Where is miku from




















In addition to her work as a festival mascot, fans have also come up with a few holidays in her honor. Her birthday, however, is considered a separate event, taking place on August 31st, which celebrates her original Vocaloid release. In the memes, fans of a popular work falsely attribute Miku as the creator, with everything from the Minecraft video game and the Harry Potter book series. The joke, however, became somewhat controversial when songs were used in the meme, causing fans to assume Vocaloid was the creator of said songs covered or sampled, leaving the original creators uncredited.

Miku's association with leeks is so strong that fans like to bring leek-colored glowsticks to her shows. The connection likely comes from her association with the "Ievan polkka" song. A meme played the song with a looping image of an anime character, Orihime Inoue from Bleach, twirling a leek. The song itself would be given the nickname of "Leekspin Song. Since then, leeks have become an iconic part of Miku's image, where it serves as her favorite food and occasional weapon. She's also shown to be fond of bacon-wrapped hotdogs.

In , Miku's production company, Crypton Future Media, announced that she and the other Vocaloid singers hadn't been getting updates on Vocaloid and that she would be disassociated with them in her future endeavors. The popularity of Hatsune Miku has led to a staggering variety of merchandise—and not just action figures, but also products such as video games and lingerie. The virtual singer has become a veritable pop star in her own right.

This is not meant to be a formal definition of Hatsune Miku like most terms we define on Dictionary. Feedback See Today's Synonym. Word of the Day. Meanings Meanings. What is the experience like and how did you think about the production of it? For example, why glowsticks? For Miku concerts it has become a tradition, especially those that can change colors according to the character that is singing on stage.

I have to explain that in addition to Hatsune Miku, there are 5 more characters who are also part of the show, and each have their own designated color. But on the other hand she does many of the things her human counterparts do: singing, dancing, live concerts of course, TV appearances in Japan and the US, and recently even photoshoots for a fashion magazine!

Have you spoken to any users or fans? I take every opportunity to talk with users and fans. For example, after the concert we had in Los Angeles in , a group of Japanese fans drove all the way from L. Thousands were following them online, and I had a chance to talk with them in New York. Their passion and commitment was impressive! At most shows I try to go out and meet the fans, and they are always incredibly friendly and enthusiastic.

Why do you think Miku has become so popular in the world? People have been relying increasingly on social media to get in touch with the world. At the same time they have become themselves sources and conveyers of content and information. What you get, therefore, is a voice with slightly different traits than the original voice. We came to understand our Vocaloid as a "virtual singer" with a distinctive voice different from what a human being would have. So, I first began to search for the voice that would be the base for the Vocaloid.

I listened to CDs of the voice actresses affiliated with the three major voice acting production studios and also collected CDs for newcomer voice actresses.

Out of all those I chose the young voice actress Fujita Saki. Her voice is quite high, but also strong and good on the sustained notes. I liked it also that it was her natural voice, reasoning that it would be more stable in the course of repeated recordings than a "performed voice.

For the creation of Hatsune Miku's physical character, I decided her age and figure beforehand and asked an illustrator to create her. When the voice was selected, I had decided to make the Yamaha DX7 synthesizer the motif.

DX7 was well known for its metallic sounds and capability in producing quite high electronic sounds. I took a chance on this decision because Hatsune Miku had a high-pitched voice and had been developed with Yamaha technology from the outset.

The striking blue-green image color was matched to the DX7. Hatsune Miku would have taken on a completely different appearance if I had not had the DX7 as a motif.

The response, after Hatsune Miku was released in , was rapid and more successful than expected. I think one reason is that it happened to dovetail neatly with lifestyle changes taking place in Japan at the time. In the United States, I understand that people have various places to sing out loud, such as at church on Sundays, and they can gather friends for home parties on weekends. But most people in Japan live in small houses, condominiums, or apartments, and there are few places where they can sing openly or get together to play instruments and the like.

Around then, people had begun to notice a tendency among young men to avoid going out drinking with their workmates as had been the norm in the past , but to minimize communication with older or younger co-workers.

In that environment, the desire among such men--dubbed soshoku danshi "grass-eating," as opposed to "carnivore" men --to spend their time alone, writing music and using Vocaloid to sing their songs, was gradually building.

Another important factor propelling the success of Hatsune Miku was the expansion of communications infrastructure capable of distributing high-volume data via the Internet. It was just about the time that people began to communicate mainly via the Internet and posting of original video works online via YouTube and the like had begun to spread.



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