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The video exceeded 1 million views on YouTube within 24 hours of its release, and on September 1, it was reported on Yonezu's website that the video had surpassed 100 million views, Yonezu's fifth music video to reach this milestone. It exceeded 200 million views on August 24, 2020. On December 18, 2017, a special music video for "Peace Sign ...
The song's tune and lyrics were done by Yonezu, with vocals done in Vocaloid, a kind of singing synthesizer software. The theme of the song is a desert planet where life is dying and "no grass will grow for the next millennium", which Yonezu said refers to the dreary, "desert-like atmosphere" of the Japanese video site Niconico at the time of the song compared to when he was first active. [1]
Kenshi Yonezu (米津 玄師, Yonezu Kenshi, born March 10, 1991) is a Japanese singer. He released Vocaloid music under the stage name Hachi (ハチ) in 2009. In 2012, he debuted under his real name, releasing music with his own voice.
88Kasyo Junrei (Japanese: 八十八ヶ所巡礼, Hepburn: Hachi-jū Hachi Kasho Junrei) is a Japanese rock band formed on October 8, 2006. [2] They consist of vocalist and bassist Margarette Hiroi, guitarist Katzuya Shimizu and drummer Kenzo. The name, which means "pilgrimage to eighty-eight places," is reminiscent of the Shikoku Pilgrimage.
"Lemon" is a song by Japanese singer-songwriter Kenshi Yonezu, released as a single through Sony Music Entertainment Japan on March 14, 2018. It is the theme song for the TV series Unnatural. It has sold more than 500,000 physical copies and 3,000,000 digital copies in Japan. [1] [2] [3]
"Mad Head Love" (stylised as "MAD HEAD LOVE") is a song by Japanese musician Kenshi Yonezu. It was released as a double A-side single alongside the song "Poppin' Apathy" on October 23, 2013, by Universal Signma, on the same day that Yonezu's two self-released Vocaloid albums, Hanataba to Suisō and Official Orange, were re-issued by independent label Boundee by SSNW.
The song is planned to be used in the campaign from April 1, 2014 until March 31, 2015. [23] On April 1, the song's music video was released on YouTube and Nico Nico Douga. It featured artwork drawn by Yonezu himself, much like the videos for his songs "Go Go Yūreisen" and "Vivi" from Diorama. [28]
Yonezu first released music on the Internet using Vocaloid software, and uploaded videos to the video steaming website Nico Nico Douga from 2009 to 2011. Many of his songs were very popular on the site, including "Matryoshka" with 5,000,000 views and "Musunde Hiraite Rasetsu to Mukuro" with 3,000,000 views amassed by the release of Diorama. [2]