Benutzer:Lychrel/Lostwave

aus Wikipedia, der freien Enzyklopädie
Zur Navigation springen Zur Suche springen
Dieser Artikel (Lostwave) ist im Entstehen begriffen und noch nicht Bestandteil der freien Enzyklopädie Wikipedia.
Wenn du dies liest:
  • Der Text kann teilweise in einer Fremdsprache verfasst, unvollständig sein oder noch ungeprüfte Aussagen enthalten.
  • Wenn du Fragen zum Thema hast, nimm am besten Kontakt mit dem Autor Lychrel auf.
Wenn du diesen Artikel überarbeitest:
  • Bitte denke daran, die Angaben im Artikel durch geeignete Quellen zu belegen und zu prüfen, ob er auch anderweitig den Richtlinien der Wikipedia entspricht (siehe Wikipedia:Artikel).
  • Nach erfolgter Übersetzung kannst du diese Vorlage entfernen und den Artikel in den Artikelnamensraum verschieben. Die entstehende Weiterleitung kannst du schnelllöschen lassen.
  • Importe inaktiver Accounts, die länger als drei Monate völlig unbearbeitet sind, werden gelöscht.
Vorlage:Importartikel/Wartung-2024-07

Als Lostwave werden im Netzjargon Musikstücke bezeichnet, über die keine oder nur wenige Informationen wie Ursprung, Liedtitel, beteiligte Musiker oder Aufnahme- und Veröffentlichungsdatum bekannt sind. Lostwave-Songs sind häufig Gegenstand von Crowdsourcing-Suchen im Internet, die versuchen Kenntnis über deren Ursprung zu erlangen.[1]

Die Ursprünge von Lostwave reichen zurück in die Mitte des 19. Jahrhunderts, als mit Erfindung des Phonautographen durch Édouard-Léon Scott de Martinville und Phonographen durch Thomas Alva Edison die ersten Tonaufnahmen entstanden. Die Erhaltung bzw. Wiederherstellung früher Musikaufnahmen stellen eine große Herausforderung dar, da nach Angabe der Library of Congress viele Aufnahmen aus dem späten 19. Jahrhundert bis frühen 20. Jahrhunderts über die Jahre verloren gingen. Schätzungen zufolge sind bis heute lediglich 2% der über 3.000 Wachszylinder, die zwischen 1889 und 1894 von der North American Phonograph Company hergestellt wurden, erhalten geblieben.[2]

Der Begriff »Lostwave« entstammt der Suche nach The Most Mysterious Song on the Internet, einem Lied, das vermutlich zwischen 1982 und 1984 im Norddeutschen Rundfunk (NDR) gespielt und von einem Hörer auf Kassette aufgezeichnet wurde. Ein 74-sekündiger Ausschnitt dieser Aufzeichnung wurde am 18. März 2007 zu Spiritofradio.ca hochgeladen, der später ein bis heute andauerndes Interesse in mehreren Internetforen zur Folge hatte.

The term "lostwave" originated from the search for The Most Mysterious Song on the Internet, recorded from the German radio station Norddeutscher Rundfunk (NDR) in the mid-1980s, likely in or after 1984, by Darius S. In 2007, Darius’ sister, Lydia H., uploaded the song to best-of-80s.de and The Spirit of Radio, sparking widespread interest across various Internet forums.[3][4]

"Ready 'n' Steady"

[Bearbeiten | Quelltext bearbeiten]

"Ready 'n' Steady" is a song by American musicians Dennis Lucchesi and Jim Franks, credited as D.A, which was recorded in 1979. Despite never being publicly or commercially released, the song debuted on the Billboard's Bubbling Under Hot 100 chart at number 106, rising to number 102 before disappearing from the chart.[5] To date, the song is the only song without an official release to appear on a Billboard chart. The song's existence was in question for many years,[6] but was confirmed to be real in 2016. It was aired on KFAI in Minneapolis, Minnesota, US, that same year, the only known instance of it being aired on radio.[7]

"The Most Mysterious Song on the Internet"

[Bearbeiten | Quelltext bearbeiten]

"The Most Mysterious Song on the Internet" was recorded by teenager Darius S. from a radio program that aired on the West German public radio station Norddeutscher Rundfunk.[8][9] The song was recorded to a cassette tape, which also included other songs by the bands XTC and The Cure. To get a clean copy of the songs, the DJ chatter was removed, which is possibly why the song's exact airplay date and title are unknown.[10]

The song was first posted online between 2004 and 2007, but the search for it did not gain traction until 2019, when Brazilian teenager Gabriel da Silva Vieira learned of it from Nicolás Zúñiga of Spanish independent record label Dead Wax Records. He uploaded the excerpt of the song to YouTube and several music-related Reddit communities, eventually founding r/TheMysteriousSong.[11]

On 27 May 2019, Australian music news website Tone Deaf wrote the earliest article focusing on the song, with author Tyler Jenke discussing the preliminary stages of the search and noting its similarities to the 2013 search for a song eventually identified as "On the Roof" by Swedish musician Johan Lindell.[12][13]

Also in 2019, DJ Paul Baskerville was thought to be related to the song, as it was believed to have been taped off of his program Musik für junge Leute ("music for young people").[14][15][16] He suspects that it was a demo recording that was played once by an NDR presenter and then discarded.[17]

"Ulterior Motives" / "Everyone Knows That"

[Bearbeiten | Quelltext bearbeiten]

In 2021, WatZatSong user carl92 uploaded a 17-second snippet of a song recorded between 1982 and 1999; they claimed to have found the recording amongst files in a DVD backup, and speculated that it was a leftover from when they were learning to record audio. They also claimed that the snippet was from 1999 and possibly from Spain, where they claimed to live.[18][19][20] Initially, users referred to the song as "Everyone Knows That" due to the lyrics of the snippet.

The search for the song was initially slow to gain traction, but gained a dedicated following over time.[20] A subreddit dedicated to finding the song was created, with two of its members being interviewed by French commercial TV network TF1 on 7 January 2024.[21] Theorized sources for the song included a 1990s MTV broadcast, production music, or a commercial jingle.[22]

On 28 April 2024, the song was identified as "Ulterior Motives" by Christopher and Phillip Booth, from the 1980s pornographic film Angels of Passion.[23]

"On the Roof" is a song by Swedish musician Johan Lindell, under the name Stay (The Second Time Around). It remained unidentified until 2013 when a listener of Swedish radio station PP3, played the song in hopes that others would recognize it. Lindell had since abandoned music to pursue a career in painting, and was unaware of the search.[21][24]

D>E>A>T>H>M>E>T>A>L

[Bearbeiten | Quelltext bearbeiten]

In 2016, a 4chan user asked for help identifying a demo EP of D>E>A>T>H>M>E>T>A>L by Panchiko which he had found in a Oxfam shop in Britain. Despite the band name, album name, and cover art being visible, the band members, Owain, Andy, Shaun, and John, were identified only by their first names, and there was no information about the band or its members online. In 2020, the band members were identified by using metadata from the price sticker to geolocate the charity shop to Sherwood, Nottingham, and contacting Facebook users with the same first names in the Sherwood area.[25] The band has since reunited and gone on multiple international tours, as well as make a debut album.[26]

"How Long (Will It Take)"

[Bearbeiten | Quelltext bearbeiten]

"How Long (Will It Take)" is a song by Canadian musician Paula Toledo that was licensed for use in the TV film Secret Lives and the series 15/Love.[27] Snippets from the song were used on the menus of two Russian bootleg DVDs containing multiple movies each. The search for the song began when it was posted to a Ukrainian message board in August 2007, where it became known as "How Long Will It Take".[28] In December 2023, user the-arabara found the song after searching the database of Society of Composers, Authors and Music Publishers of Canada.[29] After Toledo learned of the search from her son, she uploaded it to Bandcamp and other streaming services, with the funds from the Bandcamp page being donated to the Music Heals Charitable Foundation.[27] Soon after, fake versions of the song began to appear on streaming services, which she suspected to be streaming fraud.[30]

Einzelnachweise

[Bearbeiten | Quelltext bearbeiten]
  1. Mathis Raabe: Pop als Detektivprojekt: Lostwave -Song „Everyone Knows That“. Deutschlandfunk Kultur. Abgerufen am 24. Juli 2024.
  2. Lost Recording List. National Recording Preservation Board. Library of Congress, archiviert vom Original am 19. Oktober 2023; (englisch).
  3. Vorlage:Cite magazine
  4. Alexandra Mae Jones: Help solve a decades-long mystery: What is the name of this mysterious 80s song? In: CTVNews. 18. November 2019, abgerufen am 24. Mai 2023 (englisch).
  5. Billboard. Nielsen Business Media, Inc. via Google Books, 30. Juni 1979;.
  6. Jim Cofer: The Record That (Apparently) Doesn't Exist. In: jimcofer.com. 20. Juni 2013, abgerufen am 13. Dezember 2023 (amerikanisches Englisch).
  7. Crap From The Past - July 8, 2016: Paul Haney presents a world premiere of D.A.'s Ready 'N' Steady from 1979! via Internet Archive, 8. Juli 2016;.
  8. Vorlage:Cite magazine
  9. Alexandra Mae Jones: Help solve a decades-long mystery: What is the name of this mysterious 80s song? In: CTVNews. 18. November 2019, abgerufen am 24. Mai 2023 (englisch).
  10. Tanja Reeve: Die Jagd nach dem Most Mysterious Song on the Internet. In: Braunschweiger Zeitung. 30. Mai 2020, abgerufen am 3. Juli 2020.
  11. This Mysterious Three-Minute Song Has The Internet Baffled In: 2 Ocean's Vibe News, 29 July 2021. Abgerufen im 25 December 2021 
  12. Tyler Jenke: Can you help some internet sleuths identify a mysterious song? In: Tone Deaf. 27. Mai 2019, abgerufen am 1. Juni 2023 (australisches Englisch).
  13. Al Newstead: The 30 Year Puzzle Of The Mystery Song Finally Solved. In: Tone Deaf. 23. September 2013, abgerufen am 13. Dezember 2023 (australisches Englisch).
  14. Ekkehard Knörer: Wer kennt diesen Song? In: www.zeit.de. 27. September 2019, abgerufen am 16. August 2020.
  15. 80er-Song lässt User verzweifeln: "Most mysterious song on the internet"? Spuren nach Deutschland. In: www.rotenburger-rundschau.de. 4. Juni 2020, abgerufen am 16. August 2020.
  16. Viola Ulrich: Mysteriöser Song: Wer kennt dieses Lied aus den 80er-Jahren? In: DIE WELT, 11 September 2019. Abgerufen im 17 August 2020 
  17. Hamburg Journal: Der geheimnisvolle Song aus dem NDR Archiv | ARD Mediathek. In: www.ardmediathek.de. Archiviert vom Original am 15. November 2020; abgerufen am 9. Dezember 2020.
  18. Bárbara Castro Publicado 24 de Fevereiro de 2024 às 09:00: Mistério! Conheça a música "perdida" dos anos 1980 que intriga a internet. In: IGN Brasil. 24. Februar 2024, abgerufen am 25. Februar 2024 (brasilianisches Portugiesisch).
  19. carl92: Can you help me name this tune? In: WatZatSong. Abgerufen am 16. November 2023 (englisch).
  20. a b Vorlage:Cite magazine
  21. a b morromocoduto: "Everyone Knows That" on Journal de 13 heures (TF1, 7 January 2024) \. In: YouTube. 7. Januar 2024;.
  22. Laura Holliday: Lostwave: how the internet became obsessed with identifying lost songs. In: Dazed. 27. Februar 2024;.
  23. Ellie Robinson: Viral Lost Song 'Ulterior Motives' Found In Obscure '80s Porn Flick In: The Music (Australia), 29 April 2024 (englisch). 
  24. Al Newstead: The 30 Year Puzzle Of The Mystery Song Finally Solved. In: Tone Deaf. 23. September 2013, abgerufen am 13. Dezember 2023 (australisches Englisch).
  25. Panchiko Reflect on "D>E>A>T>H>M>E>T>A>L," Lost Y2K Demo Turned Internet Cult Hit. In: Bandcamp Daily. 18. Mai 2020, abgerufen am 27. März 2024.
  26. Caitlin Curran: 'We didn't even know they were there': the little-known bands finding fans years later In: The Guardian, 16. August 2022. Abgerufen am 27. März 2024 (britisches Englisch). 
  27. a b Stuart Derdeyn: Global online search for the author of a 16-year-old song comes to a close in Vancouver. In: Vancouver Sun. 20. Dezember 2023;.
  28. Wells, V. S.: Internet sleuths spent a decade trying to find a mystery song—and turns out it's from a Vancouver musician. In: The Georgia Straight. 19. Dezember 2023;.
  29. Azpiri, Jon: Internet sleuths looked for the singer of a mystery song for 16 years. They found her in Vancouver. In: CBC. 19. Dezember 2023;.
  30. Azpiri, Jon: Fate of Vancouver musician's long-lost song highlights growing problem of streaming fraud. In: CBC. 8. Februar 2024;.