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The YouTube comments sections of slowed and reverb videos are often used as a safe haven for users, which Digital Trends described as "a sensitive reprieve from the toxicity often found on the platform." Users commonly share stories of heartbreak and loss, which are given support by the slowed and reverb content creators. YouTuber Rayen Hemden ...
The song became an internet meme after the nightcore version was posted to YouTube by a user known as Andrea, who was known as an osu! player. [ 13 ] [ better source needed ] From there, the music rose in popularity with more people applying the nightcore treatment to more non-dance genres such as pop music and hip hop .
[39] Musically, vaporwave reconfigures dance music from the 1980s and early 1990s [4] through the use of chopped and screwed techniques, repetition, and heavy reverb. [39] It is composed almost entirely from slowed-down samples [1] and its creation requires only the knowledge of rudimentary production techniques. [41]
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Under the title "Slow Dancing", the song originally was a minor US hit in 1976 for the band Funky Kings (of which Tempchin was a member). The song became much better known as "Swayin' to the Music (Slow Dancin')" in a 1977 cover version by Johnny Rivers , which became a top ten US hit.
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The first reverb effects, introduced in the 1930s, were created by playing recordings through loudspeakers in reverberating spaces and recording the sound. [2] The American producer Bill Putnam is credited for the first artistic use of artificial reverb in music, on the 1947 song "Peg o' My Heart" by the Harmonicats.
The term "slowcore" derives from "slow", referring to the tempo and energy of the music, and "-core", which refers to a scene, style, or musical subgenre. "Sadcore" imitates similar etymology, and the names are used interchangeably. The term itself has an unclear origin, though sources suggest the use of "slowcore" started in the early 1990s.