Every week brings a fresh wave of music videos, and most disappear as quickly as they arrive. But a few make us stop and pay attention. These are the clips that caught our eyes this week, each one adding something to the song, shaping a mood or building a world of its own. From polished intensity to underground grit, this is the selection that stood out on impact alone. Press play and see what made the cut.
Jamie’s Elsewhere – “Alchemical”
A live version with real pulse, “Alchemical” feels like being dropped into the middle of the room with the band, sweat in the air and every phrase landing harder because there is no studio veil to hide behind. It is raw, confident and strangely intimate.
Źrenica – “Endymion”
Today the band release “Endymion”, their debut single and an emotional plunge into one of the defining struggles of our era. The track explores depression, resilience and the slow, fragile process of learning how to move again when the world feels drained of colour. Emotional vocals build into intensifying layers that echo the feeling of cracking, collapsing and eventually gathering strength. Źrenica frame it as a tribute to the quiet fighters, the ones who see too much, feel too deeply and still manage to rise in a way that warms everyone around them. The video matches that spirit with a stark, human honesty.
Levels – “Black Dove”
Arkansas cyber-industrial metal unit Levels close out their year with the explosive clip for “Black Dove”, directed by Spencer Peck. The song is built on glitch-leaning riffs, deep grooves and vocals that snap like electric wire, and it lingers in your head long after you step away. The band describe it as a requiem for lost faith and forbidden love, a haunting prayer wandering through the ruins of devotion to ghosts born in the mind. The video carries that tension in every frame.
Vukovi – “Bladed”
The Scottish duo unleash their monochromatic, razor-edged video for “Bladed”, the final word from their critically praised 2025 album “My God Has Got A Gun”. Directed by Zak Pinchin, the clip captures the song’s volatile energy, all radiance, rupture and emotional turbulence. Janine Shilstone calls it her favourite track from the album, describing the video as elegant on the surface while hinting at destruction and mental unrest beneath. It is a perfect closing chapter for a band whose identity blends alt-rock force, melodic bite and an unflinching approach to themes of mental health, religion and liberation.
Moodring x Clevatess – “Cannibal”
Now Atlanta-based, Moodring return with a visualiser for “Cannibal”, a track steeped in late 90s and early 2000s hard-rock DNA. Hunter Young leads the charge with a sound that fuses nu-metal, alt-rock and industrial dance, pushing their newly sharpened edge. He explains that the song mirrors the life cycle of black widow spiders, using it as a metaphor for intimate relationships that turn self-destructive, nihilistic and ultimately doomed. Heavy riffs, kinetic synths, dark themes. Classic Moodring, but meaner.