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Japan's Latest Rockstar Is a 3D Hologram

kkleiner writes "Hatsune Miku is a Japanese pop diva who's just started to play massive stadium concerts to sold out crowds. Her hair is blue, she dresses like Sailor Moon, and she'll only appear in concerts via a 3D 'hologram.' Oh, and did I forget to mention that she's completely fictional? Created by Crypton Future Media, Hatsune Miku and her virtual colleagues have gone on limited tours in Japan."

7 of 305 comments (clear)

  1. This isn't exactly news... by RogueyWon · · Score: 5, Informative

    Erm... yes, that's great and all. Except Hatsune Miku has been around since 2007, and versons of the the Vocaloid software that powers "her" has been around a good bit longer (since 2004 or so, I think). I'm pretty sure I heard reference to special-effects-heavy concerts more than a year ago.

    The software can be used, with a lot of practice, to do reasonably convincing versions of Japanese language songs. Attempts to use the Hatsune Miku vocaloid to do anything in English are usually hilariously awful. Fans of the game portal may be amused to note this rendition of the game's famous closing song... erm... Steal A Lamp.

    In fairness, there are Vocaloids which can handle English much better, but this story seemed to be specifically about Hatsune Miku.

    1. Re:This isn't exactly news... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

      The Gorrilaz use the full 3-D version, I'm not sure what year they started. If you check them out on Youtube, they appeared at an MTV awards show with their virtual avatars in 3-D and had Madonna live onstage dancing with the virtual models. It looked really slick and from what I've heard it looks just as good if not better in person.

      It's basically an updated version of the classic "Pepper's Ghost" illusion (wikipedia has a pretty good explanation of the effect with diagrams). Essentially it uses semi-transparent mirrors to reflect an image of someone off-stage onto a slanted glass or mirrored 'screen' which creates the illusion of someone being on the stage. The modern version the Gorrilaz use does away with the off-stage room in favor of a semi-transparent display glass which is in front of the stage, as opposed to being on the stage in the classic version, and uses a digital projector to just pump the image out.

      But the 'hologram' part of this is really, really old news. And so is the whole bit about the virtual idol. In fact, if you read the article it's mostly just a fluff piece talking about how the Japanese like to freak out over the virtual idols. So it's really a piece about the audiences not the idol or the technology. And the only mention of the tech is a single phrase in the sentence which links to an article the same site ran in Dec of 2009.

      So while this is rather interesting if you've never come across it before, this article is Old News.

  2. FINALLY i get to make a MACROSS reference! by acedotcom · · Score: 5, Informative

    So Sharon Apple in Macross Plus was a hologram. She was an experimental AI but her emotions were provided by a human. Eventually she fell in love and gained her own emotions, and then tried to try to kill everyone after hacking into every military computer on the planet...

    what was my point......OH YEAH...dont trust singing Japanese holograms.

    --
    they say it is often more relevant then the comment above, all we know is its called the Sig!
  3. Re:Life imitates Art or Art imitates Life ? by Nursie · · Score: 4, Informative

    William Gibson's Idoru too, back in '96. I don't think the idea of having entirely synthetic pop-idols is that new...

  4. Re:Life imitates Art or Art imitates Life ? by pchan- · · Score: 3, Informative

    Sharon Apple for the win. Information High

    Megazone 23 (1985) has that beat by about 10 years. The character of Eve Tokimatsuri is a computer-generated popular singer.

    Himitsu Kudasai - Megazone 23, Part II

  5. Re:Stadium Concerts to Sold Out Crowds? by Aereus · · Score: 4, Informative

    I'm not really into the whole Vocaloid thing, but I remember there was something about a CD of Vocaloid music topping the charts there last year or such. A little Googling comes up with this excerpt:
    http://myanimelist.net/forum/?topicid=211424

    Granted, it was only for one week, but still considering the "singer" is computer-generated, it's interesting.

    "According to Oricon news, VOCALOID Hatsune Miku's album "EXIT TUNES PRESENTS Vocalogenesis feat. Hatsune Miku" has won the top in the weekly album CD sales ranking for May 17th - May 23rd. It's for the first time that a VOCALOID CD is ranked first in the weekly CD sales ranking. The album also includes the songs of other VOCALOIDs such as Kagamine Rin, Len, Megurine Luka, Meiko and Kaito. The cover illustration was drawn by Miwa Shirow.
    Note that the sales of the CD, 23,000 copies, are the smallest number in Oricon's history among all the top sellers of the weekly CD rankings, reflecting the shrinkage of the CD market in Japan."

  6. English songs by abigsmurf · · Score: 3, Informative

    Hatsune Miku can do English songs fairly well if the people using her are smart enough, some of them are fairly listenable. As she only sings Japanese syllables she's always going to have a bit of a Japanese accent. Here's a sample of some of the better done ones, some:

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HATpOha7DFg - Heaven is a place on Earth
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TaSZ0siQjXA - Never ending story (duet with an english vocaloid)
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E6m2NzdN7o0 - I'm Gonna Be (500 Miles)