Singer Hatsune Miku

Image of Hatsune Miku #
225
Singer

Hatsune Miku

Living place: Japan

Birthday: 31-8-2007 (17 years old)

Population of the world 2007: 6.7 billions

Global rank: #1874

Facebook: facebook.com/HatsuneMikuOfficialPage/

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Singer Hatsune Miku profile

Who is Singer Hatsune Miku?
Hatsune Miku is the most popular virtual singer in the world. Hatsune Miku performs hundreds of thousands of songs, has millions of fans, wears Marc Jacobs' designer clothes... All the aura surrounding Hatsune Miku is real, except for herself.
Hatsune Miku means "music of the future" in Japanese. Although she is a virtual singer, Hatsune Miku's charm far exceeds that of a real person. Miku is described as 16 years old, 1m58 tall, 42kg weight, loves to sing, dance and loves green. Knee-length candy-colored blue hair, big round anime eyes, and a clear sweet voice, Hatsune Miku has been shaped to become a true Pop princess since her birth. Hatsune Miku is the strangest, most original and most influential musical phenomenon among the youth of Japan. According to statistics, by 2011 there were more than 100,000 songs performed by Hatsune Miku, covering all genres from EDM, Bumblegum Pop to Rock and Opera. Most of Hatsune Miku's songs express the aspirations and dreams of the ambitious young generation.
Hatsune Miku is no one but represents everyone, carrying the emotions of many different individuals. From a simple piece of software, Hatsune Miku became a means of expressing love, trial and suffering all over the world. Hatsune Miku is the 2nd Vocaloid released for the Vocaloid 2 system and the first Vocaloid to use the Japanese version. Hatsune Miku's voice is the voice of a Japanese voice actor named Saki Fujita. Hatsune Miku has performed on stage with Hologram technology.
Hatsune Miku could open a new page in music history, bringing humanity to a post-human musical era, far beyond the three-dimensional world of Coachella, or the hidden electronic artists Nightcore and Daft Punk .
Hatsune Miku's album is sold out worldwide. Hatsune Miku's videos attract tens of millions of views on Youtube. She collaborated with the world's top music producers and performed the opening act of Lady Gaga's ARTPOP tour.
Hatsune Miku's chibi doll has been sent to space twice. Hatsune Miku's image appeared densely on television, in games or even in Playboy magazine. Hatsune Miku is crazy in love with millions of Japanese teenagers.
Hatsune Miku's 16-year-old singer was built by a team of experts from the Japanese media company Crypton Future Media.
 
 

Close relationship

Who is Boy friend/ husband/ darling Singer Hatsune Miku?
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Body measurements of

How tall is Singer Hatsune Miku? What Hatsune Miku's weight?
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Summary of Hatsune Miku profile

When was Singer Hatsune Miku born?
Hatsune Miku birthday 31-8-2007 (at the age of 17).
Where is Singer Hatsune Miku's birth place, what is Zodiac/Chinese Zodiac?
Hatsune Miku was born in Japan. Ms, whose Zodiac is Virgo, and who Chinese Zodiac is The Pig. Hatsune Miku's global rank is 1874 and whose rank is 225 in list of famous Singer. Population of the world in 2007 is about 6.7 billions persons.
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Photos/ Images

Virtual singer Hatsune Miku is admired around the world
Virtual singer Hatsune Miku is admired around the world
Singer Hatsune Miku brings music from the future
Singer Hatsune Miku brings music from the future
Singer Hatsune Miku is crazy in love with Japanese teenagers
Singer Hatsune Miku is crazy in love with Japanese teenagers

Hatsune Miku ranking

Comment

trang 14/05/23 13:39
miku mãi là ca sĩ tôi yêu thích nhất

mi 04/05/23 20:19
FAN Miku

khánh huyền 20/09/21 13:20
miku miku miku cute quá à


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Events in 2007 and 31-8

Events in the world in the birth year of Hatsune Miku

  • Romania and Bulgaria join the European Union, bringing the number of member nations to 27 (Jan. 1).
  • Leaders of Hamas and Fatah, two rival Palestinian factions, meet in Mecca and reach a deal to end hostilities and form a unity government (Feb. 7). The Palestinian legislature approves a Hamas-dominated unity government (March 17). Hamas takes control of much of the Gaza Strip (June 13). Palestinian president Mahmoud Abbas dissolves the government, fires Prime Minister Ismail Haniya, the leader of Hamas, and declares a state of emergency (June 14).
  • The U.S. begins its "surge" of some 30,000 troops to Iraq to stem increasingly deadly attacks by insurgents and militias (Feb. 7).
  • The International Court of Justice rules that the slaughter of some 8,000 Bosnian Muslims by Bosnian Serbs in Srebrenica in 1995 was genocide (Feb. 26).
  • David Hicks, an Australian, pleads guilty to providing material support to al Qaeda. He's the first Guantánamo Bay detainee to be convicted by a military commission (March 26).
  • Iranian troops detain 15 Britons (eight sailors and seven marines) claiming they were in Iranian territorial waters (March 26). The detainees are freed (April 4).
  • Gerry Adams, the leader of Sinn Fein, and Rev. Ian Paisley, the head of the Democratic Unionist Party, meet face-to-face for the first time and hash out an agreement for a power-sharing government (March 26).
  • Ukrainian president Viktor Yushchenko dissolves Parliament and accuses Prime Minister Viktor Yanukovich of attempting to consolidate power (April 2).
  • President Vladimir Putin announces Russia will suspend the 1990 Conventional Armed Forces in Europe Treaty, which limits conventional weapons in Europe (April 26).
  • In the second round of French presidential elections, Conservative candidate Nicolas Sarkozy defeats Socialist candidate Ségolène Royal, 53.1% to 46.9% (May 6).
  • A commission that investigated 2006's war between Israel and Lebanon says Israeli prime minister Ehud Olmert was responsible for "a severe failure in exercising judgment, responsibility, and prudence." It also says Olmert rushed to war without an adequate plan (April 30).
  • Gordon Brown replaces Tony Blair as the prime minister of Great Britain (June 27).
  • Russian president Vladimir Putin announces that the country will suspend its participation in the Conventional Forces in Europe Treaty, a cold-war era agreement that limits the deployment of heavy weaponry (July 14).
  • India and U.S. reach an accord on civilian nuclear power that allows India, which has not signed the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty, to buy nuclear fuel from the U.S. to expand its civilian nuclear energy program and reprocess its spent fuel (July 27).
  • President Ramos-Horta names independence activist Xanana Gusmão as prime minister of East Timor (Aug. 6).
  • Two pairs of truck bombs explode about five miles apart in the remote, northwestern Iraqi towns of Qahtaniya and Jazeera, killing at least 500 members of the minority Yazidi community, making it the single deadliest insurgent attack of the war (Aug. 14).
  • Abdullah Gul, of the Justice and Development Party, is elected president of Turkey in the third round of voting by the country's parliament. He is the first Islamist president in the country's modern history (Aug. 28).
  • Japanese prime minister Shinzo Abe abruptly announces his resignation. The move follows a string of scandals and his party's recent defeat in parliamentary elections, in which his Liberal Democratic Party lost control of the upper house to the opposition Democratic Party (Sep. 12). Yasuo Fukuda is elected prime minister of Japan (Sep. 23).
  • Seventeen Iraqi civilians are killed when employees of private security company Blackwater USA reportedly fire on a car that failed to stop at the request of a police officer (Sep. 16). The House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform finds that employees of Blackwater USA have been involved in some 200 shootings in Iraq. The report says the company paid some families of victims and tried to cover up other incidents (Oct. 1). The State Department announces that its own monitors will accompany Blackwater employees on all security convoys (Oct. 5). An FBI report says 14 of the 17 shootings were unjustified and the guards were reckless in their use of deadly force (Nov. 13).
  • Nuon Chea, who was second-in-command to Pol Pot during the four years of Khmer Rouge rule that led to the state-sponsored massacre of between 1 million and 2 million Cambodians, is arrested and charged with war crimes (Sep. 19).
  • After a month of peaceful pro-democracy demonstrations that include hundreds of monks, Burmese government forces shoot at crowds, raid pagodas, and arrest monks. Dozens of people are killed. The protests are the largest in Myanmar in 20 years (Sep. 26)
  • In a landmark deal, North Korea agrees to disclose details about its nuclear facilities, including how much plutonium it has produced, and dismantle all of its nuclear facilities by the end of 2007. In exchange, the country will receive some 950,000 metric tons of fuel oil or financial aid. The Bush administration will also start the process of removing North Korea from its list of nations that sponsor terrorism (Oct. 1).
  • Pakistani president Pervez Musharraf is easily reelected to a third term by the country's national and provincial assemblies. The opposition boycotts the vote, however, and only representatives from the governing party participate in the election (Oct. 6). Former Pakistani prime minister Benazir Bhutto arrives in Pakistan after eight years in exile (Oct. 18). Musharraf declares a state of emergency, suspends the country's constitution and fires Chief Justice Iflikhar Muhammad Chaudhry and the other judges on the Supreme Court (Nov. 3). The Supreme Court, filled with judges loyal to Musharraf, dismisses the case challenging the constitutionality of Musharraf being elected president while head of the military (Nov. 22). Former prime minister Nawaz Sharif returns to Pakistan after eight years in exile and demands that Musharraf lift the emergency rule and reinstate the dismissed Supreme Court justices (Nov. 25). Musharraf steps down as military chief. He is replaced by Gen. Ashfaq Parvez Kayani (Nov. 28). Musharraf is sworn in as a civilian president (Nov. 29). Former Pakistani prime minister Benazir Bhutto is killed in a bombing at a campaign rally in Rawalpindi (Dec. 27).
  • Cristina Fernández de Kirchner is elected Argentina's first woman president. She succeeds her husband, Néstor Kirchner (Oct. 28).
  • Australian prime minister John Howard loses to the Labor Party's Kevin Rudd (Nov. 24).
  • A National Intelligence Estimate says "with high confidence" that Iran froze its nuclear weapons program in 2003. The report contradicts one written in 2005 that stated Iran was determined to continue developing such weapons (Dec. 3).
  • The African National Congress chooses Jacob Zuma as its leader, ousting South African president Thabo Mbeki (Dec. 18).
  • Violence breaks out between rival tribes after preliminary results in Kenya's presidential elections show opposition candidate Raila Odinga, of the Orange Democratic Movement, defeating incumbent Mwai Kibaki, 57% to 39% (Dec. 27).

Birthday Hatsune Miku (31-8) in history

  • Day 31-8 year 1887: Thomas Edison received a patent for his "Kinetoscope," and moving pictures were born.
  • Day 31-8 year 1888: Mary Ann Nicholls, considered to be Jack the Ripper's first victim, was found murdered in London.
  • Day 31-8 year 1962: Trinidad and Tobago gained independence from Great Britain.
  • Day 31-8 year 1980: Poland's Solidarity labor movement had its beginnings when an agreement ending a 17-day strike was signed in Gdansk.
  • Day 31-8 year 1994: Russia officially ended its military presence in the former East Germany and the Baltic states.
  • Day 31-8 year 1997: Princess Diana and her companion Dodi al-Fayed were killed in a car accident in Paris.
  • Day 31-8 year 2012: Armenia severed diplomatic relations with Hungary, after the pardoning of Ramil Safarov. In 2004, Safarov was convicted of killing an Armenian soldier.
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Note about Singer Hatsune Miku

Hatsune Miku infomation and profile updated by nguoinoitieng.tv.