In the final frame, the split-screen dissolved. The two men stood side-by-side on a rooftop overlooking the skyline they were sworn to change. The music faded into the natural sounds of the city—sirens in the distance, a dog barking, a child laughing.
The video opened with a wide, cinematic drone shot of a city at dawn—not the polished skyscrapers of the financial district, but the raw, brick-and-mortar reality of the neighborhoods that rarely made the evening news. As the first notes hit—a soulful, looping jazz sample layered over a crisp boom-bap beat—the screen split. BLM - Compass & Elado.mp4
This wasn't just another brand collaboration or a standard music video. It was a visual manifesto. In the final frame, the split-screen dissolved
The editing was frantic yet intentional, mirroring the heartbeat of the streets. Compass’s voice grew more urgent, his verses cutting through the air like a blade, while Elado’s production swelled into a wall of sound—part gospel, part revolution. The video opened with a wide, cinematic drone