This is 'Mumford Sons - Hopeless Wanderer - YouTube.mp4' by Dylan Cousins on Vimeo, the home for high quality videos and the people who love them. The new album ‘Delta’ out now! Order here: Official Website - Facebook - http://po.st/mu. Well, the band's latest video somehow manages to be even better. Though the actual Mumford & Sons members don't even appear in it once, their comedic doppelgangers certainly do. 'We are delighted to present you the new video for the song Hopeless Wanderer, featuring Mumf. Oh wait,' the band tweets, along with a link to the above video. None of the musicians in the video are actually in Mumford and Sons. Compare their Babel video to 'Hopeless Wanderer'. The musicians in Hopeless Wanderer are famous comedians/actors. It was unexpected of a band like Mumford and Sons to allow others to make fun of their style, especially in an official music video. The video will stop till all the gaps in the line are filled in. If the video stops your life will go down, when your life runs out the game ends. To listen to a line again, press the button or the 'backspace' key. You can also drag to the left over the lyrics. To skip a word, press the button or the 'tab' key.
Mumford & Sons - 'Hopeless Wanderer' Video
Mumford & Sons - 'Hopeless Wanderer' Video
British banjo-folk pastiche-kings Mumford & Sons are more famous than a motherfucker, so they don’t have to care whether you like them or not. (I do like them, though.) And yet, they’ve pulled at least a couple of moves that seem directed toward making you, Stereogum reader, like them at least a little bit, including the repeated casting of people you already like in their music videos. First, there was Idris Elba in “Lover Of The Light.” And now comes the “Hopeless Wanderer” video, which features an all-star cast of famous comedy bros — Jason Sudeikis, Jason Bateman, Will Forte, noted bluegrass aficionado Ed Helms — all doing their best Mumford impressions and making what might be the most Mumford video of all-time. The video stays pretty straight-faced most of the way, which only serves to further skewer the band’s deathlessly sincere old-timey pose. And honestly, isn’t it a little bit brave for a band to hire famous people to make their whole thing look stupid in their own music video? I think it is. Either way, whether you enjoy liking or detesting this band, it’s a fun video. Forte’s fake scraggle-beard is obviously amazing, but don’t sleep on Sudeikis’s fake earrings. Sam Jones directs; watch it below.
Mumford’s new album Babel is out now on Island/Glassnote.