Kacfan
Well-Known Member
Regarding the there’s a kind of hush promo, does anyone know where and under what circumstances it was made? The set, band and Karen’s dress all look like the Osaka 1976 concert. Was it made during that tour in Japan?We are so fortunate to have these visuals, all of them. Kudos to everyone that has a hand in preserving them. This video topic and the time period in particular 1977-1980 is sort of complex because of things going on both in the record industry and for K&R.
Of course we all know that Carpenters were a successful act in the first half of the 70s decade. I can get behind that during that time that music videos weren't truly promos. The manner in which records companies made their capital was an acceptable risk. It was a simple formula. Make a record, get it played on the radio for as much exposure as you could get, hope you get a hit and if you did, invest in 10 more acts.
Even early videos weren’t a thought as a vehicle for promoting records and it wasn't until towards the latter part of the decade when risk was viewed a little differently. The record industry as a whole peaked in 1977 and then began to see a gradual decline. The AKOH All You Get From Love is a Love Song, I Need to Be In Love, There's A Kind of Hush videos were made as true promos to boost sales.
In 1978 K&R had I believe one promo video out there from Passage, Occupants, which I thought was pretty cool. Then after Christmas Portrait they disappeared from the public eye in 1979 as a Duo. When they came in back in 1980, there were 3 MIA videos Beechwood, Those Good Old Dreams and Touch Me When We're Dancing. All 3 framed more of an adult contemporary vision.
I am a devoted fan of MIA (I am a devoted fan of everything they did). After they resurfaced with MIA and when those last 3 videos were made, I think we are all of the same thoughts that this would have been a great time for some outside guidance on those videos.