Below are a sampling of music videos I have created mostly as a vehicle to showcase various music projects I am involved with. For a complete listing, check out my YT channel.
Blood Chimeras is a music project featuring me and my husband Ian. This video features digitized VHS footage of us (and many dear friends) captured in 2000 and 2001 in and around Boston, MA.
Gertrude Atherton is a Providence, RI based band I’ve had the extreme pleasure of playing with since 2011. This video features vintage home movie footage from the Prelinger Archives.
Ian and I have long made music under the moniker Twin Goat. Our music is typically instrumental, often features collaborators, and is usually created during the RPM Challenge. Maybe it’s the instrumental nature of our work, but it’s often compared to soundtrack music, so I’ve started using it as the soundtrack to moments we capture on film. This one from a 2025 trip to Greece.
For the 2020 RPM Challenge Ian thought it would be fun for Twin Goat to experiment with electronic music. We intended to use this album as the audio component of a video installation we were asked to produce for an event called Bish Bash.
I wanted to channel the video stylings of our dear friend Andy Baraf who passed away in 2017. Unfortunately, COVID got in the way and we were never able to see the vision through to completion. Most of this footage is from a trip to New Mexico processed the app Hyperspektiv.
More Twin Goat music set to more digitized VHS footage from our 2001 honeymoon in Italy. For this RPM Challenge, Ian challenged us to have a guitar or bass loop serve as the foundation of each song. This song remains one of my favorites so I naturally decided to set it to video footage from one of my favorite trips.
This was a fun experiment and first time trying to actually capture video footage for the purpose of making a music video. This one features another Providence band that I play bass in called Dëmonstration Tapes. Complimentary footage courtesy of a collection of content titled “Panorama Ephemera” by Rick Prelinger.
