Part 2 begins! Credit: Screencap from The Unfit's "Caged Rats and Hamster Wheels"

Our quest to bring you the best music videos that fly under the average person’s radar continues. These are the sort of music videos that don’t get millions of views, but they shine on like crazy diamonds regardless. Let’s get into the guts of it all.

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40. The Unfit, โ€œCaged Rats and Hamster Wheelsโ€

CONTENT WARNING: Animal experimentation

If you wanted to learn about how scientists studied aggression in animals when basic needs start to be taken away while listening to a killer punk song, here you go. Itโ€™s uncomfortable, but enlightening, and in a huge economic downturn the information might just be useful.

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39. Braids, โ€œSnow Angelโ€

โ€œSnow Angelโ€ is a nine-minute investment. Itโ€™s long enough that watching it on YouTube it was interrupted by an ad for a juice cleanse when I saw it, which conflicts a little with its message of taking responsibility of a broken world, to put it mildly. If you can invest the time in it, though, you can get a lot of out this incredible poem/song and its brilliant winter cinematography. Itโ€™s probably not as deep as it thinks it is, but itโ€™s just deep enough to get lost in.

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38. Man Man, โ€œFuture Pegโ€

It was an absurd year, and music videos should reflect that. Director Stephanie Ward went all in the โ€œwait, what?โ€ factor here. Insert Stefon voice: โ€œ’Future Peg’ has everything. Ballerinas on ice cream sandwiches, coked up Ewoks, teeth falling out.โ€ Enjoy the parade of oddities.

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37. Zach Heckendorf, โ€œStronger Than I Once Wasโ€

Only Kate Bush seems to have really embraced the shadow puppet as a music video tool, but even she doesnโ€™t do it nearly as well as itโ€™s done in โ€œStronger Than I Once Was.โ€ Heckendorf and animator Andrew Benincasa create a triumphant, bloody tale of evolution that is riveting to follow, with Heckendorf playing narrator in a wonderful bit of performance.

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36. Another Sky, โ€œBrave Faceโ€

A lot of bands try to make great videos that are centered on minimalist, interpretive dance performances, but very few can actually pull that off. For instance,ย _BY.ALEXANDERย tried to make it happen with Gary Busey this year and just… no. A rare exception is vocalist Catrin Vincent under the direction of Ingeborg Lรธvlie. Together, they manage to weave a dark, empty narrative of connection to nature that is fairly inspiring as well as being beautiful.

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35. The Vansaders, โ€œWalking Between Raindropsโ€

Introspective videos are all the rage now that weโ€™re housebound, but โ€œWalking Between Raindropsโ€ lets you do all that obnoxious soul-searching quickly and set to a killer pop punk track. The video is made by D. I. Why? Films, and itโ€™s drags a viewer through a maze of memories in the form of photographs, slowly revealing a mirror that weโ€™ll have to look into stripped from all the context of life. The headfirst fall through is a hell of a trip, and makes for a fine video.

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34.ย Uniform, โ€œLife in Remissionโ€

Iโ€™m just going to quote director A.F. Cortes on this one:

“With this video, I wanted to use the body as a communication tool of chaos. A deconstruction story told through ritual and action. Two friendsโ€™ bond is gone wrong from a visceral and perverse perspective. Inspired by abstract expressionism, instead of playing opposites with the music, I wanted to match its intensity like a Jackson Pollock painting, a piece that feels filthy, messy, claustrophobic, yet beautiful and contained.”

https://youtube.com/watch?v=F8WMhLzBU94

33. Jehnny Beth, โ€œWe Will Sin Togetherโ€

I personally hate it when a band refers to their music video as a short film because it kind of reeks of pretentiousness. That said, โ€œWe Will Sin Togetherโ€ is definitely an artistic collaboration that transcends the idea of a songโ€™s promotional material. Directed by Tom Hingston and Markus Lehtonen and starring dancers Stevie Mahoney and Mina Neighbour, itโ€™s three minutes of incredible human movement and camera work that rolls across moving statues like a silk drape being pulled slowly off of them. Exquisite is the only word to describe it.

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32.ย Bob Vylan, โ€œWe Live Hereโ€

For sheer anti-racist rage, thereโ€™s no beating Englandโ€™s answer to our own B L A C K I E, Bob Vylan. The video itself is pretty pedestrian, more or less just band shots in the streets, but sometimes the raw power of a songโ€™s rage can overpower the lack of cinematic ingenuity. This is definitely one of those times. In a year where most of us have had to scream at someone about their backward-ass bigotry, โ€œWe Live Hereโ€ is one hell of a battlecry.

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31.ย Palaye Royale, โ€œLittle Bastardsโ€

In the animated music video for โ€œLittle Bastards,โ€ Palaye Royale stops drinking tea long enough to fight an army of demon rats with the power of rock and roll. Sure, why not? Yeah, The Gorillaz already did it, but being second best to The Gorillaz in a music video concept is not an insult.

It’s only going to get weirder and more wonderful from here on out. Tune in for Part 3.

The Best Music Videos of 2020 You Probably Missed:
Part 1: 50-41

Jef Rouner (not cis, he/him) is a contributing writer who covers politics, pop culture, social justice, video games, and online behavior. He is often a professional annoyance to the ignorant and hurtful.