"Never Understand" was the first single from Psychocandy to chart, reaching number 47 in the UK. It signaled a shift in the music landscape, moving away from the polished pop of the mid-80s toward something more confrontational.
The video for "Never Understand" is famously "surly". It features the band—brothers , bassist Douglas Hart , and Bobby Gillespie on drums—performing in a stripped-back, high-contrast style that emphasizes their "don't-give-a-fuck" attitude.
The band often plays with their backs to the camera or gazes downward through a "haystack of backcombed hair," a look that became iconic for the burgeoning shoegaze movement.
When released the music video for "Never Understand" in 1985, it wasn't just a promotional tool—it was a visual manifesto for a new kind of noise. Directed by Tim Broad , the video captures the band at their most raw and defiant, perfectly mirroring the "Beach Boys record played on a table saw" sound that would define their landmark debut, Psychocandy . The Visual Language of Noise
In interviews, the Reids have noted that their early videos were essentially just them "doing what they did on stage"—pretending it’s a gig and letting it fall apart.
The visuals support the song's core identity: a "sonic assault" that marries 1960s girl-group melodies with relentless, feedback-drenched drones. Cultural Impact and Legacy
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"Never Understand" was the first single from Psychocandy to chart, reaching number 47 in the UK. It signaled a shift in the music landscape, moving away from the polished pop of the mid-80s toward something more confrontational.
The video for "Never Understand" is famously "surly". It features the band—brothers , bassist Douglas Hart , and Bobby Gillespie on drums—performing in a stripped-back, high-contrast style that emphasizes their "don't-give-a-fuck" attitude.
The band often plays with their backs to the camera or gazes downward through a "haystack of backcombed hair," a look that became iconic for the burgeoning shoegaze movement.
When released the music video for "Never Understand" in 1985, it wasn't just a promotional tool—it was a visual manifesto for a new kind of noise. Directed by Tim Broad , the video captures the band at their most raw and defiant, perfectly mirroring the "Beach Boys record played on a table saw" sound that would define their landmark debut, Psychocandy . The Visual Language of Noise
In interviews, the Reids have noted that their early videos were essentially just them "doing what they did on stage"—pretending it’s a gig and letting it fall apart.
The visuals support the song's core identity: a "sonic assault" that marries 1960s girl-group melodies with relentless, feedback-drenched drones. Cultural Impact and Legacy
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