
***
And, to make a serious contribution to the thread... well...
...I guess the validity of my advice depends on whether my videos can be considered good AMV's...
But my own approach involves a lot of active listening (since I'm a music-driven editor). That means that before I really get anywhere with actually editing an AMV, I'll listen to potentially-useful music as both just music and a potential AMV track, and I listen to it very carefully. This way, I learn both the external and internal musical structure and the implied/imagined visual structure of the music piece/song. That way, by the time I sit down, I have an intimate understanding of the music and know what's going to be involved in visualizing it.
Technically though, I do that with all my music, whether or not I ever intend to make AMV's to it.
By the the time I get the anime worked into the formula, I already have a visual structure. So, then it's left to work out the exact visuals (translate the musical impressions taken from active listening into what's actually available) and, just as importantly, consider very carefully the context of the anime - story and characterisations, and look for ways of incorporating them meaningfully into the video.
So, going by this approach, I think it's possible to make some very good, meaningful serious videos. Or that's just me
