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Karaoke (Japanese: カラオケ, from 空 kara, "empty", & オーケストラ Å?kesutora, "orchestra") occurs as form of entertainment where recorded music accompanies an amateur singer who sings along with a accompaniment in microphone. the music is of a easily-known song within which the voice of the original singer is abstracted or even reduced in volume. Lyrics are usually too displayed, for instance including colour changes synchronized with the music, in music video to help with a sing-along.
Karaoke has been the popular form of amusement within East Asia since at least the 1980s, and has since spread to more area of the globe. Karaoke engenders quite bit of culture specific to its enthusiasts, & this culture, unsurprisingly, varies from either united states to united states. Great deal of the tools in that entry is presently specific to karaoke's vicinity of origin in the Far East.
Word origin
A Japanese word stems from either a words kara (空), meaning "empty" (when around karate, "empty hand") and oke which is short for Å?kesutora, meaning "orchestra". the words together produce a contraction literally meaning "empty orchestra".
It used to be the slang inside medithe around which the survive performance is substituted by a pre-recorded music & so these are written in katakana. A term karaoke may be interpreted when "virtual orchestra" because of these might specify the key to the music & run singing along forswearing the presence of a survive band or even orchestra. In a United States, the word is typically pronounced when . (These pronunciations come around IPA.)
History
It has been green to provide the musical amusement at the dinner or even the person around Japan for an extended instance. It appeared in the earliest Japanese mythology. For an extended period, singing & dance remained a single amusement in the rural front yard. Noh was initially played at the tethe person & guests were welcomed to joinside in for even the cheer or a cry of praise. Dance & singing was too the the portion of a samurai's education. It was required that each samurai have the dance or even a song it may perform. When you took a Taisho period, Utagoe Kissa, (literally song coffee shop), became popular & client sung to the survive performance of the music band.
A industry began inside Japan in the early 1970s when singer Daisuke Inoue (Inoue Daisuke) was asked by frequent guests in the Utagoe Kissthe where he performed to provide the recording of his performance then that it can sing along in a company-sponsored vacation. Realizing the likely for the market, Inoue mass produced the tape machine that played the song for a 100-yen coin. This was the karaoke machine. Instead of selling karaoke machines, he leased the children retired, thus that places didn't have to find freshly songs in their own. Originally it was considered the fad which was lacking the "live atmosphere" of the really performance. It was too take to be somewhat expensive since 100 yen in a Seventies was the price of deuce average dejeuner. But, it caught in as a popular amusement. Karaoke machines were at first set around eating place or even hotel rooms; nonetheless, fresh businesses known as Karaoke Pack using compartmented rooms became popular. (Look at following "Public Places for Karaoke" & Terms of Karaoke" for a description of karaoke boxes.) In 2004, Daisuke Inoue was dubiously awarded the Ig Nobel Peace Prize for inventing karaoke, "thereby providing an entirely recently way for humans to see to tolerate every more." [http://www.asahi.com/english/opinion/TKY200410060126.html]
Early karaoke machines used cassette tapes but technological advances replaced this with CDs, VCDs, laserdiscs and, currently, DVDs. In 1992, Taito introduced the X2000 that fetched music via a dial-up telephone network. Its repertoire of music and graphics was limited, but the advantage of continuous updates and the smaller machine size saw it gradually replace traditional machines. It is now common to use karaoke machines connected via fiber-optic links to provide instant high-quality music and video.
Karaoke soon spread to the rest of Asia and then to the United States in the 1990s. Facilities such as karaoke bars or "KTV boxes" provided the venue, equipment and software for amateur singers to entertain (or "torture") each other.
Its popularity has spread rapidly to the United States, Canada and other Western countries. Some people still regard it as "hokey" and simply a method for the intoxicated to embarrass themselves, but as the novelty has worn off and the available selection of music has exploded, more and more people within the industry see it as a very profitable form of lounge and nightclub entertainment. It is not uncommon for some bars to have karaoke performances seven nights a week, commonly with much more high-end sound equipment than the small, standalone machines noted above. Dance floors and lighting effects are also becoming common sights in karaoke bars. Lyrics are often displayed on multiple TV sets around the bar, including big screens.
It also growing in popularity in the United Kingdom, with Martha Lane Fox, the founder of lastminute.com, helping finance what is being touted as a chain of upmarket Karaoke venues, called Lucky Voice.
Technology
A basic karaoke machine consists of audio input, a means of altering the pitch of the music (not the singer) and an audio output. Some low-end machines attempt to provide vocal suppression so that one can feed regular songs into the machine and suppress the voice of the original singer, however this is not very effective (see below). Most common machines are audio mixers with microphone input built-in with CD+G, Video CD, Laser Disc, or DVD players. CD+G players use a special track called subcode to encode the lyrics and pictures displayed on the screen, while the other formats natively display both audio and video. In some countries, karaoke with video lyrics display capabilities is called KTV.
Most karaoke machines have technology that electronically changes the pitch of music so that amateur singers can sing along to any music source by choosing a key that is appropriate for their vocal range, while maintaining the original tempo of the song. (There were some very old systems that used cassettes, and these changed the pitch by altering playback speed, but none are still on the market, and their commercial use is virtually nonexistent.)
A popular game using karaoke is to randomly type in a number and call up a song, which participants take a turn to try to sing as much as they can. In some machines, this game is pre-programmed and may be limited to a genre so that they cannot call up an obscure national anthem that none of them can sing. This game has come to be called "Kamikaze Karaoke" in some parts of the United States and Canada.
Many low-end entertainment systems (boom boxes etc) have a karaoke mode that attempts to remove the vocal track from general (non-karaoke) audio CDs. This is done by center removal which exploits the fact that in most music the vocals are in the center. This means that the voice, as part of the music, has equal volume on both stereo channels and no phase difference. To get the quasi-karaoke (mono) track the left channel of the original audio is subtracted from the right channel.
The crudeness of that approach is reflected in the often poor performance of voice removal. Common effects are hearing the echo of the voice track (due to stereo echo being put on the vocals), and also other instruments that happen to be mixed into the center get removed (snare/bass drum, solo instruments), degrading this approach to hardly more than a gimmick in those devices.
MIDI applications
Some computer programs that serve a similar purpose to the standard karaoke machine have been developed that use MIDI instrumentation to generate the accompaniment rather than a recorded track. This has the advantage of making transposition technically trivial and also shrinks the information needed to provide the accompaniment to the point where it is easy to transfer them across the Internet, even over slow connections. The standard file format used is *.KAR, which is an extension of the standard .MID MIDI disk format, and can be played unaltered by MIDI player software.
Video game
A karaoke game was initially released for the Nintendo Famicom but its limited computing ability made for a short catalog of songs, and therefore reduced replay value. As a result, karaoke games were considered little more than collector's items until games saw release in the higher-capacity DVD format. Karaoke Revolution, created for the PlayStation 2 by Konami and released in North America in 2003, is a console game in which a single player sings along with on-screen guidance, and receives a score based on his or her pitch, timing, and rhythm. The game soon spawned two more versions, Karaoke Revolution Vol. 2 and Karaoke Revolution Vol. 3. While the original Karaoke Revolution was also eventually released for the Microsoft Xbox console in late 2004, the new online-enabled version included the ability to download additional song packs through the console's exclusive Xbox Live service.
A similar game, SingStar, published by Sony Computer Entertainment Europe, is particularly popular in the European and Australasian markets. Other similar titles in the rhythm-based game genre include Bemani's Dance Dance Revolution, Guitar Freaks, and Drum Mania.
Karaoke VCD
The takeoff of Video CDs in Southeast Asia is partly due to the cheap but tolerable quality, and partly due to the popularity of karaoke. Many VCD players in Southeast Asia have built-in Karaoke function. If users disable the singer's voice and leave the music alone, they can play karaoke. In the past, there were only pop-song karaoke VCDs. Nowadays, different types of karaoke VCD are available. Cantonese opera karaoke VCD is now a big hit among the elderly in Hong Kong.
Karaoke on mobile phones
In 2003, several companies started offering a karaoke service on a mobile phone. This is still a budding service and it is unclear whether this service will take root even with all advances in technology.
However, today there are some interesting efforts for Mobile Karaoke with an amazing usability and compatibility. A great example can be found at http://www.karaokini.com/
Karaokini, is already sold through Vodafone Live! Greece and Malta with a great success.
Karaoke on computers and internet
Starting in 2003, much software has been released for hosting karaoke shows, and playing karaoke songs on a personal computer. Instead of having to carry around hundreds of CD-G's or LaserDiscs, a KJ can 'rip' their entire library onto a hard drive, and play the songs and lyrics from that.
Additionally, new software permits singers to sing and listen to one another over the Internet with collaborators/audience from all around the world.
Alternative playback devices
The CD+G format of karaoke disc, which contains the lyrics on a specially encoded subcode track, has heretofore required special—and expensive—equipment to play it. Commercial players have come down in price, though, and some unexpected devices (including the Sega Saturn videogame console) can decode the graphics; in fact, karaoke machines, including video and sometimes recording capability, are often popular electronics items for sale in toy stores and electronics stores.
Additionally, there is software for Windows, Pocket PC, Linux, and Macintosh PC's that can decode and display karaoke song tracks, though usually these must be ripped off of the CD first, and possibly compressed. Recently, Karaoke software was also made available for mobile telephones, mainly in Asian countries.
In addition to CD+G and Software-based Karaoke, microphone-based Karaoke players enjoy popularity mainly in North America and some Asian countries such as the Philippines. Microphone-based Karaoke Players only need to be connected to a TV - and in some cases to a power outlet, in other cases they run on batteries. These devices often sport advanced features, such as pitch correction and special sound effects. Some companies offer Karaoke content for paid download to extend the song library in microphone-based Karaoke systems.
CD+G and Microphone-based Karaoke systems are typically also used at home. Recently, DVD Karaoke disks became the most popular medium for home-Karaoke in North America. This is due to the large amount of DVD Players in US Households which enables consumers to simply play a DVD rather than have to hook up new equipment.
Public places for karaoke
A karaoke bar / karaoke restaurant / karaoke club / karaoke lounge is simply a bar or restaurant with karaoke equipment, so that people can sing publicly. This is the most common arrangement in North America. Many establishments offer karaoke on a weekly schedule, while some have shows every night. Such establishments commonly invest more in both equipment and song discs, and are often extremely popular, with an hour or more wait between a singer's opportunities to take the stage (called the 'rotation').
In some regions, a Karaoke Box is the most popular type of karaoke venue. A karaoke box (or KTV as is known in Taiwan) is a small or medium-sized room containing karaoke equipment for a group of friends to rent by half-hour increments, providing for a more intimate and less public atmosphere. A typical karaoke box establishment contains 10-20 such rooms as well as a main "karaoke bar" area in the front. Some believe that the karaoke box format originated in South Korea, where it is called noraebang, which literally means "song (norae) room (bang)". Noraebang parlours is the Korean name for karaoke box establishments. Most Americans have experienced karaoke only in the "karaoke bar" setting, although "karaoke boxes" also became popular in New York in the late 1990s.
In some traditional Chinese restaurants, there are so-called "mahjong-karaoke rooms" where elderly can play mahjong and teenagers can enjoy karaoke. The result is fewer complaints about boredom but more noise.
Terms of karaoke
Gian
A character from Doraemon, known for his highly questionable singing ability. Thus someone who loves karaoke but can only sing completely out of tune, is referred as a Gian (pronounced like giant, but without the t sound on the end).
Ohako (18th)
Some karaoke singers have one song which they are especially good at, and which they use to show off their singing abilities. It is called Ohako (十八番), meaning "Eighteenth", which refers to the 18 most popular kabuki plays. It is also used to mean being good at any entertainment such as dancing or playing an instrument. "Total 18" is slang in Korean and mildly obscene because going to karaoke was one of the few occasions where a male and a female could get together in Korea. The term took hold in Korea during the Japanese colonial period when varieties of entertainment were introduced.
In Hong Kong, such a song is called a "scolion" (飲歌).
Karaoke box
As discussed above in the section "Public Wharehouses for Karaoke", a "karaoke pack" is a type of venue where small, private rooms can be rented to sing. This term, which (like karaoke itself) originated in East Asia, is an example of Engrish that has become so prevalent that it appeared in the latest edition of the Oxford English Dictionary.
Sing K
There is a new term originating from Hong Kong which refers to "going to the karaoke pack"; karaoke is abbreviated as "K". This buzzword is now particularly prevalent in Chinese-speaking countries or regions like Hong Kong, Macau, Mainland China, Taiwan, and Singapore. In fact, there are other similar new terms, of which karaoke is identically shorted as a single "K", e.g.:
The K King / The King of K: a man who is sophisticated in karaoke singing.
The K Queen / The Queen of K: a woman who is sophisticated in karaoke singing.
a K song: (1)similar to "Ohako" (see above); (2) a song which is designated for karaoke, particularly due to its easy-to-remember melody and smooth lyrics.
K lunch / K buffet: meals (buffet) served in karaoke boxes; people can sing songs while enjoying their food.
K hours: going to a karaoke box in happy hours, usually with special discounts.
K fun: karaoke discount coupons, or the act of going for karaoke
Karaoke in fiction
Karaoke appears in a variety of fictional settings in Asia, often as a place young people gather for fun. The small size of a karaoke room makes for an intimate and simple setting.
Karaoke in film
Karaoke has been depicted in movies and television shows. Examples include the 1996 comedy film The Cable Guy, and the 1997 Korean movie No. 3, a gangster comedy film, in which some of the characters are depicted drunk and singing off-key. A more recent example is Lost in Translation. Karaoke is central to the 2000 movie Duets, which was reasonably well researched, and presents the topic in a fairly positive light.
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