"If a song has been edited to have a higher tempo, use a (Sped Up Ver.) marker at the end of the current title. If there is an existing sped up version marker in the title, replace it with (Sped Up Ver.). Sped up songs in Techno, Trance, Dance, or other similar genres must use a (Nightcore Mix) marker instead."
I understand that nightcore has it's roots in EDM/trance/techno music stemming from the two Norwegian DJs who popularized the genre in the early 2000's, but the combination of the tempo + pitch increase is what I and many others would consider the identifying aspect of nightcore as a genre, not simply just the tempo change.
I apologize for the unscholarly source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nightcore
"A nightcore edit is a cover track that speeds up the pitch and time of its source material by 10–30%."
Songs like this, this, this etc, are widely considered as nightcore songs due to defining pitch increase, with each respective mapper and nominators acknowledging this fact and including "nightcore" in tags for searchability, but are disallowed from using the "Nightcore Ver." marker because they don't constitute as EDM/trance/dance.
Although I couldn't find any concrete examples, this definition would technically require any EDM/trance/dance
music with any sort of tempo increase, regardless of whether the pitch was altered, to wear the "Nightcore Ver." tag despite not being considered nightcore by the general population.
Current definition on the ranking criteria for what is considered nightcore seems a bit misleading and incomplete, as a nightcore mix isn't defined solely by the genre.
I feel just removing the "Sped up songs in Techno, Trance, Dance, or other similar genres must use a (Nightcore Mix) marker instead." statement and replacing it with something more along the lines of "Sped up songs that also had their pitch increased must use a (Nightcore Mix) marker instead." would help better represent songs that are traditionally considered nightcore.
I could just have a misconstrued understanding of what the nightcore signifies to others, but from my point of view this rule feels like it should be altered.
I understand that nightcore has it's roots in EDM/trance/techno music stemming from the two Norwegian DJs who popularized the genre in the early 2000's, but the combination of the tempo + pitch increase is what I and many others would consider the identifying aspect of nightcore as a genre, not simply just the tempo change.
I apologize for the unscholarly source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nightcore
"A nightcore edit is a cover track that speeds up the pitch and time of its source material by 10–30%."
Songs like this, this, this etc, are widely considered as nightcore songs due to defining pitch increase, with each respective mapper and nominators acknowledging this fact and including "nightcore" in tags for searchability, but are disallowed from using the "Nightcore Ver." marker because they don't constitute as EDM/trance/dance.
Although I couldn't find any concrete examples, this definition would technically require any EDM/trance/dance
music with any sort of tempo increase, regardless of whether the pitch was altered, to wear the "Nightcore Ver." tag despite not being considered nightcore by the general population.
Current definition on the ranking criteria for what is considered nightcore seems a bit misleading and incomplete, as a nightcore mix isn't defined solely by the genre.
I feel just removing the "Sped up songs in Techno, Trance, Dance, or other similar genres must use a (Nightcore Mix) marker instead." statement and replacing it with something more along the lines of "Sped up songs that also had their pitch increased must use a (Nightcore Mix) marker instead." would help better represent songs that are traditionally considered nightcore.
I could just have a misconstrued understanding of what the nightcore signifies to others, but from my point of view this rule feels like it should be altered.