More actions
No edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
Line 22: | Line 22: | ||
| Misc = | | Misc = | ||
}} | }} | ||
"Mic" was a demo created during the period leading up to the ''[[Hybrid Theory]]'' sessions. It was leaked online in June 2019. The song uses a Macintosh voice called Zarvox which was introduced in 1995 with the MacinTalk 3 text-to-speech component. Mike's first computer was an Apple as he explained on his blog. He wrote, ''"In college, I was reintroduced to Apple in a new way. Having spent years honing my skills drawing and painting, I hadn’t yet had the chance to bring those illustrations into the computer. At Art Center, there was a computer lab–a huge underground complex of rooms filled with computers. And the computer of choice for the designers and artists at Art Center was Apple. I loved the design, inside and out, and it seemed built for making art. And once it was my computer for art, it became my computer for music."''<ref>[http://web.archive.org/web/20150308065715/http://mikeshinoda.com/2011/10/07/thank-you-steve-jobs/ Thank You Steve Jobs « Mike Shinoda's Blog], October 07, 2011</ref> | "Mic" was a demo created during the period leading up to the ''[[Hybrid Theory]]'' sessions. It was leaked online in June 2019. The song uses a Macintosh voice called Zarvox which was introduced in 1995 with the MacinTalk 3 text-to-speech component. | ||
==Background== | |||
Mike's first computer was an Apple as he explained on his blog. He wrote, ''"In college, I was reintroduced to Apple in a new way. Having spent years honing my skills drawing and painting, I hadn’t yet had the chance to bring those illustrations into the computer. At Art Center, there was a computer lab–a huge underground complex of rooms filled with computers. And the computer of choice for the designers and artists at Art Center was Apple. I loved the design, inside and out, and it seemed built for making art. And once it was my computer for art, it became my computer for music."''<ref>[http://web.archive.org/web/20150308065715/http://mikeshinoda.com/2011/10/07/thank-you-steve-jobs/ Thank You Steve Jobs « Mike Shinoda's Blog], October 07, 2011</ref> | |||
==Versions== | ==Versions== |
Revision as of 23:58, 25 October 2022
Template:Infobox song "Mic" was a demo created during the period leading up to the Hybrid Theory sessions. It was leaked online in June 2019. The song uses a Macintosh voice called Zarvox which was introduced in 1995 with the MacinTalk 3 text-to-speech component.
Background
Mike's first computer was an Apple as he explained on his blog. He wrote, "In college, I was reintroduced to Apple in a new way. Having spent years honing my skills drawing and painting, I hadn’t yet had the chance to bring those illustrations into the computer. At Art Center, there was a computer lab–a huge underground complex of rooms filled with computers. And the computer of choice for the designers and artists at Art Center was Apple. I loved the design, inside and out, and it seemed built for making art. And once it was my computer for art, it became my computer for music."[1]
Versions
Note: Only the date of the very first release of each version is listed.
Title | Album | Length | Recorded | Released | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Mic | Hybrid Party Of A Thousand Things | 4:25 |
|
Lyrics
Give me the microphone
(Give me the mic)
Give me the microphone
(Give me the mic)
Give me the microphone
(Give me the mic)
Give me the microphone
(Phone)
Give me the microphone
(Give me the mic)
Give me the microphone
(Give me the mic)
Give me the microphone
(Give me the mic)
Give me the microphone
(Phone)
Give me the microphone
(Give me the mic)
Give me the microphone
(Give me the mic)
Give me the microphone
(Give me the mic)
Give me the microphone
(Phone)
Give me the microphone
(Give me the mic)
Give me the microphone
(Give me the mic)
Give me the microphone
(Give me the mic)
Give me the microphone
(Phone)
- ↑ Thank You Steve Jobs « Mike Shinoda's Blog, October 07, 2011