In the music video for “Forever Mirin,” Lord Conrad isn’t content to be the guy behind the soundboard. He shows up on screen as a cyber-armored billionaire, an interstellar DJ, a Tron-cycle racer, and a laser-gun-toting hero blasting cyborgs across a galaxy he built himself. The Italian producer, born Corrado Garibaldi, has done something that used to require a studio backlot and a nine-figure budget. He’s written himself into a sci-fi epic as the lead, and he did it with AI.
That’s the real story here. For most of film history, casting yourself as the action hero of your own universe meant you needed a crew, a soundstage, and producers willing to bet on you. Lord Conrad needed a progressive house track and AI generation tools. The video is entirely AI-made, which gives it that hyper-smooth, constantly morphing quality where interstellar armadas and cyberpunk megacities materialize on demand. One person, generating an entire world from scratch, then stepping into the middle of it as the protagonist.
What’s interesting is how completely he commits to the fantasy. There’s no irony, no wink at the camera. He’s surrounded by neon tickers flashing $1,000,000 for Bitcoin and the Nasdaq, Lamborghini-style supercars with butterfly doors, pink super-yachts, and champagne in sky-high penthouses. On-screen text claims a “Quantum CPU AI Revolution” has solved every human problem and handed out wealth and immortality to all. It’s techno-optimism cranked to its absolute fictional ceiling, the opposite of the usual sci-fi warning about machines turning on us.
Strip away the spectacle and you’re left with a question about authorship. When a single creator can generate the cities, the spacecraft, the villains, and the visual mythology, then install himself as the central figure, the line between producer and protagonist disappears. Lord Conrad has built a string of EDM hits, from “Touch The Sky” to “Only You,” which dancers have picked up on the shuffle-dance channel ELEMENTS, but this is the first time he’s been able to make himself the literal main character of the world the music lives in.
The result is loud, excessive, and entirely aware of who it’s for. It’s a self-portrait dressed up as a space opera, riding a progressive house beat. You can find Lord Conrad on his website, Instagram, Facebook, TikTok, YouTube, and Spotify, where the rest of the universe he keeps building is waiting.