If you're a writer, musician, visual artist, branding enthusiast, or just a lover of culture - this will interest you.

I'm a passionate follower of Internet countercultures. Discovering vaporwave was the end my part-time DJing career, simply because I was too mesmerized by it and subsequently refused to play popular music against my will anymore. Especially on repeat. Too many good music out there. Maybe I'll hit the clubs again one day, when they're ready.

If you are into cryptocurrency news, you might have noticed the meme-like, Ethereum-based project called Hermicity. The founder released a Rainbow Paper, a work heavily influenced by Vaporwave. Any Steemit hermits? Hermicity might be your salvation.

Anyway, I've been studying this certain shift in audiovisual consciousness. Is this the sign of the singularity? It's like an addictive meme to the n-th order. All facets of it jumbled, intertwined, and emphatically relatable in all ways. As if some sort of awakening.

Is this product the first-world's culmination of drugs, depression, and distress? Half right. Add godly levels of mental sovereignty and collective intelligence into the mix. This is the voice of the youth - the "jobless" and "entitled" generation. A generation that has been wronged by mainstream society. I'm here to convince you about this phenomenon. And get you hooked on it. There are so many things to learn and understand from it.

Plus you'll get a lifetime's worth of free good music that doesn't always sound the same.

To preface this, I am dedicating half of the future payouts coming out of this writeup to support the vaporwave and new age aesthetics community. More marketing points for Steemit as well, in hopeful reciprocation. Etherpunk's honor.

If you have never heard of Vaporwave before, take a look at the chart below that I've just stitched up.

It was all just in my mind before, but now I'm feeling validated.

Look at the decline of the popular genres and the exponential rise of Vaporwave. There's a reason why I have included Minimalist as well. There's a mindset correlation between Vaporwave and Minimalism (as both musical and lifestyle discipline). Minimalism is back in full-force. Why? The world is fucking up the millenials. Productivity has been heavily automated. But the spoils are being siloed. Governments are failing to engage next-level discussions with the public about stuff like basic income and the redefinition of work. So gotta stay zen and green and do everything with just a laptop or smartphone.

Some industry experts say that the music scene is cyclical, similar to societal progress as highlighted by the Strauss–Howe generational theory. Even if the theory may be sound, there is absolutely nothing cyclical about the singularity. Vaporwave is necessarily the product of exponential technologies.

Here's a pair of pretty recent Vaporwave effects on a popular commercial music videos:-



Let's step back for awhile and check out Wikipedia's entry on Vaporwave as of 7/7/2016:-

Preface:

Vaporwave is a music micro-genre and art movement that emerged in the early 2010s among Internet communities. It is characterized by a nostalgic or surrealist fascination with retro cultural aesthetics (typically of the 1980s, 1990s, and early-mid 2000s), video games, technology, postmodernism, Japanese culture and advertising, and styles of commercial and popular music such as lounge, smooth jazz and elevator music. Musical sampling is prevalent within the genre, with samples often pitched, layered or altered in classic chopped and screwed style. Central to the style is often a critical or satirical preoccupation with consumer capitalism, popular culture, and new-age tropes. The visual style of vaporwave, as seen on album covers and in art videos accompanied by the music, is commonly referred to as "aesthetics" (often stylized as "ＡＥＳＴＨＥＴＩＣＳ").

History:

Vaporwave emerged as an internet-birthed style loosely derived from the work of hypnagogic pop artists such as Ariel Pink and James Ferraro in previous years. Daniel Lopatin's 2010 release Chuck Person's Eccojams Vol. 1 and Ferraro's own Far Side Virtual are often credited for sparking vaporwave's development, as is Macintosh Plus's Floral Shoppe. In subsequent years, the genre has found wider appeal through websites such as Bandcamp, Soundcloud, Last.fm and 4chan. It continued to evolve in 2013 with acts like Blank Banshee adopting sounds that "have a hint of virtual plaza but significantly transcend it". Subgenres have also appeared, including mallsoft, which "conjures the muzak played in shopping malls". In 2015, MTV revealed a rebrand heavily inspired by vaporwave and seapunk. Inversely, Tumblr launched Tumblr TV, with an explicitly 1990s MTV-style visual spin. According to Jordan Pearson of Motherboard, Vice's technology website, this change would mean the death of the genre, as the "cynical impulse that animated vaporwave and its associated Tumblr-based aesthetics is co-opted and erased on both sides—where its source material originates, and where it lives." Artists often embrace classical sculpture, 1990s web design, computer renderings, glitch art, VHS, Cassette Tape, East Asian Artwork, and cyberpunk. In November 2015, according to a Rolling Stone "10 artists you need to know" list, 2814's album 新しい日の誕生 (Birth of a New Day) found success within a "small, passionate pocket of the internet." 2814 cited Boards of Canada, Steve Roach, Vangelis, Burial and Sigur Rós as influences. In the same year the album I'll Try Living Like This, by Death's Dynamic Shroud.wmv, was featured at number fifteen on the Fact list of "The 50 Best Albums of 2015".

Interpretations:

Vaporwave has been described as "a degrading of commercial music" in an attempt to reveal the "false promises" of capitalism. Music writer Adam Harper of Dummy Mag describes Vaporwave as "ironic and satirical or truly accelerationist"; noting that the name "Vaporwave" itself is both a nod to vaporware, and the idea of libidinal energy being subjected to relentless sublimation under capitalism. Critic Simon Reynolds has characterized Daniel Lopatin's Chuck Person project as "relat[ing] to cultural memory and the buried utopianism within capitalist commodities, especially those related to consumer technology in the computing and audio/video entertainment area". 情報デスクVIRTUAL (Jouhou Desuku VIRTUAL), the alias of Vektroid, describes her album 札幌コンテンポラリー (Sapporo Contemporary) as "a brief glimpse into the new possibilities of international communication" and "a parody of American hypercontextualization of e-Asia circa 1995." Music educator Grafton Tanner argued in his 2016 book Babbling Corpse: Vaporwave and the Commodification of Ghosts that vaporwave is a rebellion against rampant, uncontrolled capitalism, particularly surrounding its treatment of nostalgia.

So wtf again is Vaporwave and the New Age Aesthetics?

The approach of higher-grade commercial videos rely on pristine rendering, rather than the low-cost approach of indie bedroom musicians plundering old commercial videos and hacking bare minimum texturing for 3d renders, if any.

As you can see in Wikipedia's entry, it covers a pretty wide spectrum of audiovisuals with huge philosophical overtones about consumer culture. Music can range from droning ambient atmospheric sounds to upbeat future funk. On the visual side - it's the gateway to both nostalgic and / or pristine, minimal high-def elements. With the chance of glitch and memory corruption. The whole premise is based on plundering, revitalizing, and playing around with audiovisual samples. Mashup and experimentation on steroids. Highly disposable. Elements emphasized usually taken to the extremes.

There are no clear boundaries. But there is an art to it and I will attempt to explain. Right after you experience for yourself the different tastes of vaporwave examples below. Some of these are the more mainstream and palatable adaptations of Vaporwave, while others, perhaps totally unusable in social clubs:-

[1] Proto Vaporwave

