![]() ![]() Concerts were how we connected best with our favorite artists, but karaoke is how we really bonded with our favorite songs. 29 essential L.A.As much as we here at Billboard missed live music in the thick of the pandemic, another cultural loss was just as devastating to our day-to-day lives: the shutdown of karaoke.Link icon is by Rafaël Massé from Noun Project. Additional photo credits, from Alyssa Navarro to right, courtesy of: Alyssa Navarro, Graeme Hinde, Howard Ho, Kiki Park, Sarah Cabrera and A.J. Photo of Adam Jones by Kailyn Brown / Los Angeles Times. Maneeza Iqbal planned the promotion and engagement. Illustration by Jess Hutchison with art direction by Jim Cooke. Copy edited by Jason Sanchez and Lisa Horowitz. Edited by Matthew Ballinger, Sean Greene and Hanna Sender. ![]() To classify songs by vocal range, The Times converted Pandora’s data for male and female voices and low, medium and high registers into the six broadly defined voice types: soprano, mezzo-soprano, alto, tenor, baritone and bass.Īdditional design and development by Vanessa Martínez and Sean Greene. You can learn more about the Pandora team and how they analyze songs here. The Times collected song recommendations from readers and worked with members of Pandora’s music analysis team to categorize songs by time period, mood, vocal range and more. This guide was created using data from Pandora’s Music Genome Project. “Not all 21-year-olds will know the ’90s songs,” Jones said, recalling a time where he thought he’d kill with Nirvana but was met with silence. Others might want to consider the crowd in their song decision. Some people will prefer to belt out the oldies. You’re emotionally tied to it, and you don’t even know it.”Īnother reason she suggests your middle-school jams is because that’s probably before you started getting pretentious with your musical tastes. “That song that you sang in middle school is your favorite song,” she said. One of the things that makes karaoke fun is nostalgia. If you’re not sure where to begin, start with what you liked when you were young, Kiki Park said. And consider the vibe of the room, as if you’re the host whenever you have the mic. No matter what the song-selector below suggests, pick a song that you know well. People tend to feel the passion behind the karaoke rather than fixate on the actual quality of the vocals, he said. ![]() “Whereas with karaoke, you’re trying to relive what it’s like to be a fan of that song.” “When you’re a good singer, you often have your own take on the song,” said Ho. But he knows how to nail a karaoke performance. He doesn’t consider singing one of his musical talents. Ho - in addition to being the creator of YouTube videos analyzing the melodies in “Encanto” and “Hamilton” - is a composer and sound designer. As an adult, he and his friends were karaoke regulars at Little Tokyo’s Miyako Hotel. When he was a kid, his mom encouraged him to participate in her Taiwanese community group’s karaoke competitions. Howard Ho said karaoke is about embracing the cheesiness. Whether you’re in front of a crowd at a bar or at a noraebang (a private karaoke room) with a handful of friends, figuring out your go-to karaoke song is key to having a good time with the least amount of self-consciousness. More than anything, he loves when people get the courage to jump onstage for the first time. Now he makes his living as a karaoke DJ, or KJ, in Los Angeles. “One day, I just didn’t care, and once that happened, I had a lot more fun.” “I had put so much pressure on myself, on whether I sounded good or not, and it’s a shame,” Jones said. Then he picked a second song, and he’d sing the same two songs every time. Over the next year, he sang the same song in the same bar once a month until he got comfortable. “What are you talking about?” his friend said. When he finished, he was mortified and wanted to leave. ![]() “I just remember my legs were trembling really bad, my palms were sweaty, my face had to have been beet red, but the whole time I’m smiling, because when I get nervous, I smile,” he said. She made a deal with him: If he sang, she’d cover his $100 tab. In his late 20s, he reconnected with a friend who had opened a karaoke bar. When he got older, he’d walk into bars, realize it was karaoke night, immediately turn around and leave. He was singing to Boyz II Men’s “End of the Road” when his older brother interrupted: “Dude, shut up,” he said. It began on a family road trip to Palm Springs when he was a kid. A Adam dam Jones used to have a karaoke phobia. ![]()
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