Maidcore
| Maidcore | |
|---|---|
| Native name | Мейдкор |
| Etymology | maid + -core |
| Other names | Maid rock |
| Stylistic origins | |
| Cultural origins | c. 2013 — |
| Regional scenes | |
| Russia (online) | |
Maidcore (Russian: Мейдкор, Japanese: メイドコア), also known as maid rock, is an underground electronic music microgenre and online music community aesthetically defined by the prevalence of anime girl French maid personas. Popularized on the Russian website VK.com, the genre and subculture are influenced by the otaku subculture, anime and manga fandom and internet culture. Maidcore variously blends post-rock, shoegaze and witch house.
Nijiura maids
[edit]The Nijiura maids (虹裏メイド) are a collection of French maid bishōjo characters created c. 2001 by anonymous users on the Japanese imageboard Futaba Channel (colloquially 2chan), from the eponymous 'Nijiura' (虹裏, lit. 'back of the rainbow') board. Maidcore stems from a derivative Russian imageboard 'omichan', where future Maidcore artists used the Nijiura maids as image macros for trolling.[1][2][3]
Yakui the Maid, a foundational artist of the scene, claims that they used the Nijiura maid persona for their first 2013 VK.com digital music release on a whim. Other artists in the online music community followed, claiming or inventing a 'maidsona' as a musical persona, with the 'the Maid' suffix.[2][4]
Characteristics
[edit]Aesthetic
[edit]Many maidcore projects have a depressive and wistful audiovisual tone, informed by post-Soviet life, Soviet nostalgia, the "doomer" mentality and otaku subculture. Nijiura maids are frequently depicted coping with smoking and recreational drug use, with psychedelic art motifs.[1][4]
Music
[edit]Maidcore music varies widely by artist, with genre influences including post-rock, breakcore, shoegaze, witch house and anime song.[5][6][7]
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ a b Creative Blood: Project Basement Dating, Sukeban Games, 2023-03-04
- ^ a b 「メイドコア」についてインタビュー(Yakui The Maid) [Interview on “Maidcore” - Yakui the Maid] (in Japanese), 仁義なき音楽巡り [A Ruthless Musical Journey], 2023-09-10
- ^ Keshino (2025-05-24), Laameche, H. (ed.), “虹裏メイド”に起源を持つメイドコア系ADV『Project_Basement_Dating』Kickstarter開始―日本語に対応のパンクなビジュアルノベル [Project_Basement_Dating, a maidcore-style ADV originating from “Nijiura Maids,” launches on Kickstarter—a punk visual novel featuring Japanese language support] (in Japanese), GameSpark
- ^ a b 采访俄罗斯女仆乐制作人 Yakui the Maid [Interview with the Producer of Russian Maid Music Yakui the Maid], Yanov Station, 2021-08-17, archived from the original on 2023-10-16
- ^ Zhuravleva, Lisa (2023-02-02), Генеральная уборка под брейкбит: что такое мейдкор [Spring cleaning to breakbeat: what is maidcore?] (in Russian), Zvuk.com
- ^ Melo, Fabio (2024-11-19), O que define o Maidcore [What defines Maidcore] (in Portuguese), Groundcast
- ^ Cinque generi musicali assurdi di cui non conoscevi l’esistenza [Five absurd music genres you never knew existed], M20.it (in Italian), Elemedia S.p.A., 2025-10-02
External links
[edit]- Maidcore Records community hub: https://www.maidcore.es/
- Archive of Maidcore music: https://archive.maidcore.es:2053/
- Archive of Maidcore artists and websites: https://archive.org/details/the-maidcore-index-v-4.82.2.9/mode/2up
- Archive of Nijiura maid images and threads: https://web.archive.org/web/20250505124956/https://yellow.ribbon.to/~medoi/