Barei premieres the video clip for 'Say yay!', a song that will represent Spain in Eurovision
Directed by Gus Carballo, it was filmed with RED Scarlet and Sony Alpha a7S II cameras in cities such as Madrid, Barcelona, Stockholm, London, Havana and Miami.
Barei walks with his back to the camera. The evening falls and the city lights are already on. He has a sports bag hanging on him. Behind, the city of Stockholm. Lights, buildings, cars, people passing by... This is how the video clip of Say yay!, the song with which Barei will participate in the 2016 Eurovision Song Contest.
Directed by Gus Carballo, it will be the letter of introduction of the Spanish representative for European viewers. The video clip, which will be broadcast on all television stations participating in the Festival, has been filmed with cameras RED Scarlet y Sony Alpha a7S II by the producer The Panda Bear Show.
Carballo highlights that "Barei arrives at a tunnel in the city, takes out a small sound system from her bag and ties the laces of her sneakers tightly. She begins to stretch and prepare to dance. Along with her, other young people try to dance and fight against the effort of not being defeated or against fatigue"... As the video clip progresses, everyone regains their strength and dances different types of urban dances. Everyone has fun and dances in a complicit manner with Barei.
International filming
Madrid, Barcelona, Stockholm, London, Havana, Miami... are some of the cities that appear in the video clip for 'Say yay!', a very international song: "The video takes place in many places because the message is union, coincidence, connections... Getting different people from different places, of different races and countries, united by difficulties... Street dancers, adults, children... They are all united by dancing. When someone dances, there are no differences. They are abstracted in that universe,” adds Gus Carballo.
And, above all, a story of personal improvement, as Barei herself explained during filming: “The step of the feet will be the common thread of several stories, and reflects that something that at first seems difficult, if you try again and again, in the end you end up achieving everything you set out to do.”
The Madrid singer also wanted to include her fans in the video clip. It is the first time that a video clip of a Spanish candidate in Eurovision integrates the followers of the contest through a flashmob.
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