J-core
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J-core
Summary
J-core is a music genre[1]. J-core draws 109 Wikipedia views per month (music_genre category, ranking #453 of 1,946).[2]
Key Facts
- J-core was influenced by speedcore[3].
- J-core was influenced by breakcore[4].
- J-core was influenced by anime music[5].
- J-core was influenced by denpa song[6].
- J-core was influenced by gabber[7].
- J-core was influenced by happy hardcore[8].
- J-core's instance of is recorded as music genre[9].
- J-core's subclass of is recorded as hardcore[10].
- J-core's subclass of is recorded as Dōjin music[11].
- J-core's has use is recorded as rhythm game[12].
- J-core's country of origin is recorded as Japan[13].
- J-core's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/071khs[14].
- J-core's described at URL is recorded as https://daily.redbullmusicacademy.com/2015/01/j-core-feature/[15].
- J-core's described at URL is recorded as https://daily.bandcamp.com/scene-report/j-core-japanese-electronic[16].
- J-core's instrument is recorded as synthesizer[17].
- J-core's uses is recorded as sampling[18].
- J-core's significant person is recorded as DJ Sharpnel[19].
- J-core's subreddit is recorded as Jcore[20].
- J-core's MusicBrainz genre ID is recorded as aa068134-d667-4f9b-a7a2-07a5fafe51c1[21].
- J-core's Rate Your Music genre ID is recorded as j-core[22].
- J-core's Discogs style ID is recorded as j-core[23].
- J-core's Every Noise at Once ID is recorded as jcore[24].
Why It Matters
J-core draws 109 Wikipedia views per month (music_genre category, ranking #453 of 1,946).[2] J-core has Wikipedia articles in 8 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[25] J-core is known by 7 alternative names across languages and contexts.[26]