Why is no one talking about how talented Kikuo is? His tuning is impeccable, every instrumental he produces is layered and full of little details that you wouldn't notice on your first few listens, his lyrics flow so well and are catchy despite many viewers not knowing any Japanese. His tuning of Miku is so good that most people don't even know it's her, they just assume it's an actual singer. He is a god tier vocaloid producer and should be recognized as such. *Edit:* okay so this got a loooot of attention so I'm gonna clarify. When I said his tuning is so great, I didn't mean that it's very human-like or as realistic as other vocaloid producers. It's just really great in its own retrospect. Idk how to explain it properly but like if you're a vocaloid fan of course youre gonna know it's Miku, I never said it didn't sound like Miku, but a lot of people coming here from TikTok have never heard of vocaloid and so to them it sounds very realistic, and I think kikuo's tuning helps make that assumption. Honestly, I shouldn't have focused on that and just stayed focused on what I most love about kikuo's work which is his instrumentals and how well the music flows, but oh well I'm not rewriting the whole comment lol Also yes Kikuo is a guy. This is confirmed. Just letting people know cause some seemed to be confused when I referred to him as a guy.
in my opinion, this song is about golden child syndrome. the necklace is figurative, too the child not getting enough attention (basically neglect) and the lyrics "screaming for more, your not enough" is figurative too the girl telling herself this because her parents dont love her, so she has too be better. this stuff is pretty common in real life. children dont get the attention they need too grow up healthy then get mental issues later in life.
@《Baka Berry》 it's where a child doesn't get enough attention from their parents so they need attention more than other kids but they don't usuallly get it
Me: Puts on captions because I'm not fluent in Japanese. The captions: *Slide to the left , Slide to the right, Criss cross, Criss cross, Cha cha real smooth*
I love how the English captions bounce around and go with the eerie flow of the video. These little details show how the other versions don't compare to how wonderful this one is. Edit: I know this is the original. The original tends to be the best~ Edit 2: Thank you every one for your opinions and other version listings I appreciate it.
@@vcaalnu34 no idea I always thought the English translation was part of the video so I never questioned it. Then after seeing this comment I kept turning the subs off and on and holy shit.
When she said 'AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH' I felt that.
Easy, think of a gruesome situation, add words, take a shelf of drugs and try to make a solid pattern background (easier cuz of woobly) then close your eyes and press them so you see a pattern, draw all that and there you have it
And then there's me, trying to process the person who made the animation for love me, breaking things into pieces and waltz of malice can sing so adorably ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-1iC8RvcoI9g.html
Everyone talks about the starting bits but nobody points out the significance of the “gym confession” portion. The reason why it’s so important is that we’re seeing the golden child viewing her classmates as inferior due to this complex that she learned. She confessed to somebody, and through the learning of her parents that her top-of-class grades means she’s the best child of them all, and that she suffered to get there, her crush nor other peers deserve to say no to her, because SHE worked hard. SHE’S the good child. SHE’S pure. SHE wore the necklace and survived. Her peers did not, and she learned to hate them for it.
ok i know the meaning of the song but im gonna say what i think This child was ignored by her parents, and fell into a depressive state trying to be perfect. Behavior, school work, and more. referencing the line: “ I won’t lose to anyone in my class. “ The “ necklace “ is probably something that she’s holding onto. The line: “ This is happiness. “ is her ( trying to ) convince herself that she’s happy. thanks for reading, bye
i believe the necklace is metaphorical. her parents have her on a chokehold, their expectations keeping her on a leash throughout her life. so, maybe, the necklace represents her parents expectations.
@@mimichelly539 Me too, especially during the part where she says 'no matter how big your body grows the necklace still stays small' (paraphrasing), how when she grows no matter what her parents still control her in the form of expectation of perfection. The necklace is mentioned twice in the song but towards the end mention of it disappears, and instead you see two snakes in opposite directions wrapped around her neck tightly. I don't think the snakes are symbols of her parents, since that's the necklace. More like (this feels like a common cliché in songs of this genre) suicide(?) a noose maybe. She says sorry for the last chorus, maybe she was done feeling like a disappointment and just accepted her fate. Perhaps she did commit suicide which could explain 3:42 - 3:44 a flash of herself as a child (couldn't get a good look, but pretty sure the necklace wasn't present, showing a happier time in her life and that the necklace is indeed a metaphor.) like how your life supposedly flashes before your eyes when you die, another belief being the first and last memory or thought you have is the happiest memory and/or feeling you desired the most. She also says "Shiawase nano" "This is happiness" before screaming, shiawase being long term happiness, eternal peace (differing from ureshii which is more joy of the moment like OP described). In the end she lays there looking up, free from the necklace and the snakes and closes her eyes, for the last time(?). I know its long and almost definitely wrong but that's just my two cents on it. :P
Here’s a little info on the song: This song is *not* about a yandere, it’s about a girl with golden child syndrome. She basically wants to be loved by her own parents. This is the definition of golden child syndrome: The phenomenon suggests that true love should involve an agnosticism around a child's eventual level of worldly success. It should ideally not matter to the parent where a child ends up - or rather, it should matter only in so far as, and no further than, it matters to the child. Small edit: sorry if I may offended anyone in any way or something, please have a nice day everyone! Stay safe ^^
So, in conclusion, Golden Child Syndrome is something that the parents of the child have, not the child themself, but the syndrome in the parents negatively affects the child.
Everybody: talking about how gacha kids and tiktoks are stealing this song without knowing the real meaning Me: Bro where are the comments from 5 YEARS AGO
If anybody is curious about the captions, here's a explanation: All the captions were made in a custom caption file first, and then loaded into youtube. The type of file used here is a .vtt file and its around 17,000 lines long. That's insane
Korean sub: Chilling English sub: haha... *Pathetic* Edit: ayo i was a bit confused why people starting to say like "Japanese*" or "i think u meant Japanese..?" In the comments, now lemme explain: In the early days, there were only Korean and English subtitles/captions, thats why i only included the Korean and English subtitles/captions.
VOCALOID is a vocal synthesizer and computer software in which its user can select a purchasable "character" with a distict voice that can be manipulated to sing like a real singer.
As a sufferer of golden child syndrome, I cried listening to this song. I never really had the words to describe how lost and lonely and useless I felt until I found this song. It really sucks when you’re only liked for your skills/intelligence instead of who you are as a person. And as is kind of shown in the words, when you finally have someone that cares about you, it feels fake. You automatically assume they want something from you because everyone else did. So there is always this distance between the two of you, and even though they would “bear everything for (you)” you can’t really bring yourself to believe it until it’s too late.
I hope one day you will feel a lot better, and I may not know you, but I care for almost everyone, everyone deserves the right amount of love and attention and I'm sorry you go through that, I hope it all gets better.
Gacha Kids: This song isn't about a yandere. It's about a child wanting love from her parents. She wants to be the center of attention, that's why she says "Aren't I a good kid?", and there are drawings of her mom and dad at the very beginning of the video. She grows up, and so does her desire for attention. She craves it. She wants it above anything else; she has feelings for this kid in her school, so she confesses to them. It ends up being a toxic relationship, from my perception, because the person has to carry three mountains on their back so they could be with her. It's one-sided. She does nothing for the person, while they bear the world for her.
Song: a kid literally getting abuse. Anyone who doesn't speak Japanese: *dance like there's no tomorrow* Edit (3 years after original comment): after years of not listening to this music, it suddenly comes to mind once in a while. But now the song is ruined for me because I missed remembered the lyrics as "aishite aishite aishite mojojojo." Now I can only think of a monkey when i hear this song.
@@Doughyy736 Yeah, I know that the girl was real and she realy commited the suacide but fact that there are people that can just dance to it and think that its a happy song is just..-
Everything in this video is a torture: The singing The editing The music The meaning of the song The subtitle They all haven been through torture to make this masterpiece
I think this song is about a girl whose parents have high expectations of her. The collar represent those expectations. As she grows and gets bigger, they never change and the collar becomes a constant weight on her. The parents never tell her they’re proud of her, so she tries to get validation from others. When this doesn’t work (for example the boy she confesses to), she has a mental breakdown. It’s not Golden Child Syndrome because the parents neglect her and fail to pay any attention to her.
"If you listen to this song, you are a yandere." No, I listen to this song because it portrays an unloved child trying it's best and works very hard to seek affection from their parents. And that child is me.
People always ask “Is the person who made the subtitles okay?” or “Is my child listening to this song okay or depressed?” But no one ask if the creator of the song (Kikuo) is okay
“This song is about a girl who demands love and attention from other people as an effect of a cursed collar she wears. As she grows up, the collar's effect on her becomes stronger, making her end up feeling unsatisfied and continues to demand more love and attention from others, believing that the people whom she demands from are not enough. Another interpretation is that it is about a girl who wants love from her parents. Her parents want her to do well in school and do not give her the love she so desires. The collar she wears is a symbol of her parents' expectations. As she grows up and her body changes, the collar stays the same size just as what her parents want out of her doesn't change either.” Are you guys okay? This is a dark song, feel free to rant to me and I’ll try and reply to you. That’s the ACTUAL meaning to the song, and a pretty dark one. If you don’t want to rant that’s okay! I don’t want to make you uncomfortable! I don’t want other people to experience my trauma have nobody to talk to.
I thought the collar on the neck was like her brain saying that shes not loved so shes tried her best to get the people around her to love her but it ends up being depressing
It's the same reason a good violinist has more clarity and emotion than a beginner violinist. The artist just knows the instrument (robot voice in this case) very well
@@thelaststraw1467 what ;-; Edit: I think the person means that the captions weren't originally there during editing, but we're added upon uploading and stuff
I love that even though the subtitles were extremely detailed and moved a lot in the video, it was still readable and understandable (for me at least). Whoever made the subtitles was incredibly talented.
ok but are we not gonna talk about how the captions are moving around and changing colors in a way that matches the song perfectly- also yes ik that was the intention i just thought it was super cool cause ive never seen something like it before
IKR LIKE I TURNED ON MY CAPTIONS N AT FIRST I THOUGHT THE ENGLISH CAPTIONS WERE FROM THE VID BUT I REALISED IT WAS FROM THE CC LIKE EVEN THE CAPTIONS TURN RED AND ITS SHAKING ITS SO COOOLLLLLL