Lord Conrad’s ‘Forever Mirin’ Is the Most 2026 Music Video You’ll Ever Watch

Lord Conrad
Lord Conrad

There’s a moment in Lord Conrad’s “Forever Mirin” where a neon ticker flashes $1,000,000 next to Bitcoin and the NASDAQ, and that single frame tells you everything about what you’re watching. This is a fully AI-generated sci-fi music video set to a progressive house track, and it’s also a near-perfect fossil of what mid-2020s internet culture actually wanted.

The music video moves through deep space, interstellar armadas, and cyberpunk megacities with that hyper-smooth, constantly morphing quality that only AI generation produces. It lets Conrad build at a scale no indie producer could afford, but it never tries to hide what it is. The digital surrealism matches the track’s quantum-AI theme so closely it almost feels intentional, like the seams are part of the design.

What’s striking is how little subtlety the thing wants. Lamborghini-style supercars with butterfly doors. Massive pink super-yachts. Champagne popping in penthouses that sit somewhere above the cloud line. The wealth isn’t a backdrop here, it’s the entire mood board. And unlike most science fiction, which usually treats AI as the thing that ends us, “Forever Mirin” flips the script entirely. On-screen text declares that a “Quantum CPU AI Revolution” has solved humanity’s problems and handed out wealth and immortality to everyone. It’s techno-optimism cranked past the point of plausibility, on purpose.

Conrad casts himself at the center of all of it. He’s a cyber-armored billionaire, an interstellar DJ, a Tron-style racer, and a laser-gun-toting action hero, all in the same runtime. It’s pure fantasy, and that’s the point. Conrad’s background as both an EDM producer and a financial analyst explains why this specific dream came from him. He’s one of the few producers pushing Italian EDM into a U.S. market dominated by hip-hop, with tracks like “Touch The Sky” and “Only You” pulling real view counts, and “Forever Mirin” reads like the maximalist endpoint of that producer-meets-analyst combination.

You can find it across Spotify, Instagram, TikTok, YouTube, and his site.

Whatever you make of it, “Forever Mirin” captures something real about right now, the moon-shot crypto dreams, the AI hype, the unembarrassed appetite for excess. That neon million-dollar ticker isn’t a prediction. It’s a snapshot.

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