MIKE DAVENPORT Reacts to ADO UNRAVEL Back to Back!

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  • Опубликовано: 27 дек 2023
  • This are Mike Davenport's reactions to watching 【Ado】unravel 歌いました and Ado Unravel Live for the first time.
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    #ado #adoreaction #reaction
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Комментарии • 7

  • @davidornberg
    @davidornberg 7 месяцев назад +12

    You know. Ado is coming to the states! After Asia and Europe!

  • @frankmustermann7272
    @frankmustermann7272 7 месяцев назад +4

    rock and metal isn't dead...it just moved to Japan and now lives there.🤣😜

  • @germanletshackz5596
    @germanletshackz5596 5 месяцев назад +1

    Ado loves to play with her vocals which makes her very unique and she did the breathing by purpose

  • @SKuLL_7stArs
    @SKuLL_7stArs 7 месяцев назад +2

    The ancient name for Tokyo is "Edo (江戸)" which starts from E😄

  • @Bobbias
    @Bobbias 7 месяцев назад +5

    Pronunciation notes on Japanese:
    All vowels are pronounced, and they don't change their pronunciation based on what letters are around them like English vowels do.
    A - most similar to the A in father, though sometimes a bit closer to Apple than Father.
    E - between the E in the word Epic, and a "Ay". Not as extreme as Mike pronounced it in Edo, it's not Aydo :)
    U - like OO in Oops, but the lips aren't rounded. It's a subtle difference.
    I - like the name of the letter E.
    O - like the name of the letter O.
    The only other letter that really needs any explanation is R.
    In Japanese, the letter R can be pronounced a few ways. Sometimes it's more like an L (especially common when it's being sung), sometimes more like a Spanish tapped R.
    There's a few other differences, but this is already more than long enough as is. Following this alone would make someone significantly better at pronouncing Japanese words than your average English speaker.

    • @Xanderj89
      @Xanderj89 7 месяцев назад

      I think it’s easier to think of it in terms of syllables that don’t change, vowels can be on their own but any consonant sound they’re usually more akin to consonant+vowel sound pairs rather than individual western ‘letters’. Sa, Ka, Ta, Go, Jo, that kind of thing, where the surrounding ‘letters’ don’t modify the pronunciation unlike English.
      The only exceptions to think of are N (stand alone and not necessarily paired with a vowel sound), and if a word ends on a U sound it’s sometimes dropped

    • @Bobbias
      @Bobbias 7 месяцев назад

      @@Xanderj89 yes, but I didn't want to get into that, especially since there's the glides (Sha, Kya, ...), and other details that come up. I mostly was concentrating on the vowel sounds because that's the biggest key to pronouncing Japanese without completely butchering it.
      Also, it's not just when a word ends in U, there's a bunch of places where Us and Is get devoiced (they're still technically there, just completely devoiced).