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Track four “遥か彼方” ("Haruka Kanata”) stays closest to the original performed by Asian Kung-Fu Generation and featured in Naruto. Track three “Catch You Catch Me” by GUMI and from Cardcaptor Sakura starts off with a definite Choking Victim nod.
#Haruka kanata drum cover crack#
Track two “ふわふわ時間” (“Fuwa Fuwa Time”) is from the K-On! franchise fictional band Haukago Tea Time, which throws a recognizable crack rocksteady rhythm in during a breakdown. If you are a fan of anime, some of these may ring a bell. The remaining tracks follow suit, trading the often overly produced original versions with buzzsaw guitars and d-beat drums, all breaking into a tight ska/punk rhythm at some point. While not the first punk band in Japan, they are arguably the most popular. Side note, if you have never heard of The Blue Hearts, go check out the original music video for this song. The result is similar to Potshot or Hey-Smith, sans horns. Skatsune Miku goes solo, giving a more hauntingly clean take due to the autotune, but kicks in with as much energy as the original, albeit with upstrokes and a bouncing bass line later on. Whereas the original version has vocalist Hiroto Kōmoto delivering the opening lines over a few lone guitar chords to emphasize the lyrics,īecause you have a beauty that can't be reflected in pictures” Starting things off is “リンダリンダ (“Linda, Linda”) by The Blue Hearts, probably the most well-known song on the EP, due to so many other artists covering it, but most notably in this space by Me First And The Gimmie Gimmies, MxPx, and Andrew W.K. When it was ready to be commercially released, it was packaged as a replacement singer and each iteration featured its own “virtual idol”, with Hatsune Miku (which translates to “the first sound of the future”) being by far the most popular and recognizable to date. Users are able to input lyrics and pitch shift them to form melodies. Vocaloid ska/punk/crust covers of songs featured in Japanese pop culture and anime? You are goddamned correct and they do it so well.įor a bit of background reference, vocaloid is a voice synthesizer program developed in the early 2000’s that emulates singing. Skatsune Miku’s self-titled EP is for sure a strange listen at first, but nails exactly what they set forth to do. The trü punx may have already left the page, but for those who are more adventurous, a real diamond in the rough awaits. bright pink artwork with a blue haired anime girl (sans nose?) flipping you off, checkerboard patterns, the word “ska”. On first glance, you might be asking “What the hell is this?”.