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The song was created for Hatsune Miku's 10th birthday and anniversary event Hatsune Miku 10th Anniversary Magical Mirai 2017, and was first performed at Yonezu's solo concert on July 14, 2017. Its music video, released on July 21, received over 1 million views in less than a week.
The animation is marketed as the "Dolly Song", and the music is played faster than the original Loituma version. It was also given an extra 30-second drum preface. 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 ...
Hatsune Miku was the first Vocaloid developed by Crypton Future Media after they handled the release of the Yamaha vocal Meiko and Kaito.Miku was intended to be the first of a series of Vocaloids called the "Character Vocal Series" (abbreviated "CV Series"), which included Kagamine Rin/Len and Megurine Luka.
Later, a scat singing version of the song by the band Loituma was incorporated into the viral animation Loituma Girl. In 2007, the song was brought into worldwide popular culture through a cover sung by Hatsune Miku, with Otomania arranging the music and providing Miku's voice manipulation.
Kikuo (Japanese: きくお, born September 21, 1988) is a Japanese songwriter and Vocaloid producer. As an independent artist, he produces the lyrics and music for each of his songs under his own record label, "Kikuo Sound Works," often with vocals provided by popular Crypton Future Media voicebank, Hatsune Miku.
The song has also inspired a large number of Internet memes. Patrick St. Michel argued that the song "shows how Miku and the software she represents remain vital to the musical ecosystem of the 2020s". [11] On October 2, 2024, the song was included in Sega's rhythm game Hatsune Miku: Colorful Stage!.
The best part is that "Peaches" is actually eligible for an Oscar for Best Original Song, according to reports. Well, it didn't take internet sleuths long to uncover that the song could be an epic ...
Original recordings of songs on Supercell date back to the release of the song "Melt" online on the Nico Nico Douga video sharing website on December 7, 2007. [1] Composer and lyricist Ryo used the Vocaloid singing synthesizer software Hatsune Miku for the vocals and continued to use the program for the remaining songs on the album.