'Baby tell me' is the first debut single from AUG25 the music band based out of Cochin in India. The band consists of four members and this song and the video is their first attempt to establish themselves in the international music arena.
TODAY ALMOST all have a camcorder, and if willing, anyone can easily film a video whether it's a short film or other entertainment like albums. The gadgets are immense and easily accessed, but the only and vital problem is the aesthetic drought. I could easily remember the days in which I was even skipping the classes whenever I found a shooting nearby.
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Now the picture has changed a lot, and film or video shooting is a common thing that happens. Let me come to the music album industry. During the inception of this video stream people were giving great importance and looking keenly. Now the same industry is getting a hard slap from its own hands. Numerous naive albums had shattered the goodwill of this blooming entertainment wing - especially in the South. For such slaps there must be some exemptions.
So the struggle given by some of the talents to keep the video album industry active and lively is incomparable. So I am proud that one such opulent opus happened from my place. A vibrant team of four youngsters from Kerala took their first step in the territory of picturised songs. They have come up with their debut video under the banner AUG25. The video is obviously a picturesque and beautiful, and what's equally interesting is that the hands behind the scene are the team-mates themselves. It looked like an inspiration from the soft moving groggy style filmed international pop albums, and justice is shown to that standard. The candid like making plugs a unique identity for the craft. Obviously, AUG25 is going to make their mark in the arena of universal music if they are getting the right space to steer their debut creation. The budget for the video, revealed by the band itself, is really scandalizing, as it is very low for such a well-crafted digital art. The song is mesmerising, the video is brilliant, and the location-selection was clever, what else but to endorse such an awesome debut, right?