The video ends with the woman disappearing back into the crowd, leaving Iván holding nothing but a . He looks at the camera, winks, and the screen cuts to black on the final beat.
The video is shot on 16mm film to give it that gritty, authentic 70s rock-and-roll texture.
Iván walks through a crowded, grey subway station. While everyone else is glued to holographic screens, he reaches out and grabs the hand of a stranger—a woman who looks like she stepped out of a Warhol painting. As their hands touch, the world flashes into technicolor . The video ends with the woman disappearing back
Does this vibe fit the energy you were imagining for the track, or should we go for something more psychedelic and abstract ?
In the neon-drenched, rain-slicked streets of a city that feels like 1974 trapped in a dream, are more than a band—they are the last purveyors of "The Groove." Iván walks through a crowded, grey subway station
One by one, the other band members intercept the pursuers not with violence, but with instruments . A drum fill from Simon knocks the suits off balance; a fuzzy guitar riff from Máté creates a literal wall of sound they can't cross.
A mix of A Hard Day’s Night energy with the cinematic coolness of a Wes Anderson thriller. Does this vibe fit the energy you were
The story follows a , but the "stolen" goods aren't diamonds—they're stolen moments of analog joy . The band members are "The Collectors," moving through a high-tech, sterile world of the future where music and touch have been outlawed.