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Ongaku Shōjo (音楽少女, lit. "Music Girls") is a 2018 Japanese anime television series about a fictional idol unit, produced by Studio Deen.It spawned from a short film that was produced by Studio Deen for Young Animator Training Project's Anime Mirai 2015. [2]
In such videos, one person is dancing or acting strange among a room full of others going about routine business. After the drop in the song and a video cut, everyone starts dancing or acting strangely. The attempts to recreate the dance led to a viral spread on YouTube.
Reviewers have stated that although Princess Tutu is a magical girl series, it is more of a "fairy tale set to ballet with a few magical girl elements mixed in," and its use of dance in lieu of violence to solve conflicts carries "surprisingly effective emotional appeal." [14] [15] The first DVD volume included episodes 1 through 5.
The Harajuku Girls performing on the Harajuku Lovers Tour 2005. The Harajuku Girls are four Japanese and Japanese-American backup dancers featured in stage shows and music videos for Gwen Stefani during her solo pop/dance-record career. [1] The women also act as an entourage at Stefani's public appearances.
In January 2007, a similar video entitled "Holly Dolly – Dolly Song (Ieva's Polka)" appeared in the Google Video Top 100, though it had already been present on the Internet for some time. It features the same donkey, along with some dancing sheep and a snowman, but the leek-spinning girl in the background is only there briefly. [9]
An anime music video (AMV) is a fan-made music video consisting of clips from one or more Japanese animated shows or movies set to an audio track, often songs or promotional trailer audio. The term is generally specific to Japanese anime, however, it can occasionally include footage from other mediums, such as American animation, live action ...
The music video that later went viral features dancing by MARiA, Miume (who also choreographed the dance) and 217 ("Niina"), the latter two both from the J-pop group COJIRASE THE TRIP, with the costumes based on Japanese style. Dancers from around the world cover the dance and upload their own renditions on YouTube, Bilibili, and Niconico. [6]
The music video for the song was released on September 10, 2023, on her YouTube channel, after she had performed it virtually in a livestream [‡ 2] that revealed nine-year-old Ui's three-dimensional model. [20] [21] Illustrations thereof are credited to Shigure herself and animator Gagame, while the movie production is credited to Warabe ...