
Fans can visit to upload their own footage, which will instantly appear in the “Level of Concern” (Never-Ending Music Video). Conceived by the band with award-winning storyteller and director Jason Zada, the concept behind the innovative digital campaign was to find a unique way to connect with fans during the pandemic, and give them an opportunity to share meaningful moments from their lives via the continuous video stream. Powered by Imposium, every three minutes and forty seconds a new music video is created and streamed live to YouTube, containing brand new content from fans. Livestreaming now on YouTube, the groundbreaking video for Twenty One Pilots’ hit “Level of Concern” pulls in fan created content, in real time, live on YouTube. The opener “Heavydirtysoul” sounds like The Prodigy is going to tear through your speakers, as drummer Josh Dun goes completely ballistic.The snappy “Tear in My Heart” has a David Bowie meets Death Cab For Cutie vibe to it, while the consummation of “Path Boy” brings out the best electropop parts of “Vessel.JUNE 22, 20 20 – Twenty One Pilots have released the first-ever, never-ending music video with the help of their fans. Furthermore, based on Twenty One Pilot’s incoherent new collection, “Blurryface,” the answer isn’t anything but difficult to come by.The highs on “Blurryface” produce wonderment.

Much like the best groups that left Fueled By Ramen’s brilliant time of the mid-to-late 2000s, Twenty One Pilots offers something extraordinary and refreshing.The Columbus twosome’s 2013 achievement collection, “Vessel,” was each bit a star-is-conceived minute as Paramore’s “Uproar!,” Gym Class Heroes’ “As Cruel as School Children” or Cobra Starship’s “Viva La Cobra.”But the genuine inquiry is the thing that comes next.
