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"Capricorn" is a song by American rock band Vampire Weekend, released as the lead single from their fifth studio album Only God Was Above Us. It was released on February 16, 2024, by Columbia Records as a double A-side with "Gen-X Cops", and is the band's first single since 2019's "This Life"/"Unbearably White".
A music video for the song was released on May 20, 2019, directed by previous collaborator Emmett Malloy. The video depicts Koenig, Danielle Haim and Ariel Rechtshaid riding through the California desert with a driver introduced as Wade (portrayed by Kyle Field ), eventually arriving at a Passover Seder hosted by Mark Ronson , with other guests ...
The song's lyrics contain multiple references to rapper Lil Jon (claiming that "he always tells the truth"). Lil Jon sent Vampire Weekend a case of crunk juice as thanks for the name check, [2] and a friendship formed between Vampire Weekend and Lil Jon that would pan out into Lil Jon's cameo in the music video for "Giving Up the Gun".
Maluma made an impression at the 2021 Met Gala -- and had the best date to accompany him.The Colombian singer chatted with ET's Rachel Smith while on the steps at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in ...
"Mansard Roof" was the first song from Vampire Weekend's album to have a video. The video was filmed in Perth Amboy, New Jersey.The main scene in the video, directed by Alexis Boling, is set on a yacht and uses still frames.
According to an interview with Vancouver's The Peak radio station, the video for "Diane Young" was made with only five seconds of footage from a Phantom Cam which films at 1000 frames per second. [9] The video concept came from Vampire Weekend member Rostam Batmanglij's friend Borna Sammak, and was filmed while the band was performing at SXSW. [10]
After a two-year break, Olivia Rodrigo, 20, came back in full swing in 2023 with the release of her new album, "Guts." The pop singer's latest release follows her debut album, "Sour," which ...
The video, directed by British comedian Richard Ayoade (who had also directed the band's video for "Oxford Comma") and set in the 1980s, was filmed in Spring Lake, New Jersey at Kaitlin Files' shore house. It is the first video where Vampire Weekend consciously decided to use a narrative with the band becoming characters, unlike previous videos ...