Coachella fans paid hundreds to watch a hologram. It didn’t show.

https://www.sfgate.com/sf-culture/article/coachella-hatsune-miku-hologram-review-19401378.php?utm_medium=facebook&utm_source=sfgate

9 comments
  1. No, the ticket was hundreds of dollars. The amount they paid for this show is the total ticket price divided by the number of shows they attend.

  2. They paid for a music festival ticket. This one crap show doesn’t negate the entire value of the ticket. Although a hologram concert is lame as hell.

  3. Wait, I thought Hitsune fans at other shows weren’t getting the hologram so that the setup could be at Coachella. And now the Coachella fans don’t get it either?

  4. I’m not racist, but this is so fucking typical of holograms.

  5. Lmao, the article got vocaloid so worng.

    It isn’t an AI that artificially generates songs.

    It’s a human instrument, a voice actor records every sound in the language the vocaloid is made for with different inflections.

    Then it’s up to the individual song creator to arrange and pitch for whatever song they make. Essentially providing a voice to those who can’t sing or can’t afford a singer in their vocal songs.

    It’s a lot of work, and not just pressing a generate button.

    While it’s not big here a lot of Japanese singers have history with it

    Kenshin yonezu started out as a very popular vocaloid artist hachi
    Ado did covers
    Yoasobi was also a vocaloid producer

  6. Huh. I was there for the Tupac hologram. They have the ability to make a peppers ghost…

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