Basically the story is this: in 1984 a German kid named Darius was taping a rock radio show. In 2007 he and his sister Lydia found the tape again, but were unable to identify one of the songs. So Lydia posted the song online.
For the next 17 years millions of people around the world searched and investigated, trying to find out what this song was. The song became known as "The most Mysterious song on the Internet," or "Like the Wind," as that's the first line in the song. The recording was old and not entirely clear in places, and people argued endlessly over what the lyrics actually were.
Multiple subreddits became devoted to the search for the band, and it spawned an entire genre called Lostwave. Many people devoted years of their lives to searching archives, not only online but searching through actual radio station archives and similar places, turning up in person and spending hours, days, weeks, months and eventually years of their lives searching for the band who created this masterpiece. Youtubers like Justin Whang made multiple videos documenting the search.
Even the radio station that originally broadcast the song got involved, trying to help but had no idea what the song was. It seemed a lost cause. People even started to believe the song had somehow crossed into our dimension from a parallel universe, as apart from this recording, there was no trace of it, like it had never existed.
Two weeks ago, they mystery was finally solved. Turns out it's called "Subways of Your Mind," and it's awesome:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DwiEvPMANa8&list=RDDwiEvPMANa8&start_radio=1
I think people developed a deep appreciation for this song because they were forced to engage with it differently then they normally do with music. Which is to say, treat more songs like they were played once on a radio show in a country that technically ceased to exist and was rediscovered by chance.
I've never known about this, but now that I know I love it :D
Thanks for sharing comrade!
I found a YouTube link in your post. Here are links to the same video on alternative frontends that protect your privacy: