YTPMV (YouTube Poop Music Video) is an online remix microgenre in which creators transform spoken or non-musical source material into rhythmic, pitched music through heavy sampling, pitch-correction, chopping, and time-stretching.
It typically pairs hyperactive video editing with tightly quantized, melody-focused audio made from syllables, phonemes, sound effects, and short instrumental fragments pulled from TV shows, games, commercials, and internet ephemera. The result sits between plunderphonics, sound collage, and breakcore, but with a distinct meme-native sense of humor and visual pacing.
While rooted in YouTube Poopâs sentence-mixing culture, YTPMV emphasizes musicality: samples are tuned to scales, mapped to MIDI, arranged into chord progressions, and driven by energetic drums. Parallel Japanese communities (MAD/OTOMAD on Nico Nico Douga) cross-pollinated techniques and aesthetics, giving YTPMV its hallmark blend of frantic edits, catchy motifs, and pop-culture nostalgia.
YTPMV grew out of the broader YouTube Poop community in the late 2000s, when sentence-mixing edits evolved from comedic speech manipulation into fully musical remixes. Early creators discovered that with precise pitch-shifting and time-stretching, dialogue and sound effects could be arranged to form melodies and rhythms. In parallel, Japanâs Nico Nico Douga was developing MAD/OTOMADâa closely related practice of music-centric video remixingâwhich would become a major aesthetic influence.
During the 2010s the genre codified around shared techniques: slicing syllables into one-shots, tuning them to a chromatic scale, and triggering them via MIDI in DAWs like FL Studio, often with breakcore-leaning drums, sidechain pumping, and glitch edits. Visualsârapid keyframe cuts, frame-by-frame lip-sync, and on-beat maskingâbecame integral to the experience. The culture embraced recurring templates and in-jokes (e.g., motif-driven âremix themesâ), while cross-pollinating with Japanese OTOMAD.
Creators primarily published on YouTube and Nico Nico Douga, later organizing via forums, Discord servers, and collaborative events. Toolchains combined non-linear editors (Sony Vegas/Adobe Premiere) for video and DAWs (FL Studio/Ableton/Audacity) for audio. Sample sources expanded from cartoons and commercials to game voice lines, UI sounds, and even environmental SFX, reinforcing the genreâs plunderphonic, memetic identity.
YTPMV helped normalize meme-native music production and hyper-edited audiovisual collage on mainstream platforms. Its techniques influenced adjacent internet remix practices and the broader SoundClown-style culture of comedic, sample-driven mashups. Though always niche and community-driven, YTPMV remains an enduring, iterative craftâcontinually refreshed by new source materials, editing tricks, and crossovers with doujin/otaku remix traditions.