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  2. Lo-fi photography - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lo-fi_photography

    This overexposed film photograph featuring multiple exposures and visible sprocket holes is an example of a lo-fi photograph. Lo-fi photography uses film or digital photography techniques to create more of a soft, unusual look to photos compared to the crisp and high definition photographs that standard photography aims to provide. [2]

  3. Luxury Elite - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Luxury_Elite

    Luxury Elite, [a] also simply known as Lux (born August 17, 1988), is an anonymous American musician known for her significant influence in the vaporwave genre. During the 2010s, her lo-fi sound and visual style, along with her relaxed melodies, made her an impactful figure in the "late night lo-fi" subgenre.

  4. Sovietwave - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sovietwave

    Sovietwave is based on modern electronic music trends such as lo-fi, ambient and synth-pop, as well as the electronic music of the late Soviet Union. [19] Despite Sovietwave's widespread use of sampling from radio programs and speeches, the genre is not overtly political. [ 19 ]

  5. Vaporwave - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vaporwave

    Late night lo-fi (or late-nite lo-fi): slowed down 1980s pop and jazz that mimics recorded programs on old 4:3 televisions. [23] The main progenitor of this subgenre is Luxury Elite, who is known for her music's high-class feel. [115] VHS pop: a more positive variant of late night lo-fi with richer sound and vibrant aesthetics. [23]

  6. Y2K aesthetic - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Y2K_aesthetic

    Apple's iMac G3, an example of the blobject-style design common in Y2K aesthetics. [1] Y2K is an Internet aesthetic based around products, styles, and fashion of the late 1990s and early 2000s. The name Y2K is derived from an abbreviation coined by programmer David Eddy for the year 2000 and its potential computer errors.

  7. Outsider house - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Outsider_house

    Around the mid-2010s, outsider house developed into a new form, known as lo-fi house. [6] Producers like DJ Seinfeld, DJ Boring and Ross From Friends combined rough sounds of the parent genre with the aesthetic of melancholy, irony and postmodernism attributed to vaporwave, creating songs "resembling melancholic 1990s deep house recorded to cassette and packaged with a veneer of internet-age ...

  8. Slacker rock - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Slacker_rock

    Slacker rock is closely related to "slacker" culture that arose in the 1980s and 1990s with Generation X and can be seen in the way the music is composed with less emphasis on playing certain notes correctly, having slightly out of tune instruments, and having lyrics be sung in a form that was more relaxed similar to the slacker style. [2]

  9. Lo-fi music - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lo-fi_music

    A minimal bedroom studio set-up with 1980s–1990s equipment. Lo-fi (also typeset as lofi or low-fi; short for low fidelity) is a music or production quality in which elements usually regarded as imperfections in the context of a recording or performance are present, sometimes as a deliberate stylistic choice.