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Long gone is the time of sitting goggle-eyed in front of your shitty television while the latest Def Leppard video played every hour on the hour on MTV. These days, you gotta put a little effort into it if you wanna enjoy the nice music.

In recent weeks, a pair of artistsโ€”Portland heavy rockers Red Fang and Peruvian experimental musician Ale Hopโ€”have separately dropped new interactive videos into the world, both of which encourage your active participation to move the narrative forward or, in the case of the latter clip, change the sounds coming out of your headphones.

The Red Fang clip for their smokinโ€™ hot new tune โ€œAntidoteโ€ requires the most out of you. Truth be told, itโ€™s more video game than video. Developed with Wieden+Kennedyโ€™s Ansel Wallenfang, Red Fang: Headbang is a 16-bit video game in the form of a smartphone app that asks users to headbang along with the song, which will in turn help pop the heads off some zombies, destroy a car with some punkers, and defeat the big boss that is comedian Brian Posehnโ€™s head attached to the body of a mechanical spider. (Thereโ€™s also a sweet cameo appearance by Sleep/High on Fire guitarist Matt Pike along the way.)

Sound ridiculous? Youโ€™re damn right it does. Will you look foolish as you headbang (or move your phone around rapidly) at your desk today? Without a doubt. Head to the delightfully kitschy Red Fang: Headbang, or straight to the app store of your choice, to download the free app.

The clip from Ale Hop (AKA Alejandra Cardenas) is far less strenuous but much more musically adventurous. The new single โ€œOnomatopoeiaโ€ combines various samples from the Peruvian artistโ€™s most recent album Bodiless into a sonic collage that you can change and essentially remix through a โ€œ360-degree VR experienceโ€ created by filmmaker Lorena Garcรญa.

Itโ€™s a little creepy, too, as you are bearing witness to the faces and torsos of people who all look like they are going through some manner of physical or mental distress. It works very well with the clatter and thrum of the music running through each part of this clip. And youโ€™ll get a unique experience every time you try it as the music will shift and adapt with each viewing.

If youโ€™re lucky (or crazy) enough to own a VR headset, thatโ€™s the ideal way to experience โ€œOnomatopoeia,โ€ but next best is to watch itโ€”with headphones onโ€”using iPhoneโ€™s YouTube app. If all else fails, you can take a spin through the clip on Ale Hopโ€™s Facebook page.