Even manager can´t tell Korone what to do. Who else can? She went to a strip club with the daughter a few minutes after the break with the wife, in GTA. Wild dog!
@@janchristianursuaaguilar7434 She WAS an SCP. But since they can't stop the contamination they decided to integrate her as part of culture. This is the same as the color epidemic. Back then we live in a beautiful black and white tone, then an SCP incident occured that gives us all ugly ugly colors! So they use a mind altering virus to make us believe that color is the normal thing. What was left was old black and white photos and we said it was just part of photography history.
@drpibisback7680 probably can't ever happen while Disney owns them. Apart from Sesame Street I don't think muppets are even used for anything at the moment.
That's why the old National Top 40 charts used to take a 2 week break at the end of the year as the chart would be filled with Christmas albums and a certain Wham or Slade single on the singles chart.
It's funny... artists are afraid to release songs near Christmas because they have stiff competition, and they don't want to make Christmas songs because they think it will be played only for that month of December. But if they release a god tier Christmas song, it has the chance to dominate not just one month of December, but many Decembers for years or decades to come. Because of this we've probably heard Mariah Carey's singing more than Taylor Swift. And yet artists still avoid doing Christmas songs like the plague, while EVERYONE is begging for some variety. Please! All I want for Christmas is NOT THIS SONG!
Meanwhile, over here in South Elysium, we also have Jose Mari Chan, and then there's Octavio being sitcom archnemeses with Bettel when it comes to when the Christmas season is. And honestly, as memed as it is, I seriously like that one JMC Christmas song.
And by Christmas season, you mean September to December, right? Also thanks, now Christmas in our Hearts is playing in my head... orz (I like it too, but it plays on loop like forever)
Not this retail worker. Christmas music gives me a break from the same awful music that's been playing all year long. I automatically get triggered when I hear any Taylor Swift or Bruno Mars song. Give me Mariah Carey any day of the week if it means I get a rest from the same tired songs playing all year round.
I still don't get everyone's aversion to Christmas music. And I've worked retail! Everyone talks about the same songs playing all month and my reply is always, "BRUH. We've been listening to the same dang songs ALL YEAR. Let this month be a rest from Taylor Swift and Bruno Mars and all that other crap!" I love Christmas music. It makes me feel upbeat and it's a rest from the weary, unending nonsense that's always playing over the radio. I even love the Mariah Carey song.
Oh boy I can't wait for this year's Christmas Advent Callender. It'd be so cool if everyone could release a christmas song so we'd have a whole ass album of christmas songs to listen to
2:15 IF you mean it lasting close to 5 months in the Philippines like how Winter practically last 8 months in Canada a limited, then it's not really limited lmao. And we know Filipino deadbeats will be listing to that Calli Christmas album the whole time like how they listen to Jose Mari Chan's Christmas in our Hearts nonstop.
Yeah, X-mas songs are EVERYWHERE during the X-Mas season. Back at my old job, one of the managers would even play those X-mas songs on speakers ALL. MONTH. LONG. By the time X-mas finally arrived, I was already sick of them... and I wasn't alone, lol. 😂
I still love one review of Kelly Clarkson's Christmas album. "It's really important that you love Christmas, and she loves Christmas more than you ever loved anything."
I worked retail four years. Hearing the same carols over a 20-minute loop (yes, I timed it) drove me crazy, and I still have not completely recovered my sanity. I don't mind Christmas at all, but I _hate_ carols. I hear them, I leave the room. That is to prevent any form of violence, extreme or otherwise.
also people spend their money on different stuff with higher priorities, e.g. a new PC, new console, w.e. what they wanted for christmas etc. thus leading to less sales for the album, thats why releasing stuff in holidays is quite bad, even for new indie games
On the other hand if you do manage to make a christmas song that actually catches on you might be the one who's song is getting played to death every year for the next 50 years.
You make one Christmas song that hits and you're set for life though. That one overplayed to death Christmas single by Mariah has made her more money than the entirety of the rest of her career.
Personally, as someone who worked in stores for years before, nothing made me hate Christmas more than hearing like the same 12 songs ad hominum for months on end
I remember someone said that his mom use Gura Christmas songs compilation for their Christmas song theme at home because she loves Gura's singing voice. I think Cover will get a lot of money releasing an official Gura Christmas album. Christmas songs in English and Japanese!
Mori says stuff about how you can never stop in the music industry and all I can ever think of is how there was 5 years between my favorite musical duo Daft Punk's Human After All and Tron: Legacy. I know she isn't lying about her work, but like have things just changed that much or was Daft Punk a unique situation or what? I'm not asking facetiously, I genuinely don't know how to reconcile the view I originally had that musicians just needed to release like an album every year or two to stay relevant (which could just be me being wrong) with what Mori has talked about Edit: I knew next to nothing about the music industry even during the period I'm talking about, and it appears I know even less now.
I read it as a "riding the momentum" sort of thing. In an industry that's infinitely large with new artists every year, it's easy for anyone to fall into irrelevance if they take a break and their previous work didn't have enough popularity to keep them relevant for long. Of course, artists can have dedicated fans that follow them regardless (like calli and the deadbeats) but for the general public who just consume whatever is hyped up at the time, it's def an uphill battle.
Things *have* changed quite a bit. Like everything else, music's increasingly an online medium, and that means it's subject to the same algorithms and fickle audience attention spans as every other medium. As a result, musicians are slowly shifting towards a more typically online release schedule of trying to maintain a steady drip feed of content, as opposed to releasing big chunks of content every year or two. You might not necessarily produce more content in total than you would've 10-20 years ago, but you have to *finish* individual videos/episodes/songs at a quicker pace because you have to release stuff more frequently.
Keep in mind you are talking about a very different ball park of popularity. Daft Punk didn't have to be as concerned with keeping up relevancy. I think the boom of streaming services plays a role.
dude that was long time ago and compared to a big name is different rule man, and nowadays music industry is moving fast yeah if you didn't ride the wave you're gone from radar even for a big name
Keep in mind that Calli doesn't tour. Most artists, a huge part of becoming and staying relevant is touring. But Vtubers can't really do a big tour the way regular artists do.
I dunno. I think goob singing christmas songs is on par if not better than mr Buble (not bias at all). They don't count as actual charting songs as its just karaoke streams. But purely on the merit of the songs and the singer that sings it. I think goobs versions demonstrate a clear competence at old classics.
I don't remember who I heard it from, but ages ago (before the advent of streaming music as it is today and ordinary people were still buying music), I heard it being joked that you could tell a band/artist's career was essentially over if they released a Christmas album. The music industry is a completely different place now, but I'm sure there's probably still a nugget of truth in there somewhere.
Her Christmas songs do good because she is actually trying to sing Christmas songs. Just about all of her competition wants to use Christmas to sing about other stuff. Or worse they just add random caterwauling to an established song. Because no one will tell them its annoying.
It's honestly sad how that song is going to take on a more somber meaning for Mariah this year. I guarantee all she wants for Christmas is those she lost this past year. Think about that.
i dont think mariah is the case. doughnut from twice was made during christmas and it became a hit. what people have to worry about is going big with their song like doing more than a cover
@@vera_light yeah but the main issue is not getting it to trend but it becomes a competitor to other songs. it sounds like she has an issue getting it to trend bc a lot of people are doing the same thing
You may find it amusing to check out a song called "Rock the Night Away" by Monster Siren Records (MSR - Topic on youtube). It's a song for those who are sick of Christmas.
Even as a kid I got sick and tired of holiday albums. Now, on October 1st I unplug all my radios, and logout of Spotify, and this lasts until Mid-March when I am certain they've switched back to tolerable garbage.