Harmony feat. Sasuke Haraguchi, Hatsune Miku
Oshimeter
Synopsis
When digital diva Hatsune Miku and artist Sasuke Haraguchi collide, it creates a visual storm of pop-art chaos, abstract geometry, and rapid-fire typography, all synced to a Sheeno Mirin electronic track. That's the whole thing — one music video, no traditional story, no dialogue, just pure sensory overload that somehow feels intentional in every single frame. This is avant-garde in the truest sense. The animation doesn't care about narrative structure. Instead, it builds its storytelling entirely through rhythm — every cut, every color shift, every morphing shape is locked to the beat. Miku's digital precision plays off Sasuke Haraguchi's more human, raw performance energy, and the tension between those two modes is where the whole piece lives. It's less "watching something" and more "experiencing something," if that distinction matters to you. The vibe sits somewhere between the emotional punch of Shelter and the hypnotic weirdness of ME!ME!ME! from the Japan Animator Expo. If you liked how Mekakucity Actors used Vocaloid culture as a storytelling backbone, this takes that concept and strips away everything except the music and visuals. No plot safety net. It's a single episode, so the time commitment is basically nothing. Worth it if you're into animation as an art form rather than just a delivery system for plot. Not everything needs twenty-four episodes to leave an impression.
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