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The official music video for The Low Anthem's "Boeing 737," off the band's album Smart Flesh, was directed by End of the Road Pictures. In the video, the band goes "1800s retro," says SPIN magazine, "as members of an oddball circus, who battle a group of high-wire walkers. It's totally weird yet totally poignant."
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The Low Anthem recorded the majority of Smart Flesh in a cavernous, vacant pasta sauce factory in Central Falls, Rhode Island. This video for the album track "Boeing 737" goes inside the space, which the New York Times describes as "one of the instruments" on the album. The BBC calls the song a "stomping anthem that sounds like Bob Dylan fronting Arcade Fire."
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The video for "Ghost Woman Blues," the opening track off The Low Anthem's album Smart Flesh, is set in the abandoned pasta sauce factory in which the album was recorded. The video was produced by filmmaker Robert Houllahan with the band.
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The video for The Low Anthem's "Charlie Darwin," off their 2009 Nonesuch debut, Oh My God, Charlie Darwin, matches poignant visuals, created using painstaking stop-motion animation, to the band's haunting music. NPR named the song one of the year's best: "I get chills the moment I hear this guy’s voice,” said NPR's Bob Boilen. The video was created by Glenn Z Taunton and Simon Taffe for End of the Road Films.
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