Watch Geese’s weird video for his or her new single ‘Mysterious Love’

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Watch Geese’s weird video for his or her new single ‘Mysterious Love’


Geese have shared a weird video for his or her new single ‘Mysterious Love’, taken from their forthcoming second album ‘3D Country’.

‘Mysterious Love’ is the third single the Brooklyn band has launched from the upcoming LP, following ‘3D Country’ and ‘Cowboy Nudes’. Discussing the monitor, frontman Cameron Winter defined: “This song is about a dozen ‘90s rock cliches mixed into one little over-produced package. We like the contrast in mood between the first and second halves.”

He continued: “We used to punctuate the very end with one last hit and be done with it, but then one day Max (Bassin, drummer) just kept hitting his drums, and we kept doing the same ending hit for like, two minutes. When we recorded it, there were about 40 hits, but our label begged us to cut them out. We ended up at around 15 after negotiations.”

The accompanying video, which was directed and produced by Geese, contains a mini Yorkshire terrier who’s at a desk watching movies of lions within the wild consuming their prey. The canine then goes on a stroll by way of the streets of New York City and is seen chasing after pigeons. The video additionally options an array of weird inventory video clips, together with Jesus taking pictures gentle out of his fingers, animals of their pure habitat and {couples} kissing.

In true Geese trend, the ultimate shot exhibits drummer Max Bassin operating up a staircase to a rooftop solely to be attacked by a digital lion from Shutterstock, which has been poorly edited into the video.

‘3D Country’ is about for launch on June 23 through Play It Again Sam/Partisan. Pre-order the album right here.

It follows their 2021 debut ‘Projector’. In a four-star evaluation of the LP, NME shared: “With ‘Projector’, the band have escaped their modest confines of a studio where pipes leak onto amps and delivered some of the most compelling new guitar music around.”

The album went on to be named as one of many 20 greatest debut albums of 2021 by NME, calling them the “New York indie underdogs with scrappy ditties primed for the moshpit”.



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