As the discussion in the last thread died almost two years ago, I'm posting a new proposal regarding the (Sped Up Ver.) and (Nightcore Mix) markers as the RC is pretty misleading and outdated. (sorry btw if I was supposed to just resurrect the old thread instead)
TL;DR: It's misleading to force the usage of these markers based on just the genre as non-electronic stuff can be nightcore'd, and electronic stuff can be sped up without pitch change.
Tempo change only: use (Sped Up Ver.)
Tempo + pitch change: use (Nightcore Ver.) (or stick with current (Nightcore Mix) marker)
The problems:
- Having to use (Nightcore Mix) marker when an electronic song is only sped up is misleading, as the vast majority of people identify nightcore as the song having both tempo and pitch increased (and as far as I can tell, that is the actual definition for it). Couldn't find any ranked examples for this though as all edits I found are nightcore edits anyway.
- Currently you can have nightcore edits of non-electronic songs, but you cannot use the (Nightcore Mix) marker because it's not electronic music. (example 1, example 2 etc.)
- The RC isn't perfectly clear on the genres that should use (Nightcore Mix) marker. While "Techno, Trance, Dance, or other similar genres" encompasses at least most electronic music, it's also not precise.
- Lastly, I think the word "mix" in (Nightcore Mix) sounds a bit odd and I'd replace the marker altogether with (Nightcore Ver.). This one is the smallest issue here and honestly can be unchanged if desired (due to the long-standing tradition of using "mix" in the marker), but using the word "mix" just doesn't sound right (why is speeding the song up without pitch change a "version" and with pitch change it becomes a "mix" instead?)
Currently, the RC is written like this:
We can discuss what to do if the artist uses a marker like this though (because I suppose by extension, if existing sped up markers need to be standardised, nightcore-like markers indicated by the artist should probably also be standardised to some extent)
TL;DR: It's misleading to force the usage of these markers based on just the genre as non-electronic stuff can be nightcore'd, and electronic stuff can be sped up without pitch change.
Tempo change only: use (Sped Up Ver.)
Tempo + pitch change: use (Nightcore Ver.) (or stick with current (Nightcore Mix) marker)
The problems:
- Having to use (Nightcore Mix) marker when an electronic song is only sped up is misleading, as the vast majority of people identify nightcore as the song having both tempo and pitch increased (and as far as I can tell, that is the actual definition for it). Couldn't find any ranked examples for this though as all edits I found are nightcore edits anyway.
- Currently you can have nightcore edits of non-electronic songs, but you cannot use the (Nightcore Mix) marker because it's not electronic music. (example 1, example 2 etc.)
- The RC isn't perfectly clear on the genres that should use (Nightcore Mix) marker. While "Techno, Trance, Dance, or other similar genres" encompasses at least most electronic music, it's also not precise.
- Lastly, I think the word "mix" in (Nightcore Mix) sounds a bit odd and I'd replace the marker altogether with (Nightcore Ver.). This one is the smallest issue here and honestly can be unchanged if desired (due to the long-standing tradition of using "mix" in the marker), but using the word "mix" just doesn't sound right (why is speeding the song up without pitch change a "version" and with pitch change it becomes a "mix" instead?)
Currently, the RC is written like this:
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.Similar to rosario wknd's old post on this topic, I would propose to change it to something like this:
Note: For tracks which are both cut and sped up, combine their markers into (Sped Up & Cut Ver.) or (Nightcore & Cut Ver.).
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.). If the song has been edited to have a higher tempo and a higher pitch, use (Nightcore Ver.) instead.There's also been mentions of using alternative markers such as (Nightstep Mix) in the case of dubstep + nightcore etc., but I believe those are unnecessary, both because it kinda goes against standardisation in general and also because those subgenres are very niche.
Note: For tracks which are both cut and sped up, combine their markers into (Sped Up & Cut Ver.) or (Nightcore & Cut Ver.).
We can discuss what to do if the artist uses a marker like this though (because I suppose by extension, if existing sped up markers need to be standardised, nightcore-like markers indicated by the artist should probably also be standardised to some extent)