After ten massively successful years together, McFly return, all grown up, and are not a bonafide manband in the recently-released video for their brand spankin' new tune "Love Is On The Radio," the lead singer off English pop rock band's upcoming and still untitled sixth album as they celebrate an incredible decade of successful years together in the pop industry. A studio video the idea is so much fun and simple as we see the band descend into instrument thrashing paint throwing high jinx as the romantic upbeat song plays out.
The fave foursome group, who is made up from Tom Fletcher, Danny Jones, Dougie Poynter and Harry Judd, are expected to release their new album in spring 2014 which will be four years since their 2010 hit "Above The Noise." With a more organic sound established on last year's hit "Love Is Easy," it is a newly mature McFly shining throughout "Love Is On The Radio." It's a jaunty-folky track with a violin accompaniment with dashes of Americana and indie folk over a rousing drum beat. And it's catchy - just try not to sing 'Hey!' by the end of the second verse!
On the band's longevity drummer Judd told The Huffington Post: "It's like 95 percent of pop bands end up imploding after four or five years, and you can understand why, but thankfully it's different for us. Name a band it hasn't happened to? The only band that was remaining from our era was Girls Aloud but they kind of split up three years ago, they just came back recently for a reunion tour. Thankfully, we've had really good managers who've made sure that hasn't happened to us. If we needed to we'd be given a day or a week off, and thankfully we all got on really well and have got through any other problems together."
The song is a lighthearted, a bit of magical, folky number and the video couldn't be more suited to their fun and clean cut characters with miniature versions of themselves, guitar smashing, a tattooed lady on roller skates, a Michael Jackson impersonator and a whole lot more thrown in for good measure. Just when you thought McFly couldn't be any more hilarious, they go and peer pressure Dougie Poynter into spoofing Miley Cyrus and snogging a sledgehammer for their four minute short, which sees the boys set against a blue backdrop while they perform to camera. And by the end of it the band are covered in a rainbow of colored powder paint as a shower of multicolored paper falls from above.
The fave foursome group, who is made up from Tom Fletcher, Danny Jones, Dougie Poynter and Harry Judd, are expected to release their new album in spring 2014 which will be four years since their 2010 hit "Above The Noise." With a more organic sound established on last year's hit "Love Is Easy," it is a newly mature McFly shining throughout "Love Is On The Radio." It's a jaunty-folky track with a violin accompaniment with dashes of Americana and indie folk over a rousing drum beat. And it's catchy - just try not to sing 'Hey!' by the end of the second verse!
On the band's longevity drummer Judd told The Huffington Post: "It's like 95 percent of pop bands end up imploding after four or five years, and you can understand why, but thankfully it's different for us. Name a band it hasn't happened to? The only band that was remaining from our era was Girls Aloud but they kind of split up three years ago, they just came back recently for a reunion tour. Thankfully, we've had really good managers who've made sure that hasn't happened to us. If we needed to we'd be given a day or a week off, and thankfully we all got on really well and have got through any other problems together."
The song is a lighthearted, a bit of magical, folky number and the video couldn't be more suited to their fun and clean cut characters with miniature versions of themselves, guitar smashing, a tattooed lady on roller skates, a Michael Jackson impersonator and a whole lot more thrown in for good measure. Just when you thought McFly couldn't be any more hilarious, they go and peer pressure Dougie Poynter into spoofing Miley Cyrus and snogging a sledgehammer for their four minute short, which sees the boys set against a blue backdrop while they perform to camera. And by the end of it the band are covered in a rainbow of colored powder paint as a shower of multicolored paper falls from above.
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