Japanese teenage pop sensation Miku Hatsune has millions of smitten fans, a string of top hits and an image entirely unblemished by drug use, scandals or celebrity meltdowns.
She doesn’t demand six-figure recording contracts, always shows up on time, never throws tantrums and won’t break a sweat during a two-hour live show in a concert hall packed with thousands of adoring followers.
Too good to be true? Yes and no.
Photo: AFP
Miku Hatsune is a 3D computer animation.
The collaborative brainchild of software developers, a manga comic artist and a vast digital fan community, the virtual singer from outer space has become one of the hottest stars on the J-pop scene.
Next month she’s giving her debut US concert, the “Mikunopolis” show on July 2 at the Anime Expo in Los Angeles.
Miku may not, technically, be real, but that didn’t stop several thousand fans, most of them young men, from flocking to her latest live gig in Tokyo, where the android star enthralled her audience from an onstage screen.
“We can see her, but we can’t touch her. We think she is a true idol, the purest kind of idol,” said 21-year-old literature student Keisuke Umeda, decked out in a Miku T-shirt and a range of her merchandise.
“She’s so cute and she dances so well,” said his girlfriend, Azusa Fushimi, 20, a design student dressed in a self-made Miku outfit for the occasion, complete with body-length aquamarine pig-tails.
Below the strobe lights, TV cameras and disco balls, fans were jabbing the air with fluorescent glow-sticks even before Miku showed up and while her very human support band was still fidgeting with their instruments.
An excited roar rippled through the crowd when she burst onto the stage as a cloud of pixels that morphed into the shape of a petite galactic manga vixen with thigh-high boots and an impossibly short miniskirt.
The programmers who created Miku are vague about her persona, but very specific about her stats — the teenage pop queen is 158cm tall and weighs a dainty 42kg.
What followed was an energy-packed, pixel-perfect show with all the usual elements of a rock concert — light banter between star and audience, strobe lights, bursts of dry ice and a series of well-received encores.
Unlike her flesh-and-blood pop sisters, Miku changed costumes at the speed of a mouse-click — wearing a sailor-girl uniform one moment and a China-doll red silk number with a paper hand-fan the next.
To the casual observer, Miku’s strange show could easily appear like a glimpse into a dystopian future when humans will slavishly celebrate computer programs.
However, to insiders and fans, the phenomenon is a far more participatory, collaborative and interactive experience than a normal concert, because fans don’t just sing along with the hits — they create them.
The software engine behind Miku is Yamaha’s Vocaloid music program, which allows fans to literally put words in her mouth, by typing in lyrics and a melody that creates a synthetic voice track.
The company Crypton Future Media, based in Sapporo on the northern island of Hokkaido, created the Miku Hatsune character in 2007 with the help of a manga artist and voice samples from a real singer, Saki Fujita.
Fans were invited to breathe life into her and they have — posting more than 30,000 songs and films featuring the virtual star on video sharing Web sites, such as YouTube and Japan’s Nico Nico Douga.
The creative outpouring has spawned a number of real-world hits and a compilation of Vocaloid songs featuring Hatsune Miku in May last year hit No. 1 on one Japanese weekly’s album charts.
Amid her meteoric rise, the galactic vixen really has reached for the stars.
When Japan launched the its Venus Climate Orbiter Akatsuki in May last year, the spacecraft carried three aluminum plates depicting Miku, thanks to a fan petition with more than 10,000 signatures.
OPTIMISTIC: A Philippine Air Force spokeswoman said the military believed the crew were safe and were hopeful that they and the jet would be recovered A Philippine Air Force FA-50 jet and its two-person crew are missing after flying in support of ground forces fighting communist rebels in the southern Mindanao region, a military official said yesterday. Philippine Air Force spokeswoman Colonel Consuelo Castillo said the jet was flying “over land” on the way to its target area when it went missing during a “tactical night operation in support of our ground troops.” While she declined to provide mission specifics, Philippine Army spokesman Colonel Louie Dema-ala confirmed that the missing FA-50 was part of a squadron sent “to provide air support” to troops fighting communist rebels in
PROBE: Last week, Romanian prosecutors launched a criminal investigation against presidential candidate Calin Georgescu accusing him of supporting fascist groups Tens of thousands of protesters gathered in Romania’s capital on Saturday in the latest anti-government demonstration by far-right groups after a top court canceled a presidential election in the EU country last year. Protesters converged in front of the government building in Bucharest, waving Romania’s tricolor flags and chanting slogans such as “down with the government” and “thieves.” Many expressed support for Calin Georgescu, who emerged as the frontrunner in December’s canceled election, and demanded they be resumed from the second round. George Simion, the leader of the far-right Alliance for the Unity of Romanians (AUR), which organized the protest,
ECONOMIC DISTORTION? The US commerce secretary’s remarks echoed Elon Musk’s arguments that spending by the government does not create value for the economy US Secretary of Commerce Howard Lutnick on Sunday said that government spending could be separated from GDP reports, in response to questions about whether the spending cuts pushed by Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency could possibly cause an economic downturn. “You know that governments historically have messed with GDP,” Lutnick said on Fox News Channel’s Sunday Morning Futures. “They count government spending as part of GDP. So I’m going to separate those two and make it transparent.” Doing so could potentially complicate or distort a fundamental measure of the US economy’s health. Government spending is traditionally included in the GDP because
Hundreds of people in rainbow colors gathered on Saturday in South Africa’s tourist magnet Cape Town to honor the world’s first openly gay imam, who was killed last month. Muhsin Hendricks, who ran a mosque for marginalized Muslims, was shot dead last month near the southern city of Gqeberha. “I was heartbroken. I think it’s sad especially how far we’ve come, considering how progressive South Africa has been,” attendee Keisha Jensen said. Led by motorcycle riders, the mostly young crowd walked through the streets of the coastal city, some waving placards emblazoned with Hendricks’s image and reading: “#JUSTICEFORMUHSIN.” No arrest