Videos - Visual Catalogue of Dead People's Choice

The visual side of Dead People’s Choice is not an extra layer added after the music is finished. It is part of the core identity of the project. This catalog has always lived in the space where sound, mood and image strengthen one another. Some songs become stronger when they are given a visual frame. Some live performances reveal a track more clearly than a studio version. Some collaborations only fully make sense when the listener can see the atmosphere, movement and tension surrounding the music. That is why the Videos page matters. It is not a gallery of random clips. It is a curated extension of the same artistic world that shapes the label’s releases, artists and soundtrack work.

A strong video section should help visitors understand how Dead People’s Choice moves between official music videos, intimate live recordings, collaborative visual pieces and performance-based material. The point is not to overload the page with everything available. The point is to present a focused set of videos that show the emotional and visual range of the catalog. Some tracks need narrative imagery. Some work best in a stripped live setting. Some videos matter because they capture the chemistry between artists. Together, they show that this label is not just about songs in isolation. It is about complete atmosphere.

Official Videos and Live Sessions That Define the Catalog

The selection below represents the clearest visual entry points into the Dead People’s Choice world. Blue Foundation stands at the center with one of the most recognizable visual pieces connected to the catalog. Sara Savery brings a more intimate and exposed live presence. Ghost Society adds darker collaborative energy. The result is not a random playlist. It is a compact map of the label’s emotional range: cinematic tension, shadowed beauty, exposed performance, collaborative mood and the balance between studio atmosphere and live human presence.

That balance is important. A video page on a label site should do more than provide something to click. It should show how the music behaves when it enters visual space. Does the track become colder, more fragile, more physical, more immediate? Does the live version reveal details hidden in the studio mix? Does the collaboration feel different when faces, gestures and performance energy are visible? Those are the questions this section answers. The clips below are here because they help define the visual and emotional language of the project.

Blue Foundation – Eyes On Fire
This is one of the defining visual entries into the wider Dead People’s Choice universe. The song carries the dreamlike tension, shadowed atmosphere and cinematic pull that made Blue Foundation such a central force in the catalog. As a video, it shows exactly why this music translates so naturally into visual storytelling. It is restrained, emotionally loaded and built on mood rather than spectacle. That makes it the right opening statement for a page like this.
Blue Foundation ft. Sara Savery – Lost
This video matters because it shows collaboration inside the label world rather than a single isolated identity. The track carries tension, intimacy and emotional pressure, while the visual treatment underlines the darker romantic edge that runs through much of the Dead People’s Choice sound. It is a useful inclusion here because it connects two key artistic presences and shows how the catalog expands when voices and moods meet inside one frame.
Sara Savery – Love Remains (Acoustic Live Version)
Not every important video needs heavy visual design. This live acoustic performance works because it removes distance and leaves the emotional structure fully exposed. Sara Savery’s presence adds vulnerability, closeness and human scale to a catalog often defined by layered atmosphere. That contrast is valuable. It proves that the Dead People’s Choice world can hold both cinematic production and stripped performance without losing coherence.
Ghost Society – Silence
Ghost Society adds another side of the label’s visual and emotional language. The mood is dreamlike, but there is friction underneath it. The performance and atmosphere feel collaborative rather than solitary, and that gives the page more range. Including Ghost Society here prevents the Videos section from becoming a Blue Foundation-only archive. It makes clear that Dead People’s Choice is a wider artistic network with multiple voices inside the same dark, immersive orbit.

How These Videos Work Inside the Label Identity

Video Main Visual Energy What It Adds to the Page
Eyes On Fire Cinematic, iconic, emotionally suspended Defines the core atmosphere of the catalog
Lost Dark collaboration, intimate tension Shows artist crossover and shared emotional language
Love Remains (Acoustic Live) Minimal, exposed, human-scaled Adds live intimacy and emotional directness
Silence Dreamlike, darker, ensemble-driven Expands the page beyond one central act

Why the Videos Page Matters

On many music sites, video pages are weak because they are treated like storage. A few embeds are dropped into place with no thought, no hierarchy and no relation to the larger identity of the project. That approach does not work here. Dead People’s Choice needs a video section with intention. Every clip should help explain the sound, the visual world and the emotional range of the label. The visitor should come away understanding that this music does not stop at audio. It extends into body language, visual atmosphere, collaboration, performance and screen presence.

This page also matters because it creates a stronger entry point for different kinds of visitors. Some people discover a label through songs. Others discover it through image first. Some want official music videos with a clear visual identity. Others prefer live sessions because they reveal whether the emotion survives outside the studio. A good Videos page respects both instincts. It shows the polished side of the catalog and the human side of it. It shows how a track behaves when framed as cinema and how it changes when reduced to performance and voice.

Visual Memory, Not Content Dumping

The strongest thing about a page like this is that it can become part of the memory of the site. Visitors return to videos differently than they return to text pages. They replay moments. They compare live and studio energy. They follow one artist into another. They remember a song through an image or remember an image because the song underneath it stayed with them. That is the standard this page should serve. It should not feel like a dumping ground for embeds. It should feel like a selective visual archive that deepens the rest of the catalog.

Dead People’s Choice works best when music, visuals and atmosphere move together. This Videos page exists to make that connection visible. It gathers official imagery, collaborative tension, acoustic vulnerability and darker ensemble mood in one place. For new visitors, it is a fast way into the label’s world. For returning listeners, it is a visual companion to the releases and artists that define the catalog. In both cases, the goal is the same: to let the music be seen as clearly as it is heard.