After months of nightmares, arguments and chauffeured drives around Hollywood, Tokio Hotel, the German pop rock band, founded in 2001 by singer Bill Kaulitz, guitarist Tom Kaulitz, drummer Gustav Schäfer and bassist Georg Listing, finally gave fans a first full taste of the band's much-anticipated forthcoming LP, "Humanoid" album, the follow-up to their 2007 debut Scream, and premiering the video for the lead single, the soaring "Automatic," produced by David Josh, on their Website late Thursday, and will be released digitally on September 22, while the album “Humanoid” is scheduled to be released across the US on October 6, and understandably, the boys from the Germany’s hottest musical export are already preparing to take over the music scene here with their new tracks. Until that happens, though, fans here will have to make due with the new video for their first single "Automatic".
The music video was directed by Craig Wessels and filmed over three days in the desert of South Africa. The plot of brand-new sci-fi themed video is a simple legendary tale, all kinds of epic, featuring the band racing across windswept plains in classic muscle cars, just like the message of the song. It shows the band members driving cars and performing on a stage in the desert, while a sub-plot deals with with computer generated "Transformers 4" inspired robots. "Automatic" is the most moving robot story since Wall-E.
The music video was directed by Craig Wessels and filmed over three days in the desert of South Africa. The plot of brand-new sci-fi themed video is a simple legendary tale, all kinds of epic, featuring the band racing across windswept plains in classic muscle cars, just like the message of the song. It shows the band members driving cars and performing on a stage in the desert, while a sub-plot deals with with computer generated "Transformers 4" inspired robots. "Automatic" is the most moving robot story since Wall-E.
0 comments