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Grammy Award for Best Concept Music Video

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Grammy Award for Best Concept Music Video
Awarded for quality concept music videos
Country United States
Presented by National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences
First awarded 1988
Last awarded 1989
Official website grammy.com

The Grammy Award for Best Concept Music Video was an honor presented to recording artists at the 30th Grammy Awards in 1988 and the 31st Grammy Awards in 1989 for quality concept music videos. The Grammy Awards, an annual ceremony that was established in 1958 and originally called the Gramophone Awards,[1] are presented by the National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences of the United States to "honor artistic achievement, technical proficiency and overall excellence in the recording industry, without regard to album sales or chart position".[2]

Beginning in 1982, the Academy began to honor quality music videos with the Video of the Year category. This category was discontinued with the establishment of the MTV Video Music Awards in 1984 and was replaced with two awards: Best Video, Short Form and Best Video Album. Criteria changes for the 1988 and 1989 ceremonies resulted in the Best Concept Music Video award being presented alongside the award for Best Performance Music Video. Best Concept Music Video award recipients were the English rock band Genesis for "Land of Confusion" and the American singer "Weird Al" Yankovic for "Fat". The Academy returned to the previous format in 1990, though the categories are now known as Best Short Form Music Video and Best Long Form Music Video.

Background

The National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences began to honor quality music videos with the Video of the Year category in 1982. The first two award recipients were former member of The Monkees Michael Nesmith for the hour-long video Elephant Parts (also known as Michael Nesmith in Elephant Parts) as well as Olivia Newton-John for Olivia Physical.[3][4] The Video of the Year category was discontinued with the establishment of the MTV Video Music Awards in 1984,[5] the top award of which is also presented for Video of the Year.[6] The Academy replaced the category with the awards for Best Video, Short Form and Best Video Album beginning with the 26th Grammy Awards. For the awards held in 1988 and 1989, the criteria changed and honors were presented for the categories Best Concept Music Video and Best Performance Music Video. The Academy returned to the previous format in 1990, though the categories were renamed Best Music Video, Short Form and Best Music Video, Long Form.[5] In 1998, the categories were retitled Best Short Form Music Video and Best Long Form Music Video, respectively.

Recipients

Four men on a stage; two are playing guitars, one is sitting on a stool and holding a microphone, and one is playing keyboards. Various stage equipment, lighting fixtures, drum sets, speakers and other audio equipment can be seen in the background.
The 1988 award-winning band Genesis performing in 2007

For the 30th Grammy Awards (1988), Best Concept Music Video nominees included David Bowie for "Day-In Day-Out", Kate Bush for The Whole Story, the English rock band Genesis for "Land of Confusion", David Lee Roth for David Lee Roth, and Janet Jackson for Control – The Videos Part II .[7] The music video for Bowie's "Day-In Day-Out", directed by Julien Temple, included "offending" scenes such as a man urinating on Ronald Reagan's Hollywood Walk of Fame star but was edited for television broadcast.[8] Bush's "imaginative" video sampler accompanies her greatest hits album of the same name and includes music videos for songs that span her career.[9][10] The music video for "Land of Confusion", a song that appeared on the band's 1986 album Invisible Touch, contained Spitting Image puppets of Reagan, Margaret Thatcher and other people.[11] David Lee Roth's self-titled video consisted of promotional clips created for his debut solo EP Crazy from the Heat and album Eat 'Em and Smile.[12] Jackson's video collection, which was certified gold in the United States, contained six promotional videos recorded for singles from her album Control.[13] Awards were presented to members of Genesis (Tony Banks, Phil Collins, Mike Rutherford) as the performing artists, Jim Yukich and John Lloyd as the video directors, as well as Jon Blair as the video producer.

A man standing behind a microphone stand, wearing a yellow shirt that contains the text "Atlantic Records Sucks"
1989 award recipient "Weird Al" Yankovic in 2007

Nominees for the 31st Grammy Awards were the Hampton String Quartet for "Get a Job", former member of The Beatles George Harrison for "When We Was Fab", the American rock band Talking Heads for Storytelling Giant, "Weird Al" Yankovic for "Fat", and Neil Young for "This Note's for You".[14][15] "Get a Job", a song originally by the American group The Silhouettes,[16] appears on the Hampton String Quartet's album What If Mozart Wrote "Roll Over Beethoven", a collection of 1950s R&B and pop music songs performed in the style of Beethoven, Debussy, Mozart and other composers.[17] "When We Was Fab", a song from the album Cloud Nine, is constructed from quotes about when The Beatles were famous and features Harrison playing a sitar.[18][19] The music video contains Elton John dressed as a walrus (a reference to the 1967 song "I Am the Walrus").[18] Storytelling Giants is a collection of the Talking Heads' music videos along with additional material to "link" them together.[20] Two of the nominated music videos had connections to Michael Jackson: "Fat" was a parody cover version of Jackson's song "Bad", and the video for "This Note's for You" contained a Jackson look-alike's hair catching fire (a parody of an incident that occurred to Jackson during a shoot for a Pepsi commercial in 1984).[21][22] In the "Fat" video, Yankovic "balloons" into a "grossly overweight guy" through the use of cosmetics and special effects and leads a group of hefty people on a parade.[23] The award was presented to Yankovic as the performing artist, along with Jay Levey as the video director and Susan Zwerman as the video producer.[24]

See also

References

General
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Specific
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External links