Ad of the Day: Lincoln's Beck Concert Gets Immersive | Adweek
Advertisement

Ad of the Day: Lincoln

The automaker's great Beck concert gets immersive, but it's still the performance that steals the show

Beck covers David Bowie's "Sound and Vision."

In the case of Lincoln's "Sound and Vision" project, it turns out less is more.

Last week, the automaker released what it billed as the "fully immersive digital experience" of its much-commented-on Beck-covers-Bowie concert. In English, that roughly means a website that lets viewers wander around a virtual facsimile of the show. On the site, visitors can see all of theater-in-the-round's 160-musician ensemble, and hear different versions of the mix based on their positions, during the various stages of the performance.

As Wired outlines, it was an impressive feat of production—filmed with 360-degree camera rigs and recorded with microphone setups designed to mimic the human ear. That's another notch in the already-impressive belt of @radical.media director Chris Milk.

Still, even the high-definition version comes across as grainy and underwhelming, kind of like the digital version of a town car. The facial-recognition software—an optional, hands-free method for controlling the camera's perspective—is kludgy, and a distraction from the more remarkable piece of the campaign, which is the performance itself. And perhaps not surprisingly, the visuals themselves don't really add all that much. Watching people in the audience tap their feet and members of the orchestra wait for their entrances, it turns out, doesn't really make for all that good television. That's doubly true in contrast to Beck's own dynamic stage presence.

In fact, as great an experiment as the would-be-digital-wonderland seemed in theory, the plain old edited, focused, nine-minute regular video version of the performance (posted below), and the accompanying mix, make for a much better overall package without the bells and whistles of the gimmick. Especially because the concert itself is so good.

Still, for what it's worth, the campaign has drummed up a fair amount of attention for a brand nobody thought was capable of surprising anyone. And maybe it'll help Lincoln escape the widespread impression that it exists solely for the purpose of making limos.

CREDITS
Client: Lincoln
Agency: Hudson Rouge
Agency: Willo Perron & Associates
Production Company: @radical.media
Director: Chris Milk

Advertisement

See Also
22 minutes of gnarly race cars, gorgeous terrain, and cheesy dialogue
Ad of the Day: Hot Wheels
Maria Shriver thanks Eunice Kennedy Shriver and moms everywhere
Ad of the Day: P&G
The bike company targets twee millennials
Ad of the Day: Schwinn
Not everyone loves the automaker's fuel-saving Start/Stop technology
Ad of the Day: Volkswagen
Merkley's furry green puppet calls 'BS' on big-bank loans and mortgages
Ad of the Day: LendingTree
Retailer builds giant dollhouse inside Grand Central to show off its Threshold collection
Ad of the Day: Target
Kids at a graduation pool party get their feet wet with the cool-infused Galaxy S4
Ad of the Day: Samsung
A giant, forlorn metal puppet finds love in Daniel Kleinman's eye-opening spot
Ad of the Day: Lexus
The company makes the world's smallest movie with atoms, but that's just the beginning of the story
Ad of the Day: IBM
Beyoncé kicks ass, and drinks no Pepsi, in this 90-second beach party
Ad of the Day: H&M
The company returns to its roots of love and family in an image campaign from TBWA\Chiat\Day
Ad of the Day: Johnson & Johnson
Noam Murro returns to a specialty: the evocative car ad with no car at all
Ad of the Day: Land Rover
Where every room comes with the most charming and fun-loving yoga mat
Ad of the Day: Kimpton Hotels
The brewer ambushes a summer pool party with the frosty taste of winter
Ad of the Day: Coors Light
The Butler Bros. and Psyop magnify the focus on an unlikely source of toxic waste
Ad of the Day: Legacy