Kid Dakota - Pilgrim video free download


26,844
Duration: 03:44
Uploaded: 2006/09/07

This video was directed by John Thompson and edited by John Thompson and Katie Carpenter. It was shot in Minnesota last summer on "one of the hottest days in the year! Yeah, it was pretty warm in those suits" says the band.

Like the Black Hills of songwriter Darren Jackson's native South Dakota, alt-rock duo Kid Dakota is a creature of extremes: Whisper-quiet vocals explode into searing guitar riffs and crushing drumbeats in a single breath. Loneliness and beauty go hand in hand. And a two-man band from Minneapolis makes a sound big enough to fill a stadium.

Those two men—Jackson on electric guitar and vocals, and Ian Prince on drums—offer up a moody fusion of rock, folk and country on the order of Okkervil and Sparklehorse.

Dark, dusty and desolate, the band's 2001 debut So Pretty was a haunting collection of sketches that put a slightly sinister twist on the classic breakup album. Jackson showed his teeth—and his scars—on these brutally honest, heart-achingly brilliant tales of lost love and wasted years.

With 2004's The West is the Future, the band shifted its focus from personal torment to universal struggle. Recorded live as a four-piece with layer upon layer of intricate overdubs, this cinematic rock symphony artfully exposed the seedy underbelly of westward expansion at the turn of the century.

Kid Dakota currently is the studio tracking their forthcoming Winter 2006 release, A Winner's Shadow. The new drummer, who appears in this video, is Christopher McGuire.

http://www.kiddakota.com

Comments

10 years ago

Quitu1849

howdy there, pilgrim!

10 years ago

Quitu1849

so wasn't in minnesota again for the winter in this?

16 years ago

raccoonlord

we're not supernatural in spite of the airplanes in spite of the atoms God these guys blow me away.

17 years ago

Crumpty Williams

definitely gnarly.

17 years ago

Allen DeWitt

The Director's Sister sent me. The line-ups from the audial-cues to the visual lines were very well done, and the inclusion of the stock footage was a nice choice. Not being afraid to jump from one visual aspect to another might not work in another medium, but lines up extremely well within the context of the song's (apparent) message/theme. Quite well done, i must say.

Related Videos