A post expressed concern about other people who had made snide remarks about things such as Vocaloid seeming to be for children, and not something adults should be involved with. I wrote a reply that turned into something I felt should be its own post. People who say things like "that stuff is childish, you need to grow up" are insecure. They try to shame others for not being their idea of what an "adult" is in order to make themselves feel like more of an "adult."
I sometimes hear of people saying Vocaloid is something "for kids," or whatever. That's total nonsense. When Hatsune Miku was released in 2007 it was mostly people in college who were into Vocaloid. And "kids" are not the ones producing music with Vocaloid. People of all ages attend the expositions and concerts. Right now there's a thread on reddit where we are talking about the various disturbing Vocaloid songs (stuff that is very much not for kids, although kids are going to listen to it anyway).
I didn't listen to Vocaloid as a kid... because it didn't become a thing until I was in my twenties! Now I'm in my thirties and I'm more into it than ever. I've said it before and I'll say it again: Vocaloid gives a lot of people a chance to create music who wouldn't have done so without it. You get this sincerity from Vocaloid songs you don't hear elsewhere. The anonymity granted by Miku's voice and persona let people open up about their feelings in a way they could never do by themselves. And there are no marketing executives deciding what does and doesn't get published. That's what makes all of this still meaningful to me 14+ years later.
If it was just another anime thing about idols, doing songs that have been commissioned from studio artists, with a tightly controlled Intellectual Property, and studio executives calling the shots; you know, content created by a typical commercial enterprise? I would have lost interest long ago. But CFM just made a music software tool with a creative commons licensed avatar and let people go nuts with it. It became this thing with a life of its own. Thousands, thousands of new songs every year. Made by people who just have a passion to create something. And it's the ability to shape and modify a common avatar, a character, a symbol for us all to collectively identify with that is the glue that holds it all together.
So when people, in their ignorance, dismiss all of this as a thing for kids or children because of some superficial appearances. They truly don't know what the hell they're talking about.
I sometimes hear of people saying Vocaloid is something "for kids," or whatever. That's total nonsense. When Hatsune Miku was released in 2007 it was mostly people in college who were into Vocaloid. And "kids" are not the ones producing music with Vocaloid. People of all ages attend the expositions and concerts. Right now there's a thread on reddit where we are talking about the various disturbing Vocaloid songs (stuff that is very much not for kids, although kids are going to listen to it anyway).
I didn't listen to Vocaloid as a kid... because it didn't become a thing until I was in my twenties! Now I'm in my thirties and I'm more into it than ever. I've said it before and I'll say it again: Vocaloid gives a lot of people a chance to create music who wouldn't have done so without it. You get this sincerity from Vocaloid songs you don't hear elsewhere. The anonymity granted by Miku's voice and persona let people open up about their feelings in a way they could never do by themselves. And there are no marketing executives deciding what does and doesn't get published. That's what makes all of this still meaningful to me 14+ years later.
If it was just another anime thing about idols, doing songs that have been commissioned from studio artists, with a tightly controlled Intellectual Property, and studio executives calling the shots; you know, content created by a typical commercial enterprise? I would have lost interest long ago. But CFM just made a music software tool with a creative commons licensed avatar and let people go nuts with it. It became this thing with a life of its own. Thousands, thousands of new songs every year. Made by people who just have a passion to create something. And it's the ability to shape and modify a common avatar, a character, a symbol for us all to collectively identify with that is the glue that holds it all together.
Cheerful uplifting tunes, soulful ballads, lively hip hop beats,
hard metal riffs, cute bubbly pop songs, dream-like trance tones,
jamming rock guitars, thumping techno, sweet funk vibes,
experimental nonsense, powerful anthems, chill rhythms,
wild melodies, somber poetry.
Deranged meditations on madness, high-energy celebrations,
heartbreaking tales of life and love, jubilations of unity and friendship,
bitter laments on the human condition, hopeful words of comfort,
screams of despair and confusion, peaceful reminiscing of fond memories,
unchained anger and rebellion, affirmations of love,
tears of frustration, tears of joy and relief.
It's all there. Side-by-side in this seething mass of human expression that we call music.
Sometimes I don't even understand the words or language, yet the message gets through; the feelings are real.
hard metal riffs, cute bubbly pop songs, dream-like trance tones,
jamming rock guitars, thumping techno, sweet funk vibes,
experimental nonsense, powerful anthems, chill rhythms,
wild melodies, somber poetry.
Deranged meditations on madness, high-energy celebrations,
heartbreaking tales of life and love, jubilations of unity and friendship,
bitter laments on the human condition, hopeful words of comfort,
screams of despair and confusion, peaceful reminiscing of fond memories,
unchained anger and rebellion, affirmations of love,
tears of frustration, tears of joy and relief.
It's all there. Side-by-side in this seething mass of human expression that we call music.
Sometimes I don't even understand the words or language, yet the message gets through; the feelings are real.

So when people, in their ignorance, dismiss all of this as a thing for kids or children because of some superficial appearances. They truly don't know what the hell they're talking about.
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