About Music Videos Club
Music Videos Club is a music video archive and editorial destination built for people who want more than a thumbnail and a play button. Every page on this site pairs the video — official release, live performance, or rare footage — with the real story behind it: chart history, recording details, the human moments that shaped the song, and the cultural context that explains why it still matters.
The archive spans more than six decades of popular music, from the first wave of rock ‘n’ roll and the golden age of soul through the disco era, the MTV explosion, the rise of country crossover, and the streaming present. Whether you’re looking for the defining sounds of the 1960s, the singer-songwriters and funk architects of the 1970s, or the synth-driven blockbusters of the 1980s, you’ll find the video and the story in the same place.
The editorial approach here is deliberate. Every article is written from scratch — no AI copy, no press release recycling, no Wikipedia summaries dressed up as insight. The facts are researched, the context is earned, and the writing is built for music fans who already know the basics and want to go deeper. Who was in the room when the song was recorded? What almost stopped it from being released? Who covered it, sampled it, or made it their own twenty years later? Those are the questions Music Videos Club is built to answer.
The catalogue covers the full width of popular music. Soul and R&B sit alongside rock and pop. Country and disco share space with soft rock, funk, progressive rock, and psychedelic rock. If it made an impact — on the charts, on the culture, on the people who heard it at the right moment in their lives — it belongs here. The No.1 collection gathers the chart-toppers across genres and eras, while the Oldies archive reaches back to the recordings that built the foundations everything else stands on.
Live performances and television appearances receive the same editorial treatment as studio recordings. When Tracy Chapman walked onto the Wembley stage in 1988 because Stevie Wonder’s hard disk had gone missing, the performance that followed changed her career overnight — and that context belongs on the page alongside the video, not buried in a footnote. When Neil Sedaka performed “Love Will Keep Us Together” on The Midnight Special in 1975 alongside the duo who had taken his song to number one, the story of how that moment came to exist is part of what makes it worth watching. Music Videos Club is where both the video and that story live together.
The site is updated regularly with new pages across all genres and decades, from newly released singles to performances that have been sitting in archives for fifty years waiting for a proper introduction. If you have a suggestion, a correction, or a story worth telling, the conversation is always open.
Music Videos Club. Every video has a story.