4.1. Taxonomy
Lepidoptera being the most commonly insects featured in music videos is not terribly surprising, given that it is a visual medium. Butterflies and moths are the most abundant species in album covers [
3], the second most common in rock music [
4], and third in folk [
5]. Butterflies are conspicuous and well-known to non-entomologists, appearing in artwork going back centuries. Their colorful wing patterns and elegant flight provide them with perhaps the greatest aesthetic value among insects. It probably helps that butterflies are relatively easy to animate, and live specimens are not difficult to obtain, such as the Painted Lady (
Vanessa cardui) appearing in Maddie and Tae’s “Fly”.
Hymenoptera are the second most frequently observed insects in music videos. Bees compose the majority of these, followed by ants and wasps. This pattern probably follows the familiarity of most humans with this group. The popularity of hymenopterans may be attributable to their almost unique position of being able to represent both positive and negative traits, apparently leading to them being the most common insects in rock music album titles, song titles and artist names, as well as subjects of folk music [
4,
5,
6]. Bees can suggest the sweetness of honey, ants thriftiness, hard work, and toughness, and wasps the threat of the sting. Bees’ perceived cuteness is utilized by frequent appearances of people in bee costumes, the best known being Blind Melon’s “No Rain”, in which an adorable little girl wears a bee costume throughout the entire video, and she is joined by bee-costumed adult dancers. The availability of live honeybees (
Apis mellifera) likely facilitates their appearance in several videos, such as Missy Elliot’s “Work it”. The strength of ants is well demonstrated in Rammstein’s “Links 2 3 4”, in which a colony of ants, initially threatened by several large tiger beetles, rally their forces to wipe them out. The totemic quality of ants is represented by rap group Alien Ant Farm, which uses their presumably trademarked ant head logo in at least 6 videos. Wasps were almost always used in a terrorizing way. The recent appearance of Asian giant hornets (
Vespa mandarinia) in North America has spawned at least two songs and videos, both with negative implications.
Araneae, Coleoptera, Diptera, and Orthoptera were approximately equally represented among music videos. Araneae are the most common arthropods in older feature films [
11], perhaps indicating a shift in attitudes from negative to positive, though when shown in music videos, they were almost always used to inspire fear. Spiders and tarantulas are nearly all used to inspire horror, perhaps best illustrated by The Cure’s “Lullaby” in which spiderwebs and tarantulas are featured throughout, and the lead singer is swallowed by a spider in the end.
Beetles are often colorful enough to be co-opted for their aesthetic value, such as lightning bugs (Lampyridae), but the diversity of their uses defies classification, as scarabs may be used to represent death, while mealworms (
Tenebrio molitor larvae) sometimes serve as stand-ins for maggots. These varied representations have resulted in a consistently moderate use of Coleoptera in music: beetles are the third most common group in cover art [
3], fourth in folk songs [
5], and seventh in rock songs [
4].
Flies often inspire disgust, as do their larvae, maggots [
12]. Dipterans are also well known to all and can be quite pestiferous. Hence, flies are the second most common in folk music [
5], third in albums and songs (first in artist names) [
4], and fourth in cover art [
3]. In Alice in Chains’ “I Stay Away” (from the album
Jar of Flies), flies are central to the story, and are presented in a fascinating mix of live specimens and claymation. Mosquitoes are also used with unpleasant implications. The Yeah Yeah Yeahs’ “Mosquito” features a hyper-realistic CGI mosquito taking a blood meal from a human hand for much of the duration of the video. Its abdomen swells to enormous proportions, and it gets squished in the end.
Orthoptera made a strong showing in insect videos, as they have in other media; they are 5th in folk music [
5], 5th in rock artists and albums, and 6th in tracks [
4]. This taxon gets a boost from the Moon Crickets, a rap group that sports their cricket logo in four different videos. Grasshoppers and crickets often represent favorable values [
13] and could presumably be used to generate favorable feelings. Rather than being seen as a useful food source [
13], swarms of locusts are used to generate fear in several videos. Machine Head’s “Locust” probably features the biggest swarm of any species and the greatest number of insects in any video, with dense clouds of migratory locusts contributing to the strong menacing effect of the music.
Cockroaches were the seventh most popular in videos, as well as in rock music tracks [
4]. Nearly always, these are the go-to species for inspiring disgust. Cockroaches are the second most disgusting arthropods [
12]. Familiar to all as household pests, swarms of cockroaches appear in the video for Papa Roach’s “Between Angels and Insects”.
Other taxa appeared in numbers too small to make any strong inferences, though most seemed to conform to stereotypical roles, such as fleas and lice being negative. Mantids and phasmids made a small showing, usually with live specimens. A few obscure insects did appear, including a dobsonfly, a lacewing, a mayfly and a brief glimpse of a caddisfly. This rarity is, again, consistent with most people’s ignorance of these species.
Less common non-insect arthropods were dominated by scorpions and myriapods, but also included two tailless whipscorpions, two ticks, two vinegaroons and a single harvestman. Scorpions and centipedes are among the most feared arthropods [
12], which may account for their frequency among non-insect arthropods.
Conspicuous by their absence were the Hemiptera (Heteroptera), which are common in rock music in part because of the use of the generic term “bug” and the appearance of bed bugs in many songs [
4]. The term “bug” alone does not lend itself to illustration. No bed bugs appeared in any music videos, perhaps because they prove difficult to obtain. Homopterans in the form of cicadas did show up and were generally cast in a favorable light. In fact, a recent mass emergence of
Magicicada was celebrated by Trasea’s “Cicada Serenade” (Brood X), Southern Culture on the Skids’ “Cicada Rock 2020 (Brood IX)”, and an earlier brood by Lloyd H. Miller with “Seventeen Years (a cicada love song)”.
Half of the music videos with insects in them also had insects in the title of the song. Most often, the insect named in the song title was at least one of those appearing in the video. As seen previously [
4], insect themes can be correlated, as an artist with an insect name is likely to produce insect-related albums and songs. However, as artists with insect names were relatively rare in this study, only two completed the trifecta, having an insect video of an insect song from an insect album: Papa Roach’s “Between Angels and Insects” from
Infest and Wu-Tang Killa Bees “Killa Beez” from
The Sting.
4.2. Animation
Leskosky and Berenbaum [
14] suggest that one of the reasons that insects are uncommon in early animated films is that the animation of multiple legs, wings and antennae is difficult, time-consuming and expensive. Interestingly, many music videos featured animated insects, with some of the subjectively best being Tool’s “Prison Sex” and “Vicarious”, Alice In Chains’ “I Stay Away”, and The Uncluded’s “Organs”. It seems likely that innovations in animation technology, such as CGI, have made the animation of insects easier, such that they are more readily featured. On the other hand, the time-consuming claymation and stop-motion techniques are featured in a number of these videos, including the Psychedelic Porn Crumpets’ “Tally-Ho” and They Might Be Giants’ “Insect Hospital”. It may be easier to animate insect behaviors than to induce live insects to perform. Nonetheless, live insects are featured in many videos as well.
Many such insects were readily identifiable to genus, species and sex upon examination, even to those with limited taxonomic skills. These cases included some common in the pet trade or in culture that would be readily available to insect wranglers hired to supply specimens, including the monarch (
Danaus plexippus), the Madagascar hissing cockroach (
Gromphadorhina portentosa), the mealworm (
Tenebrio molitor), and the Emperor scorpion (
Pandinus imperator). The Asian giant hornet (
Vespa mandarinia), the honeybee (
Apis mellifera), and the Atlas moth (
Attacus atlas) were also noted. Odonates are generally distinct and readily identifiable from photographs [
15], thus the following were noted from music videos: the Halloween pennant (
Celithemis eponina), the widow skimmer female (
Libellula luctuosa), the roseate skimmer (
Orthemis ferruginea), the blue dasher (
Pachydiplax longipennis), the twelve-spotted skimmer (
Libellula pulchella), the flame skimmer (
Libellula saturata), the eastern amberwing (
Perithemis tenera), the eastern pondhawk female (
Erythemis simplicicollis), and the ebony jewelwing (
Calopteryx maculata). Identifiable to genus were
Atta, Catocala and
Magicicada. Hence, actual insects can also be used to great effect in video, although in many cases they were represented by static images or stock footage.
Music videos with insects spanned a diverse range of musical genres, including alternative, classic rock, dance, death core, folk, hard rock/metal, hip hop, new age, new wave, nu metal, pop, punk, ska, and probably others that I was unable to recognize. Apparently, insects appeal to many varieties of musicians.
4.3. Swarms, Chimerae and Giants
Swarms and giant insects are common in movies and are used to induce horror [
11]. It is not surprising that these trends carry over into the music video genre, which have a limited amount of time in which to get the viewer’s attention. On the other hand, human–insect chimerae were often depicted in a friendly fashion. People in insect costumes or animated characters with insect wings populated quite a few videos, conveying a fun atmosphere and the fantasy of human-powered flight. This pattern is in curious opposition to that of early film, where the arthropodization of humans was common and horrific [
11], and animated films, where anthropomorphic insects are used for moral and metaphor [
14].
Curiously, there are few cases of insects playing instruments. Mostly these consist of musicians dressed in insect costumes. The exception was The Uncluded’s “Organs”, which opens with a grasshopper and cicada playing instruments. These are quite sensible choices, as both are sound-producing insects. In Primus’s “Shake Hands with Beef”, band members fly with insect wings, and one flies into a bug zapper at the end.
On the other hand, entomological techniques appeared in at least 11 videos. Most such videos demonstrated various forms of insect control. Dori Montana feat. Tbeezi’s “Kill The Roach” demonstrates spraying RAID insecticide and simulated stomping of insects. Korn’s “Somebody Someone” shows a variety of arthropods, and all but the fleas are squished in the end. In Mystikal’s “Tarantula”, the main character drives an exterminator truck and uses a backpack sprayer.
Not all such videos were so negative, however. Some made reference to insect collecting. The Stone Temple Pilots’ “Vasoline” shows a cricket and flies stuck to fly paper at the start, but also features a woman with an insect net and collection boxes. Marilyn Manson’s “Tourniquet” shows pinned insects, as does Rhydian’s “Parade”, which also shows many riker mounts on a wall. Others demonstrated apicultural themes. Mark Stanley’s “You Will Be Digitized” shows honeybees on a frame at the beginning. Sunna’s “Power Struggle”, Soundgarden’s “Black Hole Sun”, and The Head and the Heart’s “Honeybee” show a man in a bee suit. The Artichoke’s “The Commune” describes temporal polyethism in bees and features a lot of footage of hive activity.
Some videos took advantage of the tremendous diversity of insects. The most diversity demonstrated within a single video was Darth Nater’s “The Insect Song” and Boxcar’s “Insect (12-inch version)”, each with 10 orders. Weezer’s “All My Friends are Insects” featured seven orders, while Will Ragano’s “Cicada song” and Isaac Dunbar “Isaac’s Insects” showed five. The most diversity within an order is probably illustrated by Jesse Lane’s “Dragonfly Song”, which features mostly rotating photos of various dragonflies and a couple of damselflies (also an eclosing mayfly). Hence, the diversity of insects may be exploited artistically in the music video format, particularly with aesthetically pleasing taxa such as Odonata.
4.5. Best Viewed
A great many music videos featured only a brief glimpse of an insect or perhaps a band’s insect-themed logo. However, others used insects as the central character or theme that was displayed throughout nearly the entire video. These types are perhaps the most interesting for an entomologist to watch and include Alice in Chains’ “I Stay Away”, Andrew Bird’s “Imitosis”, Blind Melon’s “No Rain”, Bobby Jimmy & the Critters’ “Roaches”, Gnarls Barkley’s “Gone Daddy Gone”, The Orbweavers’ “Poison Garden”, Psychedelic Porn Crumpets’ “Tally-Ho”, PUSA’s “Ladybug”, Rammstein’s “Links 2 3 4”, S.P. Mullen & the Feel’s “Mayfly”, Southern Culture on the Skids’ “Cicada Rock 2020 (Brood IX)”, They Might Be Giants’ “Insect Hospital” and Yeah Yeah Yeahs’ “Mosquito”.
Several videos did not feature insects so prominently throughout the length of the video, but the insect was used to very dramatic effect via a brief, intimate encounter. Die Antwoord’s “Fatty Boom Boom” shows a large orthopteran (apparently a camel cricket) being birthed from a Lady Gaga look-alike. This South African hip-hop group’s stated purpose is to shock [
16], and they use arthropods as a means to this end in five videos. Tyler the Creator’s “Yonkers” shows live footage of the rapper handling, eating, then vomiting up a Madagascar hissing cockroach, all in one uninterrupted take comprising the first minute of the video. Entomophagy is known to get the viewer’s attention [
11], but careful examination reveals likely sleight of hand in this case. The moment before Tyler eats the roach, it goes out of frame in his left hand, then he eats something not quite identifiable from his right hand, strongly suggesting that he did not actually eat the roach. In this way, he gets the shock value of the scene without actually enduring the distaste and discomfort. In Soundgarden’s surreal “Black Hole Sun” video, one of the characters captures a lepidopteran with her elongated, animated tongue. This video also features swarms of honeybees and sphingid moths, as well as a cockroach being burned with a magnifying glass. The video is perhaps too bizarre for interpretation, though a certain degree of horror is certainly conveyed, as in the end people are drawn by gravity into the titular star to their presumed death.