The Invisible Band

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.

Sometimes musicians are... facially unfortunate. It's not their fault, but that doesn't mean you should pander to them by putting them in the video, oh no. After all, who wants to watch a bunch of ugly, hairy types leaping around when you can replace them with oiled-up catalogue models and whiz-bang CGI.

As a result you get videos in which the people who made the music are conspicuously absent, having been replaced with any number of other, more visually interesting things.

This is particularly popular in dance music videos; since dance music fans tend to buy songs they like rather than stick closely to any particular artist, there's less impetus to build up a "brand" by making the artist's face (and name) well-known. Additionally, as the artist very rarely contributes vocals there's very little reason to have them on-camera.

Examples of The Invisible Band include:
  • An odd example is "Light Aircraft On Fire" by The Auteurs, in which lead singer Luke Haines becomes the bass player while an actor pretends to sing the lyrics.
  • Daft Punk have made a habit of never appearing in-person in their videos; in addition, they always wear full-body costumes at every public appearance, including live performances. Their reason for doing this, according to them, is to make their concerts about the music and not the musicians.
    • Many believe that this habit is one of the reasons for Daft Punk's popularity. This makes sense, seeing as their "full-body costumes" are glowing robot costumes. Just go do a Google Images search, you'll see what I mean...
  • In the video to the Satellite song "Lighten Up the Load", Satellite himself only appears at the very end of the video, in a Talky Bookend.
  • Probably the most infamous example of this is the Milli Vanilli scandal; the actual singers were great, but middle-aged and not good-looking.
  • Although Elton John is normally very visible in his videos, and is overall very performance-oriented, for the video "I Want Love", Robert Downey, Jr.. lip synchs the song. Similarly, Justin Timberlake portrays a younger Elton (with an eerie resemblance to the real thing, circa 1975) in the clip for "This Train Don't Stop There Anymore".
    • Rhys Ifans does the same for Oasis in the video to the song "The Importance of Being Idle".
  • Semi-example: For the first few minutes of the Grateful Dead's "Touch of Grey", the band are replaced by skeleton puppets. Around the three-quarter mark, someone finally gets one of the drummers' leg back from a dog, plugs it into the socket, and the skeletons flash into the actual band.
    • Also notable for actually being shot at a Grateful Dead concert. The fans stayed for three hours, dutifully singing along to the same song seventy times and loudly applauding the puppets.
  • Partly mocked and partly averted by Paul Simon's "You Can Call Me Al". The entire video is Paul Simon and Chevy Chase sitting next to each other while Chase lipsyncs the song, and Simon silently and morosely acts almost as a butler or gofer for him.
    • A similar effect occurs in the video for Radiohead's "High and Dry." It's set in a roadside diner in the Southwest US, and while the band does appear, all the lip-syncing is done by actors playing other customers and staff.
  • Poking fun at the convention: In the video for Pavement's "Shady Lane," the head of lead singer Stephen Malkmus is rendered invisible while his body continues performing the song.
  • The members of the Jon Spencer Blues Explosion are replaced by actors (Winona Ryder, Giovanni Ribisi, and John C. Reilly) in their video for "Talk About the Blues."
  • During Pink Floyd's live performances of The Wall in 1980 and 1981, the band was at times replaced by a quartet of identically-dressed stand-ins, wearing life masks molded from the band members' faces. This one has a deeper meaning, as per the themes of The Wall.
    • There were actually several deeper meanings, one of which was that the meaning was lost on the audience. Pink Floyd was[1] widely regarded as one of the most "Faceless" bands in rock history; nobody had any clue what they looked like (they just pictured prisms and guys shaking hands while engulfed in flames). Members of the band have since stated that they felt like they could have hired a different band to tour for them, and none would be the wiser.
    • During one mid-70s gig, their car couldn't get to the stage entrance since it was blocked by fans... so the band simply jumped into the crowd and left through the main exit along with the everyone else. Not one fan recognized them.
  • In Starflyer 59's "I Win" video, the entire band is replaced by anonymous younger actors. The rest of the video is a mishmash of performance and Concept Video; it's played so straight that anyone who hadn't seen the band before wouldn't know the difference (it didn't help that their previous two albums had no pictures of the band).
  • Mega-example: the band Gorillaz has never appeared as the band in public. There are effectively two versions of the band - the animated characters presented as "Gorillaz", and Damon Albarn, Tom Tom Club and the group of unknowns that actually records the music. Performances tend to hide the musicians behind screens, showing them only in sihoulette.
    • Although at the end of the Demon Days Live DVD, Damon does actually step up to the front of the stage to sing "Hong Kong".
    • They've played live on the telly too.
    • Not valid as of Plastic Beach - the musicians now perform live fully visible. Damon decided playing behind the screen was too much of a hassle and the animated holograms were too expensive and risky. Murdoc explains it by how hard leaving Plastic Beach is, how he doesn't have his visa, or other reoccuring excuses, while calling Damon and the other musicians "a bunch of imposters". This is even shown in the O2 priority walk where Damon and the actual musicians are let on the stage and the fictional band is stopped by the bodyguards.
  • Another mega-example: Studio Killers, a band that consists of three animated characters: Cherry, Goldie Foxx and Dyna Mink. Speculations as to who the real members behind the characters are have arisen, but none of the rumours have been officially confirmed.
  • They Might Be Giants' video for With the Dark has them portrayed by small action figures. They end up being killed and taxidermized by a giant squid.
  • A somewhat extreme inversion of this trope is the Nine Inch Nails video for Into The Void, which consisted for the most part of extreme close-ups of frontman Trent Reznor's face, hair, eyes, and skin.
  • Korn's video for "Twisted Transistor" replaces the actual band members (Jonathan Davis, Fieldy, David Silveria, and Munky) with four famous rappers (Lil Jon, Xzibit, David Banner, and Snoop Dogg, respectively) for a This Is Spinal Tap-style mockumentary. The actual musicians only appear at the end of the video as music company executives.
  • Serj Tankian only appears in two of his twelve videos for his solo album Elect the Dead.
  • George Michael did this on purpose for the videos for singles from Listen Without Prejudice Vol. 1, as he didn't want to objectify his person and he was in the middle of arguing with his record label. Due to this, "Praying for Time" features just a static background and the lyrics being shown on screen (there's a good reason you haven't seen it, ever). For the more famous "Freedom '90", David Fincher decided to throw in a bunch of models.
  • The video for C+ C Music Factory's single, "Gonna Make You Sweat (Everybody Dance Now)", substituted young, attractive, (and most distinctly) slim Zelma Davis for the actual vocalist, Martha Wash (who was distinctly not young or slim). She sued for credit on the album, won, and which eventually led to vocal credits in albums and music videos mandatory.
    • C+C's record label tried to refute the charges by having Davis perform the song live (most notably on "The Aresenio Hall Show"). It backfired spectacularly: Davis' thin, reedy voice sounded nothing like the voice on the song, strengthening Wash's case that much more.
  • Norman Cook / Fatboy Slim doesn't like to appear in his videos. He does however appear in some form in most of them - either as a photograph, a cardboard cutout or a painting of himself. For example, there's a portrait of him hung on a hotel wall in "Weapon of Choice", and the video for "The Joker" (which stars a bunch of kittens) features a miniscule "MISSING HUMAN, ANSWERS TO 'NORMAN'" poster hanging on a streetlight.
    • The Chemical Brothers likewise make brief cameos while remaining otherwise absent from their music videos. They're the skeletons exiting the car at the end of the "Hey Boy Hey Girl" video, for example.
  • Parodied by the video for Blues Traveler's "Runaround". It features a thin young actor with a certain resemblance to Adam Duritz of Counting Crows lip syncing and miming harmonica, in place of the slightly older and decidedly less thin John Popper. The whole music video is a parody of this trope, complete with references to The Wizard of Oz, in which a Dorothy stand-in and her companions discover that the band performing the song is miming and lip-synching and the real band is playing from behind a curtain, and they are eventually revealed.
  • Phoebe fronted for a (probably) unattractive singer with a fantastic voice. It took her a while to realise it wasn't her singing...
  • Would Garbage's "Cherry Lips" count?
    • The trope is parodied (inverted?) in the video in which the band are in fact completely invisible save for clothes but can in fact be seen through TV screens and mirrors.
  • "Another Way To Die" by Disturbed in order to get the Green Aesop across is the first video of their's to not feature any band members. It instead depicts a wasteland destroyed by humanity's treatment of the earth interplayed with images of the current earth and things such as oil spills and smoke stacks.
  • Many of the "faces" of Eurobeat artists are not the actual singers. For example, Bazooka Girl was depicted as Cristiana Cucchi, but the vocals on the recordings were performed by a singer known only as "R.".
  • BT's "Somnambulist(Simply Being Loved)" features JC Chasez as the vocalist, but the video depicts BT himself lipsynching. Ditto for "Suddenly", where the real vocalist was Christian Burns.
  • As a possible parody of the use of this trope for sex appeal, Von Sudenfed's "Fledermaus Can't Get It" replaces Mark E. Smith with a trio of drag queens, who lip-sync to the song while wearing various makeup and outfits.
  • Ya Kid K's album covers and music videos showed Zairean model Felly in place of her.
  • In the video for Kraftwerk's "The Robots", the band members are replaced by animatronic replicas.
  • The Comic Relief version of "Is This The Way To Amarillo?" It's not even a cover version; it's a Tony Christie re-release with a video in which Peter Kay pretends to be singing.
  • The British band The Alan Parsons Project rarely appeared on camera. The video for their song "Don't Answer Me" paid homage to Andy Warhol.
  • The Beastie Boys video for "Make Some Noise" features Seth Rogen, Elijah Wood, and Danny McBride lip-syncing to the song and dressed as Mike D, Ad Rock, and MCA (respectively) from the "(You Gotta) Fight for Your Right (To Party!)" video. The video functions as a sort of sequel to the earlier video, and features The Beastie Boys in brief cameos portraying other characters.
  • In live performances of Katy Perry's "Last Friday Night (TGIF)", Kathy Beth Terry is sometimes portrayed by Angela Hudson (her sister).
  • Trey Parker and Matt Stone's band DVDA did a version of "What Would Brian Boitano Do?" for the South Park: Bigger Longer And Uncut soundtrack album. When the label wanted a video made for the song, they didn't want to be in it, so the band were played by some actors.
  • Wiley's "Wearing My Rolex" - rumor had it Wiley was supposed to be in it, but he hated the Fight Fur Your Right to Party-like concept so much he refused to get on camera and they had to make his video without him.
  • The video for REM's swan song, "We All Go Back to Where We Belong", focuses solely on Kirsten Dunst, with none of the band members appearing.
    • "Crush With Eyeliner" also kind of applies: Members of the band are briefly seen looking on, but the main focus of the video is a group of Japanese teenagers either miming to the song (complete with guitars, a mic and a drum kit), dancing around, or generally participating in wacky antics.
  • The Rubber Bandits; sure they're in the music videos, but always hidden by the iconic plastic bag mask.
  • The Melvins' already Surreal Music Video for "The Talking Horse" features elements of the scenery lip-synching the lyrics instead of the band - trees, skyscrapers, and newspaper boxes for instance. Vocalist Buzz Osborne gets a cameo of sorts, though - his picture graces a cologne ad on the side of a bus stop.
  • The video for The Format's "Dog Problems" portrays the plot of the song using hands with clothes on - For instance the lip-synching (finger-synching?) hand representing Nate Ruess has a tiny Nice Hat.
  • The Cure's "Boys Don't Cry" has kids playing the song while the band appears only in shadow behind them.
  • Similarly, Queen's "The Miracle" has a quartet of kid lookalikes until the very end, when the real band shows up.
  1. until roughly 1987, when they started touring and recording again after a hiatus