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The music video was directed by French collective Megaforce and premiered on March 26, 2013. [6] The video stars English model and actress Lily Cole. [7] The video consists of a chronologically reversed sequence of events outlining the rationale and events leading to a group of people in a small town shooting a man and burning a promiscuous woman (Cole) alive.
Yeah Yeah Yeahs are an American indie rock band formed in New York City in 2000. The group is composed of vocalist and pianist Karen O (born Karen Lee Orzolek), guitarist and keyboardist Nick Zinner , and drummer Brian Chase . [ 4 ]
"Y Control" is a single by Yeah Yeah Yeahs, from their debut album, Fever to Tell. The song's music video was controversial for its disturbing imagery; nonetheless, it received some play on MTV and its sister station, MTV2. The song is part of the soundtrack of the 2009 video game Dirt 2.
Cool It Down is the fifth studio album by American indie rock band Yeah Yeah Yeahs, released on September 30, 2022, through Secretly Canadian.It marks the group's first album since 2013's Mosquito and their first release through Secretly Canadian.
Show Your Bones is the second studio album by American indie rock band Yeah Yeah Yeahs, released on March 22, 2006 by Interscope Records. [1] The album was nominated for a Grammy Award for Best Alternative Music Album in 2007.
Yeah Yeah Yeahs performed the songs "Mosquito" and "Sacrilege" on Jimmy Kimmel Live! on April 15. [8] A music video for the title track, directed by B. Shimbe Shim, debuted on May 8, 2013. [9] The video for the second single "Despair" was directed by Patrick Daughters and premiered on June 21. [10] [11]
"Cheated Hearts" is a single by New York–based alternative rock band Yeah Yeah Yeahs. It is taken from their second album Show Your Bones. The song was first released as a live performance from their DVD, Tell Me What Rockers to Swallow in 2004, but was released as a single two years thereafter. The track was voted the 10th best song of 2006 ...
"Zero" received acclaim from music critics. Paula Carino of AllMusic described the song as "an exhilarating and wide-open expanse of pure electro-pop". [1] Mary Bellamy of Drowned in Sound viewed the track as "the call to arms of a band who desperately want to teleport the refugees of fashion-fizzled pop, the hippest of hipsters and the weirdest outsiders to the dancefloor of their sweaty ...