Sophie Muller
Sophie Muller | |
---|---|
Birth name | Sophie Melanie Muller |
Born | St Pancras, London, England | 31 January 1962
Origin | Marylebone, London, England |
Occupation | Music video director |
Years active | 1982–present |
Sophie Melanie Muller (born 31 January 1962) is an English music video director, noted for her long-time collaborations with artists like The Strokes, Beyoncé, Coldplay, No Doubt, Gwen Stefani, Sade, Shakira, Shakespears Sister, Garbage, The Killers, Sophie Ellis-Bextor, Annie Lennox, Leona Lewis, Eurythmics, P!nk, One Direction, Sam Smith, Mika and Selena Gomez.
Background
Sophie Muller was born in St Pancras, London, United Kingdom, but spent her early years growing up on the Isle of Man. After leaving secondary education, she returned to London to attend Central St Martin's, gaining a Foundation Diploma in Art.
Following her graduation, Muller went to the Royal College of Art to study for her Masters in Film and Television, where she made "Interlude" and "In Excelsis Deo (In Adoration of God)." The latter won the J Walter Thompson Prize for creativity.
Her trademark style in most of her videos usually has a singer or a band inside a dim, isolated room.
Career
Muller's first taste of professional film came working as a third assistant on the 1984 horror/thriller Company of Wolves. She then went on to work for International Film and Video, honoring her for her editing, producing, and directing skills.
Muller's goal was to become a successful director in her own right, and her big break came through a chance meeting with John Stewart (brother of Eurythmics' Dave Stewart) and Billy Poveda of Oil Factory, an established film production company.
She has directed over one hundred music videos and has been a longtime collaborator with acts like Sophie Ellis-Bextor, No Doubt, Shakespears Sister, Garbage, Blur, Annie Lennox and Eurythmics. Her work with Annie Lennox won her a Grammy for the Diva video album. She also picked up an MTV Video Music Award for Lennox's 1992 hit "Why", and was also Grammy nominated for the Eurythmics' 1987 Savage video album. In total, Muller has directed over twenty videos for Lennox and Eurythmics and has a long time collaboration with producer Rob Small.
So far, she has directed eleven videos for Sophie Ellis-Bextor including "Take Me Home", "Murder on the Dancefloor", "Catch You", two versions of "Music Gets the Best of Me" and "Love Is a Camera".
Muller has also directed seven videos for No Doubt and six solo videos for Gwen Stefani. When No Doubt's "Don't Speak" won the award for Best Group Video at the 1997 MTV Video Music Awards, Stefani thanked her extensively, saying "I'd like to say that Sophie Muller is a genius." Stefani has also stated, "Sophie Muller is one of my most talented friends. She can and will only do projects that she is inspired by. She is driven by creativity and the love for what she does and as a result she never compromises. I consider her a true artist. I was a fan of Sophie's work before I even imagined working with her. She has a very pronounced style and taste that drew me in. I think she has the gift of being able to bring out the artist's personality, emotion and style. After working with her for the first time on our "Don't Speak" video, we became close friends [...]. On the set her direction is humble and simple, but she knows what she wants and knows when she gets it. A woman in charge in the male-dominated world of filmmaking makes the whole experience that much more exciting. [...] She has a way of making every cut have a reason and meaning. The videos have a life of their own and become better each time you watch them. I am always in shock the first time I see them and then after a few more times I am actually amazed. She has taught me a lot and I feel very lucky to have worked with her."[1]
The artwork for The Jesus and Mary Chain's 1994 album, Stoned & Dethroned, and the singles accompanying it, is composed entirely of stills from the video to the group's song "Sometimes Always," which was directed by Muller. She also directed the video for "Come On", which also appears on the album.
Muller states that her only ambition is to continue directing to her own high standards and to never grow bored. In 2004, she directed the socially aware video for Sarah McLachlan's "World on Fire",[2] where all but $15 of the entire $150,000 video budget was donated to charities. Recently, she has directed videos for Shakira, Mika, Kings of Leon, Brandon Flowers, Tom Odell and the critically acclaimed video for the Dixie Chicks, "Not Ready to Make Nice".
Videography
1980s
1982
- Eurythmics – "The Walk" (editing)
1987
- Eurythmics – "Beethoven (I Love to Listen to)"
- Eurythmics – "I Need a Man"
1988
- Eurythmics – "You Have Placed a Chill in My Heart"
- Eurythmics – "Brand New Day"
- Eurythmics – "Do You Want to Break Up?"
- Eurythmics – "Heaven"
- Eurythmics – "I Need You"
- Eurythmics – "Put the Blame on Me"
- Eurythmics – "Savage"
- Eurythmics – "Wide Eyed Girl"
- Sade – "Nothing Can Come Between Us"
- Sade – "Turn My Back on You"
- Sade – "Love Is Stronger Than Pride"
- Shakespears Sister – "Break My Heart"
- Shakespear's Sister – "Heroine"
- Annie Lennox featuring Al Green – "Put a Little Love in Your Heart"
1989
- Shakespears Sister – "You're History"
- Shakespears Sister – "Run Silent"
- Sarah Brightman – "Anything but Lonely"
- Eurythmics – "Don't Ask Me Why"
1990s
1990
- Eurythmics – "Angel"
- Julia Fordham – "Lock and Key"
- Sinéad O'Connor – "The Emperor's New Clothes"
1991
- Nanci Griffith – "Late Night Grande Hotel"
- World Party – "Thank You World"
- Curve – "Coast Is Clear"
- Shakespears Sister – "Goodbye Cruel World"
1992
- Annie Lennox – "Why"
- Annie Lennox – "Precious"
- Annie Lennox – "Cold"
- Annie Lennox – "Money Can't Buy It"
- Annie Lennox – "Legend in My Living Room"
- Annie Lennox – "The Gift"
- Annie Lennox – "Primitive"
- Annie Lennox – "Keep Young and Beautiful"
- Annie Lennox – "Walking on Broken Glass"
- Annie Lennox – "Love Song for a Vampire"
- Annie Lennox – "Little Bird"
- Shakespears Sister – "Stay"
- Shakespears Sister – "I Don't Care"
- Shakespears Sister – "Hello (Turn Your Radio On)"
- Vegas – "Possessed"
- Sade – "No Ordinary Love"
- Curve – "Fait Accompli"
- Aaron Neville – "Somewhere, Someday"
1993
- Björk – "Venus as a Boy"
1994
- Hole – "Miss World"
- The Jesus and Mary Chain Featuring Hope Sandoval – "Sometimes Always"
- The Jesus and Mary Chain – "Come On"
- Sparks – "When Do I Get to Sing My Way?"
1995
- Come – "Cimarron"
- Sophie B. Hawkins – "As I Lay Me Down"
- Sparks – "When I Kiss You"
- The Stone Roses – "Ten Storey Love Song"
- Lisa Loeb & Nine Stories – "Do You Sleep?"
- Jeff Buckley – "So Real"
- Weezer – "Say It Ain't So"
1996
- The Cure – "The 13th"
- Kè – "Strange World"
- Gary Barlow – "Forever Love"
- Shakespears Sister – "I Can Drive"
- No Doubt – "Don't Speak"
- No Doubt – "Excuse Me Mr."
- No Doubt – "Sunday Morning"
- The Lightning Seeds – "What If..."
1997
- Blur – "Beetlebum"
- Blur – "Song 2"
- Blur – "On Your Own"
- Maxwell – "Whenever, Wherever, Whatever"
- Curve – "Chinese Burn"
- No Doubt – "Live in the Tragic Kingdom"
- No Doubt – "Oi to the World"
1998
- James Iha – "Be Strong Now"
- Maxwell – "Luxury: Cococure"
- Sparklehorse – "Sick Of Goodbyes"
- Garbage – "When I Grow Up" (live version)
- Garbage – "The Trick Is to Keep Breathing"
- Rufus Wainwright – "April Fools"
1999
- Blur – "Tender" (Unreleased)
- Sinéad O'Connor – "Chiquita"
- Natalie Merchant Featuring N'dea Davenport – "Break Your Heart"
- Sparklehorse – "Pig"
- Manic Street Preachers – "You Stole the Sun from My Heart"
- Garbage – "When I Grow Up" (U.S. version)
- Semisonic – "Secret Smile"
- The Cardigans – "Hanging Around"
- Sarah McLachlan – "Possession" (American version)
- Sarah McLachlan – "I Will Remember You"
- Emiliana Torrini – "To Be Free"
- Beth Orton – "Central Reservation"
- Sarah McLachlan – "Ice Cream"
- Supergrass – "Mary"
2000s
2000
- No Doubt – "Simple Kind of Life"
- Ute Lemper – "The Case Continues"
- Doves – "Catch the Sun"
- Bentley Rhythm Ace – "How'd I Do Dat?"
- Alisha's Attic – "Push It All Aside"
- Alisha's Attic – "Pretender Got My Heart"
- JJ72 – "Oxygen"
- PJ Harvey – "Good Fortune"
- Sade – "By Your Side"
- Coldplay – "Trouble" (U.K. Version)
- Jamelia – "Boy Next Door"[3]
2001
- Turin Brakes – "The Door"
- Sade – "King of Sorrow"
- Turin Brakes – "Underdog (Save Me)"
- No Doubt – "Bathwater"
- PJ Harvey – "A Place Called Home"
- Nelly Furtado – "Turn off the Light"
- Sophie Ellis-Bextor – "Take Me Home"
- PJ Harvey – "This Is Love"
- Radiohead – "I Might Be Wrong"
- Sophie Ellis-Bextor – "Murder on the Dancefloor"
2002
- Amy Studt – "Just a Little Girl"
- Sophie Ellis-Bextor – "Move This Mountain"
- Sugababes – "Freak Like Me"
- Coldplay – "In My Place"
- Amy Studt – "Misfit"
- The Beu Sisters – "I Was Only 17"
- Sparta – "Cut Your Ribbon"
- Pink – "Family Portrait"
- No Doubt (featuring Lady Saw) – "Underneath It All"
- Sophie Ellis-Bextor – "Music Gets the Best of Me" Day Version
- Sophie Ellis-Bextor – "Music Gets the Best of Me" Night Version
2003
- Nickel Creek – "Speak"
- Dolly Parton – "I'm Gone"
- Dido – "Life for Rent"
- Pink – "Trouble"
- The Raveonettes – "That Great Love Sound"
- Sophie Ellis-Bextor – "I Won't Change You" [co-produced]
2004
- Dixie Chicks – "Top of the World"
- The Killers – "Mr. Brightside"
- Sixpence None the Richer – "Don't Dream It's Over"
- Maroon 5 – "This Love"
- Maroon 5 – "She Will Be Loved"
- Nelly Furtado – "Try"
- Mindy Smith – "Come to Jesus"
- Sarah McLachlan – "World on Fire"
- Sarah McLachlan – "Stupid"
- The Strokes – "The End Has No End"
- Natasha Bedingfield – "These Words" (UK version)
- Vanessa Carlton – "White Houses"
- Loretta Lynn Featuring Jack White – "Portland, Oregon"
2005
- KT Tunstall – "Black Horse and the Cherry Tree"
- Garbage – "Why Do You Love Me"
- Garbage – "Bleed Like Me"
- Garbage – "Sex Is Not the Enemy"
- Garbage – "Run Baby Run"
- Gwen Stefani – "Cool"
- Coldplay – "Fix You"
- Faith Hill Featuring Tim McGraw – "Like We Never Loved at All"
- Gwen Stefani – "Luxurious"
2006
- Shakira featuring Wyclef Jean – "Hips Don't Lie"
- Dixie Chicks – "Not Ready to Make Nice"
- She Wants Revenge – "These Things"
- Faith Hill – "Stealing Kisses"
- Lily Allen – "Smile"
- Beyoncé featuring Jay-Z- "Deja Vu"
- Beyoncé – "Ring the Alarm"
- The Raconteurs – "Level"
- Gwen Stefani – "Wind It Up"
- Siobhán Donaghy- "Don't Give It Up"
2007
- Sophie Ellis-Bextor – "Catch You"
- Mika – "Grace Kelly"
- Gwen Stefani – "4 in the Morning"
- Mika – "Love Today"
- Rufus Wainwright – "Going to a Town"
- Garbage – "Tell Me Where It Hurts"
- Sophie Ellis-Bextor – "Today the Sun's on Us"
- Maroon 5 – "Won't Go Home Without You"
- Gwen Stefani – "Early Winter"
2008
- The Kills – "U.R.A. Fever"
- The Kills – "Cheap and Cheerful"
- The Kills – "Last Day of Magic"
- Leona Lewis – "Better in Time"
- Leona Lewis – "Footprints in the Sand"
- The Ting Tings – "That's Not My Name"
- Gavin Rossdale – "Love Remains The Same"
- Kings of Leon – "Sex on Fire"
- Cold War Kids – "Something Is Not Right with Me"
- Duffy – "Stepping Stone"
- Sarah McLachlan – "U Want Me 2"
- Duffy – "Rain on Your Parade"
- Kings of Leon – "Use Somebody"
2009
- Paloma Faith – "Stone Cold Sober"
- Beyoncé – "Broken-Hearted Girl"
- Shakira – "Did It Again"[4] / Lo Hecho Está Hecho
- Pink – "I Don't Believe You"
- Shakira – "Give It Up to Me"[5]
- Broken Bells – "The High Road"
2010s
2010
- Sade – "Soldier of Love"
- Sade – "Babyfather"
- Armin van Buuren vs. Sophie Ellis-Bextor – "Not Giving Up on Love"
- Cheryl Cole – "Promise This"
- Cheryl Cole – "The Flood"
- Brandon Flowers – "Only The Young"
- Kings of Leon – "Radioactive"
2011
- The Kills – "Satellite"
- Ellie Goulding – "Lights"
- Noah and the Whale – "L.I.F.E.G.O.E.S.O.N."
- Birdy – "Skinny Love"
- Sade – "Love Is Found"
2012
- Alicia Keys – "Girl on Fire"
- No Doubt – "Settle Down"
- Beyoncé – "I Was Here"
- No Doubt – "Push and Shove"
- Labrinth feat Emeli Sandé – "Beneath Your Beautiful"
2013
- Rihanna – "Stay"
- Tom Odell – "Hold Me"
- Garbage and Screaming Females – "Because the Night"
- Lana Del Rey – "Young and Beautiful"[6]
- Pink feat. Lily Rose Cooper – "True Love"
- Birdy – "Wings"
- Sophie Ellis-Bextor – "Wanderlust" (Álbum trailer)
- Sophie Ellis-Bextor – "Young Blood"[7]
- John Mayer featuring Katy Perry – "Who You Love"
- Robin Thicke – "Feel Good"
- Katy B – "Crying for No Reason"
2014
- Sophie Ellis-Bextor – "Runaway Daydreamer"
- Tim McGraw – "Lookin' for That Girl"[8]
- Birdy – "Words As Weapons"
- Katy B – "Still"
- Sophie Ellis-Bextor – "Love Is a Camera"
- OneRepublic – "Love Runs Out"
- Gwen Stefani – "Baby Don't Lie"
- Gwen Stefani – "Spark the Fire"
- Labrinth – "Jealous"
- Sam Smith – "Like I Can"
2015
- Garbage – "The Chemicals"
- Selena Gomez – "Good for You"
- Misty Miller – "Happy"
- One Direction – "Perfect"
- Gwen Stefani – "Used to Love You"
2016
- Gwen Stefani – "Make Me Like You"
- The Kills - "Heart Of A Dog"
References
- ^ "» Music Video Director Sophie Muller Music Video Wire –". Mvwire.com. 2002-02-11. Retrieved 2013-08-10.
- ^ "Sarah McLachlan's Socially-Charged Video 'World On Fire' Raises $150,000 To Benefit 11 Charities Worldwide; Video Compiled and Directed by Sophie Muller Benefiting Charities include Carolina for Kibera, Comic Relief, CARE, Dorcas, Engineers Without Borders, Help The Aged, Film Aid, Warchild, Heifer International, ITDG, and Action Aid". PR Newswire. 05-OCT-04. Retrieved 6 February 2010.
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(help) - ^ Boy Next Door CD 1 (CD Liner). Jamelia. Parlophone. 2000.
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suggested) (help)CS1 maint: others in cite AV media (notes) (link) - ^ "Shakira Video Shoot Myspace Giveaway Sweepstakes Official Rules". Web.archive.org. Archived from the original on February 23, 2012. Retrieved 2014-07-31.
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suggested) (help) - ^ "Videos". Rolling Stone. Retrieved 2013-08-10.
- ^ Pelly Jenn; Laura Snapes (10 May 2013). "Watch Lana Del Rey's Video for Gatsby Soundtrack Song "Young and Beautiful"". Pitchfork Media. Retrieved 18 September 2013.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^ "Sophie Ellis-Bextor premieres 'Young Blood' video". Pop Sirens. 2013-11-25. Retrieved 2014-07-31.
- ^ "CMT : Videos : Tim McGraw : Lookin' for That Girl". Country Music Television. Retrieved March 15, 2014.