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1-50 of 76
- A promotional video for Bryan Adams' 1995 hit single "Have You Really Ever Loved a Woman?"
- The later version features a surreal, dream-like sequence, where The Killers, dressed as cowboys, are attacked by scantly clad female warriors armed with boomerangs.
- A promotional video for Depeche Mode's 1997 single "It's No Good."
- "Enjoy the Silence" is a song by Depeche Mode, taken from their seventh studio album, Violator. The single is Gold certificated in the US and Germany. The song won Best British Single at the 1991 BRIT Awards.
- A promotional video for Depeche Mode's 1997 single "Barrel of a Gun."
- A career retrospective collecting the music videos of Depeche Mode from 1986 to 1998.
- Joy Division's video clip for "Atmosphere" is a posthumous tribute to lead singer/guitarist Ian Curtis (1956-1980), directed by Anton Corbijn, a close friend and official photographer of the band through its brief period. It consists of strange hooded people slowly walking on a beach, carrying objects and a big poster of Ian Curtis. The video also intertwines images from the band.
- A promotional video for Depeche Mode's 1993 single "Walking in My Shoes."
- The video also stars two models in underwear (one of whom was Anton Corbijn's partner), as well as passing pedestrians, featured in the closing 'out-takes' sequence of fast-edit shots.
- Released alongside The Smashing Pumpkins greatest hits CD "Rotten Apples", this video collection comes with all of the Pumpkins music videos (excluding "The End is the Beginning is the End"). It also comes with a live performance of "Geek USA" and "An Ode to No One" which is taken from their final performance at the Metro. There is also a hidden video for the never-before-released song "Untitled". All of the videos come with commentary from the band and some have out-takes and behind the scenes footage.
- A promotional video for Radiohead's 1993 hit single "Creep", one of their greatest singles from "Pablo Honey" album. The video consists of Thom Yorke and his band mates performing the song on a small stage followed by great light use and an enthusiastic audience jumping and fully enjoying the song.
- Depeche Mode performs in the music video "Personal Jesus" from the album "Violator" recorded for Mute Records. The video opens on a ranch as the band approaches on horseback and on a pickup truck. The band sings while dressed in cowboy hats and western gear. They appear to be meeting women at a brothel.
- "Policy of Truth" is a song by English electronic band Depeche Mode, released in May 1990 as the third single from their seventh studio album Violator (1990). Although the song was less successful than the first two singles before, it is the only Depeche Mode single to chart higher on the US Billboard Hot 100 chart (#15) than on the UK Singles Chart (#16), as well as peaking at number two on the Billboard Dance Club Songs chart. The music video for "Policy of Truth" is directed by Anton Corbijn and appears on the VHS collection Strange Too.
- "The Strongest Man in the Universe" (Dave Gahan) sings while giving a show with a traveling circus in the middle of nowhere.
- The music video was directed by Anton Corbijn and included on the Strange compilation. Shot entirely in black and white, the video depicts Dave Gahan's car from the "Never Let Me Down Again" video being towed away while he waits on crutches, only to discard those crutches as he rides on the back of a Vespa SS180 driven by a female companion to a local southwestern village, where the rest of the band play the song while Gahan and the woman dance.
- A promotional video for Depeche Mode's 1997 single "Useless."
- The second version shows the Cranberries performing the song in a dimly lit aquatic-themed room interspersed with shots of geometric flowers hitting water. This video received high rotation on MTV's 120 Minutes in 1993 before the release of the bands next single, Linger, and the re-release of Dreams worldwide.
- A promotional video for Metallica's 1996 single "Hero of the Day."
- Björk: Volumen Plus includes the music videos for Alarm Call and All Is Full of Love from Homogenic, Hidden Place, Pagan Poetry, and Cocoon from Vespertine, and It's in Our Hands from Greatest Hits and Nature Is Ancient from Family Tree.
- Bryan Adams performs in the music video "Do I Have to Say the Words?" from the album "Waking Up the Neighbours" recorded for A&M Records. The music video begins with Brian Adams travelling in a taxi through the crowded streets of Istanbul, Turkey. He searches for a woman who poses at a variety of landmarks.
- A promotional video for the Rollins' Band's 1994 single "Liar."
- A promotional video for U2's 1997 single "Please."
- The first version was filmed in Berlin and features the band members performing at Hansa Studios interspersed with footage of Trabants (an East German automobile they became fond of as a symbol for a changing Europe) and shots of them dressed in drag.