick answer is yes they are. Fans and fellow musicians (myself included) instinctively believe once an artist gives up their creative control and integrity for commercialism, then they have sold out. The belief being that anyone who would do a commercial is having their soul has been sucked out in exchange for a big paycheque.  But let's look at this on a different angle.

Perhaps a more interesting response to the sellout question is by replying "no".

Most advertising creative within the automotive category has traditionally been rather safe and predictable in execution, being nothing more than a visual pamphlet for the make and model featured in the ad. They are more utilitarian rather than artistic endeavours. And this does not exclusively speak to automotive ads. Just look at most of the ads on the air on daily basis. Multinational conglomerates that own practically every package good, service, or retail outlet on the planet shovel out uninspired ad creative. And do you know why? Because most corporations do not feel the desire to be innovative or provocative. Believe me, I've been in those boardroom meetings.

So when artists like The Flaming Lips and Beck do appear in car ads that do not look, feel, or sound like a typical automotive spot, I applaud it. Why should creative people not be rewarded for having their art communicate to the masses? That is the point isn't it?

While I'm glad to see that the art directors at advertising agencies and directors at production houses are pushing the clients to try different approaches in their spots, whether I like it or not, this sea change is not only the doing of the creative types. The turn from traditional thinking in the corporate realm can be attributed to those who in marketing in many of the big corporations who do not necessarily feel that the old school way of thinking is the way to go. And advertising can only get better when this happens.

But I wish the creation of interesting, funny, and provocative ads would be produced more often than just for a football game in late January.

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