For me i’d say vocaloid when i was younger. No clue about now, maybe some russian songs like igorek.
Anything from the hu
That is some seriously addictive stuff. Good call.
I like vocaloid music, but many of the songs are in Japanese which I don’t speak
99 luftballoons!that’s it, until I learned german
I really enjoy Pourquoi by Eths, but I have no idea what’s being said
This is a significant fraction of my music collection.
I like several songs by Stromae and don’t understand French.
Locutorio - Sara Socas (España)
historical example: Sukiyaki by Kyu Sakamoto – released in Japan in 1961 under “Ue o Muite Arukō” – released in US in 1963 under “Sukiyaki” because that was about the only Japanese word Americans knew …
Most anime OP’s I like I have no idea what they’re saying and that’s probably for the best.
Polish cow song. The melody itself is from another song, “How long - Lipps, inc” apparently. But both songs do well with that beat.
I know enough Spanish to understand the lyrics now, but loved that song before I knew what it was saying.
Mundian to Bach Ke by Punjabi MC (and famously remixed with Jay Z)
Leek spin https://youtu.be/GCO62VNm67k
Which is actually the Finnish song “Ievan polkka” and not just scatting/jibberish as I always naively used to think
Except it is just scatting. The leekspin version and the Miku version of the song is just the scatting parts of the Loituma arrangement. The full Loituma version, Korpiklaani version or one of the many recorded versions from Finnish folk singers have the actual lyrics. They do actually include a scatted part, usually after every verse, but Loituma atleast extended it for a full verse of scatting, which the Miku version made into a full song.
For the record, the lyrics are about the main character of the song dancing polka with the girl he loves (Ieva), whose “proper” and religious parents don’t approve of the mc or dancing in general. So after they dance and go home, the mom of Ieva catches them and makes Ieva cry, the mc threatens the mom to leave them alone and professes his love for Ieva. Then they go on to dance more polka. It’s great.
Except, it is mostly scat/jibberish! Just in Finnish! Most of the song is nonsense lyrics.
That’s a solid “The entire Caramba” album.
You might’ve heard (of) Habba Habba Zoot Zoot; well, they made an entire album of “plausible sounding” songs in German, Japanese, Finish, American, Russian, etc. It’s really quite hilarious.
Here’s a Spotify link: https://open.spotify.com/artist/57BijyLUDfabkaaSwZsxsS