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      A nightcore (also known as sped-up song, sped-up version, sped-up remix, or, simply, sped-up edit) is a version of a music track that increases the pitch and speeds up its source material by approximately 35%. This gives an effect identical to playing a 33⅓-RPM vinyl record at 45 RPM.
      The name is derived from the Norwegian musical duo "Nightcore" (Norwegian pronunciation: [ˈnɑɪ̯tkɔːɾ]), who released pitch-shifted versions of trance and Eurodance songs. Nightcore is also almost always associated and accompanied with anime and otaku culture, with many YouTube thumbnails, and similar formats, of nightcore remixes containing anime characters and art.
      Nightcore saw a general resurgence in popularity in the early 2020s due to TikTok, causing major recording labels to officially release "sped-up" versions of their songs.


      History




      = 2000s: Origins

      =

      The term "nightcore" was first used in 2001 as the name for a school project by Norwegian DJ duo Thomas S. Nilsen and Steffen Ojala Søderholm, known by their stage names DJ TNT and DJ SOS respectively. The two were influenced by pitch-shifted vocals in German group Scooter's hardcore songs "Nessaja" and "Ramp! (The Logical Song)", stating in an interview that "[t]here were so few of these kinds of artists, we thought that mixing music in our style would be a pleasure for us to listen to" and that "[n]ightcore has become a style of music, a way to make the music happier – 'happy hardcore' as they say."
      The duo set a template of a track in the style: a 25–30% speed-up (commonly to around 160 to 180 beats per minute) of a trance or Eurodance song. The nightcore music has been compared to happy hardcore and bubblegum bass because of its fast tempos, energetic feel, and high-pitched vocals. Nightcore made five albums of sped-up versions of trance recordings, including its 2002 thirteen-track debut album Energized and the group's later albums Summer Edition 2002, L'hiver, Sensación and Caliente. The group's first album was made with eJay, while all of its later work was made with what the duo described as "top-secret" programs. All of its records were sold to their friends and DJs around the group's area. Nightcore's works started appearing on services such as LimeWire in mid-2003 and YouTube in 2006. The first nightcore track to appear on the latter site was "Dam Dadi Doo" by the duo. Only two of the project's albums have surfaced on the Internet. One of the first people to distribute nightcore music on YouTube was a user going by the name Maikel631, beginning in 2008. The user uploaded about 30 original tracks by Nightcore on the Web site. In 2009, they found a "new" nightcore track, as well as the technique to make material in the style:

      I came to the realization that Nightcore songs could be made by everyone, using reasonably simple audio software. I was at least one of the first people to really use that knowledge to make Nightcore edits. oShyGuyzo did this before me with Nightcore II. Another channel [that] I followed and started exploring fan-made Nightcore around the same time was Nasinocinesino.


      = 2010s: Popularity

      =
      One of the first viral nightcore videos was for "Rockefeller Street", the song by Getter Jaani that was chosen to represent Estonia at the 2011 Eurovision Song Contest. The song became an internet meme after the nightcore version was posted to YouTube by a user known as Andrea, who was known as an osu! player. From there, the music rose in popularity with more people applying the nightcore treatment to more non-dance genres such as pop music and hip hop. Many of the pioneer uploaders of nightcore including Maikel631 have called these non-dance edits "fake". The nightcore scene then crossed over to SoundCloud with the help of artist lilangelboi, who had released around ten to fifteen edits on the service before signing with Manicure Records. The head of Manicure, Tom "Ghibli" Mike, recalled, "I just got totally obsessed with it. I put up that one he did, "Light"; we had him up here to DJ a few parties; and then he moved here. That was totally how nightcore became a thing for us." The label's #MANICURED playlist consisted of nightcore renditions of K-pop and electro house tracks, a few of them also incorporating production techniques outside of pitch-shifting and speeding up the source material, such as "Mile High" by Chipped Nails and Ponibbi and "Fave Hours" by F I J I.
      By the mid-2010s, the nightcore scene had garnered attention from musicians such as Djemba Djemba, Maxo and Harrison, Nina Las Vegas, Ryan Hemsworth, Lido, Moistbreezy, and PC Music founders Danny L Harle and A. G. Cook. Harle and Cook have claimed nightcore to be influences in interviews, the former saying in an interview:

      From the second I first heard it, it's been so intensely emotional for me to listen to. I don't feel like it's an interaction from another human to me, it's just MP3 sound making me feel emotional in my head. With that kind of stuff, it's just a representation of heightened emotion for me. A Thump writer described it as the "groundwork for some of the most innovative club music today" and wrote that it also led to a number of "awful" internet memes:
      Throughout the late aughts and into the 2010s, it became the subject of a number of awful memes, and even an entry on KnowYourMeme.com, where a surprisingly extensive history of the music sits next to histories of trap and its infamous air horn sample. Like that iconic, oft-sampled sound, nightcore's inescapable appeal lies in loud, brash, low-brow fun, a heart-pounding blunderbuss of gooey, candy-coated sounds. It's an artifact indebted to an earlier, less formalized internet, one where file-sharing and forum culture reigned supreme, and where many aspiring producers first experienced the thrill of connecting with a larger community online.
      Dance Music Northwest described nightcore as "too catchy, too danceable, and far too much fun to not welcome into the dance music mainstream." David Turner of MTV described a nightcore remix of "7 Years" by Lukas Graham as the same as "the normal [...] song" and "plagiarism."


      = 2020s: TikTok

      =
      During the early 2020s, nightcore, under the name "sped-up", became substantially popular thanks to TikTok, where many sped-up versions of older songs were watched millions of times. Online music magazine Pitchfork noted: "Much of the music that performs well on TikTok has been modified slightly, either sped-up or slowed-down." Pitchfork quoted one nightcore TikTok creator: "Editors really enjoy sped-up music because edits with sped-up audios are much more energetic and interesting to watch."
      In turn, major recording labels began releasing official sped-up remixes, gaining millions of streams. They either started releasing three versions (normal, sped-up, and slowed) of a track at the same time, or started curating popular Spotify playlists for sped-up versions of hit singles released specifically on their label (such as Warner Music Group).


      See also


      Chopped and screwed
      Audio time stretching and pitch scaling
      Vaporwave


      References




      External links


      Nightcore's original website at the Wayback Machine (archived 24 December 2013)

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    How to Nightcore a song! (NIGHTCORE TUTORIAL)

    May 8, 2010 · Universally, the definition of 'Nightcore' is raising the speed (tempo and pitch) of a techno/trance/dance song, creating a happier, upbeat sound. If you would like to learn more about Nightcore and it's origins, click here. Audacity Tutorial: (recommended, for beginners) First, find a song that would sound good in Nightcore style.

    Nightcore Creator - https://nightcore.app - Nightcore Universe

    Oct 11, 2015 · Just wanted to let you know that I just moved the creator to it's own domain hosted on my own VPS with HTTPS. Yup, now you can nightcore your soungs without the government knowing ;) The new place for the nightcore maker is here: https://nightcore.rocks/ The old one: dret.nu/nightcore-creator should redirect to https://nightcore.rocks but might ...

    How to make Nightcore (NIGHTCORE TUTORIAL) UPDATED

    Sep 29, 2015 · If you find the songs you are going to use do not sound like the above songs. It is absolutely fine as long as you don't label them nightcore, use Artist - Song Name (Sped Up), (Speed Mix) or (Speed Edit) instead. If you are desperately want to label them nightcore, please do add the actual genre after Nightcore - Song Name [Genre].

    What is Nightcore? - Nightcore Universe

    Aug 8, 2011 · Almost all nightcore music are original songs nightcored (remixed into nightcore) by nightcore fans. Very popular is a belief that nightcore is a nickname of a person who remixes the songs. In reality anyone who knows how to use a computer can …

    BPM of all original Nightcore songs - Nightcore Universe

    Jan 12, 2014 · BPM of all original Nightcore songs, songs from TPB Nightcore Song Pack, using Virtual DJ Home. Doing a Chinese Wiki for Nightcore and I want to prove that Nightcore songs always have >160 BPM so here we go. 5 Elements 175.16 Another Night 174.18 Breathe Without You 175.19 Dam Dadi Doo 172.68 Destiny 175.17 Don't Let Me Down 170.18

    What is angel with a shotgun? - Nightcore Universe

    Jun 23, 2015 · This is where the term "Nightcore" has become so "overused", and as it has been stated, you can pretty much speed up any song, stick an anime girl on it and call it nightcore. HOWEVER, there is a "nightcored" version of a Mozart operatic aria which is HILARIOUS. Being both an opera lover and a nightcore lover made me enjoy it :)

    Nightcore Trance - Channel - Nightcore Universe

    Oct 13, 2022 · Nightcore Trance wrote: October 13th, 2022, 3:13 pm Hello! I enjoy listening to trance music and doing so I often thought "this would sound great as Nightcore mix" and since there wren't any Nightcore versions I started doing them myself.

    How to see if a song will be blocked on Youtube - Nightcore …

    Aug 30, 2017 · As for uploading someone else's work in the first place, this is, after all, a nightcore forum. And nightcore involves, well, taking someone else's song and speeding it up. As mentioned in this thread, you can't produce nightcore from scratch like you can with techno, house, electro, trance, etc. If you want to upload nightcore, you're going to ...

    Who sang Waves and Castle In The Sky - Nightcore Universe

    Oct 22, 2015 · ↳ Nightcore Radio - di.fm; ↳ Nightcore Radio - nightcore.com; ↳ mChat; Nightcore; ↳ Nightcore General; ↳ Nightcore Uploads; ↳ Favorite Songs; Community; ↳ General; ↳ Forum Games; ↳ Contest Hall; ↳ Tutorials; ↳ Interests - Anime - Gaming - Graphics

    Nightcore Mix/Compilation competition - Nightcore Universe

    Aug 16, 2014 · Participants (since yet):HFU Nightcore, StefanGhost, Luv4Nightcore, Night Wayfarer,LonelyLittleAngel,NightcoreLounge, SwooshXD, hko2006 read hko's post for more information. Last edited by HFUNightcore on September 16th, 2014, 3:44 …