| "Denpa" by Konstantin (2005-11-08) |
To continue from last week's rant, I thought I'd talk a bit more about denpa music. The official Japanese term for it is "denpa song", since by itself the word denpa literally translates as "radio wave". In Japanese fan jargon, though, it usually refers to insanity or things causing insanity, this usage aparently originating from Leaf's first visual novel Shizuku, which featured mind-poisoning radio waves that turned people violently insane. So in this context the term is rather appropriate for music whose main features are chipmunk-pitched voices, ultra-sugary melodies, brain-draining lyrics, and tendency to get stuck in one's head for days or weeks. ^^
The genre has emerged from the Japanese moe subculture, the songs originally being used in erogames and later spreading into anime, and as such tends to reflect its values and preferences. Similar to Europe's happy hardcore, the songs typically feature fast upbeat tempos, mostly electronic instrumentation, and almost exclusively cute female vocals. Arguably the two best known denpa singers are KOTOKO (though she has done both denpa and regular pop while working with I've Sound and has abandoned denpa entirely for her major label stuff) and Momoi Haruko, whose career appears centered on becoming the embodiment of all things moe, singing included.
Denpa songs, with their manic energy and extreme catchiness, have also become popular targets for parody flash animations, similar to the fate experienced by Dragostea Din Tei, as described by Akira in an earlier rant. Some of the most popular ones are Troubled Windows (set to KOTOKO's Sakuranbo Kiss and featuring the infamous OS-tan characters, originally from nijiura-os.hp.infoseek.co.jp) and the various renditions of Miko Miko Nurse.
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