Source #3 - Postmodernist Music Video
- Big Nerd
- Apr 3, 2020
- 4 min read
Updated: May 9

Keep Going! This portion is due Friday, 9 May 2025. Be sure to include live links.
As you Listen/View each iconic work of Postmodernism, consider these points:
Intertextuality/Pastiche - Look at how the work draws from established literary traditions and tropes, "samples" them - mocks them in both a literal and figurative sense.
Metafiction/Poioumena - Find the different ways the artist/author turns the camera back onto hirself, becoming part of the narrative zhe tells. At what point does zhe blur the lines between artist and audience, between creator and consumer?
Fabulism/Magical Realism - Recognize where the artist/author creates an ecosystem that is uncomfortably uncanny, magical, yet utterly photo-realistic.
Minimalism v. Maximalism - Find examples of the stripped down aesthetic of Postmodernist art and literature, then compare it to the sometimes baroque overindulgence of 21st century societies.
Any other element from your KF - you know the drill!
Radiohead "Pyramid Song" (9 pts possible)
Tenacious D "Tribute" (8 pts possible)
CN: Expletive use (but bleeped)
The Prodigy "Breathe" (7 pts possible)
Gorillaz "Humility" (10 pts possible)
Beyoncé (Cowboy Carter) "Blackbiird" (7 pts possible)
Ramona Falls "I Say Fever" (5 pts possible)
OutKast" Hey Ya" (7 pts possible)
CN: Expletive use (but bleeped)
Gotye "Somebody I Used to Know" (6 pts possible)
CN: Nude male torso
Tool "Schism" (10 pts possible)
CN: Graphic animated imagery (body horror)
Ylvis "What Does the Fox Say" (7 pts possible)
Diplo/Morgan Wallen "Heartless" (6 pts possible)
Here's Ima Nerd's Model Response
Funniest comment I've read: Billie Eilish: Where do we all go when we dream? Little Kids: That's deep and weird. Tool: Hold my EAR.
IMA NERD
COMMENT #3 - Postmodernist Music/Video
Model Response
Ramona Falls, “I Say Fever”
Here are the lyrics to the song:

Beyond the absolute weirdness of the video, what jumps out to me are the patterns in the lyrics. On the surface they appear to be a chaotic mess, but maybe that's the point? Like lots of math rock, there is an underlying pattern.
The woman in this song needs adoration so badly, she purchases what looks like a love potion. But, the love potion reduces everybody to animals.
This is "Human and Animal," part of Chimera Serie by Aurore Lephilipponnat

The jumbled, fragmented imagery in the surface, the blurred motion, the jumpy shifts from scene to scene, the paper cut-out characters from 19th century lithographs, distort time. The Postmodernist temporal distortion ironically makes linear time unnecessary. Instead, it becomes cyclical. The through-line is the number five, our "code to decipher."
According to our favorite archetype guy CG Jung in his book, Synchronicity, archetypes are the math of human existence. They are the underlying equation that manifests in the symbols of our stories. The number five, repeated often in "I Say Fever," is a representation of that algebra. Archetypally, 5 symbolizes the human being for a bunch of reasons beyond the dead Swiss dude's theories. Human beings typically have five fingers on each hand, five toes on each foot, and five appendages (if the head is included). It is also the number of systems in the human body.
We use our five senses to understand the world and our place in it. That's why Biblical symbologists see the number as a an image of God's grace ("The Meaning of Numbers in the Bible").
According to Encyclopedia Britannica, there is also a long history connecting the number five to womanhood. The Babylonians worshiped the moon goddess Ishtar and associated
her with five phases of the moon: new, crescent, gibbous, full, waning ("Number Symbolism").
This is due to a few factors, most notably a woman's menstrual cycle's connection to the lunar cycle. It links our senses and bodily functions to the cycles of nature. This makes the song lyrics about waiting five years seem awfully sinister, like waiting for a girl to reach menstrual maturity.
The visuals of the young woman inhaling the fumes of the potion, then having others inhale the fumes reminds us of the fundamental sensory experiences that tie us to one another and the animal world.
However, it also smacks of Eve convincing Adam to partake of the fruit of the Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil:
"Of every tree of the garden thou mayest freely eat: But of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil, thou shalt not eat of it: for in the day that thou eatest thereof thou shalt surely die..."
Is that the story behind this? Woman's original sin?
It reveals this song to be a Postmodernist commentary on the Cultural Hegemony that persists in British society, just like American society: the idea that women are somehow carriers of sin. It emanates from women like miasma.
This reminds me of another Postmodernist music video about original sin, although it's not British (she's Icelandic).
Here is Björk's "Human Behaviour" (1993)
Whadaya think?
To Post:
1. Use your digital alias & class period to post on this site.
2. Identify video/song you intend write about. Comment on one or more of the Postmodernist elements above. Identify yourself by your alias, identify the text or detail you intend to discuss, then offer your comment.
3. Add your reaction to the work, including applications of the messages to your own experience (do not be too specific if it is a personal anecdote - again, privacy) and other works that this reminds you of (use hyperlinks here), and how they compare/contrast.
4. Include in your reactions:
embedded videos
headings & subheadings
GIFs/images
Respond to one of these works in the Nerdy comments. Once you finish this...

“Humility”, By Gorillaz
Let’s talk about “Humility” by Gorillaz. As shown in the music video, this is a song that sounds like it should be playing while you roller-skate down Venice Beach without a care in the world. And you can’t forget Jack Black is playing the guitar... duh. It’s smooth, funky, and surprisingly philosophical for a track that feels like summer sunshine bottled into 3 minutes.
Postmodern Vibes: Simulated Realities and Genre Mashups
So, what makes “Humility” postmodern? For starters, the Gorillaz is THE DEFINITION of postmodern. They’re literally a virtual band, made up of animated characters with entire fictional backstories. The line between real and fake? Totally blurred. You’ve got real musicians (like Damon Albarn and guest star George Benson)…
Ylvis, “The Fox (What Does the Fox Say?)”
At first, the song seems like nonsense. It lists animal sounds and then invents strange noises for the fox. But that’s exactly the point. It plays like a children’s song and then breaks all the rules. We expect to learn something. Instead, we get pure gibberish. This blend of nature sounds and pop music shows how form can be turned inside out. It looks simple, but underneath the surface, there’s something more happening.
The question “What does the fox say?” becomes a sign of the limits of language. There is no real answer. Each made-up noise reminds us that words are constructions. They don’t always point to anything real. Language feels unstable,…
Heres the lyrics.........
Heres the Video if you want
There’s something a bit unusual about Pyramid Song. Right from the first piano notes, it feels like you’re stepping into a dream where time doesn’t work the way it usually does. The song sounds kind of offbeat, but in a way that feels thoughtful. Radiohead has never really followed the usual rules, and with Pyramid Song, they seem to go in their own direction completely. What comes out is a track that’s calm, mysterious, and full of strange beauty. The rhythm is tricky, the lyrics are a little hard to figure out, and the whole song feels like it’s floating somewhere between happy and sad. It’s not trying to be weird…
THE BEST SONG EVER:
Somebody I used to Know- Gotye
EmoGoddessQueen-6th
PostModern Elements
Intertextuality and Pastiche
The song borrows heavily from the aesthetic of 1980's pop culture.
That retro influence is a pastiche. Not parody, but a sincere blend into a new, hybrid form.
The break-up song is an age-old pop music staple! Gotye twists the genre from classic heartbreak to a different narrative when Kibra starts singing about her side. The one sided narrative turns into two!
"Now I think about all the times you screwed me over..." -Kibra
Maximalism
The song is overloaded with references, detail, and footnotes. It embraces chaos and contradiction.
“But you didn’t have to cut me off , Make out like it never happened…
Introduction
Ylvis’ “What Does the Fox Say” is a song that somehow manages to be both completely ridiculous and kind of amazing. On paper, it sounds like a meme with a budget, but once the beat drops and the fox noises start, it becomes something life changing. The video is dramatic, the production is
clean, and the energy is off the charts. It follows all the rules of a mainstream pop hit, but swaps out disgusting love lyrics for animal sounds. That contrast between how serious it looks and how dumb the question is “what sound does a fox make?” is what makes it work. It’s a perfect example of postmodernism through irony, parody, and the blurring of nonsense with…