The Fray get into a really bad brawl in a Texas bar in the music video for their sing-along anthem "Love Don't Die," the first single from the Isaac Slade-led pop rock band's upcoming fourth studio album "Helios," which is due in stores on January 14 via Epic Records. The members of The Fray have found themselves at the center of a bar fight in their latest video. It's mildly entertaining as far as videos go, which is to say it has something of a narrative, which a great many these days don't.
Normally the visuals from The Fray feature the band performing and some signature piano playing but this video for "Love Don't Die" takes the band and fans in a whole new visual direction. The music video focuses on the band performing at a very rowdy bar. Punches fly, glass is broken and drinks are spilled. "Love Don't Die" is very different from the typical style of video that the band puts out. Even though the setting for the video is a departure for The Fray, it is funny and fits into the upbeat and rhythmic styling of "Love Don't Die." The video might be the band saying that they are going in a new direction and are ready for a new fight.
If John Legend's "All of Me" music video proved anything, it's that having a significant other in the business is both incredibly convenient and incredibly amazing. Suddenly, music videos become much easier to cast, not to mention the fact that fans eat it up when real-life couples get all romantic on screen. It features the guest star Candice Accola from Vampire Diaries, who is also band's guitarist Joe King real life fiancée, and holds its setting at a bar. All Accola wants to do is watch her fiancé play with her best friends, but when a bar-goer gets a little too handsy, things take a turn for the violent. But hey, it gives her fiancé the chance to play hero.
It's a pretty simple visual, which was filmed November 13 at Cowboy Palace Saloon in Chatsworth, California. The group arrive at a Texas biker bar, they hit the stage to perform the song and singing from behind a fence for their protection, then Accola and friends comes in. But when a rude guy begins to harass Accola, her real-life fiance comes to the rescue, igniting in this way and starts quite the bar brawl. The fight progresses and comes to include the entire band, and ends when the band escapes the bar on motorcycles. Accola then does what any woman would do: She kisses the heck out of him. The moment is equal amounts fun and voyeuristic.
Normally the visuals from The Fray feature the band performing and some signature piano playing but this video for "Love Don't Die" takes the band and fans in a whole new visual direction. The music video focuses on the band performing at a very rowdy bar. Punches fly, glass is broken and drinks are spilled. "Love Don't Die" is very different from the typical style of video that the band puts out. Even though the setting for the video is a departure for The Fray, it is funny and fits into the upbeat and rhythmic styling of "Love Don't Die." The video might be the band saying that they are going in a new direction and are ready for a new fight.
If John Legend's "All of Me" music video proved anything, it's that having a significant other in the business is both incredibly convenient and incredibly amazing. Suddenly, music videos become much easier to cast, not to mention the fact that fans eat it up when real-life couples get all romantic on screen. It features the guest star Candice Accola from Vampire Diaries, who is also band's guitarist Joe King real life fiancée, and holds its setting at a bar. All Accola wants to do is watch her fiancé play with her best friends, but when a bar-goer gets a little too handsy, things take a turn for the violent. But hey, it gives her fiancé the chance to play hero.
It's a pretty simple visual, which was filmed November 13 at Cowboy Palace Saloon in Chatsworth, California. The group arrive at a Texas biker bar, they hit the stage to perform the song and singing from behind a fence for their protection, then Accola and friends comes in. But when a rude guy begins to harass Accola, her real-life fiance comes to the rescue, igniting in this way and starts quite the bar brawl. The fight progresses and comes to include the entire band, and ends when the band escapes the bar on motorcycles. Accola then does what any woman would do: She kisses the heck out of him. The moment is equal amounts fun and voyeuristic.
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