WideEyedMan wrote...
I love all the Vocaloids-some less than others but never hatred, however Miku remains my my favorite because she opened my ears to music. She was the first Vocaloid I listened to at a concert during Mikupolis 2009, I was pessimistic toward music to the point of thinking that if nobody in the music industry at that time could appeal to me, then what chance does a dressed up lump of code have? It was then that I heard her sing. People were driven mad, they were hollering while leaping from their seats, screaming in ecstasy hours after the finale, but to me her voice felt
too real to believe. So I indulged my curiosity and dived more into the world of Vocaloid's discovering their cultural worth, their struggles to be accepted by society, their facades and above all the power they gave to the people who could not sing for themselves. I owe this realization to Miku.
Dude, that's deep.
Most of the music that's emotionally affected me has been by Sonic Youth, God Lives Underwater, Get Set Go, and Nine Inch Nails. >_>
The one thing I've never understood in terms of popularity was Radiohead. I've heard literally almost every song they've ever done in the history of their career dozens of times, all the way through from
Pablo Honey to
In Rainbows, and I just don't get it. I love music, I listen to everything from every era, and usually I get it with whatever groups were influential at the time, but in that instance I just don't understand the appeal. Some people are outright religious about Thom Yorke and co., they've called them (more accurately, him) everything from revolutionary to transcendent, and I just don't get it. I like the song "Videotape" a lot, but that's about it.
I bring that up for two reasons. One, it was connected to a story I read about hikikomori. Two, one of my artsy friends in high school was only my friend as far as either of our artsy interests went, and he said he was influenced in large part by them, except he became so successful in his pursuits that he made a film into Sundance, and freaking won awards for it. Sure, I earned a few public accolades on my own for some stuff I did in college, in no small part because we were creative partners at one point and split for reasons of "creative differences", but I never made it into anything as absurdly awesome as Sundance.
And mad props for Labrys.