With Found Footage, we dig through the depths of archival video on the internet. From performances to interviews to music videos, we uncover the best visual documents floating around the web.

We begin with vintage clips from My Bloody Valentine, in honor of the long-in-the-works reissue series out next week. Read our recent interview with Kevin Shields about the painful process of bringing these releases to the light of day here.

Along with the following, we recommend "Live at University of London Union", a 1989 performance in four parts.

1. "Only Shallow" video. The music video for the massive opening track from 1991's Loveless presents dizzying footage of a dazed studio performance.

2. "You Made Me Realise" video. "You Made Me Realise" is the title track from My Bloody Valentine's 1988 EP. During live performances, the band is still known to extend a single chord from this song into 10 to 30 minutes of hallucinatory white noise. (Did you think Bradford Cox came up with that on his own?) The Jesus and Mary Chain's ex-bassist Douglas Hart directed this psychedelic clip.

3. "Glider" and "When You Sleep", live in London, 1991. Here is some very bootleg footage of My Bloody Valentine performing the Loveless track "When You Sleep" while touring in support of the record. They prefaced the song with a bit of skull-mining texture off "Glider", the title track from the band's 1990 EP.

4. "To Here Knows When", live in Japan, 2008. A considerably less bootleg performance of "To Here Knows When" from Loveless, during one of the band's first reunion shows, at Japan's Fuji Rock Festival in 2008. Shields noted in 2008 that the band spent $366,000 on equipment for these shows, and that he used 30 pedals onstage.

5. "Lose My Breath", live in London, 1989. The band performed the second cut from their 1988 album Isn't Anything to a seemingly grateful crowd in London. How I wish I were in that crowd in 1989 rather than a cradle.