fbpx
Wikipedia

K-pop

K-pop (Korean케이팝; RRkeipap), short for Korean popular music,[1] is a form of popular music originating in South Korea as part of South Korean culture.[2] It includes styles and genres from around the world, such as pop, hip hop, R&B, rock, jazz, gospel, reggae, electronic dance, folk, country, disco, and classical on top of its traditional Korean music roots.[3] The term "K-pop" became popular in the 2000s, especially in the international context. The Korean term for domestic pop music is gayo (가요; 歌謠), which is still widely used within South Korea.[4][5] While "K-pop" can refer to all popular music or pop music from South Korea, it is colloquially often used in a narrower sense for any Korean music and artists associated with the entertainment and idol industry in the country, regardless of the genre.[contradictory]

K-pop
Stylistic origins
Cultural origins1940s, South Korea

The more modern form of the genre, originally termed "rap dance", emerged with the formation of the hip hop boy band Seo Taiji and Boys, in 1992. Their experimentation with different styles and genres of music and integration of foreign musical elements helped reshape and modernize South Korea's contemporary music scene.[6]

Modern K-pop "idol" culture began in the 1990s, as K-pop idol music grew into a subculture that amassed enormous fandoms of teenagers and young adults.[7][8] After a slump in early idol music, from 2003, TVXQ and BoA started a new generation of K-pop idols that broke the music genre into the neighboring Japanese market and continue to popularize K-pop internationally today.[9][10] With the advent of online social networking services and South Korean TV shows, the current spread of K-pop and South Korean entertainment, known as the Korean Wave, is seen not only in East Asia, but also throughout the world, gaining an international audience.

In 2018, K-pop experienced significant growth and became a "power player", marking a 17.9% increase in revenue growth. As of 2019, Korean popular music is ranked at number six among the top ten music markets worldwide according to the International Federation of the Phonographic Industry's "Global Music Report 2019", with BTS and Blackpink cited as artists leading the market growth.[11] In 2020, K-pop experienced a record-breaking year when it experienced a 44.8% growth and positioned itself as the fastest-growing major market of the year.[12]

Etymology

The term "K-pop" is the Korean equivalent of the Japanese "J-pop,"[13] Which first known use of the term occurred on Billboard in the October 9, 1999, edition at the end of an article titled "S. Korea To Allow Some Japanese Live Acts" by Cho Hyun-jin, then a Korea correspondent for the magazine, which used it as a broad term for South Korean pop music. Cho himself, however, is not sure if he coined the term, since some articles stated that the word 'K-pop' was already being used by music industry insiders, even though he had never heard it personally.[14]

Characteristics

Audiovisual content

Although K-pop generally refers to South Korean popular music and the associated industry, some consider it to be an all-encompassing genre exhibiting a wide spectrum of musical and visual elements.[15][unreliable source?] The French Institut national de l'audiovisuel defines K-pop as a "fusion of synthesized music, sharp dance routines and fashionable, colorful outfits."[16] Songs typically consist of one or a mixture of pop, rock, hip hop, R&B, and electronic music genres.

Idol trainee

The mainstream method is to become an idol trainee through agency auditions, online auditions, or street casting.[17]

South Korean management agencies offer binding contracts to potential artists, sometimes at a young age. Trainees live together in a regulated environment and spend many hours a day learning how to sing, dance, speak foreign languages, and gain other skills in preparation for their debut. This "robotic" system of training is often criticized by Western media outlets.[18] In 2012, The Wall Street Journal reported that the cost of training one Korean idol under SM Entertainment averaged US$3 million.[19]

Hybrid genre and transnational values

 
Search volume for K-pop for the period 2008–2012 according to Google Trends.

K-pop is a cultural product that features "values, identity and meanings that go beyond their strictly commercial value."[20] It is characterized by a mixture of modern Western sounds and African-American influences (including sounds from Hip-hop, R&B, Jazz, black pop, soul, funk, techno, disco, house, and Afrobeats) with a Korean aspect of performance (including synchronized dance moves, formation changes and the so-called "point choreography" consisting of hooking and repetitive key movements). It has been remarked that there is a "vision of modernization" inherent in Korean pop culture.[21] For some, the transnational values of K-pop are responsible for its success. A commentator at the University of California, San Diego has said that "contemporary Korean pop culture is built on ... transnational flows ... taking place across, beyond, and outside national and institutional boundaries."[22] Some examples of the transnational values inherent in K-pop that may appeal to those from different ethnic, national, and religious backgrounds include a dedication to high-quality output and presentation of idols, as well as their work ethic and polite social demeanor, made possible by the training period.[23]

Use of English phrases

 
Hip-hop artist Yoon Mi-rae and her husband, rapper Tiger JK of Drunken Tiger, are credited with popularizing American-style hip hop in Korea.[24]
 
g.o.d at the "I Am Korea" concert, 2015

Modern K-pop is marked by its use of English phrases. Jin Dal Yong of Popular Music and Society wrote that the usage may be influenced by "Korean-Americans and/or Koreans who studied in the U.S. [who] take full advantage of their English fluency and cultural resources that are not found commonly among those who were raised and educated in Korea."[25] Korean pop music from singers or groups who are Korean-American such as Fly to the Sky, g.o.d, Rich, Yoo Seung-jun, and Drunken Tiger has both American style and English lyrics. These Korean-American singers' music has a different style from common Korean music, which attracts the interest of young people.[25] Increasingly, foreign songwriters and producers are employed to work on songs for K-pop idols, such as will.i.am and Sean Garrett.[26] Foreign musicians, including rappers such as Akon, Kanye West, Ludacris, and Snoop Dogg, have also featured on K-pop songs.[27][28]

Entertainment companies help to expand K-pop to other parts of the world through a number of different methods. Singers need to use English since the companies want to occupy markets in the other parts of Asia, which enables them to open the Western market in the end. Most K-pop singers learn English because it is a common language in the world of music, but some singers also learn other foreign languages such as Japanese to approach the Japanese market.[25] Similarly, increasing numbers of K-pop bands use English names rather than Korean ones. This allows songs and artists to be marketed to a wider audience around the world.[25]

However, the use of English has not guaranteed the popularity of K-pop in the North American market. For some commentators, the reason for this is because the genre can be seen as a distilled version of Western music, making it difficult for K-pop to find acceptance in these markets.[25] Furthermore, Western audiences tend to place emphasis on authenticity and individual expression in music, which the idol system can be seen as suppressing.[18] According to Elaine W. Chun's research, even though hybridity appears more and more often in K-pop, and sometimes may even make fans admire K-pop stars more because it is fresh, new and interesting, it is hard to change those who believe in a perfect ideal for pure linguistic. This means that the original form of language is still difficult to alter.[29]

Artist names, song titles, and lyrics have exhibited significant growth in the usage of English words. No singers in the top fifty charts in 1990 had English in their names: people who worked in the Korean music industry viewed using Korean names as standard. In 1995, most popular singers such as Kim Gun-mo, Park Mi-kyung, Park Jin-young, Lee Seung-chul, and Byun Jin-sub still used Korean names, but fourteen of the singers and groups in the top fifty used English names, including DJ DOC, 015B, Piano, and Solid. After the 1997 financial crisis, the government stopped censoring English lyrics and Korea started to have a boom in English. Since the late 1990s, English usage in singers' names, song titles, and lyrics has grown quickly. Seventeen singers in the top fifty charts used English names in 2000, and thirty-one did so in 2005. In 2010, forty-one singers used English names among the top fifty songs, but usually, three or four singers and groups had more than one or two songs on the chart simultaneously. Korean names (e.g. Baek Ji-young, Seo In-young, and Huh Gak) are seen less frequently, and many K-pop singers have English names (e.g. IU, Sistar, T-ara, GD & TOP, Beast, and After School). Notably, until the early 1990s, musicians with English names would transliterate them into hangul, but now singers would use English names written with the Roman alphabet.[25] In 1995, the percentage of song titles using English in the top 50 charts was 8%. This fluctuated between 30% in 2000, 18% in 2005, and 44% in 2010. An example of a Korean song with a large proportion of English lyrics is Kara's "Jumping," which was released at the same time in both Korea and Japan to much success.[25]

Criticism of hybrid identity

There have been critical responses in South Korea regarding the identity of the genre since its ascendance. Some of the notable music critics in the region have criticized K-pop as "an industrial label mainly designed to promote the national brand in the global market from the beginning" and argued that it was "not formed spontaneously as a pop culture but created with the orchestrated plan led by the government with commercial considerations" although in fact "the genre has practically no ties with traditional Korean identity." There is the perspective that the name of the genre was derived from J-pop.[30][31]

K-pop has at times faced criticisms from journalists who perceive the music to be formulaic and unoriginal.[32][33][34][35] Some K-Pop groups have been accused of plagiarizing Western music acts as well as other musical acts.[36] In addition, K-pop has been criticized for its reliance on English phrases, with critics dubbing the use of English in titles "meaningless."[37]

K-pop groups have been regularly accused of cultural appropriation of cultures such as African-American culture, especially due to the frequent use of cornrows and bandanas in idol groups' on-stage styling.[38] Some have used blackface and racial slurs as part of their performances.[39] K-Pop groups have also been accused of appropriating Native American[40][unreliable source?] and Indian cultures.[41] However, debate exists about whether the borrowing of cultural elements from cultures outside of Korea indeed constitutes cultural appropriation, or if this cultural appropriation is negative at all. Scholar Crystal S. Anderson writes that "appropriating elements of a culture by taking them out of their original context and using them in a completely different way does not automatically constitute negative cultural appropriation."[42]

Marketing

Many agencies have presented new idol groups to an audience through a "debut showcase" which consists of online marketing and television broadcast promotions as opposed to radio.[43] Groups are given a name and a "concept" along with a marketing hook. These concepts are the type of visual and musical theme that idol groups utilize during their debut or comeback.[44] Concepts can change between debuts and fans often distinguish between boy group concepts and girl group concepts. Concepts can also be divided between general concepts and theme concepts, such as cute or fantasy. New idol groups will often debut with a concept well known to the market to secure a successful debut. Sometimes sub-units or sub-groups are formed among existing members. Two example subgroups are Super Junior-K.R.Y., which consists of Super Junior members Kyuhyun, Ryeowook, and Yesung, and Super Junior-M, which became one of the best-selling K-pop subgroups in China.[45]

Online marketing includes music videos posted to YouTube in order to reach a worldwide audience.[43] Prior to the actual video, the group releases teaser photos and trailers. Promotional cycles of subsequent singles are called comebacks even when the musician or group in question did not go on hiatus.[46]

Dance

The dance for "Gangsta", an electronic dance track by Noir, includes point choreography.[47]

Dance is an integral part of K-pop. When combining multiple singers, the singers often switch their positions while singing and dancing by making prompt movements in synchrony, a strategy called "formation changing" (자리바꿈; jaribakkum).[48] The K-pop choreography (안무; 按舞; anmu) often includes the so-called "point dance" (포인트 안무; pointeu anmu), referring to a dance made up of hooking and repetitive movements within the choreography that matches the characteristics of the lyrics of the song.[49][50] Super Junior's "Sorry Sorry" and Brown Eyed Girls' "Abracadabra" are examples of songs with notable "point" choreography. To choreograph a dance for a song requires the writers to take the tempo into account.[51] According to Ellen Kim, a Los Angeles dancer and choreographer, a fan's ability to do the same steps must also be considered. Consequently, K-pop choreographers have to simplify movements.[51]

 
24K performing choreography in a practice studio

The training and preparation necessary for K-pop idols to succeed in the industry and dance successfully are intense. Training centers like Seoul's Def Dance Skool develop the dance skills of youth in order to give them a shot at becoming an idol.[52] Physical training is one of the largest focuses at the school, as much of a student's schedule is based around dance and exercise.[52] The entertainment labels are highly selective, so few make it to fame. Students at the school must dedicate their lives to the mastery of dance in order to prepare for the vigorous routines performed by K-pop groups. This, of course, means that the training must continue if they are signed. Companies house much larger training centers for those who are chosen.[52]

An interview with K-pop choreographer Rino Nakasone lends insight into the process of creating routines. According to Nakasone, her focus is to make dance routines that are flattering for the dancers but also complementary to the music.[53] Her ideas are submitted to the entertainment company as video recordings done by professional dancers.[53] Nakasone mentions that the company and the K-pop artists themselves have input on a song's choreography.[53] Choreographer May J. Lee gives another perspective, telling that her choreography often starts out as expressing the feeling or the meaning of the lyrics.[54] What starts out as small movements turns into a full dance that is better able to portray the message of the song.[54]

Fashion

The emergence of Seo Taiji and Boys in 1992 paved the way for the development of contemporary K-pop groups.[55] The group revolutionized the Korean music scene by incorporating rap and American hip-hop conventions into their music.[56] This adoption of Western style extended to the fashions worn by the boy band: the members adopted a hip-hop aesthetic.[57] Seo and bandmates' outfits for the promotional cycle of "I Know" included vibrant streetwear such as oversized T-shirts and sweatshirts, windbreakers, overalls worn with one strap, overalls worn with one pant leg rolled up, and American sports team jerseys.[citation needed] Accessories included baseball caps worn backwards, bucket hats, and do-rags.[citation needed]

As K-pop "was born of post-Seo trends,"[57] many acts that followed Seo Taiji and Boys adopted the same fashion style. Deux and DJ DOC can also be seen wearing on-trend hip-hop fashions such as sagging baggy pants, sportswear, and bandanas in their performances.[citation needed] With Korean popular music transforming into youth-dominated media, manufactured teenage idol groups began debuting in the mid and late 1990s,[55] wearing coordinated costumes[58] that reflected the popular fashion trends among youth at the time. Hip-hop fashion, considered the most popular style in the late '90s,[59] remained, with idol groups H.O.T. and Sechs Kies wearing the style for their debut songs. The use of accessories elevated the idol's style from everyday fashion to performance costume, like ski goggles (worn either around the head or neck), headphones worn around the neck, and oversized gloves worn to accentuate choreography moves were widely used.[citation needed] H.O.T.'s 1996 hit "Candy" exemplifies the level of coordination taken into account for idol's costumes, as each member wore a designated color and accessorized with face paint, fuzzy oversized mittens, visors, bucket hats, and earmuffs, and used stuffed animals, backpacks, and messenger bags as props.

 
Members of Baby Vox performing in 2004

While male idol groups' costumes were constructed with similar color schemes, fabrics, and styles, the outfits worn by each member still maintained individuality.[60] On the other hand, female idol groups of the '90s wore homogeneous costumes, often styled identically.[60] The costumes for female idols during their early promotions often focused on portraying an innocent, youthful image.[61] S.E.S.'s debut in 1997, "('Cause) I'm Your Girl", and Baby Vox's second album 1998 hit, "Ya Ya Ya," featured the girls dressed in white outfits, "To My Boyfriend" by Fin.K.L shows idols in pink schoolgirl costumes, and "One" and "End" of Chakra presented Hindu and African style costumes. To portray a natural and somewhat saccharine image, the accessories were limited to large bows, pompom hair ornaments and hair bands. With the maturation of female idol groups and the removal of bubblegum pop in the late 1990s, the sets of female idol groups focused on following the fashion trends of the time, many of which were revealing pieces. The latest promotions of the girl groups Baby Vox and Jewelry exemplify these trends of hot pants, micro-miniskirts, crop tops, peasant blouses, transparent garments and blouses on the upper part of the torso.[citation needed]

As K-pop became a modern hybrid of Western and Asian cultures starting from the late 2000s,[62] fashion trends within K-pop reflected diversity and distinction as well. Fashion trends from the late 2000s to early 2010s can largely be categorized under the following:[63]

  • Street: focuses on individuality; features bright colors, mix-and-match styling, graphic prints, and sports brands such as Adidas and Reebok.
  • Retro: aims to bring back "nostalgia" from the 1960s to 1980s; features dot prints and detailed patterns. Common clothing items include denim jackets, boot-cut pants, wide pants, hair bands, scarves, and sunglasses.
  • Sexy: highlights femininity and masculinity; features revealing outfits made of satin, lace, fur, and leather. Common clothing items include mini skirts, corsets, net stockings, high heels, sleeveless vests, and see-through shirts.
  • Black & White: emphasizes modern and chic, symbolizes elegance and charisma, mostly applied to formal wear.
  • Futurism: commonly worn with electronic and hip-hop genres; features popping color items, metallic details and prints; promotes a futuristic outlook.
 
2NE1 performing "I Don't Care"—an instance of street style
 
Wonder Girls performing "Nobody"—an instance of retro style
 
A publicity shot of 2PM—an instance of sexy style
 
MBLAQ performing "Y"—an instance of black & white style

K-pop has a significant influence on fashion in Asia, where trends started by idols are followed by young audiences.[64] Some idols have established status as fashion icons, such as G-Dragon[65] and CL, who has repeatedly worked with fashion designer Jeremy Scott, being labeled his "muse."[66][67]

According to professor Ingyu Oh, "K-pop emphasizes thin, tall, and feminine looks with adolescent or sometimes very cute facial expressions, regardless of whether they're male or female singers."[68]

Government support

 
The Bank of Korea has attributed the rapid surge in cultural exports since 1997 to the increased worldwide popularity of K-pop.[69]

The South Korean government has acknowledged benefits to the country's export sector as a result of the Korean Wave (it was estimated in 2011 that a US$100 increase in the export of cultural products resulted in a US$412 increase in exports of other consumer goods including food, clothes, cosmetics and IT products[70]) and thus have subsidized certain endeavours.[71] Government initiatives to expand the popularity of K-pop are mostly undertaken by the Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism, which is responsible for the worldwide establishment of Korean Cultural Centers. South Korean embassies and consulates have also organized K-pop concerts outside the country,[72] and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs regularly invites overseas K-pop fans to attend the annual K-Pop World Festival in South Korea.[73]

In addition to reaping economic benefits from the popularity of K-pop, the South Korean government has been taking advantage of the influence of K-pop in diplomacy. In an age of mass communication, soft power (pursuing one's goals by persuading stakeholders using cultural and ideological power) is regarded as a more effective and pragmatic diplomatic tactic than the traditional diplomatic strategy hard power (obtaining what one wants from stakeholders through direct intimidation such as military threat and economic sanctions).[74] Cultural diplomacy through K-pop is a form of soft power.[75]

An example of the South Korean government effort in diplomacy through K-pop is the Mnet Asian Music Awards (MAMA), a K-pop music award ceremony. Park Geun-hye (the Korean president at the time) delivered the opening statement at the 2014 MAMA, which was held in Hong Kong and sponsored by the Korean Small and Medium Business Administration (SMBA). This event was considered a deliberate endeavor by the Korean government to support Korean cultural industries in order to strengthen the nation's international reputation and political influence.[75]

Another example of cultural diplomacy is K-pop performances in North Korea. Prior to 2005, South Korean pop singers occasionally gave performances in North Korea.[76] After an interval of more than a decade, approximately 190 South Korean performers, including well-known musicians Red Velvet, Lee Sun-hee, Cho Yong-pil, and Yoon Do-hyun, performed in Pyongyang, North Korea, on March 31 and April 3, 2018. Kim Jong Un was present in the audience.[77]

History

Origins of Korean popular music

The history of Korean popular music can be traced back to 1885 when an American missionary, Henry Appenzeller, began teaching American and British folk songs at a school. These songs were called changga (창가; 唱歌), and they were typically based on a popular Western melody sung with Korean lyrics. For example, the song "Oh My Darling, Clementine" became known as Simcheongga (심청가; 沈淸歌).[note 1] During the Japanese colonial period (1910–1945), the popularity of changga songs rose as Koreans expressed their feelings against Japanese oppression through music. One of the most popular songs was Huimangga (희망가; 希望歌). The Japanese confiscated the existing changga collections and published lyrics books of their own.[78][third-party source needed]

K-pop was represented by H.O.T in the early days, and it was mostly fanatical, flashy, and showed the rebellious psychology of young people in the emotional aspects. Most of the songs are relatively fast-paced and have a strong sense of rhythm, which is suitable for dancing. They often sing and dance when they perform, and the choreography urbanance is a very important factor in popularity.[79] The first known Korean pop album was I Pungjin Sewol (이 풍진 세월; 이 風塵 歲月; lit. This Tumultuous Time), by Park Chae-seon and Lee Ryu-saek in 1925, which contained popular songs translated from Japanese. The first pop song written by a Korean composer is thought to be Nakhwayusu (낙화유수; 落花流水; lit. Fallen Blossoms on Running Water) sung by Lee Jeong-suk in 1929.[78] In the mid-1920s, Japanese composer Masao Koga mixed traditional Korean music with Gospel music that American Evangelists introduced in the 1870s. This type of music became known as Enka in Japan, and later in Korea developed into Trot (트로트; teuroteu; t'ŭrot'ŭ).[80][81] In the 1930s singers such as Wang Su-bok, Lee Eun-pa and the Jeogori Sisters popularised folk music further.[82]

1940s–1960s: Arrival of Western culture

 
Marilyn Monroe entertaining American soldiers in Korea in 1954

After the Korean Peninsula was partitioned into North and South following its liberation in 1945 from Japanese occupation, Western culture was introduced into South Korea on a small scale, with a few Western-styled bars and clubs playing Western music. After the Korean War (1950–1953) U.S. troops remained in South Korea, causing American and world culture to spread in South Korea and Western music to gradually become more accepted.[83] Prominent figures of American entertainment like Nat King Cole, Marilyn Monroe and Louis Armstrong held USO shows in South Korea for the U.S. Army.[84] These visits prompted attention from the Korean public. In 1957, the American Forces Korea Network radio started its broadcast, spreading the popularity of Western music. American music started influencing Korean music, as pentatony was gradually replaced by heptachords and popular songs started to be modeled after American ones.[85]

In the 1960s, the development of LP records and improvements in recording technology led to the pursuit of diverse voice tones.[86] Open auditions were also held to recruit musicians to perform at the U.S. army clubs. Since South Korea was impoverished after the Korean War, skilled Korean singers regarded performing for the U.S. troops as a good means to earn money. Many singers sang for the American troops, usually in dedicated clubs, the number of which rose to 264. They performed various genres like country music, blues, jazz and rock & roll. The South Korean economy started blooming and popular music followed the trend, spread by the first commercial radio stations. Korean cinema also began to develop and Korean musicians began performing to wider audiences.[84]

When Beatlemania reached the shores of Korea the first local rock bands appeared, the first of which is said to be Add4, a band founded in 1962.[87] The first talent contest for rock bands in Seoul was organized in 1968.[citation needed]

Some Korean singers gained international popularity. In 1959, the Kim Sisters went to Las Vegas and became the first Korean artist to release an album in the U.S. pop market. Their cover of "Charlie Brown" reached No.7 on the Billboard Single Chart. The Kim Sisters also appeared on TV programs and radio programs and held tours in the U.S. and Europe. They made 25 appearances on The Ed Sullivan Show—more than American stars like Patti Page and Louis Armstrong (who appeared 18 times each).[84] The Kim Sisters, Yoon Bok-hee and Patti Kim were the first singers to debut in such countries as Vietnam and the United States. The Kim Sisters became the first Korean group to release an album in the United States. They also performed in Las Vegas.[88] Han Myeong-suk [ko]'s 1961 song "The Boy in The Yellow Shirt" was covered by French singer Yvette Giraud and was also popular in Japan.[85]

In the 1960s, the Korean artists such as Shin Joong-hyun, Pearl Sisters [ko] and Patti Kim who previously performed for the U.S. army clubs reached out to the Korean public. In the mid-1960s, due to the influence of the legendary British group The Beatles, there was a rise of "group sound" in South Korea, for example, Add4 and the Key Boys [ko].  Add4, Korea's first rock group, was formed by Shin Joong-hyun in 1962 and produced Korea's first rock song, "The Woman in the Rain," which is a form of light rock reminiscent of the early Beatles. Shin Joong-hyun was so instrumental in the development of Korean rock music that he is regarded as the "godfather of Korean rock" in South Korea.

During this period, with the rise of Western pop music and Korean rock music, trot was no longer predominant in South Korea. However, trot singers like Lee Mi-ja still managed to attract a certain level of popularity, with famous songs like "Camellia Lady" (동백 아가씨; 冬柏 아가씨; dongbaek agassi).

During the 1950s and 60s, Western pop music, Korean rock music, and trot co-existed in South Korea.[84]

Late 1960s and 1970s: Hippie and folk influences

At the end of the 1960s Korean pop music underwent another transformation. More and more musicians were university students and graduates who were heavily influenced by American culture and lifestyle (including the hippie movement of the 1960s) and made lighthearted music unlike their predecessors, who were influenced by war and Japanese oppression.[86] The younger generation opposed the Vietnam War as much as American hippies did, which resulted in the Korean government banning songs with more liberal lyrics. In spite of this, folk-influenced pop remained popular among the youth, and local television channel MBC organized a music contest for university students in 1977. This was the foundation of several modern music festivals.[89] The younger generation born after the 1950s had grown up under the U.S. influence and preferred the U.S. lifestyle, giving rise to the "youth culture" which was expressed through long hair, jeans, acoustic guitars and folk music.  The folk music of that time is made up of melodies sung plainly, with the singing accompanied by a guitar or two. A majority of the folk music at that time was initiated by elite university students and those who graduated from prestigious schools. Like the activists of the U.S. student movement, they turned to folk music as the preferred music of politicized youth, who staged demonstrations against the authoritarian government.  In turn, the government banned folk music due to its association with the students' anti-government movements. In the 1970s, the Park Chung Hee government banned American pop music and Korean rock music for their association with sex and drugs. Shin Joong-hyun, the "godfather of Korean rock music," was imprisoned in 1975 due to a marijuana scandal. In order to bolster its anti-Japanese credentials, the government also banned trot songs because of its "Japanese style" (왜색; 倭色; waesaek) given the influence of Japanese enka songs on trot. However, President Park actually embraced trot.

One of the leading figures of the era was Hahn Dae-soo, who was raised in the United States and influenced by Bob Dylan, Leonard Cohen and John Lennon. Han's song Mul jom juso (Korean물 좀 주소; lit. Give me water) became iconic among young people in Korea. His daring performances and unique singing style often shocked the public and later he was banned from performing in Korea. Han moved to New York City and pursued his musical career there, only returning to his home country in the 1990s.[89] Other notable singers of the period include Song Chang-sik, Jo Young-nam, and Yang Hee-eun.[84][failed verification]

In the 1970s, DJs also started to become popular.[86]

1980s: The era of ballads

The 1980s saw the rise of ballad singers after Lee Gwang-jo [ko]'s 1985 album "You're Too Far Away to Get Close to" (가까이 하기엔 너무 먼 당신) sold more than 300,000 copies. Other popular ballad singers included Lee Moon-se (이문세) and Byun Jin-sub (변진섭), nicknamed the "Prince of Ballads". One of the most sought-after ballad composers of the era was Lee Young-hoon (이영훈), whose songs were compiled into a modern musical in 2011 titled Gwanghwamun Yeonga (광화문 연가; lit. Gwanghwamun sonata).[90]

The Asia Music Forum was launched in 1980, with representatives from five different Asian countries competing in the event. Korean singer Cho Yong-pil won first place and went on to have a successful career, performing in Hong Kong and Japan. His first album Chang bakkui yeoja (창 밖의 여자; lit. Woman Outside the Window) was a hit and he became the first Korean singer to take to the stage at Carnegie Hall in New York. Cho's musical repertoire included rock, dance, trot and folk-pop.[90] Despite his early association with rock music as an electric guitarist in a rock band, Cho Yong-pil's initial popularity came from his trot songs which were popular in both South Korea and Japan. For example, in 1976, his trot song, "Please Return to Pusan Port" (돌아와요 부산항에) was a great hit. Despite the temporary setback due to his involvement in a marijuana incident in 1977, he managed to bounce back with the song "The Woman Outside the Window" which reached a record-breaking sales of 1 million in 1980. In 1988, he sang "Seoul Seoul Seoul" in three languages (Korean, English and Japanese) to celebrate the 1988 Seoul Olympic Games.[84]

1990s: Development of modern K-pop

 
DJ DOC, one of the popular hip hop trios of the 1990s[91]

In the 1990s, Korean pop musicians incorporated partially Europop and mostly American popular music styles such as hip hop, rock, jazz, and electronic dance in their music.[92] In 1992, the emergence of Seo Taiji and Boys marked a revolutionary moment in the history of K-pop. The trio debuted on MBC's talent show on April 11, 1992, with their song "I Know" and got the lowest rating from the jury;[93] however, the song and their self-titled debut album became so successful that it paved the way for other songs of the same format. The song's success was attributed to its new jack swing-inspired beats and memorable chorus, as well as innovative lyrics which dealt with the problems of Korean society. A wave of successful hip hop and R&B artists followed in their footsteps, including Yoo Seung-jun, Jinusean, Solid, Deux, 1TYM and Drunken Tiger.[93]

In 1995, South Korean record producer Lee Soo-man, who was educated in the U.S. and was exposed to the trends in American music, founded the entertainment company SM Entertainment. Former Seo Taiji & Boys' member Yang Hyun-suk formed YG Entertainment in 1996, and Park Jin-young established JYP Entertainment in 1997.

The huge popularity of Seo Taiji & Boys among teenagers shifted the focus of the Korean music industry to teen-centred pop music. Idol bands of young boys or girls were formed to cater to a growing teenage audience.[93] H.O.T. was one of the first idol boybands, debuting in 1996 after rigorous training encompassing not only singing and dancing skills but also etiquette, attitude, language and the ability to deal with the media.[84] Their song "Candy" presented a softer and gentler form of pop music with upbeat and cheerful melodies accompanied by energetic dance steps – a formula adopted by many subsequent idol groups. The group was hugely successful, with many fans copying the group members' hairstyles and fashion. Merchandise affiliated with the group ranging from candy to perfume were sold as well. Their success was followed by that of young male and female idol groups like Sechs Kies, S.E.S., Fin.K.L, NRG, Baby Vox, Diva, Shinhwa and g.o.d, which also became popular among the younger generation.[84][94]

During the late 1990s, talent agencies began to market K-pop stars by implementing an idol business model used in J-pop,[95] where talents are selected and trained to appeal to a global audience through formal lessons or through residency programs.[96][97][98] The extensive and intensive process includes physical and language training (a program sometimes called abusive), and potential talents are also selected for height, being much taller on average than their Japanese counterparts. Sociology professor Ingyu Oh has explained regarding looks, "K-pop emphasizes thin, tall, and feminine looks with adolescent or sometimes very cute facial expressions, regardless of whether they're male or female singers."[97] Over time, Korean-American artists have become successful due to their fluency.[99] These efforts increase the marketability of K-pop while also increasing South Korean soft power, which has become an important part of official policy.[100]

The 1990s saw a reactionary movement against mainstream popular culture with the rise of illegal underground music clubs and punk rock bands such as Crying Nut.[93] The 1997 Asian financial crisis not only prompted South Korean entertainers to look for new markets, with H.O.T. releasing a Mandarin-language album[93] and Diva releasing an English-language album in Taiwan,[96] but also prompted South Korea's leaders to focus on building the nation's cultural influence through music.[101] The government poured millions into building infrastructure, technology, and a specific department within its Ministry of Culture for K-pop. Regulations were passed on karaoke bars, for example, to protect the interests of idols.[101]

21st century: Rise of Hallyu

K-pop's increasing popularity forms part of Hallyu, or the Korean Wave: the popularity of South Korean culture in other countries.[102] K-pop is increasingly making appearances on Western charts such as Billboard.[103][104] The development of online social media has been a vital tool for the Korean music industry in reaching a wider audience.[105] As part of the Korean Wave, K-pop has been embraced by the South Korean government as a tool for projecting South Korea's soft power abroad, particularly towards overseas youth.[106][107] In August 2014, the prominent British news magazine The Economist dubbed Korean pop culture "Asia's foremost trendsetter."[108]

 
Girls' Generation at SM Town Live NY in 2011

By the beginning of the 21st century, the K-pop market had slumped and early K-pop idol groups that had seen success in the 90's were on the decline. H.O.T. disbanded in 2001, while other groups like Sechs Kies, S.E.S., Fin.K.L, Shinhwa, and g.o.d became inactive by 2005. Solo singers like BoA and Rain grew in success. However, the success of the boy band TVXQ after its debut in 2003 marked the resurgence of idol groups to Korean entertainment and the growth of K-pop as part of Hallyu. The birth of second-generation K-pop was followed with the successful debuts of SS501 (2005), Super Junior (2005), BigBang (2006), Wonder Girls (2007), Girls' Generation (2007), Kara (2007), Shinee (2008), 2NE1 (2009), 4Minute (2009), T-ara (2009), f(x) (2009), and After School (2009).

During the beginning of the 21st century, K-pop idols began receiving success elsewhere in Asia: in 2002, Baby Vox's single "Coincidence" (우연; uyeon) became popular in many Asian countries after it was released and promoted during the World Cup in South Korea. BoA became the first K-pop singer to reach No. 1 on the Japanese Oricon music chart[109] and shortly afterwards, Rain had a sold-out concert to an audience of 40,000 fans in Beijing.[110] In 2003, Baby Vox topped the Chinese music charts with their Chinese single "I'm Still Loving You" from their third album Devotion, the first idol group to do so, creating a huge fanbase in China. They also charted in various music charts in Thailand. TVXQ marked the rise of K-pop boy bands in Japan. In 2008, their single "Purple Line" made TVXQ the first foreign boy band and second Korean artist after BoA to top the Oricon music chart.

Since the mid-2000s, a huge portion of the East Asian music market has been dominated by K-pop.[111] In 2008, South Korea's cultural exports (including television dramas and computer games) rose to US$2 billion, maintaining an annual growth rate of over 10%.[112] That year, Japan accounted for almost 68% of all K-pop export revenues, ahead of China (11.2%) and the United States (2.1%).[113] The sale of concert tickets proved to be a lucrative business; TVXQ's Tohoshinki Live Tour in Japan sold over 850,000 tickets at an average cost of US$109 each, generating a total of US$92.6 million in revenues.[114]

Elsewhere in the world, the genre has rapidly grown in success,[115] especially after Psy's "Gangnam Style" music video was the first YouTube video to reach one billion views, achieving widespread coverage in mainstream media.[116][117] As of December 2020, the video has 3.9 billion views.[118] Several failed attempts have been made by entertainment companies to break into the English-language market, including BoA, Wonder Girls, Girls' Generation, and CL.[119][120][121] BTS won Top Social Artist at the 2017 Billboard Music Awards in 2017, making them the first K-pop group to win a BBMA.[122] Their performance of the song "DNA" at the American Music Awards, the first AMA performance by a K-pop group, also led to the song peaking at number 67 on the Billboard Hot 100.[123] The following year, BTS became the first K-pop group to reach number one on the Billboard 200 with Love Yourself: Tear.[124] The K-pop industry is active in New York City, hosting numerous concerts in the city as well as being home to K-pop musicians. The musical KPOP opened off-Broadway in 2017 and moved to Broadway in 2022.[125][126]

Industry

Agencies

K-pop has spawned an entire industry encompassing music production houses, event management companies, music distributors, and other merchandise and service providers. The three biggest companies in terms of sales and revenue are SM Entertainment, YG Entertainment and JYP Entertainment, often referred to as the 'Big Three.'[127] These record labels also function as representative agencies for their artists. They are responsible for recruiting, financing, training, and marketing new artists as well as managing their musical activities and public relations. Currently, the agency with the greatest market share is S.M. Entertainment.[127] In 2011, together with Star J Entertainment, AM Entertainment, and Key East, the Big Three companies founded the joint management company United Asia Management.[128][129][130]

Total revenues of K-pop record labels (in USD million)
Year of
establishment
Record label 2008 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 Source
1995 SM Entertainment 42.5 87.1 129 241 268 286.9 290 314 329 551 592 521 [131]
1996 YG Entertainment 16.5 51.8 70.3 96.9 116.6 156.3 170 286.4 321.5 242 228 229 [132]
1997 JYP Entertainment 3.1 9.1 17.8 13.5 21.4 48.5 50.56 69.5 94 111 139 129 [133]

Sales and market value

In 2009, DFSB Kollective became the first distributor of K-pop on iTunes.[134]

In 2011, 1,100 albums were released in South Korea. The hip-hop genre had the most representation, at two-thirds of the total albums.[135] One-third of the albums were from a variety of other genres, including rock, modern folk, and crossover.[135]

In 2012, the average cost of obtaining a K-pop song in South Korea amounted to US$0.10 for a single download, or $0.002 when streamed online.[136] In the first half of 2012, according to Billboard, the Korean music industry grossed nearly US$3.4 billion—a 27.8% increase on the previous year—and was recognized by Time magazine as "South Korea's Greatest Export."[137][138]

In 2017, it is estimated that the K-pop music industry has a revenue of $5 billion.[139]

In 2019, the International Federation of the Phonographic Industry (IFPI) listed South Korea as the 6th largest music market in the world.[140] Moreover, BTS alone accounted for $4.65 billion of South Korea’s GDP.[141]

Stock Market Summary (5-year period) (Beginning of the year summary) record labels (in KRW)
Record label 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 source
SM Entertainment 26,000 KRW 33,700 KRW 52,200 KRW 37,200 KRW 29,900 KRW [142]
JYP Entertainment 4,880 KRW 13,350 KRW 30,250 KRW 24,200 KRW 37,800 KRW [143]
YG Entertainment 28,400 KRW 27,600 KRW 48,900 KRW 28,400 KRW 45,100 KRW [144]

Record charts

Korean record charts include the Circle Digital Chart and the Billboard K-pop Hot 100. Some K-pop records have appeared on the Oricon Albums Chart of Japan and the Billboard Hot 100 of the United States.

In 2009, singer Hwangbo entered the European music industry for a short period when she released the single R2song, reaching # 1 on the world's largest dance music site JunoDownload, being successful in the United Kingdom, Europe, as well as Korea; becoming the first Asian artist to achieve it.

In May 2014, Exo became the third K-pop act to enter the Billboard 200 that year after 2NE1, Girls' Generation and Wonder Girls were the first K-Pop act to chart on Billboard 200.[145]

In October 2016, BTS's album Wings becomes the first Korean album to chart in the UK Albums Chart, reaching #62,[146] and the highest-charting and best selling K-pop album in the Billboard 200.[147] In February 2017, BTS landed their fourth album You Never Walk Alone at #61 on the Billboard 200.[148] In September 2017, BTS landed at #14 on the UK Album Charts with their new album, Love Yourself: Her.[149] Love Yourself: Tear debuted at number one on the US Billboard 200 with 135,000 album-equivalent units (including 100,000 pure album sales), becoming BTS' highest-charting and first number one album in the US, the first K-pop album to top the US albums chart, and the highest-charting album by an Asian act.[150] "Fake Love" peaked at number ten on the Billboard Hot 100 that same week, becoming the band's highest reaching song on the chart as well as their first in the top ten. Overall, only twenty non-English songs have reached the top ten, with "Fake Love" being the first for a K-Pop group. The single also debuted at number seven on Billboard's Streaming Songs chart with 27.4 million streams earned in the week ending May 24, giving BTS its first top ten on the chart and making "Fake Love" the first K-pop song to land on top ten since Psy's "Hangover" feat. Snoop Dogg in 2014. In August 2020, their song "Dynamite" topped the Billboard Hot 100 in its opening week, becoming the group's first number-one single in the US and their fourth top-10 entry. BTS became the first K-pop act in Hot 100 history to debut at number one.[151]

In June 2018, YG Entertainment's girl group Blackpink became the first K-pop girl group to hit within the top 50 of Billboard 200 album chart; their first mini-album SQUARE UP debuted at No. 40. Their title song "Ddu Du Ddu Du" charted at No. 55 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart, making it the highest-charting song and the first full Korean-language song by a K-pop girl group.[152] Since then, they have beaten their own record with Ice Cream peaking at #13 on the Billboard Hot 100.

Trainee system

By convention in modern K-pop, trainees go through a rigorous training system for an undetermined amount of time before debut. This method was popularized by Lee Soo-man, founder of S.M. Entertainment,[153] as part of a concept labelled "cultural technology."[154] The Verge described this as an "extreme" system of artist management.[155] According to the CEO of Universal Music's Southeast Asian branch, the Korean idol trainee system is unique in the world.[156]

Because of the training period, which can last for many years, and the significant amount of investment that agencies put towards their trainees, the industry is very serious about launching new artists. Trainees may enter an agency through auditions or be scouted, and once recruited are given accommodation and classes (commonly singing, dancing, rapping, and foreign languages such as Mandarin, English and Japanese) while they prepare for debut. Young trainees sometimes attend school at the same time. There is no age limit to become a trainee and no limit to the duration one can spend as a trainee.[157][158][159]

Television

 
The 11-member temporary girl group I.O.I was assembled through the reality television program Produce 101.[160]

The Korean music industry has spawned numerous related reality TV shows, including talent shows such as Superstar K and K-pop Star, specialist rap competition Show Me the Money and its female counterpart Unpretty Rapstar, and many 'survival' shows, which commonly pit trainees against each other in order to form a new idol group. Examples of survival shows include Jellyfish Entertainment's MyDOL, which formed boy group VIXX;[161][162] YG Entertainment's WIN: Who Is Next, which formed boy group Winner, and its follow-up MIX&MATCH, which formed iKon; JYP Entertainment's Sixteen, which formed girl group Twice; Starship Entertainment's No.Mercy, which formed boy group Monsta X; Cube Entertainment's Pentagon Maker, which formed boy group Pentagon; Mnet's Produce 101, which formed girl groups I.O.I and Iz*One and boy groups Wanna One and X1;[163][164][165] Duble Kick's Finding Momo Land, which formed girl group Momoland; Mnet's Idol School, which formed girl group Fromis 9; Belift Lab's I-Land, which formed boy group Enhypen; MBC's My Teenage Girl, which formed girl group Classy; and Mnet's Girls Planet 999, which formed girl group Kep1er. The rise in these shows, which often involves larger agencies contracting smaller agencies' trainees into project groups and taking a larger portion of the revenues, has led to criticisms over the former monopolizing the industry.[166][167] However, these shows provide an opportunity for idol trainees to showcase their charms and talents to gain a following even before their debut. This could serve as a stepping stone for these individuals to start growing their fanbase early or even receive offers from larger companies, even if they do not make the final lineup of the survival show itself.[168]

Criticism of industry practices

Corruption

In 2002, Time magazine reported that Korean television producers such as Hwang Yong-woo and Kim Jong-jin had been arrested for "accepting under-the-table payments guaranteeing TV appearances to aspiring singers and musicians" in a bid to tackle "systemic corruption in South Korea's music business." Companies investigated included SidusHQ and SM Entertainment.[94]

Poor living and working conditions

K-pop management companies have also been criticized for exploitation of idols through overwork and restrictive contracts, described as "slave contracts" in a BBC report.[169] According to The Hollywood Reporter, "Korea's entertainment business is notoriously improvisational and unregulated. In-demand K-pop stars – many of whom are teenage 'idols' – have been known to rehearse and perform without sleep."[170]

In July 2009, S.M. Entertainment was taken to court by TVXQ and a Super Junior member, who alleged that their working conditions had led to adverse health effects.[171][172] The court decision in the TVXQ lawsuit determined their contract with S.M. Entertainment void, and resultantly the Fair Trade Commission released contract templates to regulate industry conditions.[169]

In 2014, South Korea passed a law to regulate its music industry, protecting idols aged under 19 from unhealthy labor practices and overtly sexualized performances[173] and guaranteeing them "the basic rights to learn, rest and sleep."[170] Failure to comply with these regulations may lead to the equivalent of a US$10,000 fine.[170]

Industry professionals such as SM Entertainment's CEO Kim Young-min have defended the system, arguing that individuals trained within the system are "no different than [sic] typical middle or high school kids, who go to after-school programs to cram for college entrance exams." Kim has also argued that there is a need to consider the expenses incurred by the company during the trainee period, including "facilities, equipment, costumes, and virtually everything the trainees need."[174]

On March 7, 2017, the South Korea Fair Trade Commission (KFTC) passed new regulations in order to protect trainee idols from unfair terms and working conditions. Prior to these regulations, trainee idols at eight idol agencies were not permitted to seek contracts at any other agency while at training. Moreover, agencies were able to terminate a trainee contract at any time for any reason. The Fair Trade Commission states that they believe these changes will "result in a more just contract culture within the entertainment industry between trainee and agency." The Ministry of Culture applied these regulations to all existing agencies throughout 2018.[175]

Some of the concerns raised by the idol agencies over these regulations include the risk of a trainee at one agency going undercover at another agency to receive training with the other agency. This introduces the further risk that the idol agencies must take in training new idols. Trainees train for 3 years on average and the agencies support these trainees with various training programs during this duration, resulting in each trainee being a very large investment for the agency.[176]

Tight control over public image

K-pop management is very strict in terms of regulating the public appearance of their groups, according to Michael Hurt, a lecturer of cultural theory at the Korea National University of Arts. Therefore, he reasoned, most stars are not allowed to date publicly or have "control of their own lives". Kwon Joon-won, an entertainment management professor at the Dong-ah Institute of Media and Arts, said K-pop stars should be expected to lose half of their fandom if they were to make controversial statements. This may explain why K-pop groups are more outspoken about social issues abroad than within South Korea.[177]

Sexualization and pressure on appearance

The industry has been criticized for the sexualization of both male and female idols, with the sexualization of minors in particular being of concern.[178] Critics such as James Turnbull of the Korean Pop Culture blog The Grand Narrative have argued young female idols are especially susceptible to pressures to wear revealing clothing or dance provocatively.[178] However, compared to western popular music, K-pop has little sex, drugs, or aggressive behavior and has a much more parent-friendly branding.[179] In 2014, South Korea passed a law to protect idols under the age of 19 from overtly sexualized performances.[173][170]

Questions have also been raised over K-pop's focus on appearance and its effects on children and teens, especially pressure to obtain cosmetic surgeries.[180] In 2019, the South Korean Ministry of Gender Equality and Family announced non-mandatory guidelines in an effort to prevent "lookism." One recommendation asked to limit how many idol singers can appear on TV together, saying "most of them are skinny ... with outfits exposing their bodies."[181] The concern was that their nearly identical appearances would narrow the standards of beauty. Many young viewers of K-pop are raised in a culture where cosmetic surgery is promoted. Some idols openly document themselves undergoing surgery.[180] The government recommendations upset many fans, however, who began circulating an online petition in protest. An opposition politician also compared the guidelines to regulations under the "military dictatorship of Chun Doo-hwan".[181]

Mental health

Some K-pop artists have suggested that the uncertainty and pressures of their jobs as entertainers may be detrimental to their mental health. According to musician Park Kyung of Block B, "There are many people who debuted with no sense of self yet, and they come to realize later that every move and every word they say is being observed so they become cautious and lose their freedom."[182] In an interview with Yonhap News, Suga of BTS talked about his own mental health, and said, "Anxiety and loneliness seem to be with me for life…Emotions are so different in every situation and every moment, so I think to agonise every moment is what life is."[182]

The suicides of prominent K-pop musicians have drawn attention to industry pressures.[183] In 1996, singer Charles Park, also known as Seo Ji-won [ko], died by suicide at the age of 19, before the release of his second album.[183][184] Kim Jong-hyun, who had previously been open about his history of depression, also died by suicide in December 2017.[183] In the spring of 2018, a number of prominent Korean musicians participated in a free concert series to raise awareness of suicide prevention.[182] In 2019, the death of Sulli of an apparent suicide, followed by the death of Goo Hara, after both were subjected to cyberbullying, added to calls for reform.[185][186][187] In 2023, the death of Moonbin in another apparent suicide, renewed scrutiny on the highly competitive world of Korean show business and the pressures its performers face.[188]

One reason is that K-pop amplifies the pressure to be perfect, already intense in Korean society.[189] Its competitive nature, where one may need to step on someone else in order to get ahead, can lead to jealousy and bullying toward those who appear more successful. After dating fellow musician Choiza, Sulli became the center of online abuse because K-pop idols are expected not to be in a relationship for years. During one talk show, she expressed how empty her life was, "I feel like I'm lying to everyone by pretending to be happy on the outside." A jewellery designer who works with K-pop stars, including Sulli, said that receiving threats and angry mail is normal for many idols.[189]

Culture

K-pop artists are frequently referred to as idols or idol groups.[190] Groups usually have a leader, who is often the eldest or most experienced member and speaks for the group. The youngest group member is called the maknae (Korean막내; RRmangnae; lit. the youngest in a family).[191] The popular use of this term in Japan was influenced by boy group SS501 when they expanded their activities in the country in 2007. Its Japanese translation man'ne (マンネ) was often used to name the group's youngest member Kim Hyung-jun in order to differentiate him from their leader with a similar name and spelling, Kim Hyun-joong.[192]

Industry-specific expressions

Korean Romanized Meaning
대상
(Hanja: 大賞)
daesang At music awards artists may receive a bonsang for outstanding music achievements. One of the bonsang winners is then awarded with a daesang, the "Grand Prize".[193]
본상
(Hanja: 本賞)
bonsang
All-Kill (AK) Referring to chart positions. An Instiz all-kill ("AK") occurs when an individual song sweeps all of South Korea's major music charts simultaneously, placing first on the real-time charts.[194][195][unreliable source?]
Certified All-Kill (CAK) An Instiz Certified all-kill happens when a song tops all of the charts, both real-time and daily, and is first on Instiz Real-time Chart.[citation needed]
Perfect All-Kill (PAK) An Instiz Perfect all-kill happens when an individual song has a certified all-kill and at the same time it places first on Instiz Weekly Chart. [citation needed]
Mini album Roughly equivalent to an EP, contains multiple tracks but shorter than a full-length album.[196][unreliable source?]
Title track The main track of an album or an EP. Released with a music video and promoted through live performances on televised music shows. Success of the title track is of vital importance as it carries over to the album/EP sales. Most of K-pop artists do not release the title track separately from the album/EP.[citation needed]
Pre-release single Roughly equivalent to a lead single or promotional single, the pre-release single is a track of an album or EP released before the actual album release. It may have an accompanying music video, as well as live performances on televised music shows. [citation needed]
Promotion Takes place when a title track is released. Artists perform in televised music shows and interviews. Promotion on TV shows usually lasts one month, with a 'debut stage' for newcomers, a 'comeback stage' for regulars and a 'goodbye stage' at the end of the cycle.[196][unreliable source?]
Comeback Refers to the release of an artist's new music and the accompanying promotional activities typically including TV performances and participation on TV shows.[46]
Single album A single that is promoted like an album. Usually includes one b-side and the instrumental of both songs. [citation needed]

Appeal and fan base

 
Big Bang fans (VIPs) hold crown shaped light sticks during a concert: this is the symbol of the fan club

Many fans travel overseas to see their idols on tour, and tourists commonly visit Korea from Japan and China to see K-pop concerts.[197] A K-pop tour group from Japan had more than 7,000 fans fly to Seoul to meet boy band JYJ in 2012,[198] and during JYJ's concert in Barcelona in 2011, fans from many parts of the world camped overnight to gain entrance.[199] A 2011 survey conducted by the Korean Culture and Information Service reported that there were over three million active members of Hallyu fan clubs.[200]

Bang Si-hyuk, the music industry executive behind BTS, expressed that K-pop idol fans view their idol differently from how music fans view a typical singer. Idol fans want to feel close to and be a part of their idol's lifestyle, even outside of live performances.[201]

An article by The Wall Street Journal indicated that K-pop's future staying power will be shaped by fans, whose online activities have evolved into "micro-businesses."[202] K-pop groups commonly have dedicated fan clubs with a collective name and sometimes an assigned colour,[203][204] to which they will release merchandise. For example, TVXQ fans are known as 'Cassiopeia,' and their official colour is 'pearl red.' Some of the more popular groups have personalized light sticks for use at concerts; for example, Big Bang fans hold yellow crown-shaped light sticks.[205]

 
Fan rice for the Korean boyband Exo

Fan clubs sometimes participate in charity events to support their idols, purchasing bags of 'fan rice' in order to show support. The rice bags are donated to those in need.[206] According to Time, for one of BigBang's shows, 12.7 tons of rice were donated from 50 fan clubs around the world. There are businesses in Korea dedicated to shipping rice from farmers to the venues.[207] Another way that fan clubs show their devotion is by sending lunch to idols during their schedules, and there are catering companies in South Korea specifically for this purpose.[208] Increasingly, fans participate in activism that extends outside of the K-pop community.[209][210][211]

A unique feature of K-pop fandom is the "fan chant". When an idol group releases a new song, chants, usually consisting of group members' names, are performed by live concert audiences during non-singing parts of songs.[196]

Obsession

Some idols and idol groups have faced problems from obsessive fans who indulge in stalking or invasive behavior. These fans are known as sasaeng fans (사생팬; 私生팬; sasaengpaen), from the Korean word for 'private life,' which alludes to their penchant for invading the privacy of idols and members of idol groups. There have been accounts of extreme behaviors from fans trying to gain idols' attention.[212] Korean public officials recognize this as a unique but serious concern.[213]

Some idols have reacted angrily towards sasaeng fans, for which they received backlash; including members of JYJ, Super Junior member Kim Hee-chul, and Jang Keun-suk.[212][214][215]

In response to the issue, a new law introduced in February 2016 in Korea saw the penalty for stalking rise to around US$17,000 as well as a possible two-year jail sentence.[216]

Events

International tours

Conventions and music festivals

With the rise of the popularity of K-pop globally, K-pop groups and idols' appearances at internationally recognized music festivals is becoming more and more regular.

Social media

Social media sites such as YouTube, Twitter, and Facebook allow K-pop artists to reach a global audience and to communicate readily with their fans.[222] As global online music market revenue increased 19% from 2009 to 2014 with social media, music consumers around the world are more likely to be exposed to K-pop.[223] K-pop idol groups benefit from video-based social media such as YouTube since visual components such as dance and fashion are essential factors in their performance. The number of searches of "K-pop" on YouTube increased by a factor of 33 from 2004 to 2014. Through social media advertisement, Korean entertainment companies narrowed the cultural gap so K-pop could enter the global market and gain recognition among overseas consumers. The export of K-pop dramatically increased from US$13.9 million to US$204 million between 2007 and 2011.[223] Social media also changes the consumption patterns of K-pop music. Before the digital era, people would purchase and consume music products on an individual basis. Consumers now actively participate in sharing music products and advertising their favorite artists, which is advantageous for K-pop.

K-pop fandoms are highly active on the said platforms as well as the likes of Instagram, TikTok, Reddit, Tumblr and Twitch.[224]

YouTube

 
Psy, whose music video for "Gangnam Style" in December 2012 became the first to reach more than a billion YouTube views[225]

Since K-pop started to spread its industry outside South Korea, K-pop artists have set notable records on YouTube. Of the 2.28 billion worldwide K-pop YouTube views in 2011, 240 million came from the United States, more than double the figure from 2010 (94 million).[citation needed] In December 2011, K-pop became the first country-specific genre of music to gain a homepage on YouTube.[222] In December 2012, Psy's music video for "Gangnam Style" became the first YouTube video to receive 1 billion views.[226] In 2016 the music video for the song "TT" by Twice became the first video by a female Korean act with over 400 million YouTube views.[227] On January 21, 2019, girl group Blackpink's music video for "Ddu-Du-Ddu-Du" became the highest viewed K-pop group music video on YouTube.[228] On May 21, 2021, BTS' music video for "Butter" set a record for the most viewed online music video in the first 24 hours, garnering over 108 million views.[229]

Twitter

Twitter has also been a significant social media platform for K-pop stars to get connections and promotions.[230] The viral song "Gangnam Style" gained popularity from mentions by prominent Twitter users.[230] Bang Si Hyuk, the producer of BTS, partially attributed the fast growth of their fanbase to social media such as Twitter.[231] On November 13, 2017, BTS became the first South Korean act to reach 10 million followers on Twitter.[232][233] In 2017, BTS was the most tweeted-about artist both in the United States and globally. Other K-pop groups, such as Seventeen and Monsta X, also appeared in the global top ten. Exo, a South Korean boyband, was the most followed celebrity to have entered Twitter in 2017.[234] At the 2017, 2018, and 2019 Billboard Music Awards, BTS won the award for Top Social Media Artist based on Twitter voting by their fans.[235][236][237] According to Sin Chang Seob, the CEO of Twitter Korea, the usage of Twitter by K-pop artists has increased Twitter's popularity among South Koreans.[238]

Facebook

Many Korean entertainment companies use social media platforms, especially Facebook, to promote and communicate about their global auditions.[222] K-pop groups use Facebook pages to promote their music and other content to large numbers of fans.[239] K-pop fans use Facebook to express their devotion, communicate with other members of the K-pop community, and consume K-pop content.[240]

TikTok

Multiple entertainment companies use TikTok to market and promote their artists' music. Many K-pop songs have gone viral on TikTok and some K-pop artists and their labels were contacted for possible collaborations. The "Any Song" dance challenge by rapper Zico got 400 million views in less than two months, and around 830,000 videos have been uploaded featuring the sound.[241] Fifty Fifty's song "Cupid" went viral on TikTok with over 400,000 videos published with the sound. Prior to the TikTok audio, Fifty Fifty were averaging 300,000 monthly listeners, to now having over a million.[242] TikTok continues to be an avenue in which K-pop artists can receive exposure and recognition.

Popularity and impact

East Asia

Japan

Following the lifting of WWII-era restrictions imposed on exchanges and trade between Korea and Japan in the late 1990s, the first-generation girl group S.E.S became the first Korean artists to debut in Japan in late 1998, releasing their first Japanese-language album Reach Out in 1999. Young K-pop star BoA had Japanese-language training before her Korean debut and when she debuted in Japan in 2002 with her first Japanese-language album Listen to My Heart, her Korean identity was inessential, as her music style and fluency in Japanese led her to be considered a part of J-pop.[243] Listen to My Heart was the first album by a Korean singer to debut atop the Japanese Oricon Charts and become an RIAJ-certified "million-seller" in Japan.[244] BoA has since released several Japanese albums, most of which have topped the Oricon Charts.[245]

Following BoA's successful Japanese debut, TVXQ debuted in Japan in 2005 under a procedure similar to BoA's. TVXQ did not promote their Korean identity, and their ballad-style songs fit well into J-pop's typical sound. TVXQ's first and second albums released in Japan were minor successes, peaking on the Oricon Charts at twenty-five and ten respectively.[citation needed] However, on January 16, 2008, TVXQ reached the top of the Oricon Charts with their sixteenth Japanese single "Purple Line", becoming the first Korean male group to have a number-one single in Japan.[246][247] They have since had remarkable success with their comebacks. In 2018, they accumulated over 1.2 million people to their concerts, beating Japanese band B'z.[248] Since the start of the Korean Wave, the Japanese market has seen an influx of Korean pop acts such as SS501,[249] Shinee,[250] Super Junior,[251] Big Bang,[252] Kara, and Girls' Generation.[253] In 2011, it was reported that the total sales for K-pop artists' increased 22.3% between 2010 and 2011 in Japan. Some Korean artists were in the top 10 selling artists of the year in Japan.[254]

As of 2019, several other K-pop groups have debuted in the Japanese market including Exo, BTS, Got7, Seventeen, iKon, GFriend, Astro, Pentagon, Twice, Monsta X, FT Island, NCT 127 and Blackpink.[255][unreliable source?] Many of these groups debut with Japanese versions of their recent Korean releases, then later release original Japanese songs. Many groups such as NCT 127, Twice, and Pentagon also include Japanese members that auditioned in Japan and were brought to Korea, or came to Korea in order to become a K-pop singer.

With tensions still remaining between Korea and Japan, the import of Korean popular culture has been met with different forms of resistance, in the form of the 'Anti-Korean Wave.' One demonstration against the Korean Wave with roughly 500 participants was broadcast on Japan's Fuji TV to an Internet audience of over 120,000. However, the chairman of the Presidential Council on National Branding cited this resistance as proof of "how successful Korean Wave is."[256] The Korean Wave has also interested Japanese people to pursue a pop music career by going to Korea to become K-pop stars.[257]

China

 
Chinese singer Zhang Bichen, later a member of K-pop girl group Sunny Days, performs during 2012's K-POP World Festival.

The 1990s saw the rise of K-pop in China through groups like H.O.T. and Sechs Kies—sparking China's investment in Korea's entertainment industry. K-pop artists have achieved considerable success in China since then: in 2005, Rain held a concert in Beijing with 40,000 attendees.[110] In 2010, the Wonder Girls won an award for the highest digital sales for a foreign artist, with 5 million digital downloads, in the 5th annual China Mobile Wireless Music Awards.[258] Most recently, China has become the South Korean entertainment industry's biggest market for exports.[259] Twelve percent of SM Entertainment's sales in 2015 went to China, and this number rose to 14.4 percent by the middle of 2016.[260] China has found that K-pop is a profitable investment.[261] According to Director of Communication for the Korea Economic Institute of America Jenna Gibson, sales for a certain shampoo brand rose by 630% after Super Junior endorsed it on a Chinese reality show.[261] K-pop's popularity has also led China's e-commerce company Alibaba to buy roughly $30 million worth of SM Entertainment's shares in 2016 in order to help its expansion into the online music industry.[262] Legend Capital China has also invested in BTS' label BigHit Entertainment.[261] As of the beginning of 2017, China took up around 8–20 percent of major Korean entertainment companies' total sales.[260] Chinese entertainment companies have also claimed stakes in the industry, partially overseeing groups like EXID and T-ara or representing groups which include both Chinese and Korean members like Uniq and WJSN.[261]

Having Chinese members in K-pop groups is one way that Korean entertainment companies increase K-pop's marketability and appeal in China. Other strategies include giving Korean members Chinese-sounding names, releasing songs or whole albums in Chinese, and making subgroups with members that predominantly speak Mandarin[262]—like SM Entertainment's Exo-M and Super Junior-M, which has had successful results on the Kuang Nan Record and CCR.[263]

The K-pop industry's methods of producing idols have influenced the practices of Chinese entertainment companies, which aim to reproduce K-pop idols' success with their own stars so that Chinese entertainers can compete better globally. To achieve this, those companies have recruited K-pop industry experts, and some of these insiders have actively started moving into the Chinese music industry to capitalize on K-pop's increasing influence on market demands. Chinese reality show Idol Producer further highlights K-pop's impact on China's entertainment scene: closely mirroring Korea's Produce 101.[261]

 
Hong Kong singer Jackson Wang from Got7 at a fansigning event in Yeouido

A number of Chinese K-pop idols, such as Super Junior-M's Han Geng and Exo-M's Kris, Luhan, and Tao, have left their respective K-pop groups in order to pursue solo careers in China. However, lately, Korean entertainment companies have allowed their Chinese K-pop idols more freedom in pursuing solo work in China.[261] Got7's Jackson Wang, for example, has released several of his own songs in China and, in 2017, reached number one on Chinese music charts.[264]

Additionally, the rise of K-pop has led to an increase in the number of Chinese tourists in South Korea—3.8 million more Chinese toured South Korea in 2016 than 2015 according to the Union of International Associations.[265] K-pop has also made China's youth find South Korean culture "cool",[266] thus helping to facilitate greater understanding between Korea and China.[267]

North Korea

Despite North Korea's traditionally strict isolationism, K-pop has managed to reach a North Korean audience. While consumption of South Korean entertainment is punishable by death in North Korea,[268] it has still become increasingly more available with the global rise of technology and the implementation of underground smuggling networks over the past decades.[269] The popular flash drive technology containing K-pop and K-dramas was preceded by the use of DVDs burned with such content. Because North Korean law enforcement had figured out how to catch people consuming the media from DVDs, few people accessed K-pop and K-dramas.[270] Many North Koreans considered the risk too great, so it was not until the proliferation of the flash drive media type that watching the K-pop shows hit common homes. Utilizing the increasingly sophisticated smuggling networks, several thousands of USB drives and SD cards containing K-pop and K-dramas have been distributed and sold through care packages and the black market.[271] Some South Korean humanitarians have also deployed drones and balloons carrying these flash drives in order to make the media more accessible.[272] Access to USB drives and SD cards rose exponentially from 26% to 81% in from 2010 to 2014 largely due to development in technology, with a large majority containing South Korean music and dramas.[273] The expanding technology capabilities allowed the flash drives to be accessed by a wider North Korean audience. Flash drives that used to cost upwards of US$50, can now be purchased for under $10, making them more affordable and easier to send into North Korea.[270] The content on these USB drives and SD cards are then viewed by plugging the device into a Notel, a small portable media player.[271] Although this practice had originally begun with banned books and simple radios, there is now an even higher demand for South Korean media following the cultural phenomena of hallyu.

Those near the border who choose to stay away from the banned media from flash drives often cannot escape it. Ever since the 1950s, both countries have blasted their own propaganda across the DMZ: North Korea broadcasting anti-south propaganda and South Korea broadcasting Korean and world news as well as K-pop.[272] In 2004, both countries agreed to end the broadcasts. After an incident in 2015, South Korea resumed broadcasting anti-North news for four days, as well as in 2016, after North Korea tested its hydrogen bomb and has been broadcasting since. In April 2018, in preparation and out of respect for the meeting between North leader Kim Jong Un and South leader, Moon Jae In, the South Korean speakers ceased their broadcasts. These 11 loudspeakers can be heard up to six miles (10 km) into North Korean territory. This enables the broadcasts to influence possible defectors staying near the border as well as create bothersome propaganda that North Korean soldiers cannot escape.[272]

The dissemination of K-pop and Korean media has been crucial in presenting the realities of North Korea to its citizens. By detailing the basic conditions of life in South Korea and introducing foreign ideologies, Korean media has aroused civil unrest amongst both citizens and elites concerning the disparities between living conditions inside and outside North Korea.[271] A defector explains that, when he escaped in 2012, only the wealthy families were the ones consuming the South Korean media because the costs of the flash drives and technology to use them were so high. Because most youths lacked the resources to afford the drives, most consumers of South Korean media before 2012 were the middle-aged elite who favored K-dramas over K-pop due to their more traditional behavior.[274] The current high demand for Korean media continues to rise as now approximately 70% of North Koreans consume foreign media in their homes,[271] which accounts for the higher youth following of South Korean media today. One researcher at the Korea Institute for National Unification claims to have never met a single defector who had not seen or listened to foreign media before entering South Korea. Yet experts remain wary that a cultural uprising will occur because of the media. Consuming South Korean media serves many purposes for North Koreans such as enjoyment and education, but few consider uprooting a totalitarian regime because of the cultures they've experienced through K-pop and K-dramas.[275]

Even North Korean leader Kim Jong Un has shown a liking for K-pop music. In 2018, Kim stated he was "deeply moved" after attending a two-hour concert in Pyongyang featuring South Korean performers such as singer Cho Yong-pil and the popular girl band Red Velvet.[276] This historic concert marks the first performance by South Korean artists attended by a North Korean leader in Pyongyang. The concert featuring over 150 South Korean artists, attended by 1500 North Korean elites,[277] also displays growing relations between the North and the South. None of the song line ups, lyrics, or dance moves of the performers were asked to be changed by traditionalist North Korean officials. This acceptance of the K-pop genre and its content shows a stark contrast to Kim Jong Un's historically stringent policies on foreign media. The South Korean artists also performed alongside notable North Korean artists in the following week. Recordings of both performances have been made public to South Koreans, though no reports have been made of their release to the North Korean public.[278] Despite all the previous events Kim Jong-un has changed his stance on K-pop since 2021 by referring to it as a "vicious cancer" and viewing it as a threat to North Korean society.[279]

Taiwan

Despite sharing a similar past, the Taiwanese did not carry a positive sentiment towards South Korea after 1992, which is when South Korea broke off its diplomatic relationship with Taiwan in order to pursue one with mainland China. This changed in the early 2000s as the cultural dispersion of Hallyu has contributed to the reconstruction of South Korea's image among the Taiwanese. This change was partly prompted by the South Korean government, which wished to encourage goodwill between the two countries after the break of diplomacy. Many Taiwanese have since remarked that Korean popular music and Korean dramas have helped to foster a renewed interest and healthier relationship with South Korea.[280]

Southeast Asia

Singapore

There is a thriving K-pop fanbase in Singapore, where idol groups, such as 2NE1, BTS, Girls' Generation, Got7 and Exo, often hold concert tour dates.[281][282] The popularity of K-pop alongside Korean dramas has influenced the aesthetics image of Singaporeans. Korean-style "straight eyebrows" have become quite popular among many Singaporean females and males of Chinese, Malay and Indian descent.[283] Singaporean beauty salons have seen an increase in the number of customers interested in getting Korean-style "straight eyebrows" and Korean-style haircuts in recent years.[284] On August 5, 2017, Singapore hosted the 10th Music Bank World Tour, a concert spin-off of Music Bank, a popular weekly music programme by South Korean broadcaster KBS. This event proved the immense popularity of the Hallyu wave in Singapore.[285]

In recent years, several notable entertainment companies (both big and small scale), like Attrakt and YG Entertainment, came to Singapore to conduct auditions to select eligible candidates to train in South Korea,[286][287] and a K-pop international school is also set to be established in Singapore with the collaboration between Singapore Raffles Music College (SRMC) and the prestigious School of Performing Arts Seoul (Sopa).[288] According to Singaporean national newspaper The Straits Times in February 2024, over 120 teenage girls (mostly Singaporeans) took part in Attrakt‘s first and only on-site audition at Kallang Place, which aimed to recruit possible candidates to join the agency’s girl group Fifty Fifty.[289]

Malaysia

In Malaysia, among the three main ethnic groups—Malay, Chinese and Indian—many prefer to listen to music in their own languages, but K-pop and Korean movies and TV series have become popular among all three ethnic groups, which Malaysian firms have capitalized upon.[290] The popularity of K-pop has also resulted in politicians bringing K-pop idols to the country in order to attract young voters.[291] Malaysians have accepted the Korean Wave more rapidly and even more favorably, notably in the 2010s, despite the fact that it came to Malaysia later and that the first reaction there was relatively hostile compared to other nations. Approximately 80% of Malaysian respondents have begun learning the Korean language due to their keen interest in Korean culture. Malaysia is also seventh in the world for the quantity of travelers visiting Korea.[292]

Indonesia

K-pop along with Korean TV series and movies has turned into popular culture, especially among the young generation of Indonesia. This trend can be observed in any major city in the country. K-pop has also influenced music in Indonesia.[293] Popularity of Korean culture has increased continuously in Indonesia since the early 2000s, starting with the East Asian popular culture boom.[294]

Philippines

 
2NE1 at a press conference in Manila

Korean telenovelas were aired locally in the Philippines starting in 2003, marking a further expansion of the Hallyu wave.[295] K-pop took longer to catch on; it gained popularity through the internet, and through Korean expatriate celebrities like Sandara Park.[citation needed] Super Junior held a concert in the Philippines in 2010.[296]

Vietnam

Vietnam already had numerous contacts with South Korea in the past and even shared a similar political situation, notably the separation in half of both nations. Despite the tragedies of the Vietnam War, the country presently remains welcoming of the Korean influence on the Vietnamese population.[297] Vietnamese pop music, known as V-pop, is heavily influenced by K-pop in terms of music production and music videos.

In 2015, the northern capital city of Hanoi hosted the Music Bank World Tour.[298] In the year of 2018, V Live and RBW Entertainment Vietnam launched special monthly mini-concerts called "V Heartbeat Live", inviting both V-pop and K-pop stars to perform, such as Winner, Momoland, IKon, Sunmi, and more. In the same year, Park Ji-yeon collaborated with a Vietnamese singer, Soobin Hoàng Sơn, releasing Vietnamese and Korean versions of the single "Between Us."[299] K-pop, and Korean culture in general, gained popularity mainly because of the Vietnamese youth.[297]

South Korean entertainment companies are investing and searching for talent in Vietnam. For example, SM Entertainment announced plans for a Vietnamese sub-unit of the Korean boy group NCT, which executive producer Lee Soo-man called "NCT-V", to promote V-pop globally. Lee also said that Vietnamese culture is extremely similar to Korean culture, which is favorable for both countries in terms of global expansion.[300] In 2018, SM Entertainment hosted their annual Global Audition in Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh City for the first time ever.[301] Cube Entertainment held an audition session in 2018.[302] On January 11–13 in 2019, Big Hit Entertainment established a joint venture with entertainment company CJ E&M to host an audition called the "2019 Belift Global Audition."[303] SBS also announced that popular variety show "Running Man" will be getting a Vietnamese version. These are prime examples of hallyu and the rising popularity of K-pop in Vietnam.

South Asia

Bangladesh

Bangladeshi youths, especially teens, have shown great attraction to Korean pop music as they described such songs make them feel better.[304] Starting from 2015, Bangladesh began to participate in an annual event called K-Pop World Music Festival which started in 2011 by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Korea in cooperation with The Korean Broadcasting System (KBS). The objective of the event is not only to bring the Hallyu fans all over the world to South Korea but also to bring people from different countries together in the name of culture.[305]

India

In the Northeast Indian state of Manipur, where separatists have banned Bollywood movies, consumers have turned to Korean popular culture for their entertainment needs. The BBC's correspondent Sanjoy Majumder reported that Korean entertainment products are mostly unlicensed copies smuggled in from neighbouring Burma, and are generally well received by the local population. This has led to the increasing use of Korean phrases in common parlance amongst the young people of Manipur.[306][307][308]

In order to capitalize on the popularity of K-pop in Manipur, many hairdressing salons have offered "Korean-style" cuts based on the hairstyles of K-pop boy bands.[306][307] This wave of Korean popular culture is currently spreading from Manipur to the neighbouring state of Nagaland. K-pop is catching up in various other states of the country and K-pop festivals and competitions draw thousands of fans.[309][310]

Nepal

In Nepal, K-pop gained popularity along with Korean dramas and films. K-pop has become influential in the Nepali music industry and K-pop music videos are often used as an accompaniment to Nepali music on YouTube.[citation needed]

United States

 
BTS on the red carpet at KCON New York 2016

In 2006, Rain held sold-out concerts in New York City and Las Vegas as part of his Rain's Coming World Tour

In 2009, the Wonder Girls became the first K-pop artist to debut on the Billboard Hot 100 singles chart.[311] They went on to join the Jonas Brothers on the Jonas Brothers World Tour 2009. In 2010, they toured 20 cities in the United States, Canada and Mexico, and were named House of Blues "Artist of the Month" for June.[312]

In 2010, SM Entertainment held the SMTown Live '10 World Tour with dates in Los Angeles, Paris, Tokyo, and New York. The same year, during the 8th Annual Korean Music Festival, K-pop artists made their first appearances at the Hollywood Bowl.[313]

Notable K-pop concerts in the United States in 2011 include the KBS Concert at the New York Korea Festival, the K-Pop Masters Concert in Las Vegas, and the Korean Music Wave in Google, which was held at Google's headquarters in Mountain View, California.[314]

 
Rain at the 2011 Time 100 gala at Lincoln Center in New York City

2012 marked a breakthrough year for K-pop in North America.[315][316] At the start of the year, Girls' Generation performed the English version of "The Boys" on the late-night talk show The Late Show with David Letterman and also on the daytime talk show Live! with Kelly, becoming the first Korean musical act to perform on these shows, and the first Korean act to perform on syndicated television in the United States.[317] In the same year, the group formed their first sub-unit, entitled Girls' Generation-TTS, or simply "TTS", composed of members Taeyeon, Tiffany, and Seohyun. The subgroup's debut EP, Twinkle, peaked at #126 on the Billboard 200.[318] In May, SMTown returned to California again with the SMTown Live World Tour III in Anaheim. In August, as part of their New Evolution Global Tour, 2NE1 held their first American concert in the New York Metropolitan Area at the Prudential Center of Newark, New Jersey.[319] In November, as part of their Alive Tour, BigBang held their first solo concert in America, visiting the Honda Center in Los Angeles and the Prudential Center in Newark. The tickets sold out in only a few hours, and additional dates were added.[320] On November 13, the American singer-songwriter Madonna and backup dancers performed "Gangnam Style" alongside Psy during a concert at Madison Square Garden in New York City. Psy later told reporters that his gig with Madonna had "topped his list of accomplishments."[321]

On January 29, 2013, Billboard, one of America's most popular music magazines, launched Billboard K-Town, an online column on its website that covered K-pop news, artists, concerts, and chart information.[322][323][324]

In March of that year, f(x) performed at the K-Pop Night Out at SXSW in Austin, Texas, alongside The Geeks, who represented Korean rock. f(x) was the first K-pop group ever to perform at SXSW.[325] Mnet hosted its Kcon event in NY and LA in July 2016.[326][327]

 
Donika Sterling, an American K-Pop fan diagnosed with Charcot–Marie–Tooth disease, was sponsored to meet her favorite idols in South Korea.[328][329]

In 2017, BTS was nominated for the Top Social Artist Award at the 2017 Billboard Music Awards. Their winning of the award marks the first time a Korean group has won a Billboard Award, and the second time a Korean artist has won the award, after Psy's win in 2013.[330][331] BTS won the award at the 2017, 2018, and 2019 Billboard Music Awards, as well as Top Duo/Group in 2019.[332] They performed at the 2017 American Music Awards and the 2018 Billboard Music Awards, making them one of the first Korean groups to have performed at either awards show.[333][334] BTS's album Love Yourself: Tear reached #1 on the Billboard 200, making it the first Korean act to do so.[335] Additionally, BTS's single "Fake Love" debuted at #10 on the Billboard Hot 100, making them the second Korean artist to chart in the top ten.[336]

On August 21, 2020, BTS' song Dynamite debuted at number 1 on the Billboard Hot 100, making it the first ever single of a Korean artist to top the Billboard chart. Their next single, Life Goes On, also managed to top the chart upon release on November 20, 2020.

Latin America

Many idol groups have loyal fan bases in Latin America.[337][338][339] Since 2009, about 260 fan clubs with a total of over 20,000 and 8,000 active members have been formed in Chile and Peru, respectively.[340][341]

In recent years, an increasing number of K-pop groups have performed in Latin America.[342]

In 2011, the United Cube Concert was held in São Paulo, shortly after the second round of the first K-Pop Cover Dance Festival was held in Brazil, with MBLAQ as judges.[343]

In March 2012, JYJ performed in Chile and Peru. When the group arrived at the Jorge Chávez International Airport in Peru for the JYJ World Tour Concert, they were escorted by airport security officials through a private exit due to safety reasons concerning the large number of fans (over 3,000).[344] At the Explanada Sur del Estadio Monumental in Lima, some fans camped out for days in to see JYJ.[345] In April, Caracol TV and Arirang TV jointly aired a K-pop reality show in Colombia.[346] In September, Junsu became the first K-pop idol to perform solo in Brazil and Mexico, after the Wonder Girls in Monterrey in 2009.[347] The concerts sold out well in advance.[347] That year there were 70 K-pop fan clubs in Mexico, with at least 60,000 members altogether.[348]

In January 2014, Kim Hyung-jun performed in Peru, Chile, and Bolivia, becoming the first K-pop idol to perform in Bolivia.[349] When he arrived in Peru, where the tour began, about 1,000 fans cheered for him, followed him wherever Kim Hyung-joon went, and they caused serious traffic jams.[350] Fans were also seen pitching their tents outside the concert venue for days before the actual concert.[351][352]

In 2013, the boy group Super Junior performed in four South American countries ― Brazil, Argentina, Chile and Peru—as part of its Super Show 5 tour. Additionally, that same year on November 7, it had a show at Mexico City Arena, which attracted over 17,000 fans. Super Junior performed on April 27, 2018, at Mexico City Arena, a stage where various famous Latin American artists such as Ozuna, J Balvin, and Marco Antonio Solís also performed in 2018.[353] NU'EST held concerts in Mexico, Brazil, Chile and Peru in 2014.[342] In 2017, BTS visited Brazil and Chile where it performed as part of the Live Trilogy Episode III, the Wings Tour.[354] On March 11–12, 2017, BTS held concerts in Santiago, Chile, and in Sao Paulo, Brazil, on March 19–20. As rookies, Dreamcatcher visited 4 cities in Brazil as part of their 2017 Fly High world tour,[355] and later returned to Latin America in 2018, visiting Argentina, Chile, Peru, Colombia and Panama as part of their Welcome to the Dream World world tour.[356]

Mexico

Korean media in Mexico experienced a surge in 2002 after Mexican governor, Arturo Montiel Rojas, visited South Korea.[357] From his trip, he brought Korean series, movies, and other programs to Mexico State's broadcasting channel:[358] Televisión Mexiquense (channel 34). Korean dramas exposed the Mexican public to Korean products and spurred interest in other aspects of Korean culture. K-pop began to gain ground in Mexico due to the series the music accompanied. Fans particularly sought out the music of soundtracks respective to Korean dramas that were broadcast.

However, K-pop's arrival to Mexico is also attributed to the influence of Japanese media in Mexico and the introduction of PIU (Pump It Up). The comic convention, La Mole, commenced selling Japanese comics and music and later commenced to sell K-pop. PIUs combined gaming and dancing, introducing the Mexican youth to Korean gaming software and generating interest in Korean music.[359]

 
KCON in Mexico City

K-pop's presence in Mexico can be outlined through the growing number of Korean music acts in the country. In recent years, the number of K-pop concerts in Mexico has risen and branched into other portions of the country. Idol groups, including BigBang and NU'EST, have visited Mexico through their respective world tours. JYJ's Kim Junsu became the first Korean star to perform solo. His concert held in Mexico City sold out in advance.[360] The Music Bank World Tour also brought various acts to the Mexican public. Many of those groups covered widely known songs, such as Exo's cover of Sabor A Mi.

In 2017, Mexico also became the first Latin American country to host KCON. The two-day convention held on March 17–18 brought over 33,000 fans to Arena Ciudad de México.[361] Much like artists during Music Bank, idols covered Spanish songs.

The strength and large number of fan clubs have continuously helped promote and support K-pop across the country. Over 70 fan clubs dedicated to Korean music are present in Mexico, bringing together around 30,000 fans.[362] Although many fan clubs were created around 2003, they achieved a public presence in 2005 when Korea's ex-president Roh Moo Hyun visited Mexico for a meeting with Mexico's ex-president Vicente Fox Quesada. Around 30 Hallyu fan clubs held a "rally" asking Roh to bring actors Jang Dong-gun and Ahn Jae-wook to their country.[363]

Demonstrations have continued into recent years. On May 13, 2013, a large march was held in Mexico City's Zócalo. Called KPOP: Massive March K–Pop Mexico II, it was the second mass march that brought together hundreds of avid K-Pop fans.[364]

However, larger fan club organizations in Mexico receive indirect or direct support from Korean cultural programs. KOFICE (Korea Foundation for International Cultural Exchange)[365] and the Korean Cultural Center, Mexico City often work in conjunction with fan clubs. These larger organizations contain multiple fan clubs within their structure. The three largest are MexiCorea, Hallyu Mexican Lovers, and HallyuMx. Both MexiCorea and Hallyu Mexican Lovers are supported by KOFICE while HallyuMx previously worked with the Korean Cultural Center and the Embassy of the Republic of Korea in Mexico.[359]

Europe

In 2010, both the SMTown Live '10 World Tour and the Super Junior Super Show 4 Tour were held in Paris.

 
K-pop fans in Warsaw holding a South Korean-Polish flag as well as banners of various boy bands

In February 2011, Teen Top performed at the Sala Apolo concert hall in Barcelona. In May, Rain became the first K-pop artist to perform in Germany, during the Dresden Music Festival.[366] JYJ also performed in both Berlin and Barcelona. BigBang flew to Belfast and won the Best Worldwide Act during the 2011 MTV EMAs in Northern Ireland.[367] In Poland, the K-pop Star Exhibition was held in the Warsaw Korean Culture Center.

 
Beast performing at the Beautiful Show in Berlin

In February 2012, Beast held their Beautiful Show in Berlin. According to the Berliner Zeitung, many fans who attended were not just from Germany but also from neighbouring countries such as France and Switzerland.[368] Also in February, the Music Bank World Tour drew more than 10,000 fans to the Palais Omnisports de Paris-Bercy.[369] That year, artists such as Beast and 4Minute performed during the United Cube Concert in London, where the MBC Korean Culture Festival was also held.[370] When Shinee arrived at the London Heathrow Airport for a concert at the Odeon West End in the same year, part of the airport became temporarily overrun by frenzied fans. The reservation system of the Odeon West End crashed for the first time one minute after ticket sales began as the concert drew an unexpectedly large response.[371] At this time, Shinee also held a 30-minute performance at the Abbey Road Studio. The ticket demand for this performance was so high that fashion magazine Elle gave away forty tickets through a lottery, and the performance was also televised in Japan through six different channels.[256] Also in 2012, BigBang won the Best Fan category in the Italian TRL Awards.[372]

In March 2022, KPOP.FLEX took place at Deutsche Bank Park Stadium in Frankfurt, Germany. Over 65,000 fans attended from over 80 different countries.[373]

Russia

K-pop also saw a surge in popularity in Russia. On September 6, 2011, 57 dance teams took part in the K-pop Cover Dance Festival.[374] During the second round of the competition, Shinee flew to Moscow as judges, also performing to Russian fans.[375] The following year, Russian youths launched K-Plus, a Korean culture magazine, and the number of Russian K-pop fans was reported at 50,000.[376]

On February 3, 2014, Park Jung-min became the first ever Korean singer to hold a solo concert in Moscow.[377][378] in club Moscow Hall 600 place with tour "Park Jung Min Reverso Tour."

B.A.P held concerts during their tour "Live On Earth 2016 World Tour" in Adrenaline Stadium and their tour "2017 World Tour 'Party Baby!'" in YotaSpace.[379][380]

On June 6, 2018, Got7 performed in the concert hall Adrenaline Stadium in Moscow for their concert tour "Eyes on You."[381]

On October 7, 2018 Zico during concert tour "King Of the Zungle" performed at the club ГЛАВCLUB Green Concert in Moscow.[382]

On December 8, 2018, on the MTV Russia channel, the project of the mobile operator MTS, MTCamp, was launched (the acronym of their company name and the word amp and at the same time MTV Trainee Camp)[383] the result of which is half a year should be the junior team from 5 members in the style of k-pop.[384] The show is hosted by figure skater Evgenia Medvedeva, a fan of the Korean version of Exo, Exo-K. The show collaborates with the production company Avex Trax.

On July 15, Exo's "Power" and BTS' "Fake Love" were played at the 2018 World Cup Final Match in Russia.[385]

In 2022, the term "K pop" was included in the French dictionary Larousse.[386]

Middle East

K-pop has become increasingly popular across the Middle East over recent years, particularly among younger fans.[387][388][389] In July 2011, Israeli fans met South Korea's Ambassador to Israel, Ma Young-sam, and traveled to Paris for the SMTown Live '10 World Tour in Europe.[390] According to Dr. Nissim Atmazgin, a professor of East Asian Studies at Hebrew University of Jerusalem, "Many young people look at K-pop as culture capital—something that makes them stand out from the crowd." As of 2012, there are over 5,000 K-pop fans in Israel and 3,000 in the Palestinian territories.[391] Some dedicated Israeli and Palestinian fans see themselves as "cultural missionaries" and actively introduce K-pop to their friends and relatives, further spreading the Hallyu wave within their communities.[392]

In 2012, the number of fans in Turkey surpassed 100,000, reaching 150,000 in 2013.[387][393] ZE:A appeared for a fan meet-and-greet session in Dubai and a concert in Abu Dhabi.[394][395] In Cairo, hundreds of fans went to the Maadi Library's stage theater to see the final round of the K-POP Korean Song Festival, organized by the Korean Embassy.[396][397] In January 2018, boy group Exo was invited to Dubai, United Arab Emirates for the Dubai Fountain Show. Their single "Power" was the first K-pop song to be played at the fountain show.[398] In 2019, boy band BTS was invited to perform at King Fahd International Stadium by Crown Prince Mohammed Bin Salman. They are the first boy band to play a solo stadium tour in Saudi Arabia.[399]

Oceania

The K-pop Wave has led to the creation of a number of dance groups that perform dance covers of K-pop music and teach K-pop choreography. In the K-Pop World Festival competition, AO Crew has represented Australia three times—in 2013, 2014, and 2016.[400] Also, another dance cover group, IMI Dance, was the opening show for the RapBeat Show in 2017.[400] Several dance studios provide classes that are based on K-pop choreography. Dance group Crave NV teaches a K-pop class every Saturday at their dance studio in New Zealand.[401] A Sydney-based agency, The academy, began offering K-pop boot camps and other programs in 2016.[402][403]

A number of K-pop idols have hailed from Oceania. Australian-Korean artists include Blackpink's Rosé, ZE:A's Kevin Kim, One Way's Peter Hyun, C-Clown's Rome, Stray Kids' Bang Chan and Felix, EvoL's Hayana, and LEDapple's Hanbyul.[404][400][405]

In 2011, the K-Pop Music Festival at the ANZ Stadium was held in Sydney, featuring Girls' Generation, TVXQ, Beast, Shinee, 4minute, Miss A, 2AM, and MBLAQ.[406] There was also demand for concerts from New Zealand.[407]

In August 2012, NU'EST visited Sydney Harbour and the University of New South Wales, as judges of a K-pop contest being held there. The following year, 4Minute were judges at the same contest in Sydney.[408] In October, Psy toured Australia after his single "Gangnam Style" reached number one in Australia on the ARIA charts.[409]

In May 2016, B.A.P held a concert in Auckland, becoming the first K-Pop group to perform in New Zealand.[410][411]

KCON, an annual K-pop music and cultural convention, was launched for the first time in Australia in September 2017. They are the seventh country to host KCON since 2012.[412] It was held at Qudos Bank Arena, Sydney. The lineup for the event was Pentagon, Wanna One, Girl's Day, Cosmic Girls (WJSN), Exo, SF9, Victon, Monsta X, and UP10TION.[413]

Music shows

Foreign relations

On May 25, 2010, South Korea responded to the alleged North Korean sinking of a navy ship by broadcasting 4Minute's single "HuH" across the DMZ.[414] In response, North Korea affirmed its decision to "destroy" any speakers set up along the border.[415] That year, The Chosun Ilbo reported that the Ministry of National Defense had considered setting up large TV screens across the border to broadcast music videos by several popular K-pop girl groups such as Girls' Generation, Wonder Girls, After School, Kara and 4Minute as part of "psychological warfare" against North Korea.[416] In September 2012, North Korea uploaded a video with a manipulated image of South Korean president Park Geun-hye performing the dance moves of "Gangnam Style." The video labeled her as a "devoted" admirer of the Yusin system of autocratic rule set up by her father, Park Chung Hee.[417][418]

On May 7, 2013, U.S. President Barack Obama cited Psy's "Gangnam Style" as an example of how people around the world are being "swept up by Korean culture—the Korean Wave."[419]

Since the early 2010s, several political leaders have acknowledged the global rise of Korean pop culture, most notably U.S. President Barack Obama, who made an official visit to South Korea in 2012 and mentioned the strong influences of social media networks, adding that it was "no wonder so many people around the world have caught the Korean wave, Hallyu."[420] A few months later, U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon delivered a speech in front of the National Assembly of South Korea, where he noted South Korea's "great global success" in the fields of culture, sports and the arts, before pointing out that the Korean Wave was "making its mark on the world."[421] This occurred a few days after U.S. State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland remarked in a daily press briefing that her daughter "loves Korean pop,"[422] which sparked a media frenzy in South Korea after a journalist from the country's publicly funded Yonhap News Agency arranged an interview with Nuland and described Nuland's teenage daughter as "crazy about Korean music and dance."[423]

In November 2012, the British Minister of State for the Foreign Office, Hugo Swire, addressed a group of South Korean diplomats at the House of Lords, where he emphasized the close ties and mutual cooperation shaping South Korea–United Kingdom relations and added: "As 'Gangnam Style' has demonstrated, your music is global too."[424] In February 2013, the Vice President of Peru, Marisol Espinoza, gave an interview with South Korea's Yonhap News Agency, where she voiced her desire for more South Korean companies to invest in her country and named K-pop as "one of the main factors that made Peruvian people wanting to get to know South Korea more."[425]

According to an article published by the international relations magazine Foreign Policy, the spread of Korean popular culture across Southeast Asia, parts of South America, and parts of the Middle East are illustrating how the gradual cessation of European colonialism is giving way and making room for unexpected soft power outside of the Western world.[426] On the other hand, an article published by The Quietus magazine expressed concern that discussions about Hallyu as a form of soft power seems to bear a whiff of the "old Victorian fear of Yellow Peril."[427]

In August 2016, China proceeded to restrict Korean media, including K-pop, to protest South Korea's of deployment of U.S. THAAD systems.[428][429] The move, which lasted unti 2017, had a negative impact on the shares of Korean talent agencies, although prices later recovered.[428]

On April 1, 2018, North Korean leader Kim Jong-Un hosted a K-pop concert in Pyongyang.[430]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Not to be confused with the pansori story of the same name.

References

  1. ^ "케이팝" (in Korean). from the original on January 13, 2022. Retrieved January 13, 2022.
  2. ^ Hartong, Jan Laurens (2006). Musical terms worldwide: a companion for the musical explorer. Semar Publishers. p. 15. ISBN 978-88-7778-090-4. Retrieved December 5, 2011. Since the 1990s, popular genres like rap, rock and techno house have been incorporated into Korean popular music, setting the trend for the present generation of K-pop, which often emulates American models.
  3. ^ Laurie, Timothy (2016), "Toward a Gendered Aesthetics of K-Pop", Global Glam and Popular Music: Style and Spectacle from the 1970s to the 2000s: 214–231, from the original on November 26, 2021, retrieved April 11, 2016
  4. ^ "케이팝". terms.naver.com. from the original on February 7, 2021. Retrieved October 17, 2019.
  5. ^ . National Library of Korea. Archived from the original on June 2, 2017. Retrieved November 3, 2018.
  6. ^ Cho, Chung-un (March 23, 2012). "K-pop still feels impact of Seo Taiji & Boys". The Korea Herald. from the original on February 1, 2014. Retrieved April 12, 2016.
  7. ^ "The Root of K-Pop: The Influences of Today's Biggest Acts". Billboard. from the original on July 16, 2017. Retrieved July 16, 2017.
  8. ^ "South Korea's pop-cultural exports: Hallyu, yeah!". The Economist. January 25, 2010. from the original on November 5, 2018. Retrieved March 23, 2019.
  9. ^ Choi, JungBong (2014). K-pop – The International Rise of the Korean Music Industry. Maliangkay, Roald. Hoboken: Taylor and Francis. pp. 66–80. ISBN 9781317681809. OCLC 890981690.
  10. ^ Song, Cheol-min (2016). K-pop Beyond Asia. Korea: 길잡이미디어. pp. 37–46. ISBN 9788973755981. from the original on October 20, 2023. Retrieved July 24, 2018.
  11. ^ Kelley, Caitlin (April 3, 2019). "K-Pop Is More Global Than Ever, Helping South Korea's Music Market Grow Into A 'Power Player'". Forbes. from the original on April 3, 2019. Retrieved August 24, 2020.
  12. ^ (PDF). International Federation of the Phonographic Industry. March 23, 2021. Archived from the original (PDF) on March 25, 2021. Retrieved March 23, 2021.
  13. ^ Jung, Sun (2017). "Shifts in Korean television music programmes: Democratization, transnationalization, digitalization". In Tay, Jinna; Turner, Graeme (eds.). Television Histories in Asia: Issues and Contexts. Routledge. ISBN 978-0815355205. from the original on October 20, 2023. Retrieved September 6, 2023.
  14. ^ "20 Years of K-Pop at Billboard". Billboard. October 11, 2019. from the original on April 27, 2020. Retrieved April 18, 2020.
  15. ^ "K-pop Music: For the Eyes or For the Ears?". Seoulbeats. October 1, 2011. from the original on April 12, 2012. Retrieved March 27, 2012.
  16. ^ Rousee-Marquet, Jennifer (November 29, 2012). . La Revue des Médias. Institut national de l'audiovisuel. Archived from the original on November 3, 2013. Retrieved January 25, 2013. K-pop is a fusion of synthesized music, sharp dance routines and fashionable and colorful outfits.
  17. ^ "The Process Of Becoming A K-Pop Idol". creatrip.
  18. ^ a b "NYT Draws Attention to K-Pop Idol-Making Factories". The Chosun Ilbo. from the original on October 29, 2011. Retrieved December 28, 2012.
  19. ^ Yang, Jeff. "Can Girls' Generation Break Through in America?". The Wall Street Journal. from the original on March 4, 2016. Retrieved January 25, 2013. The management firms pay for everything; leading talent house S.M. Entertainment has pegged the cost of rearing a single idol at around $3 million, which for Girls' Generation would be multiplied by nine.
  20. ^ Choi, JungBong and Roald Maliangkay (2015). K-pop – The International Rise of the Korean Music Industry. New York: Routledge. ISBN 9781138775961. from the original on October 20, 2023. Retrieved July 24, 2018.
  21. ^ Doboo Shim (2005). "Hybridity and the rise of Korean popular culture in Asia". National University of Singapore. 28: 25–44. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.489.921. doi:10.1177/0163443706059278. S2CID 204327176.
  22. ^ Eun-Young Jung (2009). (PDF). Southeast Review of Asian Studies. 31. University of California, San Diego: 69–80. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.458.9491. ISSN 1083-074X. Archived from the original (PDF) on April 13, 2014. Retrieved April 13, 2014.
  23. ^ Lyan, Irina (January 2014). "Hallyu across the Desert: K-pop Fandom in Israel and Palestine". Cross-Currents: East Asian History and Culture Review. from the original on November 12, 2020. Retrieved January 19, 2015.
  24. ^ Park, T. K.; Kim, Youngdae (January 15, 2019). "A Brief History of Korean Hip-hop". Vulture. from the original on February 26, 2019. Retrieved February 25, 2019.
  25. ^ a b c d e f g Jin, Dal Yong; Ryoo, Woongjae (December 13, 2012). "Critical Interpretation of Hybrid K-Pop: The Global-Local Paradigm of English Mixing in Lyrics". Popular Music and Society. 37 (2): 113–131. doi:10.1080/03007766.2012.731721. ISSN 0300-7766. S2CID 143689845.
  26. ^ Lindvall, Helienne (April 20, 2011). "Behind the music: What is K-Pop and why are the Swedish getting involved?". The Guardian. London. from the original on September 30, 2013. Retrieved March 27, 2012.
  27. ^ Xu, Tina. "The K-Pop/U.S. Music Connections You Never Knew Existed". Fuse. from the original on July 15, 2018. Retrieved March 7, 2013.
  28. ^ Hampp, Andrew (March 16, 2012). "Secrets Behind K-Pop's Global Success Explored at SXSW Panel". Billboard. from the original on July 4, 2014. Retrieved March 28, 2013. The American hip-hop community's recent interest in K-pop has helped open a lot of doors for other artists and managers Stateside, too.
  29. ^ Chun, Elaine W. (February 2017). "How to drop a name: Hybridity, purity, and the K-pop fan". Language in Society. 46 (1): 57–76. doi:10.1017/S0047404516000828. ISSN 0047-4045.
  30. ^ "[레드 기획]케이팝, 진단이 필요해". h21.hani.co.kr. from the original on November 3, 2018. Retrieved November 3, 2018.
  31. ^ Shin, Hyun-joon. 가요, 케이팝 그리고 너머. from the original on November 26, 2021. Retrieved November 3, 2018.
  32. ^ "K-pop grows on disposable 'fast music'". The Korea Times. April 12, 2011. from the original on December 12, 2013. Retrieved March 27, 2012.
  33. ^ Wang, Amy X. (July 30, 2016). "Hallyu, K-pop! Inside the weirdest, most lucrative global frenzy in music". QUARTZ. from the original on April 11, 2018. Retrieved April 11, 2018.
  34. ^ Lhatoo, Yonden (December 30, 2017). "K-pop is an infectious disease, not a cultural export to be proud of". South China Morning Post. from the original on April 26, 2018. Retrieved April 10, 2018.
  35. ^ Seabrook, John (October 8, 2012). "Factory Girls". The New Yorker. from the original on July 24, 2019. Retrieved April 11, 2018.
  36. ^ "Star producer Teddy's plagiarism controversies drag on". The Korea Herald. January 19, 2018. from the original on April 24, 2023. Retrieved April 25, 2021.
  37. ^ Lindvall, Helienne. "Behind the music: What is K-Pop and why are the Swedish getting involved?". from the original on September 30, 2013. Retrieved December 15, 2016.
  38. ^ Tucci, Sherry (April 2, 2016). "When K-pop culturally appropriates". The Daily Dot. from the original on February 17, 2018. Retrieved April 10, 2018.
  39. ^ "We Need to Talk About K-Pop's Race Problem". Teen Vogue. March 15, 2017. from the original on June 10, 2023. Retrieved September 21, 2023.
  40. ^ "K-pop and Cultural Appropriation: "Cool" Culture". Seoulbeats. August 24, 2012. from the original on March 3, 2018. Retrieved April 10, 2018.
  41. ^ Dahir, Ikran (July 21, 2016). "This K-Pop Girl Group Is Being Accused Of Appropriating Indian Culture". Buzzfeed. from the original on June 15, 2018. Retrieved April 10, 2018.
  42. ^ Anderson, Crystal (January 12, 2013). "Of Misconceptions About Cultural Appropriation in K-pop". High Yellow. from the original on May 7, 2013. Retrieved April 10, 2018.
  43. ^ a b Chace, Zoe (October 12, 2012). "Gangnam Style: Three Reasons K-Pop Is Taking Over The World". NPR. from the original on September 29, 2015. Retrieved December 26, 2012.
  44. ^ "12 Concepts and Styles in K-Pop". The Odyssey Online. February 8, 2016. from the original on November 15, 2018. Retrieved November 15, 2018.
  45. ^ Kallen, Stuart A. (2014). K-Pop: Korea's Musical Explosion. Twenty-First Century Books. p. 37–38. ISBN 9781467720427.
  46. ^ a b Ramstad, Evan. . The Wall Street Journal. Archived from the original on June 6, 2013. Retrieved January 5, 2013. K-pop news sites for the past couple of weeks have seemed to have some new video or bit of Girls-related gossip to chew over once or twice a day. There's been a "drama" teaser and a "dance" teaser (that's the one above) and countdown videos from each of the group's nine members... One of the unique things about album releases by K-pop artists is that they are routinely called 'comebacks' even when there's been no evidence that the musician or group went away or, in the conventional sports usage of the term, experienced a setback or loss.
  47. ^ 정, 준화 (April 9, 2018). "[SC현장] "롤모델은 방탄소년단"...느와르, 벌써 '핫' 한 9인조 (종합)". Sports Chosun (in Korean). from the original on August 13, 2020. Retrieved March 9, 2019.
  48. ^ "유튜브 센세이션, 그루브네이션(Groove Nation)과 인터뷰". from the original on December 28, 2017. Retrieved December 27, 2017.
  49. ^ "K-pop's second wave". from the original on September 23, 2015. Retrieved December 27, 2017.
  50. ^ "K-Pop success for easy choreography". from the original on October 11, 2013. Retrieved December 27, 2017.
  51. ^ a b "K-Pop takes America: how South Korea's music machine is conquering the world". The Verge. October 18, 2012. from the original on October 20, 2012. Retrieved December 27, 2017.
  52. ^ a b c "Inside the Intense Training Centers Where Young Girls Compete to Be K-Pop Stars". Broadly. October 5, 2016. from the original on November 7, 2018. Retrieved October 15, 2018.
  53. ^ a b c . Beyond Hallyu. April 26, 2013. Archived from the original on August 19, 2019. Retrieved October 15, 2018.
  54. ^ a b "[Video] Exploring the art of K-pop dance". January 30, 2018. from the original on January 17, 2020. Retrieved October 17, 2018.
  55. ^ a b Jin, Dal Yong (April 20, 2017). Critical Discourse of K-pop within Globalization. Vol. 1. University of Illinois Press. doi:10.5406/illinois/9780252039973.003.0006. ISBN 9780252098147. from the original on May 7, 2018. Retrieved May 7, 2018.
  56. ^ Lie, John (2012). "What Is the K in K-pop? South Korean Popular Music, the Culture Industry, and National Identity". Korea Observer. 43: 339–63.
  57. ^ a b Lie, John (November 24, 2014). K-pop: popular music, cultural amnesia, and economic innovation in South Korea. Oakland, California. ISBN 9780520958944. OCLC 893686334.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  58. ^ "[Herald Interview] Girls' Generation's stylist caps K-pop fashion industry over years". October 18, 2017. from the original on May 7, 2018. Retrieved May 7, 2018.
  59. ^ "1990s Fashion: Styles, Trends, History & Pictures". www.retrowaste.com. from the original on July 20, 2018. Retrieved May 7, 2018.
  60. ^ a b Kwak, Nojin; Ryu, Youngju (2015). Lee, Sangjoon; Nornes, Abé Mark (eds.). Hallyu 2.0: The Korean Wave in the Age of Social Media. University of Michigan Press. doi:10.3998/mpub.7651262. hdl:10356/143911. ISBN 9780472072521. JSTOR 10.3998/mpub.7651262. from the original on October 20, 2023. Retrieved July 24, 2018.
  61. ^ Shim, Doobo (2006). "Hybridity and the Rise of Korean Popular Culture in Asia". Media, Culture & Society. 28: 29. doi:10.1177/0163443706059278. S2CID 204327176.
  62. ^ Jin, Dal Yong (2016). "Critical Discourse of K-pop within Globalization". In Jin, Dal Yong (ed.). New Korean Wave. Transnational Cultural Power in the Age of Social Media. University of Illinois Press. pp. 111–130. doi:10.5406/illinois/9780252039973.001.0001. ISBN 9780252039973. JSTOR 10.5406/j.ctt18j8wkv.9. from the original on October 20, 2023. Retrieved July 24, 2018.
  63. ^ Kim, Yun (Spring 2012). "K-pop 스타의 패션에 관한 연구" (PDF). Journal of the Korean Society of Fashion Design. 12 (2): 17–37. (PDF) from the original on August 26, 2021. Retrieved March 16, 2018.
  64. ^ "K-pop's slick productions win fans across Asia". Inquirer. September 21, 2011. from the original on December 30, 2011. Retrieved April 2, 2012.
  65. ^ "G-Dragon Voted Best-Dressed Celebrity of the Year". The Chosun Ilbo. December 25, 2012. from the original on January 26, 2017. Retrieved March 2, 2017.
  66. ^ "Jeremy Scott and CL On Moschino, Pop Culture and the Power Of Girls". Papermag. August 26, 2015. from the original on April 7, 2016. Retrieved April 12, 2016.
  67. ^ "Bow Down To The Ultimate Besties Jeremy Scott And CL In 'Paper' Mag". MTV News. from the original on April 23, 2016. Retrieved April 12, 2016.
  68. ^ Oh, Ingyu. "The Globalization of K-pop: Korea's Place in the Global Music Industry": 402. from the original on September 28, 2021. Retrieved January 15, 2020. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  69. ^ "K-Pop Leads Record Earnings from Cultural Exports". The Chosun Ilbo. from the original on October 2, 2012. Retrieved January 26, 2013. A BOK official said the increase "is related to a surge in exports of cultural products amid the rising popularity of K-pop in Europe and the U.S. as well as in Asia."
  70. ^ "Korean Wave Gives Exports a Boost". The Chosun Ilbo. from the original on March 1, 2013. Retrieved January 26, 2013. But for every $100 increase in exports of cultural products themselves, outbound shipments of processed food, clothes, cosmetics and IT products also grew $412 on average.
  71. ^ Rousee-Marquet, Jennifer (November 29, 2012). . Institut national de l'audiovisuel. Archived from the original on November 3, 2013. Retrieved January 25, 2013. The government then identified the cultural industry as the next growth driver. Numerous state research agencies were created and some projects were subsidised in an attempt to boost the nation's cultural industry.
  72. ^ "'Hallyu' to highlight Korea-Indonesia ties in March". Jakarta Post. from the original on January 6, 2013. Retrieved January 26, 2013.
  73. ^ . Visit Korea. Korean Tourism Organization. Archived from the original on March 3, 2017. Retrieved March 2, 2017.
  74. ^ Wagner, Jan-Philipp (May 14, 2014). "The Effectiveness of Soft & Hard Power in Contemporary International Relations". E-International Relations. from the original on May 17, 2014. Retrieved May 14, 2014.
  75. ^ a b Kim, Tae Young; Jin, Dal Young (2016). "Cultural Policy in the Korean Wave: An Analysis of Cultural Diplomacy Embedded in Presidential Speeches" (PDF). International Journal of Communication. 10: 5514–5534. from the original on April 30, 2018. Retrieved November 17, 2018.
  76. ^ "Red Velvet Perform for North Korean Leader Kim Jong-Un in Rare Pyongyang Concert". Billboard. April 2, 2018. from the original on April 2, 2018. Retrieved April 2, 2018. {{cite magazine}}: Unknown parameter |agency= ignored (help)
  77. ^ Baynes, Chris (April 2018). "South Korean pop stars perform first concert in North Korea for more than a decade". The Independent. Independent. from the original on April 1, 2018. Retrieved April 1, 2018.
  78. ^ a b K-Pop: A New Force in Pop Music, pp. 47–79
  79. ^ Shin, Solee I.; Kim, Lanu (December 1, 2013). "Organizing K-Pop: Emergence and Market Making of Large Korean Entertainment Houses, 1980–2010". East Asia. 30 (4): 255–272. doi:10.1007/s12140-013-9200-0. ISSN 1874-6284. S2CID 153779858. from the original on October 20, 2023. Retrieved April 30, 2022.
  80. ^ "JPNews 일본이 보인다! 일본뉴스포털!". Jpnews.kr. December 30, 2010. from the original on October 13, 2013. Retrieved January 13, 2012.
  81. ^ "고가마사오". Doosan Encyclopedia. from the original on October 20, 2023. Retrieved January 13, 2012.
  82. ^ "Why Korean girl groups conquering music charts are nothing new". South China Morning Post. May 23, 2018. from the original on January 22, 2023. Retrieved January 22, 2023.
  83. ^ "The History Of K-Pop Has A Lot To Do With Politics". NPR News. July 10, 2021. from the original on October 20, 2023. Retrieved July 10, 2021.
  84. ^ a b c d e f g h . A.Side. Archived from the original on November 13, 2022. Retrieved November 6, 2018.
  85. ^ a b K-Pop: A New Force in Pop Music, pp. 50–54
  86. ^ a b c 대중가요. Encyclopedia of Korean Culture (in Korean). Academy of Korean Studies. from the original on March 2, 2013. Retrieved December 7, 2012.
  87. ^ . psychemusic.org. Archived from the original on July 28, 2013. Retrieved February 27, 2012.
  88. ^ (in Hungarian). Quart.hu. September 12, 2011. Archived from the original on March 8, 2012. Retrieved February 27, 2012.
  89. ^ a b K-Pop: A New Force in Pop Music, pp. 54–57
  90. ^ a b K-Pop: A New Force in Pop Music, pp. 60–61
  91. ^ . KBS World. Archived from the original on January 7, 2015. Retrieved December 10, 2012.
  92. ^ Hartong, Jan Laurens (2006). Musical terms worldwide: a companion for the musical explorer. Semar Publishers. p. 15. ISBN 978-88-7778-090-4. Since the 1990s, popular genres like rap, rock and techno house have been incorporated into Korean popular music... which often emulates American models.
  93. ^ a b c d e K-Pop: A New Force in Pop Music, pp. 63–66
  94. ^ a b MacIntyre, Donald (July 29, 2002). . Time. Archived from the original on July 28, 2002. Retrieved July 3, 2012.
  95. ^ Gingold, Naomi (January 8, 2019). "Why The Blueprint For K-Pop Actually Came From Japan". National Public Radio. from the original on May 13, 2021. Retrieved March 22, 2020.
  96. ^ a b Shim, Doobo. "Hybridity and the rise of Korean popular culture in Asia". Media, Culture & Society: 29.
  97. ^ a b Oh, Ingyu (2013). "The Globalization of K-pop: Korea's Place in the Global Music Industry". Korea Observer. 44 (3): 389–409. from the original on September 28, 2021. Retrieved July 4, 2018.
  98. ^ "Critical Interpretation of Hybrid K-Pop: The Global-Local Paradigm of English Mixing in Lyrics". Popular Music & Society. 37: 120.
  99. ^ "Critical Interpretation of Hybrid K-Pop: The Global-Local Paradigm of English Mixing in Lyrics". Popular Music & Society. 37: 119.
  100. ^ Walsh, John. Korean Wave. pp. 20–21.
  101. ^ a b Hong, Euny (August 5, 2014). The Birth of Korean Cool: How One Nation Is Conquering the World Through Pop Culture (1st ed.). New York: Picador. ISBN 978-1-250-04511-9. OCLC 881387185.
  102. ^ Ryoo, Woongjae (2009). "Globalization, or the logic of cultural hybridization: The case of the Korean wave". Asian Journal of Communication. 19 (2): 139. doi:10.1080/01292980902826427. S2CID 144161463.
  103. ^ "Breaking & Entering: The Wonder Girls". Billboard. November 20, 2009. from the original on March 17, 2013. Retrieved April 12, 2016.
  104. ^ "K-Pop Hot 100: BIGBANG Is Unstoppable". Billboard. March 14, 2012. from the original on January 18, 2021. Retrieved April 12, 2016.
  105. ^ Oliver, Christopher (February 10, 2012). "South Korea's K-pop takes off in the west". Financial Times. from the original on November 12, 2020. Retrieved October 11, 2012.
  106. ^ Constant, Linda (September 23, 2012). "K-Pop Soft Power for the SK Government". Huffington Post. from the original on March 2, 2018. Retrieved February 20, 2020.
  107. ^ "South Korea pushes its pop culture abroad". BBC. November 8, 2011. from the original on September 6, 2012. Retrieved September 7, 2012.
  108. ^ South Korea's soft power: Soap, sparkle and pop August 29, 2017, at the Wayback Machine The Economist (August 9, 2014). Retrieved on August 12, 2014.
  109. ^ . MTV K. June 26, 2006. Archived from the original on July 5, 2006. Retrieved September 29, 2008.
  110. ^ a b K-Pop: A New Force in Pop Music, pp. 67–71
  111. ^ "K-pop: the story of the well-oiled industry of standardized catchy tunes". INA Global. from the original on November 3, 2013. Retrieved May 2, 2013.
  112. ^ "South Korea's K-pop craze lures fans and makes profits". BBC. April 26, 2011. from the original on October 6, 2013. Retrieved May 2, 2013. According to South Korea's Trade and Investment Agency, income from cultural exports like pop music and TV shows has been rising by about 10% a year. In 2008, it was worth almost $2bn.
  113. ^ "K-pop: the story of the well-oiled industry of standardized catchy tunes". INA Global. from the original on November 3, 2013. Retrieved May 2, 2013. It accounts for most of K-pop albums' overseas sales. As of 2008, Japan accounted for 68 percent of Korea's total music industry exports in 2008, while the Chinese and U.S. markets accounted for only 11.2 percent and 2.1 percent, respectively.
  114. ^ "TVXQ rakes in over $92 million in overseas concert revenues". Allkpop. from the original on May 5, 2013. Retrieved May 3, 2013.
  115. ^ "How Korean culture stormed the world". South China Morning Post. from the original on September 15, 2017. Retrieved September 14, 2017.
  116. ^ "Gangnam Style hits one billion views on YouTube". BBC News. December 21, 2012. from the original on January 15, 2014. Retrieved April 12, 2016.
  117. ^ "Gangnam Style statue built in South Korea's Seoul". BBC News. November 6, 2015. from the original on April 23, 2016. Retrieved April 12, 2016.
  118. ^ Psy – Gangam Style (강남스타일) M/V, July 15, 2012, from the original on December 3, 2020, retrieved December 20, 2020
  119. ^ CHOE SANG-HUN; MARK RUSSELL (March 4, 2012). "Bringing K-Pop to the West". The New York Times. from the original on March 22, 2012. Retrieved September 12, 2012.
  120. ^ "K-Pop Idols And The Formidable American Debut – KultScene". KultScene. October 22, 2014. from the original on June 6, 2016. Retrieved April 12, 2016.
  121. ^ Benjamin, Jeff (March 6, 2015). "Will a K-Pop Girl Group Take Over the U.S. Soon (Or Ever)?". Billboard. from the original on July 20, 2018. Retrieved July 20, 2018.
  122. ^ Liu, Marian. "K-pop band BTS beats US stars to win Billboard Music Award". CNN. from the original on September 13, 2017. Retrieved September 13, 2017.
  123. ^ Gore, Sydney. "Watch BTS make their official U.S. television debut at the American Music Awards". The FADER. from the original on November 20, 2017. Retrieved March 10, 2018.
  124. ^ . Rolling Stone. May 27, 2018. Archived from the original on May 28, 2018. Retrieved June 10, 2018.
  125. ^ Lefkowitz, Andy (November 8, 2019). "Lortel-Winning Immersive Musical KPOP Eyes Broadway Run; Talent Search Launched". Broadway.com. from the original on November 9, 2022. Retrieved April 4, 2022.
  126. ^ Sullivan, Lindsey (April 4, 2022). "Kevin Woo, Min Young Lee & More to Join Luna in KPOP on Broadway". Broadway.com. from the original on November 9, 2022. Retrieved April 4, 2022.
  127. ^ a b "The big 3 of Korean pop music and entertainment". The Dong-a Ilbo. July 26, 2011. from the original on October 11, 2013. Retrieved February 5, 2012.
  128. ^ "United Asia Management to hold a 'talent meeting' at the 16th 'Busan International Film Festival'". Allkpop. September 8, 2011. from the original on January 2, 2012. Retrieved March 1, 2012.
  129. ^ "Global Star Agency, United Asia Management". HanCinema. May 6, 2011. from the original on August 26, 2011. Retrieved March 1, 2012.
  130. ^ . uam.asia. Archived from the original on March 13, 2016. Retrieved April 12, 2016.
  131. ^ . Bloomberg Businessweek. Archived from the original on March 2, 2010. Retrieved March 29, 2013.
  132. ^ . Bloomberg Businessweek. Archived from the original on July 23, 2013. Retrieved March 29, 2013.
  133. ^ . Bloomberg Businessweek. Archived from the original on July 23, 2013. Retrieved March 29, 2013.
  134. ^ . Time. August 26, 2010. Archived from the original on August 29, 2010. Retrieved April 3, 2013. DFSB Kollective was the first company to begin direct distribution of Korean music acts on iTunes, in 2009. It began with more than 50 Korean artists in the alternative, hip-hop and electronica genres; now there are hundreds of Korean artists available in the online music store.
  135. ^ a b 이, 동연 (January 11, 2012). "케이팝에 왜 열광하지?"…케이팝의 두 얼굴. Pressian (in Korean). from the original on March 2, 2013. Retrieved March 11, 2012.
  136. ^ . Associated Press. Archived from the original on January 13, 2013. Retrieved December 30, 2012. South Koreans pay less than $10 a month for a subscription to a music service that allows them to download hundreds of songs or have unlimited access to a music streaming service. That makes the cost of a downloaded song about 10 cents on average. The average price for streaming a song is 0.2 cents.
  137. ^ "South Korea's Greatest Export: How K-Pop's Rocking the World". Time. March 7, 2012. from the original on September 16, 2012. Retrieved April 28, 2013.
  138. ^ Kwak, Donnie. "PSY's 'Gangnam Style': The Billboard Cover Story". Billboard. from the original on February 18, 2013. Retrieved November 2, 2012. The Korean music industry grossed nearly $3.4 billion in the first half of 2012, according to Billboard estimates, a 27.8% increase from the same period last year.
  139. ^ "BTS tops Billboard 100 list: How K-pop helped Korea improve its economy". The Economic Times. July 30, 2019. ISSN 0013-0389. Retrieved January 29, 2024.
  140. ^ (PDF) (Report). 2019. Archived from the original (PDF) on June 6, 2020. Retrieved January 28, 2024.
  141. ^ Abramovitch, Seth (October 2, 2019). "BTS Is Back: Music's Billion-Dollar Boy Band Takes the Next Step". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved January 29, 2024.
  142. ^ "S.M. Entertainment (041510:KOSDAQ): Financial Statements". from the original on June 1, 2022. Retrieved May 11, 2021.
  143. ^ "JYP Entertainment (041510:KOSDAQ): Financial Statements". from the original on June 2, 2022. Retrieved May 11, 2021.
  144. ^ "YG Entertainment (041510:KOSDAQ): Financial Statements". from the original on October 9, 2021. Retrieved May 11, 2021.
  145. ^ "EXO-K's 'Overdose' EP Enters Billboard 200". Billboard. from the original on April 24, 2021. Retrieved June 4, 2014.
  146. ^ "BTS make history as they become the first Korean band to enter the Official Albums Chart with Wings". Official Charts. The Official UK Charts Company. October 18, 2016. from the original on February 9, 2017. Retrieved February 3, 2017.
  147. ^ Benjamin, Jeff. "BTS' 'Wings' Sets New U.S. Record for Highest-Charting, Best-Selling K-Pop Album". Billboard. from the original on October 19, 2016. Retrieved February 20, 2020.
  148. ^ "BTS' "Spring Day," "Not Today" Reach Top 20 On US iTunes Sales Chart; "You Never Walk Alone" Also Rising". Headline Planet. February 12, 2017. from the original on March 25, 2017. Retrieved March 25, 2017.
  149. ^ Copsey, Rob. "Foo Fighters secure their fourth Number 1 on the Official Albums Chart with Concrete and Gold". from the original on September 25, 2017. Retrieved September 22, 2017.
  150. ^ Thomas, C. (2018). BTS: The K-Pop Group That Finally Won America Over. Forbes.Com, 5.
  151. ^ Trust, Gary (August 31, 2020). "BTS' 'Dynamite' Blasts in at No. 1 on Billboard Hot 100, Becoming the Group's First Leader". Billboard. from the original on September 1, 2020. Retrieved September 4, 2020.
  152. ^ Zellner, Xander (June 25, 2018). "Blackpink Makes K-Pop History on Hot 100, Billboard 200 & More With 'DDU-DU DDU-DU'". Billboard. from the original on October 4, 2019. Retrieved August 8, 2018.
  153. ^ "Lee Soo Man: Taking Korean Pop Culture Global". Stanford Graduate School of Business. from the original on April 12, 2020. Retrieved April 12, 2016.
  154. ^ Seabrook, John (October 8, 2012). "Factory Girls". The New Yorker. ISSN 0028-792X. from the original on July 24, 2019. Retrieved April 12, 2016.
  155. ^ Flatley, Joseph (October 18, 2012). "K-Pop takes America: how South Korea's music machine is conquering the world". The Verge. from the original on October 20, 2012. Retrieved October 19, 2012.
  156. ^ K-Pop: A New Force in Pop Music, p. 39
  157. ^ Leong, Melissa (August 2, 2014). "How Korea became the world's coolest brand". Financial Post. from the original on January 8, 2015. Retrieved January 18, 2015.
  158. ^ Woo, Jaeyeon (May 3, 2012). "Journey to K-Pop Star, 'I Am.' – Korea Real Time". The Wall Street Journal. from the original on June 23, 2012. Retrieved September 17, 2012.
  159. ^ "KPop's Frontiers: How Does the Big 3 Teach Foreign Languages to Their Trainees?". Kpopstarz.com. February 7, 2012. from the original on February 10, 2012. Retrieved March 1, 2012.
  160. ^ Herman, Tamar (May 7, 2018). "Temporary K-Pop Acts Like Wanna One, JBJ & I.O.I Are the New Norm". Billboard. from the original on January 18, 2019. Retrieved March 9, 2019.
  161. ^ "Sung Si Kyung to feature debut process of idol stars through 'Mydol'". from the original on March 3, 2016. Retrieved March 28, 2012.
  162. ^ . CJ E&M enewsWorld. Archived from the original on March 29, 2016. Retrieved March 19, 2016.
  163. ^ Sung, So-young (January 21, 2016). "TV competition aims to form a K-pop supergroup". Korea JoongAng Daily. from the original on January 26, 2016. Retrieved January 25, 2016.
  164. ^ Kim, Ji-young. "Produce 101' girl group to be named 'IOI'". Kpop Herald. from the original on April 24, 2016. Retrieved April 2, 2016.
  165. ^ Ko, Dong-hwan (April 4, 2016). "101 girls down to 'I.O.I'". The Korea Times. from the original on August 4, 2017. Retrieved April 7, 2016.
  166. ^ Herman, Tamar (December 11, 2017). "K-Pop Audition Shows Produce Big Results, But Cause Concerns Over Industry's Future". Billboard. from the original on November 19, 2020. Retrieved July 20, 2018.
  167. ^ Hong, Dam-young (October 25, 2017). "Yet another idol competition show 'The Unit' unveiled". The Korea Herald. from the original on July 20, 2018. Retrieved July 20, 2018.
  168. ^ "Survival Reality Shows". thekrazemag.com. May 24, 2021. from the original on March 25, 2023. Retrieved March 25, 2023.
  169. ^ a b "The dark side of South Korean pop music". BBC. June 14, 2011. from the original on December 31, 2011. Retrieved January 6, 2012.
  170. ^ a b c d "South Korean Law to Protect Young K-Pop Stars From Sexualization, Overwork". The Hollywood Reporter. July 8, 2014. from the original on July 12, 2014. Retrieved April 13, 2016.
  171. ^ "Will TVXQ Stay Together?". KBS World. October 28, 2009. from the original on September 17, 2023. Retrieved October 28, 2009.
  172. ^ "한경 "SM, 非정상적 활동강요" July 22, 2011, at the Wayback Machine Star News. December 22, 2009. Retrieved May 1, 2012 (in Korean)
  173. ^ a b South Korea Passes Law Regulating K-Pop Industry August 4, 2014, at the Wayback Machine WonderingSound.com (July 8, 2014). Retrieved on August 3, 2014.
  174. ^ Park, Gil-Sung (2013). "Manufacturing Creativity: Production, Performance". Korea Journal. 53 (4): 14–33. doi:10.25024/kj.2013.53.4.14.
  175. ^ "New contractual changes cause concern within music industry". Korea Boo. March 9, 2017. from the original on March 10, 2017. Retrieved May 6, 2018.
  176. ^ "South Korea Passes new regulations for unfair trainee contracts". Korea Boo. March 7, 2017. from the original on March 9, 2017. Retrieved May 6, 2018.
  177. ^ Lee, David D. (June 17, 2022). "'No money in it': why has BTS been silent on discrimination in South Korea?". South China Morning Post. from the original on March 6, 2023. Retrieved March 6, 2023.
  178. ^ a b Power, John (July 20, 2011). "Should a law ban sexualizing of K-pop teens?". The Korea Herald. from the original on April 11, 2018. Retrieved April 10, 2018.
  179. ^ Oakeley, Lucas (April 24, 2018). "How K-pop became a propaganda tool". The Outline. from the original on April 26, 2018. Retrieved April 25, 2018.
  180. ^ a b Wang, Amy X. (February 21, 2019). "K-Pop Has So Many 'Lookalikes' That the Government Stepped In". Rolling Stone. from the original on March 14, 2023. Retrieved March 14, 2023.
  181. ^ a b Kim, Jae-heun (February 18, 2019). "TV guidelines on 'look-alike' K-pop singers spark controversy". The Korea Times. from the original on March 14, 2023. Retrieved March 14, 2023.
  182. ^ a b c Herman, Tamar (April 23, 2018). "2018 Sees K-pop Stars Addressing Mental Health Stressors in Industry". Billboard. from the original on July 25, 2020. Retrieved December 5, 2019.
  183. ^ a b c Kil, Sonia (December 19, 2017). "Jonghyun Suicide Note Points to Brutal Pressure of Korean Spotlight". Variety. from the original on May 28, 2019. Retrieved January 27, 2019.
  184. ^ "History of K-pop: 1992–1995, The Beginning". seoulbeats. January 10, 2016. from the original on January 4, 2019. Retrieved January 27, 2019.
  185. ^ Park, Ju-won (November 28, 2019). . Time. Archived from the original on November 28, 2019. Retrieved December 5, 2019.
  186. ^ Kwon, Jake (December 2, 2019). "After another K-pop death, spotlight turns to difficulties faced by industry's 'perfect' stars". CNN. from the original on December 1, 2019. Retrieved December 5, 2019.
  187. ^ "Are Jonghyun, Sulli and Goo Hara victims of the K-pop industry?". South China Morning Post. December 18, 2019. from the original on December 18, 2019. Retrieved February 24, 2021.
  188. ^ Wang, Fan; Ku, Yuna (April 21, 2023). "Moonbin: Star's death renews scrutiny on pressures of K-pop". BBC News. from the original on April 23, 2023. Retrieved April 22, 2023.
  189. ^ a b Tai, Crystal (March 29, 2020). "Exploding the myths behind K-pop". The Observer. ISSN 0029-7712. from the original on November 15, 2020. Retrieved March 24, 2023.
  190. ^ "A Korean Idol's Life: Sweat and Sleepless Nights". Korean JoongAng Daily. February 18, 2010. Archived from the original on January 11, 2013. Retrieved February 2, 2012.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  191. ^ . MTV Korea. Archived from the original on August 18, 2011. Retrieved January 30, 2012.
  192. ^ "ソロでの活躍がめざましい各グループのマンネたち" June 29, 2017, at the Wayback MachineHwaiting! Hallyu News & Magazine. Retrieved February 23, 2013
  193. ^ "Winners from the 21st Seoul Music Awards". Allkpop. January 19, 2012. from the original on March 2, 2013. Retrieved January 1, 2013.
  194. ^ "Big Bang first to achieve 'Perfect All Kill' in 2012". Allkpop. February 26, 2012. from the original on February 27, 2012. Retrieved February 26, 2012.
  195. ^ "IU achieves a certified all-kill with 'The Red Shoes'". Allkpop. October 9, 2013. from the original on November 2, 2013. Retrieved October 31, 2013. An Instiz certified all-kill ("AK") occurs when an individual song sweeps all of South Korea's major music charts simultaneously, placing first on both the real-time and daily charts.
  196. ^ a b c "K-Pop Culture Glossary". Soompi. 2012. Archived from the original on January 11, 2013. Retrieved January 31, 2012.
  197. ^ Mahr, Krista (March 7, 2012). "K-Pop: How South Korea's Great Export Is Rocking the World". Time. from the original on September 16, 2012. Retrieved September 17, 2012.
  198. ^ "Latest K-Pop Invasion: The Fans". The Wall Street Journal. June 15, 2012. from the original on August 25, 2019. Retrieved December 19, 2012.
  199. ^ "JYJ First K-Pop Band to Perform Solo in Europe". The Chosun Ilbo. October 13, 2011. from the original on August 14, 2021. Retrieved December 19, 2012.
  200. ^ Mukasa, Edwina (December 15, 2011). "Bored by Cowell pop? Try K-pop". The Guardian. London. from the original on July 8, 2017. Retrieved January 25, 2013. The result, according to a survey conducted by the Korean Culture and Information Service, is that there are an estimated 460,000 Korean-wave fans across Europe, concentrated in Britain and France, with 182 Hallyu fan clubs worldwide boasting a total of 3.3m members.
  201. ^ Bruner, Raisa (October 8, 2019). "The Mastermind Behind BTS Explains the K-Pop Group's Success". Time. from the original on January 8, 2020. Retrieved March 20, 2023.
  202. ^ Ramstad, Evan. "Behind K-pop's Pop: The Work of Fans". The Wall Street Journal. from the original on August 18, 2012. Retrieved January 26, 2013. Others handle things like publishing lyrics, translations of lyrics or spreading news about K-pop groups and stars. To get a feel for this micro-business, we asked the operators of a K-pop lyrics translation site called pop!gasa.com to provide a glimpse of their role in the Korean Wave. Our takeaway: it's as competitive as any business.
  203. ^ "What's Your Name?: A Compendium of K-pop Fandoms". seoulbeats. May 19, 2014. from the original on April 25, 2016. Retrieved April 12, 2016.
  204. ^ "Official Fan Clubs and Fan Colors". Kpop Lists. from the original on April 3, 2016. Retrieved April 12, 2016.
kpop, redirects, here, other, uses, kpop, disambiguation, some, this, article, listed, sources, reliable, please, help, improve, this, article, looking, better, more, reliable, sources, unreliable, citations, challenged, removed, march, 2021, learn, when, remo. KPOP redirects here For other uses see KPOP disambiguation Some of this article s listed sources may not be reliable Please help improve this article by looking for better more reliable sources Unreliable citations may be challenged and removed March 2021 Learn how and when to remove this message K pop Korean 케이팝 RR keipap short for Korean popular music 1 is a form of popular music originating in South Korea as part of South Korean culture 2 It includes styles and genres from around the world such as pop hip hop R amp B rock jazz gospel reggae electronic dance folk country disco and classical on top of its traditional Korean music roots 3 The term K pop became popular in the 2000s especially in the international context The Korean term for domestic pop music is gayo 가요 歌謠 which is still widely used within South Korea 4 5 While K pop can refer to all popular music or pop music from South Korea it is colloquially often used in a narrower sense for any Korean music and artists associated with the entertainment and idol industry in the country regardless of the genre contradictory K popStylistic originsKorean music electronic pop dance gospel rhythm and blues hip hop jazz folk disco classical country rock reggaeCultural origins1940s South Korea The more modern form of the genre originally termed rap dance emerged with the formation of the hip hop boy band Seo Taiji and Boys in 1992 Their experimentation with different styles and genres of music and integration of foreign musical elements helped reshape and modernize South Korea s contemporary music scene 6 Modern K pop idol culture began in the 1990s as K pop idol music grew into a subculture that amassed enormous fandoms of teenagers and young adults 7 8 After a slump in early idol music from 2003 TVXQ and BoA started a new generation of K pop idols that broke the music genre into the neighboring Japanese market and continue to popularize K pop internationally today 9 10 With the advent of online social networking services and South Korean TV shows the current spread of K pop and South Korean entertainment known as the Korean Wave is seen not only in East Asia but also throughout the world gaining an international audience In 2018 K pop experienced significant growth and became a power player marking a 17 9 increase in revenue growth As of 2019 Korean popular music is ranked at number six among the top ten music markets worldwide according to the International Federation of the Phonographic Industry s Global Music Report 2019 with BTS and Blackpink cited as artists leading the market growth 11 In 2020 K pop experienced a record breaking year when it experienced a 44 8 growth and positioned itself as the fastest growing major market of the year 12 Contents 1 Etymology 2 Characteristics 2 1 Audiovisual content 2 2 Idol trainee 2 3 Hybrid genre and transnational values 2 3 1 Use of English phrases 2 3 2 Criticism of hybrid identity 2 4 Marketing 2 5 Dance 2 6 Fashion 2 7 Government support 3 History 3 1 Origins of Korean popular music 3 2 1940s 1960s Arrival of Western culture 3 3 Late 1960s and 1970s Hippie and folk influences 3 4 1980s The era of ballads 3 5 1990s Development of modern K pop 3 6 21st century Rise of Hallyu 4 Industry 4 1 Agencies 4 2 Sales and market value 4 3 Record charts 4 4 Trainee system 4 5 Television 4 6 Criticism of industry practices 4 6 1 Corruption 4 6 2 Poor living and working conditions 4 6 3 Tight control over public image 4 6 4 Sexualization and pressure on appearance 4 6 5 Mental health 5 Culture 5 1 Industry specific expressions 5 2 Appeal and fan base 5 2 1 Obsession 5 3 Events 5 3 1 International tours 5 3 2 Conventions and music festivals 5 4 Social media 5 4 1 YouTube 5 4 2 Twitter 5 4 3 Facebook 5 4 4 TikTok 6 Popularity and impact 6 1 East Asia 6 1 1 Japan 6 1 2 China 6 1 3 North Korea 6 1 4 Taiwan 6 2 Southeast Asia 6 2 1 Singapore 6 2 2 Malaysia 6 2 3 Indonesia 6 2 4 Philippines 6 2 5 Vietnam 6 3 South Asia 6 3 1 Bangladesh 6 3 2 India 6 3 3 Nepal 6 4 United States 6 5 Latin America 6 5 1 Mexico 6 6 Europe 6 6 1 Russia 6 7 Middle East 6 8 Oceania 7 Music shows 8 Foreign relations 9 See also 10 Notes 11 References 12 Bibliography 13 External linksEtymologyThe term K pop is the Korean equivalent of the Japanese J pop 13 Which first known use of the term occurred on Billboard in the October 9 1999 edition at the end of an article titled S Korea To Allow Some Japanese Live Acts by Cho Hyun jin then a Korea correspondent for the magazine which used it as a broad term for South Korean pop music Cho himself however is not sure if he coined the term since some articles stated that the word K pop was already being used by music industry insiders even though he had never heard it personally 14 CharacteristicsAudiovisual content Although K pop generally refers to South Korean popular music and the associated industry some consider it to be an all encompassing genre exhibiting a wide spectrum of musical and visual elements 15 unreliable source The French Institut national de l audiovisuel defines K pop as a fusion of synthesized music sharp dance routines and fashionable colorful outfits 16 Songs typically consist of one or a mixture of pop rock hip hop R amp B and electronic music genres Idol trainee See also Industry The mainstream method is to become an idol trainee through agency auditions online auditions or street casting 17 South Korean management agencies offer binding contracts to potential artists sometimes at a young age Trainees live together in a regulated environment and spend many hours a day learning how to sing dance speak foreign languages and gain other skills in preparation for their debut This robotic system of training is often criticized by Western media outlets 18 In 2012 The Wall Street Journal reported that the cost of training one Korean idol under SM Entertainment averaged US 3 million 19 Hybrid genre and transnational values nbsp Search volume for K pop for the period 2008 2012 according to Google Trends K pop is a cultural product that features values identity and meanings that go beyond their strictly commercial value 20 It is characterized by a mixture of modern Western sounds and African American influences including sounds from Hip hop R amp B Jazz black pop soul funk techno disco house and Afrobeats with a Korean aspect of performance including synchronized dance moves formation changes and the so called point choreography consisting of hooking and repetitive key movements It has been remarked that there is a vision of modernization inherent in Korean pop culture 21 For some the transnational values of K pop are responsible for its success A commentator at the University of California San Diego has said that contemporary Korean pop culture is built on transnational flows taking place across beyond and outside national and institutional boundaries 22 Some examples of the transnational values inherent in K pop that may appeal to those from different ethnic national and religious backgrounds include a dedication to high quality output and presentation of idols as well as their work ethic and polite social demeanor made possible by the training period 23 Use of English phrases nbsp Hip hop artist Yoon Mi rae and her husband rapper Tiger JK of Drunken Tiger are credited with popularizing American style hip hop in Korea 24 nbsp g o d at the I Am Korea concert 2015 Modern K pop is marked by its use of English phrases Jin Dal Yong of Popular Music and Society wrote that the usage may be influenced by Korean Americans and or Koreans who studied in the U S who take full advantage of their English fluency and cultural resources that are not found commonly among those who were raised and educated in Korea 25 Korean pop music from singers or groups who are Korean American such as Fly to the Sky g o d Rich Yoo Seung jun and Drunken Tiger has both American style and English lyrics These Korean American singers music has a different style from common Korean music which attracts the interest of young people 25 Increasingly foreign songwriters and producers are employed to work on songs for K pop idols such as will i am and Sean Garrett 26 Foreign musicians including rappers such as Akon Kanye West Ludacris and Snoop Dogg have also featured on K pop songs 27 28 Entertainment companies help to expand K pop to other parts of the world through a number of different methods Singers need to use English since the companies want to occupy markets in the other parts of Asia which enables them to open the Western market in the end Most K pop singers learn English because it is a common language in the world of music but some singers also learn other foreign languages such as Japanese to approach the Japanese market 25 Similarly increasing numbers of K pop bands use English names rather than Korean ones This allows songs and artists to be marketed to a wider audience around the world 25 However the use of English has not guaranteed the popularity of K pop in the North American market For some commentators the reason for this is because the genre can be seen as a distilled version of Western music making it difficult for K pop to find acceptance in these markets 25 Furthermore Western audiences tend to place emphasis on authenticity and individual expression in music which the idol system can be seen as suppressing 18 According to Elaine W Chun s research even though hybridity appears more and more often in K pop and sometimes may even make fans admire K pop stars more because it is fresh new and interesting it is hard to change those who believe in a perfect ideal for pure linguistic This means that the original form of language is still difficult to alter 29 Artist names song titles and lyrics have exhibited significant growth in the usage of English words No singers in the top fifty charts in 1990 had English in their names people who worked in the Korean music industry viewed using Korean names as standard In 1995 most popular singers such as Kim Gun mo Park Mi kyung Park Jin young Lee Seung chul and Byun Jin sub still used Korean names but fourteen of the singers and groups in the top fifty used English names including DJ DOC 015B Piano and Solid After the 1997 financial crisis the government stopped censoring English lyrics and Korea started to have a boom in English Since the late 1990s English usage in singers names song titles and lyrics has grown quickly Seventeen singers in the top fifty charts used English names in 2000 and thirty one did so in 2005 In 2010 forty one singers used English names among the top fifty songs but usually three or four singers and groups had more than one or two songs on the chart simultaneously Korean names e g Baek Ji young Seo In young and Huh Gak are seen less frequently and many K pop singers have English names e g IU Sistar T ara GD amp TOP Beast and After School Notably until the early 1990s musicians with English names would transliterate them into hangul but now singers would use English names written with the Roman alphabet 25 In 1995 the percentage of song titles using English in the top 50 charts was 8 This fluctuated between 30 in 2000 18 in 2005 and 44 in 2010 An example of a Korean song with a large proportion of English lyrics is Kara s Jumping which was released at the same time in both Korea and Japan to much success 25 Criticism of hybrid identity There have been critical responses in South Korea regarding the identity of the genre since its ascendance Some of the notable music critics in the region have criticized K pop as an industrial label mainly designed to promote the national brand in the global market from the beginning and argued that it was not formed spontaneously as a pop culture but created with the orchestrated plan led by the government with commercial considerations although in fact the genre has practically no ties with traditional Korean identity There is the perspective that the name of the genre was derived from J pop 30 31 K pop has at times faced criticisms from journalists who perceive the music to be formulaic and unoriginal 32 33 34 35 Some K Pop groups have been accused of plagiarizing Western music acts as well as other musical acts 36 In addition K pop has been criticized for its reliance on English phrases with critics dubbing the use of English in titles meaningless 37 K pop groups have been regularly accused of cultural appropriation of cultures such as African American culture especially due to the frequent use of cornrows and bandanas in idol groups on stage styling 38 Some have used blackface and racial slurs as part of their performances 39 K Pop groups have also been accused of appropriating Native American 40 unreliable source and Indian cultures 41 However debate exists about whether the borrowing of cultural elements from cultures outside of Korea indeed constitutes cultural appropriation or if this cultural appropriation is negative at all Scholar Crystal S Anderson writes that appropriating elements of a culture by taking them out of their original context and using them in a completely different way does not automatically constitute negative cultural appropriation 42 Marketing Many agencies have presented new idol groups to an audience through a debut showcase which consists of online marketing and television broadcast promotions as opposed to radio 43 Groups are given a name and a concept along with a marketing hook These concepts are the type of visual and musical theme that idol groups utilize during their debut or comeback 44 Concepts can change between debuts and fans often distinguish between boy group concepts and girl group concepts Concepts can also be divided between general concepts and theme concepts such as cute or fantasy New idol groups will often debut with a concept well known to the market to secure a successful debut Sometimes sub units or sub groups are formed among existing members Two example subgroups are Super Junior K R Y which consists of Super Junior members Kyuhyun Ryeowook and Yesung and Super Junior M which became one of the best selling K pop subgroups in China 45 Online marketing includes music videos posted to YouTube in order to reach a worldwide audience 43 Prior to the actual video the group releases teaser photos and trailers Promotional cycles of subsequent singles are called comebacks even when the musician or group in question did not go on hiatus 46 Dance source source source source source source source source The dance for Gangsta an electronic dance track by Noir includes point choreography 47 Dance is an integral part of K pop When combining multiple singers the singers often switch their positions while singing and dancing by making prompt movements in synchrony a strategy called formation changing 자리바꿈 jaribakkum 48 The K pop choreography 안무 按舞 anmu often includes the so called point dance 포인트 안무 pointeu anmu referring to a dance made up of hooking and repetitive movements within the choreography that matches the characteristics of the lyrics of the song 49 50 Super Junior s Sorry Sorry and Brown Eyed Girls Abracadabra are examples of songs with notable point choreography To choreograph a dance for a song requires the writers to take the tempo into account 51 According to Ellen Kim a Los Angeles dancer and choreographer a fan s ability to do the same steps must also be considered Consequently K pop choreographers have to simplify movements 51 nbsp 24K performing choreography in a practice studio The training and preparation necessary for K pop idols to succeed in the industry and dance successfully are intense Training centers like Seoul s Def Dance Skool develop the dance skills of youth in order to give them a shot at becoming an idol 52 Physical training is one of the largest focuses at the school as much of a student s schedule is based around dance and exercise 52 The entertainment labels are highly selective so few make it to fame Students at the school must dedicate their lives to the mastery of dance in order to prepare for the vigorous routines performed by K pop groups This of course means that the training must continue if they are signed Companies house much larger training centers for those who are chosen 52 An interview with K pop choreographer Rino Nakasone lends insight into the process of creating routines According to Nakasone her focus is to make dance routines that are flattering for the dancers but also complementary to the music 53 Her ideas are submitted to the entertainment company as video recordings done by professional dancers 53 Nakasone mentions that the company and the K pop artists themselves have input on a song s choreography 53 Choreographer May J Lee gives another perspective telling that her choreography often starts out as expressing the feeling or the meaning of the lyrics 54 What starts out as small movements turns into a full dance that is better able to portray the message of the song 54 Fashion See also Fashion in South Korea The emergence of Seo Taiji and Boys in 1992 paved the way for the development of contemporary K pop groups 55 The group revolutionized the Korean music scene by incorporating rap and American hip hop conventions into their music 56 This adoption of Western style extended to the fashions worn by the boy band the members adopted a hip hop aesthetic 57 Seo and bandmates outfits for the promotional cycle of I Know included vibrant streetwear such as oversized T shirts and sweatshirts windbreakers overalls worn with one strap overalls worn with one pant leg rolled up and American sports team jerseys citation needed Accessories included baseball caps worn backwards bucket hats and do rags citation needed As K pop was born of post Seo trends 57 many acts that followed Seo Taiji and Boys adopted the same fashion style Deux and DJ DOC can also be seen wearing on trend hip hop fashions such as sagging baggy pants sportswear and bandanas in their performances citation needed With Korean popular music transforming into youth dominated media manufactured teenage idol groups began debuting in the mid and late 1990s 55 wearing coordinated costumes 58 that reflected the popular fashion trends among youth at the time Hip hop fashion considered the most popular style in the late 90s 59 remained with idol groups H O T and Sechs Kies wearing the style for their debut songs The use of accessories elevated the idol s style from everyday fashion to performance costume like ski goggles worn either around the head or neck headphones worn around the neck and oversized gloves worn to accentuate choreography moves were widely used citation needed H O T s 1996 hit Candy exemplifies the level of coordination taken into account for idol s costumes as each member wore a designated color and accessorized with face paint fuzzy oversized mittens visors bucket hats and earmuffs and used stuffed animals backpacks and messenger bags as props nbsp Members of Baby Vox performing in 2004 While male idol groups costumes were constructed with similar color schemes fabrics and styles the outfits worn by each member still maintained individuality 60 On the other hand female idol groups of the 90s wore homogeneous costumes often styled identically 60 The costumes for female idols during their early promotions often focused on portraying an innocent youthful image 61 S E S s debut in 1997 Cause I m Your Girl and Baby Vox s second album 1998 hit Ya Ya Ya featured the girls dressed in white outfits To My Boyfriend by Fin K L shows idols in pink schoolgirl costumes and One and End of Chakra presented Hindu and African style costumes To portray a natural and somewhat saccharine image the accessories were limited to large bows pompom hair ornaments and hair bands With the maturation of female idol groups and the removal of bubblegum pop in the late 1990s the sets of female idol groups focused on following the fashion trends of the time many of which were revealing pieces The latest promotions of the girl groups Baby Vox and Jewelry exemplify these trends of hot pants micro miniskirts crop tops peasant blouses transparent garments and blouses on the upper part of the torso citation needed As K pop became a modern hybrid of Western and Asian cultures starting from the late 2000s 62 fashion trends within K pop reflected diversity and distinction as well Fashion trends from the late 2000s to early 2010s can largely be categorized under the following 63 Street focuses on individuality features bright colors mix and match styling graphic prints and sports brands such as Adidas and Reebok Retro aims to bring back nostalgia from the 1960s to 1980s features dot prints and detailed patterns Common clothing items include denim jackets boot cut pants wide pants hair bands scarves and sunglasses Sexy highlights femininity and masculinity features revealing outfits made of satin lace fur and leather Common clothing items include mini skirts corsets net stockings high heels sleeveless vests and see through shirts Black amp White emphasizes modern and chic symbolizes elegance and charisma mostly applied to formal wear Futurism commonly worn with electronic and hip hop genres features popping color items metallic details and prints promotes a futuristic outlook nbsp 2NE1 performing I Don t Care an instance of street style nbsp Wonder Girls performing Nobody an instance of retro style nbsp A publicity shot of 2PM an instance of sexy style nbsp MBLAQ performing Y an instance of black amp white style K pop has a significant influence on fashion in Asia where trends started by idols are followed by young audiences 64 Some idols have established status as fashion icons such as G Dragon 65 and CL who has repeatedly worked with fashion designer Jeremy Scott being labeled his muse 66 67 According to professor Ingyu Oh K pop emphasizes thin tall and feminine looks with adolescent or sometimes very cute facial expressions regardless of whether they re male or female singers 68 Government support nbsp The Bank of Korea has attributed the rapid surge in cultural exports since 1997 to the increased worldwide popularity of K pop 69 The South Korean government has acknowledged benefits to the country s export sector as a result of the Korean Wave it was estimated in 2011 that a US 100 increase in the export of cultural products resulted in a US 412 increase in exports of other consumer goods including food clothes cosmetics and IT products 70 and thus have subsidized certain endeavours 71 Government initiatives to expand the popularity of K pop are mostly undertaken by the Ministry of Culture Sports and Tourism which is responsible for the worldwide establishment of Korean Cultural Centers South Korean embassies and consulates have also organized K pop concerts outside the country 72 and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs regularly invites overseas K pop fans to attend the annual K Pop World Festival in South Korea 73 In addition to reaping economic benefits from the popularity of K pop the South Korean government has been taking advantage of the influence of K pop in diplomacy In an age of mass communication soft power pursuing one s goals by persuading stakeholders using cultural and ideological power is regarded as a more effective and pragmatic diplomatic tactic than the traditional diplomatic strategy hard power obtaining what one wants from stakeholders through direct intimidation such as military threat and economic sanctions 74 Cultural diplomacy through K pop is a form of soft power 75 An example of the South Korean government effort in diplomacy through K pop is the Mnet Asian Music Awards MAMA a K pop music award ceremony Park Geun hye the Korean president at the time delivered the opening statement at the 2014 MAMA which was held in Hong Kong and sponsored by the Korean Small and Medium Business Administration SMBA This event was considered a deliberate endeavor by the Korean government to support Korean cultural industries in order to strengthen the nation s international reputation and political influence 75 Another example of cultural diplomacy is K pop performances in North Korea Prior to 2005 South Korean pop singers occasionally gave performances in North Korea 76 After an interval of more than a decade approximately 190 South Korean performers including well known musicians Red Velvet Lee Sun hee Cho Yong pil and Yoon Do hyun performed in Pyongyang North Korea on March 31 and April 3 2018 Kim Jong Un was present in the audience 77 HistoryOrigins of Korean popular music nbsp Oppaneun punggakjaengi 오빠는 풍각쟁이 lit Older brother is a street musician source source track track track A 1938 trot song by Kim Song gyu and Park Yeong ho Sung by Park Hyang rim Problems playing this file See media help The history of Korean popular music can be traced back to 1885 when an American missionary Henry Appenzeller began teaching American and British folk songs at a school These songs were called changga 창가 唱歌 and they were typically based on a popular Western melody sung with Korean lyrics For example the song Oh My Darling Clementine became known as Simcheongga 심청가 沈淸歌 note 1 During the Japanese colonial period 1910 1945 the popularity of changga songs rose as Koreans expressed their feelings against Japanese oppression through music One of the most popular songs was Huimangga 희망가 希望歌 The Japanese confiscated the existing changga collections and published lyrics books of their own 78 third party source needed K pop was represented by H O T in the early days and it was mostly fanatical flashy and showed the rebellious psychology of young people in the emotional aspects Most of the songs are relatively fast paced and have a strong sense of rhythm which is suitable for dancing They often sing and dance when they perform and the choreography urbanance is a very important factor in popularity 79 The first known Korean pop album was I Pungjin Sewol 이 풍진 세월 이 風塵 歲月 lit This Tumultuous Time by Park Chae seon and Lee Ryu saek in 1925 which contained popular songs translated from Japanese The first pop song written by a Korean composer is thought to be Nakhwayusu 낙화유수 落花流水 lit Fallen Blossoms on Running Water sung by Lee Jeong suk in 1929 78 In the mid 1920s Japanese composer Masao Koga mixed traditional Korean music with Gospel music that American Evangelists introduced in the 1870s This type of music became known as Enka in Japan and later in Korea developed into Trot 트로트 teuroteu t ŭrot ŭ 80 81 In the 1930s singers such as Wang Su bok Lee Eun pa and the Jeogori Sisters popularised folk music further 82 1940s 1960s Arrival of Western culture nbsp Marilyn Monroe entertaining American soldiers in Korea in 1954 After the Korean Peninsula was partitioned into North and South following its liberation in 1945 from Japanese occupation Western culture was introduced into South Korea on a small scale with a few Western styled bars and clubs playing Western music After the Korean War 1950 1953 U S troops remained in South Korea causing American and world culture to spread in South Korea and Western music to gradually become more accepted 83 Prominent figures of American entertainment like Nat King Cole Marilyn Monroe and Louis Armstrong held USO shows in South Korea for the U S Army 84 These visits prompted attention from the Korean public In 1957 the American Forces Korea Network radio started its broadcast spreading the popularity of Western music American music started influencing Korean music as pentatony was gradually replaced by heptachords and popular songs started to be modeled after American ones 85 In the 1960s the development of LP records and improvements in recording technology led to the pursuit of diverse voice tones 86 Open auditions were also held to recruit musicians to perform at the U S army clubs Since South Korea was impoverished after the Korean War skilled Korean singers regarded performing for the U S troops as a good means to earn money Many singers sang for the American troops usually in dedicated clubs the number of which rose to 264 They performed various genres like country music blues jazz and rock amp roll The South Korean economy started blooming and popular music followed the trend spread by the first commercial radio stations Korean cinema also began to develop and Korean musicians began performing to wider audiences 84 When Beatlemania reached the shores of Korea the first local rock bands appeared the first of which is said to be Add4 a band founded in 1962 87 The first talent contest for rock bands in Seoul was organized in 1968 citation needed Some Korean singers gained international popularity In 1959 the Kim Sisters went to Las Vegas and became the first Korean artist to release an album in the U S pop market Their cover of Charlie Brown reached No 7 on the Billboard Single Chart The Kim Sisters also appeared on TV programs and radio programs and held tours in the U S and Europe They made 25 appearances on The Ed Sullivan Show more than American stars like Patti Page and Louis Armstrong who appeared 18 times each 84 The Kim Sisters Yoon Bok hee and Patti Kim were the first singers to debut in such countries as Vietnam and the United States The Kim Sisters became the first Korean group to release an album in the United States They also performed in Las Vegas 88 Han Myeong suk ko s 1961 song The Boy in The Yellow Shirt was covered by French singer Yvette Giraud and was also popular in Japan 85 In the 1960s the Korean artists such as Shin Joong hyun Pearl Sisters ko and Patti Kim who previously performed for the U S army clubs reached out to the Korean public In the mid 1960s due to the influence of the legendary British group The Beatles there was a rise of group sound in South Korea for example Add4 and the Key Boys ko Add4 Korea s first rock group was formed by Shin Joong hyun in 1962 and produced Korea s first rock song The Woman in the Rain which is a form of light rock reminiscent of the early Beatles Shin Joong hyun was so instrumental in the development of Korean rock music that he is regarded as the godfather of Korean rock in South Korea During this period with the rise of Western pop music and Korean rock music trot was no longer predominant in South Korea However trot singers like Lee Mi ja still managed to attract a certain level of popularity with famous songs like Camellia Lady 동백 아가씨 冬柏 아가씨 dongbaek agassi During the 1950s and 60s Western pop music Korean rock music and trot co existed in South Korea 84 Late 1960s and 1970s Hippie and folk influences At the end of the 1960s Korean pop music underwent another transformation More and more musicians were university students and graduates who were heavily influenced by American culture and lifestyle including the hippie movement of the 1960s and made lighthearted music unlike their predecessors who were influenced by war and Japanese oppression 86 The younger generation opposed the Vietnam War as much as American hippies did which resulted in the Korean government banning songs with more liberal lyrics In spite of this folk influenced pop remained popular among the youth and local television channel MBC organized a music contest for university students in 1977 This was the foundation of several modern music festivals 89 The younger generation born after the 1950s had grown up under the U S influence and preferred the U S lifestyle giving rise to the youth culture which was expressed through long hair jeans acoustic guitars and folk music The folk music of that time is made up of melodies sung plainly with the singing accompanied by a guitar or two A majority of the folk music at that time was initiated by elite university students and those who graduated from prestigious schools Like the activists of the U S student movement they turned to folk music as the preferred music of politicized youth who staged demonstrations against the authoritarian government In turn the government banned folk music due to its association with the students anti government movements In the 1970s the Park Chung Hee government banned American pop music and Korean rock music for their association with sex and drugs Shin Joong hyun the godfather of Korean rock music was imprisoned in 1975 due to a marijuana scandal In order to bolster its anti Japanese credentials the government also banned trot songs because of its Japanese style 왜색 倭色 waesaek given the influence of Japanese enka songs on trot However President Park actually embraced trot One of the leading figures of the era was Hahn Dae soo who was raised in the United States and influenced by Bob Dylan Leonard Cohen and John Lennon Han s song Mul jom juso Korean 물 좀 주소 lit Give me water became iconic among young people in Korea His daring performances and unique singing style often shocked the public and later he was banned from performing in Korea Han moved to New York City and pursued his musical career there only returning to his home country in the 1990s 89 Other notable singers of the period include Song Chang sik Jo Young nam and Yang Hee eun 84 failed verification In the 1970s DJs also started to become popular 86 1980s The era of ballads Main article Korean ballad The 1980s saw the rise of ballad singers after Lee Gwang jo ko s 1985 album You re Too Far Away to Get Close to 가까이 하기엔 너무 먼 당신 sold more than 300 000 copies Other popular ballad singers included Lee Moon se 이문세 and Byun Jin sub 변진섭 nicknamed the Prince of Ballads One of the most sought after ballad composers of the era was Lee Young hoon 이영훈 whose songs were compiled into a modern musical in 2011 titled Gwanghwamun Yeonga 광화문 연가 lit Gwanghwamun sonata 90 The Asia Music Forum was launched in 1980 with representatives from five different Asian countries competing in the event Korean singer Cho Yong pil won first place and went on to have a successful career performing in Hong Kong and Japan His first album Chang bakkui yeoja 창 밖의 여자 lit Woman Outside the Window was a hit and he became the first Korean singer to take to the stage at Carnegie Hall in New York Cho s musical repertoire included rock dance trot and folk pop 90 Despite his early association with rock music as an electric guitarist in a rock band Cho Yong pil s initial popularity came from his trot songs which were popular in both South Korea and Japan For example in 1976 his trot song Please Return to Pusan Port 돌아와요 부산항에 was a great hit Despite the temporary setback due to his involvement in a marijuana incident in 1977 he managed to bounce back with the song The Woman Outside the Window which reached a record breaking sales of 1 million in 1980 In 1988 he sang Seoul Seoul Seoul in three languages Korean English and Japanese to celebrate the 1988 Seoul Olympic Games 84 1990s Development of modern K pop nbsp DJ DOC one of the popular hip hop trios of the 1990s 91 In the 1990s Korean pop musicians incorporated partially Europop and mostly American popular music styles such as hip hop rock jazz and electronic dance in their music 92 In 1992 the emergence of Seo Taiji and Boys marked a revolutionary moment in the history of K pop The trio debuted on MBC s talent show on April 11 1992 with their song I Know and got the lowest rating from the jury 93 however the song and their self titled debut album became so successful that it paved the way for other songs of the same format The song s success was attributed to its new jack swing inspired beats and memorable chorus as well as innovative lyrics which dealt with the problems of Korean society A wave of successful hip hop and R amp B artists followed in their footsteps including Yoo Seung jun Jinusean Solid Deux 1TYM and Drunken Tiger 93 In 1995 South Korean record producer Lee Soo man who was educated in the U S and was exposed to the trends in American music founded the entertainment company SM Entertainment Former Seo Taiji amp Boys member Yang Hyun suk formed YG Entertainment in 1996 and Park Jin young established JYP Entertainment in 1997 The huge popularity of Seo Taiji amp Boys among teenagers shifted the focus of the Korean music industry to teen centred pop music Idol bands of young boys or girls were formed to cater to a growing teenage audience 93 H O T was one of the first idol boybands debuting in 1996 after rigorous training encompassing not only singing and dancing skills but also etiquette attitude language and the ability to deal with the media 84 Their song Candy presented a softer and gentler form of pop music with upbeat and cheerful melodies accompanied by energetic dance steps a formula adopted by many subsequent idol groups The group was hugely successful with many fans copying the group members hairstyles and fashion Merchandise affiliated with the group ranging from candy to perfume were sold as well Their success was followed by that of young male and female idol groups like Sechs Kies S E S Fin K L NRG Baby Vox Diva Shinhwa and g o d which also became popular among the younger generation 84 94 During the late 1990s talent agencies began to market K pop stars by implementing an idol business model used in J pop 95 where talents are selected and trained to appeal to a global audience through formal lessons or through residency programs 96 97 98 The extensive and intensive process includes physical and language training a program sometimes called abusive and potential talents are also selected for height being much taller on average than their Japanese counterparts Sociology professor Ingyu Oh has explained regarding looks K pop emphasizes thin tall and feminine looks with adolescent or sometimes very cute facial expressions regardless of whether they re male or female singers 97 Over time Korean American artists have become successful due to their fluency 99 These efforts increase the marketability of K pop while also increasing South Korean soft power which has become an important part of official policy 100 The 1990s saw a reactionary movement against mainstream popular culture with the rise of illegal underground music clubs and punk rock bands such as Crying Nut 93 The 1997 Asian financial crisis not only prompted South Korean entertainers to look for new markets with H O T releasing a Mandarin language album 93 and Diva releasing an English language album in Taiwan 96 but also prompted South Korea s leaders to focus on building the nation s cultural influence through music 101 The government poured millions into building infrastructure technology and a specific department within its Ministry of Culture for K pop Regulations were passed on karaoke bars for example to protect the interests of idols 101 21st century Rise of Hallyu Main article Korean Wave K pop s increasing popularity forms part of Hallyu or the Korean Wave the popularity of South Korean culture in other countries 102 K pop is increasingly making appearances on Western charts such as Billboard 103 104 The development of online social media has been a vital tool for the Korean music industry in reaching a wider audience 105 As part of the Korean Wave K pop has been embraced by the South Korean government as a tool for projecting South Korea s soft power abroad particularly towards overseas youth 106 107 In August 2014 the prominent British news magazine The Economist dubbed Korean pop culture Asia s foremost trendsetter 108 nbsp Girls Generation at SM Town Live NY in 2011 By the beginning of the 21st century the K pop market had slumped and early K pop idol groups that had seen success in the 90 s were on the decline H O T disbanded in 2001 while other groups like Sechs Kies S E S Fin K L Shinhwa and g o d became inactive by 2005 Solo singers like BoA and Rain grew in success However the success of the boy band TVXQ after its debut in 2003 marked the resurgence of idol groups to Korean entertainment and the growth of K pop as part of Hallyu The birth of second generation K pop was followed with the successful debuts of SS501 2005 Super Junior 2005 BigBang 2006 Wonder Girls 2007 Girls Generation 2007 Kara 2007 Shinee 2008 2NE1 2009 4Minute 2009 T ara 2009 f x 2009 and After School 2009 During the beginning of the 21st century K pop idols began receiving success elsewhere in Asia in 2002 Baby Vox s single Coincidence 우연 uyeon became popular in many Asian countries after it was released and promoted during the World Cup in South Korea BoA became the first K pop singer to reach No 1 on the Japanese Oricon music chart 109 and shortly afterwards Rain had a sold out concert to an audience of 40 000 fans in Beijing 110 In 2003 Baby Vox topped the Chinese music charts with their Chinese single I m Still Loving You from their third album Devotion the first idol group to do so creating a huge fanbase in China They also charted in various music charts in Thailand TVXQ marked the rise of K pop boy bands in Japan In 2008 their single Purple Line made TVXQ the first foreign boy band and second Korean artist after BoA to top the Oricon music chart Since the mid 2000s a huge portion of the East Asian music market has been dominated by K pop 111 In 2008 South Korea s cultural exports including television dramas and computer games rose to US 2 billion maintaining an annual growth rate of over 10 112 That year Japan accounted for almost 68 of all K pop export revenues ahead of China 11 2 and the United States 2 1 113 The sale of concert tickets proved to be a lucrative business TVXQ s Tohoshinki Live Tour in Japan sold over 850 000 tickets at an average cost of US 109 each generating a total of US 92 6 million in revenues 114 Elsewhere in the world the genre has rapidly grown in success 115 especially after Psy s Gangnam Style music video was the first YouTube video to reach one billion views achieving widespread coverage in mainstream media 116 117 As of December 2020 the video has 3 9 billion views 118 Several failed attempts have been made by entertainment companies to break into the English language market including BoA Wonder Girls Girls Generation and CL 119 120 121 BTS won Top Social Artist at the 2017 Billboard Music Awards in 2017 making them the first K pop group to win a BBMA 122 Their performance of the song DNA at the American Music Awards the first AMA performance by a K pop group also led to the song peaking at number 67 on the Billboard Hot 100 123 The following year BTS became the first K pop group to reach number one on the Billboard 200 with Love Yourself Tear 124 The K pop industry is active in New York City hosting numerous concerts in the city as well as being home to K pop musicians The musical KPOP opened off Broadway in 2017 and moved to Broadway in 2022 125 126 IndustryAgencies K pop has spawned an entire industry encompassing music production houses event management companies music distributors and other merchandise and service providers The three biggest companies in terms of sales and revenue are SM Entertainment YG Entertainment and JYP Entertainment often referred to as the Big Three 127 These record labels also function as representative agencies for their artists They are responsible for recruiting financing training and marketing new artists as well as managing their musical activities and public relations Currently the agency with the greatest market share is S M Entertainment 127 In 2011 together with Star J Entertainment AM Entertainment and Key East the Big Three companies founded the joint management company United Asia Management 128 129 130 Total revenues of K pop record labels in USD million Year ofestablishment Record label 2008 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 Source 1995 SM Entertainment 42 5 87 1 129 241 268 286 9 290 314 329 551 592 521 131 1996 YG Entertainment 16 5 51 8 70 3 96 9 116 6 156 3 170 286 4 321 5 242 228 229 132 1997 JYP Entertainment 3 1 9 1 17 8 13 5 21 4 48 5 50 56 69 5 94 111 139 129 133 Sales and market value In 2009 DFSB Kollective became the first distributor of K pop on iTunes 134 In 2011 1 100 albums were released in South Korea The hip hop genre had the most representation at two thirds of the total albums 135 One third of the albums were from a variety of other genres including rock modern folk and crossover 135 In 2012 the average cost of obtaining a K pop song in South Korea amounted to US 0 10 for a single download or 0 002 when streamed online 136 In the first half of 2012 according to Billboard the Korean music industry grossed nearly US 3 4 billion a 27 8 increase on the previous year and was recognized by Time magazine as South Korea s Greatest Export 137 138 In 2017 it is estimated that the K pop music industry has a revenue of 5 billion 139 In 2019 the International Federation of the Phonographic Industry IFPI listed South Korea as the 6th largest music market in the world 140 Moreover BTS alone accounted for 4 65 billion of South Korea s GDP 141 Stock Market Summary 5 year period Beginning of the year summary record labels in KRW Record label 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 source SM Entertainment 26 000 KRW 33 700 KRW 52 200 KRW 37 200 KRW 29 900 KRW 142 JYP Entertainment 4 880 KRW 13 350 KRW 30 250 KRW 24 200 KRW 37 800 KRW 143 YG Entertainment 28 400 KRW 27 600 KRW 48 900 KRW 28 400 KRW 45 100 KRW 144 Record charts Main article Circle Digital Chart Further information Billboard K Town Korean record charts include the Circle Digital Chart and the Billboard K pop Hot 100 Some K pop records have appeared on the Oricon Albums Chart of Japan and the Billboard Hot 100 of the United States In 2009 singer Hwangbo entered the European music industry for a short period when she released the single R2song reaching 1 on the world s largest dance music site JunoDownload being successful in the United Kingdom Europe as well as Korea becoming the first Asian artist to achieve it In May 2014 Exo became the third K pop act to enter the Billboard 200 that year after 2NE1 Girls Generation and Wonder Girls were the first K Pop act to chart on Billboard 200 145 In October 2016 BTS s album Wings becomes the first Korean album to chart in the UK Albums Chart reaching 62 146 and the highest charting and best selling K pop album in the Billboard 200 147 In February 2017 BTS landed their fourth album You Never Walk Alone at 61 on the Billboard 200 148 In September 2017 BTS landed at 14 on the UK Album Charts with their new album Love Yourself Her 149 Love Yourself Tear debuted at number one on the US Billboard 200 with 135 000 album equivalent units including 100 000 pure album sales becoming BTS highest charting and first number one album in the US the first K pop album to top the US albums chart and the highest charting album by an Asian act 150 Fake Love peaked at number ten on the Billboard Hot 100 that same week becoming the band s highest reaching song on the chart as well as their first in the top ten Overall only twenty non English songs have reached the top ten with Fake Love being the first for a K Pop group The single also debuted at number seven on Billboard s Streaming Songs chart with 27 4 million streams earned in the week ending May 24 giving BTS its first top ten on the chart and making Fake Love the first K pop song to land on top ten since Psy s Hangover feat Snoop Dogg in 2014 In August 2020 their song Dynamite topped the Billboard Hot 100 in its opening week becoming the group s first number one single in the US and their fourth top 10 entry BTS became the first K pop act in Hot 100 history to debut at number one 151 In June 2018 YG Entertainment s girl group Blackpink became the first K pop girl group to hit within the top 50 of Billboard 200 album chart their first mini album SQUARE UP debuted at No 40 Their title song Ddu Du Ddu Du charted at No 55 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart making it the highest charting song and the first full Korean language song by a K pop girl group 152 Since then they have beaten their own record with Ice Cream peaking at 13 on the Billboard Hot 100 Trainee system See also Slave contracts By convention in modern K pop trainees go through a rigorous training system for an undetermined amount of time before debut This method was popularized by Lee Soo man founder of S M Entertainment 153 as part of a concept labelled cultural technology 154 The Verge described this as an extreme system of artist management 155 According to the CEO of Universal Music s Southeast Asian branch the Korean idol trainee system is unique in the world 156 Because of the training period which can last for many years and the significant amount of investment that agencies put towards their trainees the industry is very serious about launching new artists Trainees may enter an agency through auditions or be scouted and once recruited are given accommodation and classes commonly singing dancing rapping and foreign languages such as Mandarin English and Japanese while they prepare for debut Young trainees sometimes attend school at the same time There is no age limit to become a trainee and no limit to the duration one can spend as a trainee 157 158 159 Television nbsp The 11 member temporary girl group I O I was assembled through the reality television program Produce 101 160 The Korean music industry has spawned numerous related reality TV shows including talent shows such as Superstar K and K pop Star specialist rap competition Show Me the Money and its female counterpart Unpretty Rapstar and many survival shows which commonly pit trainees against each other in order to form a new idol group Examples of survival shows include Jellyfish Entertainment s MyDOL which formed boy group VIXX 161 162 YG Entertainment s WIN Who Is Next which formed boy group Winner and its follow up MIX amp MATCH which formed iKon JYP Entertainment s Sixteen which formed girl group Twice Starship Entertainment s No Mercy which formed boy group Monsta X Cube Entertainment s Pentagon Maker which formed boy group Pentagon Mnet s Produce 101 which formed girl groups I O I and Iz One and boy groups Wanna One and X1 163 164 165 Duble Kick s Finding Momo Land which formed girl group Momoland Mnet s Idol School which formed girl group Fromis 9 Belift Lab s I Land which formed boy group Enhypen MBC s My Teenage Girl which formed girl group Classy and Mnet s Girls Planet 999 which formed girl group Kep1er The rise in these shows which often involves larger agencies contracting smaller agencies trainees into project groups and taking a larger portion of the revenues has led to criticisms over the former monopolizing the industry 166 167 However these shows provide an opportunity for idol trainees to showcase their charms and talents to gain a following even before their debut This could serve as a stepping stone for these individuals to start growing their fanbase early or even receive offers from larger companies even if they do not make the final lineup of the survival show itself 168 Criticism of industry practices Corruption In 2002 Time magazine reported that Korean television producers such as Hwang Yong woo and Kim Jong jin had been arrested for accepting under the table payments guaranteeing TV appearances to aspiring singers and musicians in a bid to tackle systemic corruption in South Korea s music business Companies investigated included SidusHQ and SM Entertainment 94 Poor living and working conditions K pop management companies have also been criticized for exploitation of idols through overwork and restrictive contracts described as slave contracts in a BBC report 169 According to The Hollywood Reporter Korea s entertainment business is notoriously improvisational and unregulated In demand K pop stars many of whom are teenage idols have been known to rehearse and perform without sleep 170 In July 2009 S M Entertainment was taken to court by TVXQ and a Super Junior member who alleged that their working conditions had led to adverse health effects 171 172 The court decision in the TVXQ lawsuit determined their contract with S M Entertainment void and resultantly the Fair Trade Commission released contract templates to regulate industry conditions 169 In 2014 South Korea passed a law to regulate its music industry protecting idols aged under 19 from unhealthy labor practices and overtly sexualized performances 173 and guaranteeing them the basic rights to learn rest and sleep 170 Failure to comply with these regulations may lead to the equivalent of a US 10 000 fine 170 Industry professionals such as SM Entertainment s CEO Kim Young min have defended the system arguing that individuals trained within the system are no different than sic typical middle or high school kids who go to after school programs to cram for college entrance exams Kim has also argued that there is a need to consider the expenses incurred by the company during the trainee period including facilities equipment costumes and virtually everything the trainees need 174 On March 7 2017 the South Korea Fair Trade Commission KFTC passed new regulations in order to protect trainee idols from unfair terms and working conditions Prior to these regulations trainee idols at eight idol agencies were not permitted to seek contracts at any other agency while at training Moreover agencies were able to terminate a trainee contract at any time for any reason The Fair Trade Commission states that they believe these changes will result in a more just contract culture within the entertainment industry between trainee and agency The Ministry of Culture applied these regulations to all existing agencies throughout 2018 175 Some of the concerns raised by the idol agencies over these regulations include the risk of a trainee at one agency going undercover at another agency to receive training with the other agency This introduces the further risk that the idol agencies must take in training new idols Trainees train for 3 years on average and the agencies support these trainees with various training programs during this duration resulting in each trainee being a very large investment for the agency 176 Tight control over public image K pop management is very strict in terms of regulating the public appearance of their groups according to Michael Hurt a lecturer of cultural theory at the Korea National University of Arts Therefore he reasoned most stars are not allowed to date publicly or have control of their own lives Kwon Joon won an entertainment management professor at the Dong ah Institute of Media and Arts said K pop stars should be expected to lose half of their fandom if they were to make controversial statements This may explain why K pop groups are more outspoken about social issues abroad than within South Korea 177 Sexualization and pressure on appearance Main article Sexualization and sexual exploitation in K popThe industry has been criticized for the sexualization of both male and female idols with the sexualization of minors in particular being of concern 178 Critics such as James Turnbull of the Korean Pop Culture blog The Grand Narrative have argued young female idols are especially susceptible to pressures to wear revealing clothing or dance provocatively 178 However compared to western popular music K pop has little sex drugs or aggressive behavior and has a much more parent friendly branding 179 In 2014 South Korea passed a law to protect idols under the age of 19 from overtly sexualized performances 173 170 Questions have also been raised over K pop s focus on appearance and its effects on children and teens especially pressure to obtain cosmetic surgeries 180 In 2019 the South Korean Ministry of Gender Equality and Family announced non mandatory guidelines in an effort to prevent lookism One recommendation asked to limit how many idol singers can appear on TV together saying most of them are skinny with outfits exposing their bodies 181 The concern was that their nearly identical appearances would narrow the standards of beauty Many young viewers of K pop are raised in a culture where cosmetic surgery is promoted Some idols openly document themselves undergoing surgery 180 The government recommendations upset many fans however who began circulating an online petition in protest An opposition politician also compared the guidelines to regulations under the military dictatorship of Chun Doo hwan 181 Mental health Some K pop artists have suggested that the uncertainty and pressures of their jobs as entertainers may be detrimental to their mental health According to musician Park Kyung of Block B There are many people who debuted with no sense of self yet and they come to realize later that every move and every word they say is being observed so they become cautious and lose their freedom 182 In an interview with Yonhap News Suga of BTS talked about his own mental health and said Anxiety and loneliness seem to be with me for life Emotions are so different in every situation and every moment so I think to agonise every moment is what life is 182 The suicides of prominent K pop musicians have drawn attention to industry pressures 183 In 1996 singer Charles Park also known as Seo Ji won ko died by suicide at the age of 19 before the release of his second album 183 184 Kim Jong hyun who had previously been open about his history of depression also died by suicide in December 2017 183 In the spring of 2018 a number of prominent Korean musicians participated in a free concert series to raise awareness of suicide prevention 182 In 2019 the death of Sulli of an apparent suicide followed by the death of Goo Hara after both were subjected to cyberbullying added to calls for reform 185 186 187 In 2023 the death of Moonbin in another apparent suicide renewed scrutiny on the highly competitive world of Korean show business and the pressures its performers face 188 One reason is that K pop amplifies the pressure to be perfect already intense in Korean society 189 Its competitive nature where one may need to step on someone else in order to get ahead can lead to jealousy and bullying toward those who appear more successful After dating fellow musician Choiza Sulli became the center of online abuse because K pop idols are expected not to be in a relationship for years During one talk show she expressed how empty her life was I feel like I m lying to everyone by pretending to be happy on the outside A jewellery designer who works with K pop stars including Sulli said that receiving threats and angry mail is normal for many idols 189 CultureK pop artists are frequently referred to as idols or idol groups 190 Groups usually have a leader who is often the eldest or most experienced member and speaks for the group The youngest group member is called the maknae Korean 막내 RR mangnae lit the youngest in a family 191 The popular use of this term in Japan was influenced by boy group SS501 when they expanded their activities in the country in 2007 Its Japanese translation man ne マンネ was often used to name the group s youngest member Kim Hyung jun in order to differentiate him from their leader with a similar name and spelling Kim Hyun joong 192 Industry specific expressions Korean Romanized Meaning 대상 Hanja 大賞 daesang At music awards artists may receive a bonsang for outstanding music achievements One of the bonsang winners is then awarded with a daesang the Grand Prize 193 본상 Hanja 本賞 bonsang All Kill AK Referring to chart positions An Instiz all kill AK occurs when an individual song sweeps all of South Korea s major music charts simultaneously placing first on the real time charts 194 195 unreliable source Certified All Kill CAK An Instiz Certified all kill happens when a song tops all of the charts both real time and daily and is first on Instiz Real time Chart citation needed Perfect All Kill PAK An Instiz Perfect all kill happens when an individual song has a certified all kill and at the same time it places first on Instiz Weekly Chart citation needed Mini album Roughly equivalent to an EP contains multiple tracks but shorter than a full length album 196 unreliable source Title track The main track of an album or an EP Released with a music video and promoted through live performances on televised music shows Success of the title track is of vital importance as it carries over to the album EP sales Most of K pop artists do not release the title track separately from the album EP citation needed Pre release single Roughly equivalent to a lead single or promotional single the pre release single is a track of an album or EP released before the actual album release It may have an accompanying music video as well as live performances on televised music shows citation needed Promotion Takes place when a title track is released Artists perform in televised music shows and interviews Promotion on TV shows usually lasts one month with a debut stage for newcomers a comeback stage for regulars and a goodbye stage at the end of the cycle 196 unreliable source Comeback Refers to the release of an artist s new music and the accompanying promotional activities typically including TV performances and participation on TV shows 46 Single album A single that is promoted like an album Usually includes one b side and the instrumental of both songs citation needed Appeal and fan base nbsp Big Bang fans VIPs hold crown shaped light sticks during a concert this is the symbol of the fan club Many fans travel overseas to see their idols on tour and tourists commonly visit Korea from Japan and China to see K pop concerts 197 A K pop tour group from Japan had more than 7 000 fans fly to Seoul to meet boy band JYJ in 2012 198 and during JYJ s concert in Barcelona in 2011 fans from many parts of the world camped overnight to gain entrance 199 A 2011 survey conducted by the Korean Culture and Information Service reported that there were over three million active members of Hallyu fan clubs 200 Bang Si hyuk the music industry executive behind BTS expressed that K pop idol fans view their idol differently from how music fans view a typical singer Idol fans want to feel close to and be a part of their idol s lifestyle even outside of live performances 201 An article by The Wall Street Journal indicated that K pop s future staying power will be shaped by fans whose online activities have evolved into micro businesses 202 K pop groups commonly have dedicated fan clubs with a collective name and sometimes an assigned colour 203 204 to which they will release merchandise For example TVXQ fans are known as Cassiopeia and their official colour is pearl red Some of the more popular groups have personalized light sticks for use at concerts for example Big Bang fans hold yellow crown shaped light sticks 205 nbsp Fan rice for the Korean boyband Exo Fan clubs sometimes participate in charity events to support their idols purchasing bags of fan rice in order to show support The rice bags are donated to those in need 206 According to Time for one of BigBang s shows 12 7 tons of rice were donated from 50 fan clubs around the world There are businesses in Korea dedicated to shipping rice from farmers to the venues 207 Another way that fan clubs show their devotion is by sending lunch to idols during their schedules and there are catering companies in South Korea specifically for this purpose 208 Increasingly fans participate in activism that extends outside of the K pop community 209 210 211 A unique feature of K pop fandom is the fan chant When an idol group releases a new song chants usually consisting of group members names are performed by live concert audiences during non singing parts of songs 196 Obsession Main article Sasaeng fan Some idols and idol groups have faced problems from obsessive fans who indulge in stalking or invasive behavior These fans are known as sasaeng fans 사생팬 私生팬 sasaengpaen from the Korean word for private life which alludes to their penchant for invading the privacy of idols and members of idol groups There have been accounts of extreme behaviors from fans trying to gain idols attention 212 Korean public officials recognize this as a unique but serious concern 213 Some idols have reacted angrily towards sasaeng fans for which they received backlash including members of JYJ Super Junior member Kim Hee chul and Jang Keun suk 212 214 215 In response to the issue a new law introduced in February 2016 in Korea saw the penalty for stalking rise to around US 17 000 as well as a possible two year jail sentence 216 Events International tours Main article List of K pop concerts held outside Asia Conventions and music festivals See also Category K pop festivals 2003 present Korean Music Festival at the Hollywood Bowl in Los Angeles 2009 present Philippine K pop Convention 2011 present K POP World Festival in South Korea 2012 present KCON in California 2015 present KCON in New York 2015 present KCON in Japan With the rise of the popularity of K pop globally K pop groups and idols appearances at internationally recognized music festivals is becoming more and more regular 2019 Blackpink at Coachella first K pop girl group to perform 217 2022 Aespa at Coachella 218 2023 Blackpink at Coachella first K pop group to perform on the main stage 219 2023 Tomorrow X Together at Lollapalooza headlining 220 2023 NewJeans at Lollapalooza first K pop girl group to perform 221 Social media Social media sites such as YouTube Twitter and Facebook allow K pop artists to reach a global audience and to communicate readily with their fans 222 As global online music market revenue increased 19 from 2009 to 2014 with social media music consumers around the world are more likely to be exposed to K pop 223 K pop idol groups benefit from video based social media such as YouTube since visual components such as dance and fashion are essential factors in their performance The number of searches of K pop on YouTube increased by a factor of 33 from 2004 to 2014 Through social media advertisement Korean entertainment companies narrowed the cultural gap so K pop could enter the global market and gain recognition among overseas consumers The export of K pop dramatically increased from US 13 9 million to US 204 million between 2007 and 2011 223 Social media also changes the consumption patterns of K pop music Before the digital era people would purchase and consume music products on an individual basis Consumers now actively participate in sharing music products and advertising their favorite artists which is advantageous for K pop K pop fandoms are highly active on the said platforms as well as the likes of Instagram TikTok Reddit Tumblr and Twitch 224 YouTube nbsp Psy whose music video for Gangnam Style in December 2012 became the first to reach more than a billion YouTube views 225 Since K pop started to spread its industry outside South Korea K pop artists have set notable records on YouTube Of the 2 28 billion worldwide K pop YouTube views in 2011 240 million came from the United States more than double the figure from 2010 94 million citation needed In December 2011 K pop became the first country specific genre of music to gain a homepage on YouTube 222 In December 2012 Psy s music video for Gangnam Style became the first YouTube video to receive 1 billion views 226 In 2016 the music video for the song TT by Twice became the first video by a female Korean act with over 400 million YouTube views 227 On January 21 2019 girl group Blackpink s music video for Ddu Du Ddu Du became the highest viewed K pop group music video on YouTube 228 On May 21 2021 BTS music video for Butter set a record for the most viewed online music video in the first 24 hours garnering over 108 million views 229 Twitter Twitter has also been a significant social media platform for K pop stars to get connections and promotions 230 The viral song Gangnam Style gained popularity from mentions by prominent Twitter users 230 Bang Si Hyuk the producer of BTS partially attributed the fast growth of their fanbase to social media such as Twitter 231 On November 13 2017 BTS became the first South Korean act to reach 10 million followers on Twitter 232 233 In 2017 BTS was the most tweeted about artist both in the United States and globally Other K pop groups such as Seventeen and Monsta X also appeared in the global top ten Exo a South Korean boyband was the most followed celebrity to have entered Twitter in 2017 234 At the 2017 2018 and 2019 Billboard Music Awards BTS won the award for Top Social Media Artist based on Twitter voting by their fans 235 236 237 According to Sin Chang Seob the CEO of Twitter Korea the usage of Twitter by K pop artists has increased Twitter s popularity among South Koreans 238 Facebook Many Korean entertainment companies use social media platforms especially Facebook to promote and communicate about their global auditions 222 K pop groups use Facebook pages to promote their music and other content to large numbers of fans 239 K pop fans use Facebook to express their devotion communicate with other members of the K pop community and consume K pop content 240 TikTok Multiple entertainment companies use TikTok to market and promote their artists music Many K pop songs have gone viral on TikTok and some K pop artists and their labels were contacted for possible collaborations The Any Song dance challenge by rapper Zico got 400 million views in less than two months and around 830 000 videos have been uploaded featuring the sound 241 Fifty Fifty s song Cupid went viral on TikTok with over 400 000 videos published with the sound Prior to the TikTok audio Fifty Fifty were averaging 300 000 monthly listeners to now having over a million 242 TikTok continues to be an avenue in which K pop artists can receive exposure and recognition Popularity and impactThis article may contain excessive or irrelevant examples Please help improve the article by adding descriptive text and removing less pertinent examples September 2023 This section may be too long and excessively detailed Please consider summarizing the material September 2023 East Asia Japan Following the lifting of WWII era restrictions imposed on exchanges and trade between Korea and Japan in the late 1990s the first generation girl group S E S became the first Korean artists to debut in Japan in late 1998 releasing their first Japanese language album Reach Out in 1999 Young K pop star BoA had Japanese language training before her Korean debut and when she debuted in Japan in 2002 with her first Japanese language album Listen to My Heart her Korean identity was inessential as her music style and fluency in Japanese led her to be considered a part of J pop 243 Listen to My Heart was the first album by a Korean singer to debut atop the Japanese Oricon Charts and become an RIAJ certified million seller in Japan 244 BoA has since released several Japanese albums most of which have topped the Oricon Charts 245 Following BoA s successful Japanese debut TVXQ debuted in Japan in 2005 under a procedure similar to BoA s TVXQ did not promote their Korean identity and their ballad style songs fit well into J pop s typical sound TVXQ s first and second albums released in Japan were minor successes peaking on the Oricon Charts at twenty five and ten respectively citation needed However on January 16 2008 TVXQ reached the top of the Oricon Charts with their sixteenth Japanese single Purple Line becoming the first Korean male group to have a number one single in Japan 246 247 They have since had remarkable success with their comebacks In 2018 they accumulated over 1 2 million people to their concerts beating Japanese band B z 248 Since the start of the Korean Wave the Japanese market has seen an influx of Korean pop acts such as SS501 249 Shinee 250 Super Junior 251 Big Bang 252 Kara and Girls Generation 253 In 2011 it was reported that the total sales for K pop artists increased 22 3 between 2010 and 2011 in Japan Some Korean artists were in the top 10 selling artists of the year in Japan 254 As of 2019 several other K pop groups have debuted in the Japanese market including Exo BTS Got7 Seventeen iKon GFriend Astro Pentagon Twice Monsta X FT Island NCT 127 and Blackpink 255 unreliable source Many of these groups debut with Japanese versions of their recent Korean releases then later release original Japanese songs Many groups such as NCT 127 Twice and Pentagon also include Japanese members that auditioned in Japan and were brought to Korea or came to Korea in order to become a K pop singer With tensions still remaining between Korea and Japan the import of Korean popular culture has been met with different forms of resistance in the form of the Anti Korean Wave One demonstration against the Korean Wave with roughly 500 participants was broadcast on Japan s Fuji TV to an Internet audience of over 120 000 However the chairman of the Presidential Council on National Branding cited this resistance as proof of how successful Korean Wave is 256 The Korean Wave has also interested Japanese people to pursue a pop music career by going to Korea to become K pop stars 257 China nbsp Chinese singer Zhang Bichen later a member of K pop girl group Sunny Days performs during 2012 s K POP World Festival The 1990s saw the rise of K pop in China through groups like H O T and Sechs Kies sparking China s investment in Korea s entertainment industry K pop artists have achieved considerable success in China since then in 2005 Rain held a concert in Beijing with 40 000 attendees 110 In 2010 the Wonder Girls won an award for the highest digital sales for a foreign artist with 5 million digital downloads in the 5th annual China Mobile Wireless Music Awards 258 Most recently China has become the South Korean entertainment industry s biggest market for exports 259 Twelve percent of SM Entertainment s sales in 2015 went to China and this number rose to 14 4 percent by the middle of 2016 260 China has found that K pop is a profitable investment 261 According to Director of Communication for the Korea Economic Institute of America Jenna Gibson sales for a certain shampoo brand rose by 630 after Super Junior endorsed it on a Chinese reality show 261 K pop s popularity has also led China s e commerce company Alibaba to buy roughly 30 million worth of SM Entertainment s shares in 2016 in order to help its expansion into the online music industry 262 Legend Capital China has also invested in BTS label BigHit Entertainment 261 As of the beginning of 2017 China took up around 8 20 percent of major Korean entertainment companies total sales 260 Chinese entertainment companies have also claimed stakes in the industry partially overseeing groups like EXID and T ara or representing groups which include both Chinese and Korean members like Uniq and WJSN 261 Having Chinese members in K pop groups is one way that Korean entertainment companies increase K pop s marketability and appeal in China Other strategies include giving Korean members Chinese sounding names releasing songs or whole albums in Chinese and making subgroups with members that predominantly speak Mandarin 262 like SM Entertainment s Exo M and Super Junior M which has had successful results on the Kuang Nan Record and CCR 263 The K pop industry s methods of producing idols have influenced the practices of Chinese entertainment companies which aim to reproduce K pop idols success with their own stars so that Chinese entertainers can compete better globally To achieve this those companies have recruited K pop industry experts and some of these insiders have actively started moving into the Chinese music industry to capitalize on K pop s increasing influence on market demands Chinese reality show Idol Producer further highlights K pop s impact on China s entertainment scene closely mirroring Korea s Produce 101 261 nbsp Hong Kong singer Jackson Wang from Got7 at a fansigning event in Yeouido A number of Chinese K pop idols such as Super Junior M s Han Geng and Exo M s Kris Luhan and Tao have left their respective K pop groups in order to pursue solo careers in China However lately Korean entertainment companies have allowed their Chinese K pop idols more freedom in pursuing solo work in China 261 Got7 s Jackson Wang for example has released several of his own songs in China and in 2017 reached number one on Chinese music charts 264 Additionally the rise of K pop has led to an increase in the number of Chinese tourists in South Korea 3 8 million more Chinese toured South Korea in 2016 than 2015 according to the Union of International Associations 265 K pop has also made China s youth find South Korean culture cool 266 thus helping to facilitate greater understanding between Korea and China 267 North Korea Despite North Korea s traditionally strict isolationism K pop has managed to reach a North Korean audience While consumption of South Korean entertainment is punishable by death in North Korea 268 it has still become increasingly more available with the global rise of technology and the implementation of underground smuggling networks over the past decades 269 The popular flash drive technology containing K pop and K dramas was preceded by the use of DVDs burned with such content Because North Korean law enforcement had figured out how to catch people consuming the media from DVDs few people accessed K pop and K dramas 270 Many North Koreans considered the risk too great so it was not until the proliferation of the flash drive media type that watching the K pop shows hit common homes Utilizing the increasingly sophisticated smuggling networks several thousands of USB drives and SD cards containing K pop and K dramas have been distributed and sold through care packages and the black market 271 Some South Korean humanitarians have also deployed drones and balloons carrying these flash drives in order to make the media more accessible 272 Access to USB drives and SD cards rose exponentially from 26 to 81 in from 2010 to 2014 largely due to development in technology with a large majority containing South Korean music and dramas 273 The expanding technology capabilities allowed the flash drives to be accessed by a wider North Korean audience Flash drives that used to cost upwards of US 50 can now be purchased for under 10 making them more affordable and easier to send into North Korea 270 The content on these USB drives and SD cards are then viewed by plugging the device into a Notel a small portable media player 271 Although this practice had originally begun with banned books and simple radios there is now an even higher demand for South Korean media following the cultural phenomena of hallyu Those near the border who choose to stay away from the banned media from flash drives often cannot escape it Ever since the 1950s both countries have blasted their own propaganda across the DMZ North Korea broadcasting anti south propaganda and South Korea broadcasting Korean and world news as well as K pop 272 In 2004 both countries agreed to end the broadcasts After an incident in 2015 South Korea resumed broadcasting anti North news for four days as well as in 2016 after North Korea tested its hydrogen bomb and has been broadcasting since In April 2018 in preparation and out of respect for the meeting between North leader Kim Jong Un and South leader Moon Jae In the South Korean speakers ceased their broadcasts These 11 loudspeakers can be heard up to six miles 10 km into North Korean territory This enables the broadcasts to influence possible defectors staying near the border as well as create bothersome propaganda that North Korean soldiers cannot escape 272 The dissemination of K pop and Korean media has been crucial in presenting the realities of North Korea to its citizens By detailing the basic conditions of life in South Korea and introducing foreign ideologies Korean media has aroused civil unrest amongst both citizens and elites concerning the disparities between living conditions inside and outside North Korea 271 A defector explains that when he escaped in 2012 only the wealthy families were the ones consuming the South Korean media because the costs of the flash drives and technology to use them were so high Because most youths lacked the resources to afford the drives most consumers of South Korean media before 2012 were the middle aged elite who favored K dramas over K pop due to their more traditional behavior 274 The current high demand for Korean media continues to rise as now approximately 70 of North Koreans consume foreign media in their homes 271 which accounts for the higher youth following of South Korean media today One researcher at the Korea Institute for National Unification claims to have never met a single defector who had not seen or listened to foreign media before entering South Korea Yet experts remain wary that a cultural uprising will occur because of the media Consuming South Korean media serves many purposes for North Koreans such as enjoyment and education but few consider uprooting a totalitarian regime because of the cultures they ve experienced through K pop and K dramas 275 Even North Korean leader Kim Jong Un has shown a liking for K pop music In 2018 Kim stated he was deeply moved after attending a two hour concert in Pyongyang featuring South Korean performers such as singer Cho Yong pil and the popular girl band Red Velvet 276 This historic concert marks the first performance by South Korean artists attended by a North Korean leader in Pyongyang The concert featuring over 150 South Korean artists attended by 1500 North Korean elites 277 also displays growing relations between the North and the South None of the song line ups lyrics or dance moves of the performers were asked to be changed by traditionalist North Korean officials This acceptance of the K pop genre and its content shows a stark contrast to Kim Jong Un s historically stringent policies on foreign media The South Korean artists also performed alongside notable North Korean artists in the following week Recordings of both performances have been made public to South Koreans though no reports have been made of their release to the North Korean public 278 Despite all the previous events Kim Jong un has changed his stance on K pop since 2021 by referring to it as a vicious cancer and viewing it as a threat to North Korean society 279 Taiwan Despite sharing a similar past the Taiwanese did not carry a positive sentiment towards South Korea after 1992 which is when South Korea broke off its diplomatic relationship with Taiwan in order to pursue one with mainland China This changed in the early 2000s as the cultural dispersion of Hallyu has contributed to the reconstruction of South Korea s image among the Taiwanese This change was partly prompted by the South Korean government which wished to encourage goodwill between the two countries after the break of diplomacy Many Taiwanese have since remarked that Korean popular music and Korean dramas have helped to foster a renewed interest and healthier relationship with South Korea 280 Southeast Asia Singapore There is a thriving K pop fanbase in Singapore where idol groups such as 2NE1 BTS Girls Generation Got7 and Exo often hold concert tour dates 281 282 The popularity of K pop alongside Korean dramas has influenced the aesthetics image of Singaporeans Korean style straight eyebrows have become quite popular among many Singaporean females and males of Chinese Malay and Indian descent 283 Singaporean beauty salons have seen an increase in the number of customers interested in getting Korean style straight eyebrows and Korean style haircuts in recent years 284 On August 5 2017 Singapore hosted the 10th Music Bank World Tour a concert spin off of Music Bank a popular weekly music programme by South Korean broadcaster KBS This event proved the immense popularity of the Hallyu wave in Singapore 285 In recent years several notable entertainment companies both big and small scale like Attrakt and YG Entertainment came to Singapore to conduct auditions to select eligible candidates to train in South Korea 286 287 and a K pop international school is also set to be established in Singapore with the collaboration between Singapore Raffles Music College SRMC and the prestigious School of Performing Arts Seoul Sopa 288 According to Singaporean national newspaper The Straits Times in February 2024 over 120 teenage girls mostly Singaporeans took part in Attrakt s first and only on site audition at Kallang Place which aimed to recruit possible candidates to join the agency s girl group Fifty Fifty 289 Malaysia In Malaysia among the three main ethnic groups Malay Chinese and Indian many prefer to listen to music in their own languages but K pop and Korean movies and TV series have become popular among all three ethnic groups which Malaysian firms have capitalized upon 290 The popularity of K pop has also resulted in politicians bringing K pop idols to the country in order to attract young voters 291 Malaysians have accepted the Korean Wave more rapidly and even more favorably notably in the 2010s despite the fact that it came to Malaysia later and that the first reaction there was relatively hostile compared to other nations Approximately 80 of Malaysian respondents have begun learning the Korean language due to their keen interest in Korean culture Malaysia is also seventh in the world for the quantity of travelers visiting Korea 292 Indonesia K pop along with Korean TV series and movies has turned into popular culture especially among the young generation of Indonesia This trend can be observed in any major city in the country K pop has also influenced music in Indonesia 293 Popularity of Korean culture has increased continuously in Indonesia since the early 2000s starting with the East Asian popular culture boom 294 Philippines nbsp 2NE1 at a press conference in Manila Korean telenovelas were aired locally in the Philippines starting in 2003 marking a further expansion of the Hallyu wave 295 K pop took longer to catch on it gained popularity through the internet and through Korean expatriate celebrities like Sandara Park citation needed Super Junior held a concert in the Philippines in 2010 296 Vietnam Vietnam already had numerous contacts with South Korea in the past and even shared a similar political situation notably the separation in half of both nations Despite the tragedies of the Vietnam War the country presently remains welcoming of the Korean influence on the Vietnamese population 297 Vietnamese pop music known as V pop is heavily influenced by K pop in terms of music production and music videos In 2015 the northern capital city of Hanoi hosted the Music Bank World Tour 298 In the year of 2018 V Live and RBW Entertainment Vietnam launched special monthly mini concerts called V Heartbeat Live inviting both V pop and K pop stars to perform such as Winner Momoland IKon Sunmi and more In the same year Park Ji yeon collaborated with a Vietnamese singer Soobin Hoang Sơn releasing Vietnamese and Korean versions of the single Between Us 299 K pop and Korean culture in general gained popularity mainly because of the Vietnamese youth 297 South Korean entertainment companies are investing and searching for talent in Vietnam For example SM Entertainment announced plans for a Vietnamese sub unit of the Korean boy group NCT which executive producer Lee Soo man called NCT V to promote V pop globally Lee also said that Vietnamese culture is extremely similar to Korean culture which is favorable for both countries in terms of global expansion 300 In 2018 SM Entertainment hosted their annual Global Audition in Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh City for the first time ever 301 Cube Entertainment held an audition session in 2018 302 On January 11 13 in 2019 Big Hit Entertainment established a joint venture with entertainment company CJ E amp M to host an audition called the 2019 Belift Global Audition 303 SBS also announced that popular variety show Running Man will be getting a Vietnamese version These are prime examples of hallyu and the rising popularity of K pop in Vietnam South Asia Bangladesh Bangladeshi youths especially teens have shown great attraction to Korean pop music as they described such songs make them feel better 304 Starting from 2015 Bangladesh began to participate in an annual event called K Pop World Music Festival which started in 2011 by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Korea in cooperation with The Korean Broadcasting System KBS The objective of the event is not only to bring the Hallyu fans all over the world to South Korea but also to bring people from different countries together in the name of culture 305 India In the Northeast Indian state of Manipur where separatists have banned Bollywood movies consumers have turned to Korean popular culture for their entertainment needs The BBC s correspondent Sanjoy Majumder reported that Korean entertainment products are mostly unlicensed copies smuggled in from neighbouring Burma and are generally well received by the local population This has led to the increasing use of Korean phrases in common parlance amongst the young people of Manipur 306 307 308 In order to capitalize on the popularity of K pop in Manipur many hairdressing salons have offered Korean style cuts based on the hairstyles of K pop boy bands 306 307 This wave of Korean popular culture is currently spreading from Manipur to the neighbouring state of Nagaland K pop is catching up in various other states of the country and K pop festivals and competitions draw thousands of fans 309 310 Nepal In Nepal K pop gained popularity along with Korean dramas and films K pop has become influential in the Nepali music industry and K pop music videos are often used as an accompaniment to Nepali music on YouTube citation needed United States nbsp BTS on the red carpet at KCON New York 2016 In 2006 Rain held sold out concerts in New York City and Las Vegas as part of his Rain s Coming World TourIn 2009 the Wonder Girls became the first K pop artist to debut on the Billboard Hot 100 singles chart 311 They went on to join the Jonas Brothers on the Jonas Brothers World Tour 2009 In 2010 they toured 20 cities in the United States Canada and Mexico and were named House of Blues Artist of the Month for June 312 In 2010 SM Entertainment held the SMTown Live 10 World Tour with dates in Los Angeles Paris Tokyo and New York The same year during the 8th Annual Korean Music Festival K pop artists made their first appearances at the Hollywood Bowl 313 Notable K pop concerts in the United States in 2011 include the KBS Concert at the New York Korea Festival the K Pop Masters Concert in Las Vegas and the Korean Music Wave in Google which was held at Google s headquarters in Mountain View California 314 nbsp Rain at the 2011 Time 100 gala at Lincoln Center in New York City 2012 marked a breakthrough year for K pop in North America 315 316 At the start of the year Girls Generation performed the English version of The Boys on the late night talk show The Late Show with David Letterman and also on the daytime talk show Live with Kelly becoming the first Korean musical act to perform on these shows and the first Korean act to perform on syndicated television in the United States 317 In the same year the group formed their first sub unit entitled Girls Generation TTS or simply TTS composed of members Taeyeon Tiffany and Seohyun The subgroup s debut EP Twinkle peaked at 126 on the Billboard 200 318 In May SMTown returned to California again with the SMTown Live World Tour III in Anaheim In August as part of their New Evolution Global Tour 2NE1 held their first American concert in the New York Metropolitan Area at the Prudential Center of Newark New Jersey 319 In November as part of their Alive Tour BigBang held their first solo concert in America visiting the Honda Center in Los Angeles and the Prudential Center in Newark The tickets sold out in only a few hours and additional dates were added 320 On November 13 the American singer songwriter Madonna and backup dancers performed Gangnam Style alongside Psy during a concert at Madison Square Garden in New York City Psy later told reporters that his gig with Madonna had topped his list of accomplishments 321 On January 29 2013 Billboard one of America s most popular music magazines launched Billboard K Town an online column on its website that covered K pop news artists concerts and chart information 322 323 324 In March of that year f x performed at the K Pop Night Out at SXSW in Austin Texas alongside The Geeks who represented Korean rock f x was the first K pop group ever to perform at SXSW 325 Mnet hosted its Kcon event in NY and LA in July 2016 326 327 nbsp Donika Sterling an American K Pop fan diagnosed with Charcot Marie Tooth disease was sponsored to meet her favorite idols in South Korea 328 329 In 2017 BTS was nominated for the Top Social Artist Award at the 2017 Billboard Music Awards Their winning of the award marks the first time a Korean group has won a Billboard Award and the second time a Korean artist has won the award after Psy s win in 2013 330 331 BTS won the award at the 2017 2018 and 2019 Billboard Music Awards as well as Top Duo Group in 2019 332 They performed at the 2017 American Music Awards and the 2018 Billboard Music Awards making them one of the first Korean groups to have performed at either awards show 333 334 BTS s album Love Yourself Tear reached 1 on the Billboard 200 making it the first Korean act to do so 335 Additionally BTS s single Fake Love debuted at 10 on the Billboard Hot 100 making them the second Korean artist to chart in the top ten 336 On August 21 2020 BTS song Dynamite debuted at number 1 on the Billboard Hot 100 making it the first ever single of a Korean artist to top the Billboard chart Their next single Life Goes On also managed to top the chart upon release on November 20 2020 Latin America Many idol groups have loyal fan bases in Latin America 337 338 339 Since 2009 about 260 fan clubs with a total of over 20 000 and 8 000 active members have been formed in Chile and Peru respectively 340 341 In recent years an increasing number of K pop groups have performed in Latin America 342 In 2011 the United Cube Concert was held in Sao Paulo shortly after the second round of the first K Pop Cover Dance Festival was held in Brazil with MBLAQ as judges 343 In March 2012 JYJ performed in Chile and Peru When the group arrived at the Jorge Chavez International Airport in Peru for the JYJ World Tour Concert they were escorted by airport security officials through a private exit due to safety reasons concerning the large number of fans over 3 000 344 At the Explanada Sur del Estadio Monumental in Lima some fans camped out for days in to see JYJ 345 In April Caracol TV and Arirang TV jointly aired a K pop reality show in Colombia 346 In September Junsu became the first K pop idol to perform solo in Brazil and Mexico after the Wonder Girls in Monterrey in 2009 347 The concerts sold out well in advance 347 That year there were 70 K pop fan clubs in Mexico with at least 60 000 members altogether 348 In January 2014 Kim Hyung jun performed in Peru Chile and Bolivia becoming the first K pop idol to perform in Bolivia 349 When he arrived in Peru where the tour began about 1 000 fans cheered for him followed him wherever Kim Hyung joon went and they caused serious traffic jams 350 Fans were also seen pitching their tents outside the concert venue for days before the actual concert 351 352 In 2013 the boy group Super Junior performed in four South American countries Brazil Argentina Chile and Peru as part of its Super Show 5 tour Additionally that same year on November 7 it had a show at Mexico City Arena which attracted over 17 000 fans Super Junior performed on April 27 2018 at Mexico City Arena a stage where various famous Latin American artists such as Ozuna J Balvin and Marco Antonio Solis also performed in 2018 353 NU EST held concerts in Mexico Brazil Chile and Peru in 2014 342 In 2017 BTS visited Brazil and Chile where it performed as part of the Live Trilogy Episode III the Wings Tour 354 On March 11 12 2017 BTS held concerts in Santiago Chile and in Sao Paulo Brazil on March 19 20 As rookies Dreamcatcher visited 4 cities in Brazil as part of their 2017 Fly High world tour 355 and later returned to Latin America in 2018 visiting Argentina Chile Peru Colombia and Panama as part of their Welcome to the Dream World world tour 356 Mexico Korean media in Mexico experienced a surge in 2002 after Mexican governor Arturo Montiel Rojas visited South Korea 357 From his trip he brought Korean series movies and other programs to Mexico State s broadcasting channel 358 Television Mexiquense channel 34 Korean dramas exposed the Mexican public to Korean products and spurred interest in other aspects of Korean culture K pop began to gain ground in Mexico due to the series the music accompanied Fans particularly sought out the music of soundtracks respective to Korean dramas that were broadcast However K pop s arrival to Mexico is also attributed to the influence of Japanese media in Mexico and the introduction of PIU Pump It Up The comic convention La Mole commenced selling Japanese comics and music and later commenced to sell K pop PIUs combined gaming and dancing introducing the Mexican youth to Korean gaming software and generating interest in Korean music 359 nbsp KCON in Mexico CityK pop s presence in Mexico can be outlined through the growing number of Korean music acts in the country In recent years the number of K pop concerts in Mexico has risen and branched into other portions of the country Idol groups including BigBang and NU EST have visited Mexico through their respective world tours JYJ s Kim Junsu became the first Korean star to perform solo His concert held in Mexico City sold out in advance 360 The Music Bank World Tour also brought various acts to the Mexican public Many of those groups covered widely known songs such as Exo s cover of Sabor A Mi In 2017 Mexico also became the first Latin American country to host KCON The two day convention held on March 17 18 brought over 33 000 fans to Arena Ciudad de Mexico 361 Much like artists during Music Bank idols covered Spanish songs The strength and large number of fan clubs have continuously helped promote and support K pop across the country Over 70 fan clubs dedicated to Korean music are present in Mexico bringing together around 30 000 fans 362 Although many fan clubs were created around 2003 they achieved a public presence in 2005 when Korea s ex president Roh Moo Hyun visited Mexico for a meeting with Mexico s ex president Vicente Fox Quesada Around 30 Hallyu fan clubs held a rally asking Roh to bring actors Jang Dong gun and Ahn Jae wook to their country 363 Demonstrations have continued into recent years On May 13 2013 a large march was held in Mexico City s Zocalo Called KPOP Massive March K Pop Mexico II it was the second mass march that brought together hundreds of avid K Pop fans 364 However larger fan club organizations in Mexico receive indirect or direct support from Korean cultural programs KOFICE Korea Foundation for International Cultural Exchange 365 and the Korean Cultural Center Mexico City often work in conjunction with fan clubs These larger organizations contain multiple fan clubs within their structure The three largest are MexiCorea Hallyu Mexican Lovers and HallyuMx Both MexiCorea and Hallyu Mexican Lovers are supported by KOFICE while HallyuMx previously worked with the Korean Cultural Center and the Embassy of the Republic of Korea in Mexico 359 EuropeIn 2010 both the SMTown Live 10 World Tour and the Super Junior Super Show 4 Tour were held in Paris nbsp K pop fans in Warsaw holding a South Korean Polish flag as well as banners of various boy bandsIn February 2011 Teen Top performed at the Sala Apolo concert hall in Barcelona In May Rain became the first K pop artist to perform in Germany during the Dresden Music Festival 366 JYJ also performed in both Berlin and Barcelona BigBang flew to Belfast and won the Best Worldwide Act during the 2011 MTV EMAs in Northern Ireland 367 In Poland the K pop Star Exhibition was held in the Warsaw Korean Culture Center nbsp Beast performing at the Beautiful Show in Berlin In February 2012 Beast held their Beautiful Show in Berlin According to the Berliner Zeitung many fans who attended were not just from Germany but also from neighbouring countries such as France and Switzerland 368 Also in February the Music Bank World Tour drew more than 10 000 fans to the Palais Omnisports de Paris Bercy 369 That year artists such as Beast and 4Minute performed during the United Cube Concert in London where the MBC Korean Culture Festival was also held 370 When Shinee arrived at the London Heathrow Airport for a concert at the Odeon West End in the same year part of the airport became temporarily overrun by frenzied fans The reservation system of the Odeon West End crashed for the first time one minute after ticket sales began as the concert drew an unexpectedly large response 371 At this time Shinee also held a 30 minute performance at the Abbey Road Studio The ticket demand for this performance was so high that fashion magazine Elle gave away forty tickets through a lottery and the performance was also televised in Japan through six different channels 256 Also in 2012 BigBang won the Best Fan category in the Italian TRL Awards 372 In March 2022 KPOP FLEX took place at Deutsche Bank Park Stadium in Frankfurt Germany Over 65 000 fans attended from over 80 different countries 373 Russia K pop also saw a surge in popularity in Russia On September 6 2011 57 dance teams took part in the K pop Cover Dance Festival 374 During the second round of the competition Shinee flew to Moscow as judges also performing to Russian fans 375 The following year Russian youths launched K Plus a Korean culture magazine and the number of Russian K pop fans was reported at 50 000 376 On February 3 2014 Park Jung min became the first ever Korean singer to hold a solo concert in Moscow 377 378 in club Moscow Hall 600 place with tour Park Jung Min Reverso Tour B A P held concerts during their tour Live On Earth 2016 World Tour in Adrenaline Stadium and their tour 2017 World Tour Party Baby in YotaSpace 379 380 On June 6 2018 Got7 performed in the concert hall Adrenaline Stadium in Moscow for their concert tour Eyes on You 381 On October 7 2018 Zico during concert tour King Of the Zungle performed at the club GLAVCLUB Green Concert in Moscow 382 On December 8 2018 on the MTV Russia channel the project of the mobile operator MTS MTCamp was launched the acronym of their company name and the word amp and at the same time MTV Trainee Camp 383 the result of which is half a year should be the junior team from 5 members in the style of k pop 384 The show is hosted by figure skater Evgenia Medvedeva a fan of the Korean version of Exo Exo K The show collaborates with the production company Avex Trax On July 15 Exo s Power and BTS Fake Love were played at the 2018 World Cup Final Match in Russia 385 In 2022 the term K pop was included in the French dictionary Larousse 386 Middle East K pop has become increasingly popular across the Middle East over recent years particularly among younger fans 387 388 389 In July 2011 Israeli fans met South Korea s Ambassador to Israel Ma Young sam and traveled to Paris for the SMTown Live 10 World Tour in Europe 390 According to Dr Nissim Atmazgin a professor of East Asian Studies at Hebrew University of Jerusalem Many young people look at K pop as culture capital something that makes them stand out from the crowd As of 2012 there are over 5 000 K pop fans in Israel and 3 000 in the Palestinian territories 391 Some dedicated Israeli and Palestinian fans see themselves as cultural missionaries and actively introduce K pop to their friends and relatives further spreading the Hallyu wave within their communities 392 In 2012 the number of fans in Turkey surpassed 100 000 reaching 150 000 in 2013 387 393 ZE A appeared for a fan meet and greet session in Dubai and a concert in Abu Dhabi 394 395 In Cairo hundreds of fans went to the Maadi Library s stage theater to see the final round of the K POP Korean Song Festival organized by the Korean Embassy 396 397 In January 2018 boy group Exo was invited to Dubai United Arab Emirates for the Dubai Fountain Show Their single Power was the first K pop song to be played at the fountain show 398 In 2019 boy band BTS was invited to perform at King Fahd International Stadium by Crown Prince Mohammed Bin Salman They are the first boy band to play a solo stadium tour in Saudi Arabia 399 Oceania The K pop Wave has led to the creation of a number of dance groups that perform dance covers of K pop music and teach K pop choreography In the K Pop World Festival competition AO Crew has represented Australia three times in 2013 2014 and 2016 400 Also another dance cover group IMI Dance was the opening show for the RapBeat Show in 2017 400 Several dance studios provide classes that are based on K pop choreography Dance group Crave NV teaches a K pop class every Saturday at their dance studio in New Zealand 401 A Sydney based agency The academy began offering K pop boot camps and other programs in 2016 402 403 A number of K pop idols have hailed from Oceania Australian Korean artists include Blackpink s Rose ZE A s Kevin Kim One Way s Peter Hyun C Clown s Rome Stray Kids Bang Chan and Felix EvoL s Hayana and LEDapple s Hanbyul 404 400 405 In 2011 the K Pop Music Festival at the ANZ Stadium was held in Sydney featuring Girls Generation TVXQ Beast Shinee 4minute Miss A 2AM and MBLAQ 406 There was also demand for concerts from New Zealand 407 In August 2012 NU EST visited Sydney Harbour and the University of New South Wales as judges of a K pop contest being held there The following year 4Minute were judges at the same contest in Sydney 408 In October Psy toured Australia after his single Gangnam Style reached number one in Australia on the ARIA charts 409 In May 2016 B A P held a concert in Auckland becoming the first K Pop group to perform in New Zealand 410 411 KCON an annual K pop music and cultural convention was launched for the first time in Australia in September 2017 They are the seventh country to host KCON since 2012 412 It was held at Qudos Bank Arena Sydney The lineup for the event was Pentagon Wanna One Girl s Day Cosmic Girls WJSN Exo SF9 Victon Monsta X and UP10TION 413 Music showsKBS2 Music Bank SBS Inkigayo MBC Show Music Core Mnet M Countdown Arirang TV Pops in Seoul Arirang TV Simply K Pop formerly called The M Wave and Wave K JTBC Music on Top JTBC Music Universe K 909 MBC M Show Champion SBS M The ShowForeign relationsSee also Korean Wave Foreign relationsOn May 25 2010 South Korea responded to the alleged North Korean sinking of a navy ship by broadcasting 4Minute s single HuH across the DMZ 414 In response North Korea affirmed its decision to destroy any speakers set up along the border 415 That year The Chosun Ilbo reported that the Ministry of National Defense had considered setting up large TV screens across the border to broadcast music videos by several popular K pop girl groups such as Girls Generation Wonder Girls After School Kara and 4Minute as part of psychological warfare against North Korea 416 In September 2012 North Korea uploaded a video with a manipulated image of South Korean president Park Geun hye performing the dance moves of Gangnam Style The video labeled her as a devoted admirer of the Yusin system of autocratic rule set up by her father Park Chung Hee 417 418 source source source source source source source source On May 7 2013 U S President Barack Obama cited Psy s Gangnam Style as an example of how people around the world are being swept up by Korean culture the Korean Wave 419 Since the early 2010s several political leaders have acknowledged the global rise of Korean pop culture most notably U S President Barack Obama who made an official visit to South Korea in 2012 and mentioned the strong influences of social media networks adding that it was no wonder so many people around the world have caught the Korean wave Hallyu 420 A few months later U N Secretary General Ban Ki moon delivered a speech in front of the National Assembly of South Korea where he noted South Korea s great global success in the fields of culture sports and the arts before pointing out that the Korean Wave was making its mark on the world 421 This occurred a few days after U S State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland remarked in a daily press briefing that her daughter loves Korean pop 422 which sparked a media frenzy in South Korea after a journalist from the country s publicly funded Yonhap News Agency arranged an interview with Nuland and described Nuland s teenage daughter as crazy about Korean music and dance 423 In November 2012 the British Minister of State for the Foreign Office Hugo Swire addressed a group of South Korean diplomats at the House of Lords where he emphasized the close ties and mutual cooperation shaping South Korea United Kingdom relations and added As Gangnam Style has demonstrated your music is global too 424 In February 2013 the Vice President of Peru Marisol Espinoza gave an interview with South Korea s Yonhap News Agency where she voiced her desire for more South Korean companies to invest in her country and named K pop as one of the main factors that made Peruvian people wanting to get to know South Korea more 425 According to an article published by the international relations magazine Foreign Policy the spread of Korean popular culture across Southeast Asia parts of South America and parts of the Middle East are illustrating how the gradual cessation of European colonialism is giving way and making room for unexpected soft power outside of the Western world 426 On the other hand an article published by The Quietus magazine expressed concern that discussions about Hallyu as a form of soft power seems to bear a whiff of the old Victorian fear of Yellow Peril 427 In August 2016 China proceeded to restrict Korean media including K pop to protest South Korea s of deployment of U S THAAD systems 428 429 The move which lasted unti 2017 had a negative impact on the shares of Korean talent agencies although prices later recovered 428 On April 1 2018 North Korean leader Kim Jong Un hosted a K pop concert in Pyongyang 430 See also nbsp Pop music portal nbsp South Korea portal Korean ballad Korean hip hop Korean idol Korean rock Korean Wave List of K pop artists List of K pop concerts held outside Asia List of South Korean idol groups South Korean musicNotes Not to be confused with the pansori story of the same name References 케이팝 in Korean Archived from the original on January 13 2022 Retrieved January 13 2022 Hartong Jan Laurens 2006 Musical terms worldwide a companion for the musical explorer Semar Publishers p 15 ISBN 978 88 7778 090 4 Retrieved December 5 2011 Since the 1990s popular genres like rap rock and techno house have been incorporated into Korean popular music setting the trend for the present generation of K pop which often emulates American models Laurie Timothy 2016 Toward a Gendered Aesthetics of K Pop Global Glam and Popular Music Style and Spectacle from the 1970s to the 2000s 214 231 archived from the original on November 26 2021 retrieved April 11 2016 케이팝 terms naver com Archived from the original on February 7 2021 Retrieved October 17 2019 정보길잡이 상세보기 국립중앙도서관 National Library of Korea Archived from the original on June 2 2017 Retrieved November 3 2018 Cho Chung un March 23 2012 K pop still feels impact of Seo Taiji amp Boys The Korea Herald Archived from the original on February 1 2014 Retrieved April 12 2016 The Root of K Pop The Influences of Today s Biggest Acts Billboard Archived from the original on July 16 2017 Retrieved July 16 2017 South Korea s pop cultural exports Hallyu yeah The Economist January 25 2010 Archived from the original on November 5 2018 Retrieved March 23 2019 Choi JungBong 2014 K pop The International Rise of the Korean Music Industry Maliangkay Roald Hoboken Taylor and Francis pp 66 80 ISBN 9781317681809 OCLC 890981690 Song Cheol min 2016 K pop Beyond Asia Korea 길잡이미디어 pp 37 46 ISBN 9788973755981 Archived from the original on October 20 2023 Retrieved July 24 2018 Kelley Caitlin April 3 2019 K Pop Is More Global Than Ever Helping South Korea s Music Market Grow Into A Power Player Forbes Archived from the original on April 3 2019 Retrieved August 24 2020 2021 State of the Industry PDF International Federation of the Phonographic Industry March 23 2021 Archived from the original PDF on March 25 2021 Retrieved March 23 2021 Jung Sun 2017 Shifts in Korean television music programmes Democratization transnationalization digitalization In Tay Jinna Turner Graeme eds Television Histories in Asia Issues and Contexts Routledge ISBN 978 0815355205 Archived from the original on October 20 2023 Retrieved September 6 2023 20 Years of K Pop at Billboard Billboard October 11 2019 Archived from the original on April 27 2020 Retrieved April 18 2020 K pop Music For the Eyes or For the Ears Seoulbeats October 1 2011 Archived from the original on April 12 2012 Retrieved March 27 2012 Rousee Marquet Jennifer November 29 2012 K pop the story of the well oiled industry of standardized catchy tunes La Revue des Medias Institut national de l audiovisuel Archived from the original on November 3 2013 Retrieved January 25 2013 K pop is a fusion of synthesized music sharp dance routines and fashionable and colorful outfits The Process Of Becoming A K Pop Idol creatrip a b NYT Draws Attention to K Pop Idol Making Factories The Chosun Ilbo Archived from the original on October 29 2011 Retrieved December 28 2012 Yang Jeff Can Girls Generation Break Through in America The Wall Street Journal Archived from the original on March 4 2016 Retrieved January 25 2013 The management firms pay for everything leading talent house S M Entertainment has pegged the cost of rearing a single idol at around 3 million which for Girls Generation would be multiplied by nine Choi JungBong and Roald Maliangkay 2015 K pop The International Rise of the Korean Music Industry New York Routledge ISBN 9781138775961 Archived from the original on October 20 2023 Retrieved July 24 2018 Doboo Shim 2005 Hybridity and the rise of Korean popular culture in Asia National University of Singapore 28 25 44 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 489 921 doi 10 1177 0163443706059278 S2CID 204327176 Eun Young Jung 2009 Transnational Korea A Critical Assessment of the Korean Wave in Asia and the United States PDF Southeast Review of Asian Studies 31 University of California San Diego 69 80 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 458 9491 ISSN 1083 074X Archived from the original PDF on April 13 2014 Retrieved April 13 2014 Lyan Irina January 2014 Hallyu across the Desert K pop Fandom in Israel and Palestine Cross Currents East Asian History and Culture Review Archived from the original on November 12 2020 Retrieved January 19 2015 Park T K Kim Youngdae January 15 2019 A Brief History of Korean Hip hop Vulture Archived from the original on February 26 2019 Retrieved February 25 2019 a b c d e f g Jin Dal Yong Ryoo Woongjae December 13 2012 Critical Interpretation of Hybrid K Pop The Global Local Paradigm of English Mixing in Lyrics Popular Music and Society 37 2 113 131 doi 10 1080 03007766 2012 731721 ISSN 0300 7766 S2CID 143689845 Lindvall Helienne April 20 2011 Behind the music What is K Pop and why are the Swedish getting involved The Guardian London Archived from the original on September 30 2013 Retrieved March 27 2012 Xu Tina The K Pop U S Music Connections You Never Knew Existed Fuse Archived from the original on July 15 2018 Retrieved March 7 2013 Hampp Andrew March 16 2012 Secrets Behind K Pop s Global Success Explored at SXSW Panel Billboard Archived from the original on July 4 2014 Retrieved March 28 2013 The American hip hop community s recent interest in K pop has helped open a lot of doors for other artists and managers Stateside too Chun Elaine W February 2017 How to drop a name Hybridity purity and the K pop fan Language in Society 46 1 57 76 doi 10 1017 S0047404516000828 ISSN 0047 4045 레드 기획 케이팝 진단이 필요해 h21 hani co kr Archived from the original on November 3 2018 Retrieved November 3 2018 Shin Hyun joon 가요 케이팝 그리고 너머 Archived from the original on November 26 2021 Retrieved November 3 2018 K pop grows on disposable fast music The Korea Times April 12 2011 Archived from the original on December 12 2013 Retrieved March 27 2012 Wang Amy X July 30 2016 Hallyu K pop Inside the weirdest most lucrative global frenzy in music QUARTZ Archived from the original on April 11 2018 Retrieved April 11 2018 Lhatoo Yonden December 30 2017 K pop is an infectious disease not a cultural export to be proud of South China Morning Post Archived from the original on April 26 2018 Retrieved April 10 2018 Seabrook John October 8 2012 Factory Girls The New Yorker Archived from the original on July 24 2019 Retrieved April 11 2018 Star producer Teddy s plagiarism controversies drag on The Korea Herald January 19 2018 Archived from the original on April 24 2023 Retrieved April 25 2021 Lindvall Helienne Behind the music What is K Pop and why are the Swedish getting involved Archived from the original on September 30 2013 Retrieved December 15 2016 Tucci Sherry April 2 2016 When K pop culturally appropriates The Daily Dot Archived from the original on February 17 2018 Retrieved April 10 2018 We Need to Talk About K Pop s Race Problem Teen Vogue March 15 2017 Archived from the original on June 10 2023 Retrieved September 21 2023 K pop and Cultural Appropriation Cool Culture Seoulbeats August 24 2012 Archived from the original on March 3 2018 Retrieved April 10 2018 Dahir Ikran July 21 2016 This K Pop Girl Group Is Being Accused Of Appropriating Indian Culture Buzzfeed Archived from the original on June 15 2018 Retrieved April 10 2018 Anderson Crystal January 12 2013 Of Misconceptions About Cultural Appropriation in K pop High Yellow Archived from the original on May 7 2013 Retrieved April 10 2018 a b Chace Zoe October 12 2012 Gangnam Style Three Reasons K Pop Is Taking Over The World NPR Archived from the original on September 29 2015 Retrieved December 26 2012 12 Concepts and Styles in K Pop The Odyssey Online February 8 2016 Archived from the original on November 15 2018 Retrieved November 15 2018 Kallen Stuart A 2014 K Pop Korea s Musical Explosion Twenty First Century Books p 37 38 ISBN 9781467720427 a b Ramstad Evan Korea Counts Down Not Just To New Year But to New Girls Album The Wall Street Journal Archived from the original on June 6 2013 Retrieved January 5 2013 K pop news sites for the past couple of weeks have seemed to have some new video or bit of Girls related gossip to chew over once or twice a day There s been a drama teaser and a dance teaser that s the one above and countdown videos from each of the group s nine members One of the unique things about album releases by K pop artists is that they are routinely called comebacks even when there s been no evidence that the musician or group went away or in the conventional sports usage of the term experienced a setback or loss 정 준화 April 9 2018 SC현장 롤모델은 방탄소년단 느와르 벌써 핫 한 9인조 종합 Sports Chosun in Korean Archived from the original on August 13 2020 Retrieved March 9 2019 유튜브 센세이션 그루브네이션 Groove Nation 과 인터뷰 Archived from the original on December 28 2017 Retrieved December 27 2017 K pop s second wave Archived from the original on September 23 2015 Retrieved December 27 2017 K Pop success for easy choreography Archived from the original on October 11 2013 Retrieved December 27 2017 a b K Pop takes America how South Korea s music machine is conquering the world The Verge October 18 2012 Archived from the original on October 20 2012 Retrieved December 27 2017 a b c Inside the Intense Training Centers Where Young Girls Compete to Be K Pop Stars Broadly October 5 2016 Archived from the original on November 7 2018 Retrieved October 15 2018 a b c Behind the Scenes in K pop Interview with SM Choreographer Rino Nakasone Beyond Hallyu Beyond Hallyu April 26 2013 Archived from the original on August 19 2019 Retrieved October 15 2018 a b Video Exploring the art of K pop dance January 30 2018 Archived from the original on January 17 2020 Retrieved October 17 2018 a b Jin Dal Yong April 20 2017 Critical Discourse of K pop within Globalization Vol 1 University of Illinois Press doi 10 5406 illinois 9780252039973 003 0006 ISBN 9780252098147 Archived from the original on May 7 2018 Retrieved May 7 2018 Lie John 2012 What Is the K in K pop South Korean Popular Music the Culture Industry and National Identity Korea Observer 43 339 63 a b Lie John November 24 2014 K pop popular music cultural amnesia and economic innovation in South Korea Oakland California ISBN 9780520958944 OCLC 893686334 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Herald Interview Girls Generation s stylist caps K pop fashion industry over years October 18 2017 Archived from the original on May 7 2018 Retrieved May 7 2018 1990s Fashion Styles Trends History amp Pictures www retrowaste com Archived from the original on July 20 2018 Retrieved May 7 2018 a b Kwak Nojin Ryu Youngju 2015 Lee Sangjoon Nornes Abe Mark eds Hallyu 2 0 The Korean Wave in the Age of Social Media University of Michigan Press doi 10 3998 mpub 7651262 hdl 10356 143911 ISBN 9780472072521 JSTOR 10 3998 mpub 7651262 Archived from the original on October 20 2023 Retrieved July 24 2018 Shim Doobo 2006 Hybridity and the Rise of Korean Popular Culture in Asia Media Culture amp Society 28 29 doi 10 1177 0163443706059278 S2CID 204327176 Jin Dal Yong 2016 Critical Discourse of K pop within Globalization In Jin Dal Yong ed New Korean Wave Transnational Cultural Power in the Age of Social Media University of Illinois Press pp 111 130 doi 10 5406 illinois 9780252039973 001 0001 ISBN 9780252039973 JSTOR 10 5406 j ctt18j8wkv 9 Archived from the original on October 20 2023 Retrieved July 24 2018 Kim Yun Spring 2012 K pop 스타의 패션에 관한 연구 PDF Journal of the Korean Society of Fashion Design 12 2 17 37 Archived PDF from the original on August 26 2021 Retrieved March 16 2018 K pop s slick productions win fans across Asia Inquirer September 21 2011 Archived from the original on December 30 2011 Retrieved April 2 2012 G Dragon Voted Best Dressed Celebrity of the Year The Chosun Ilbo December 25 2012 Archived from the original on January 26 2017 Retrieved March 2 2017 Jeremy Scott and CL On Moschino Pop Culture and the Power Of Girls Papermag August 26 2015 Archived from the original on April 7 2016 Retrieved April 12 2016 Bow Down To The Ultimate Besties Jeremy Scott And CL In Paper Mag MTV News Archived from the original on April 23 2016 Retrieved April 12 2016 Oh Ingyu The Globalization of K pop Korea s Place in the Global Music Industry 402 Archived from the original on September 28 2021 Retrieved January 15 2020 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help K Pop Leads Record Earnings from Cultural Exports The Chosun Ilbo Archived from the original on October 2 2012 Retrieved January 26 2013 A BOK official said the increase is related to a surge in exports of cultural products amid the rising popularity of K pop in Europe and the U S as well as in Asia Korean Wave Gives Exports a Boost The Chosun Ilbo Archived from the original on March 1 2013 Retrieved January 26 2013 But for every 100 increase in exports of cultural products themselves outbound shipments of processed food clothes cosmetics and IT products also grew 412 on average Rousee Marquet Jennifer November 29 2012 K pop the story of the well oiled industry of standardized catchy tunes Institut national de l audiovisuel Archived from the original on November 3 2013 Retrieved January 25 2013 The government then identified the cultural industry as the next growth driver Numerous state research agencies were created and some projects were subsidised in an attempt to boost the nation s cultural industry Hallyu to highlight Korea Indonesia ties in March Jakarta Post Archived from the original on January 6 2013 Retrieved January 26 2013 K POP World Festival 케이팝월드페스티벌 Visit Korea Korean Tourism Organization Archived from the original on March 3 2017 Retrieved March 2 2017 Wagner Jan Philipp May 14 2014 The Effectiveness of Soft amp Hard Power in Contemporary International Relations E International Relations Archived from the original on May 17 2014 Retrieved May 14 2014 a b Kim Tae Young Jin Dal Young 2016 Cultural Policy in the Korean Wave An Analysis of Cultural Diplomacy Embedded in Presidential Speeches PDF International Journal of Communication 10 5514 5534 Archived from the original on April 30 2018 Retrieved November 17 2018 Red Velvet Perform for North Korean Leader Kim Jong Un in Rare Pyongyang Concert Billboard April 2 2018 Archived from the original on April 2 2018 Retrieved April 2 2018 a href Template Cite magazine html title Template Cite magazine cite magazine a Unknown parameter agency ignored help Baynes Chris April 2018 South Korean pop stars perform first concert in North Korea for more than a decade The Independent Independent Archived from the original on April 1 2018 Retrieved April 1 2018 a b K Pop A New Force in Pop Music pp 47 79 Shin Solee I Kim Lanu December 1 2013 Organizing K Pop Emergence and Market Making of Large Korean Entertainment Houses 1980 2010 East Asia 30 4 255 272 doi 10 1007 s12140 013 9200 0 ISSN 1874 6284 S2CID 153779858 Archived from the original on October 20 2023 Retrieved April 30 2022 JPNews 일본이 보인다 일본뉴스포털 Jpnews kr December 30 2010 Archived from the original on October 13 2013 Retrieved January 13 2012 고가마사오 Doosan Encyclopedia Archived from the original on October 20 2023 Retrieved January 13 2012 Why Korean girl groups conquering music charts are nothing new South China Morning Post May 23 2018 Archived from the original on January 22 2023 Retrieved January 22 2023 The History Of K Pop Has A Lot To Do With Politics NPR News July 10 2021 Archived from the original on October 20 2023 Retrieved July 10 2021 a b c d e f g h A brief history of K Pop A Side Archived from the original on November 13 2022 Retrieved November 6 2018 a b K Pop A New Force in Pop Music pp 50 54 a b c 대중가요 Encyclopedia of Korean Culture in Korean Academy of Korean Studies Archived from the original on March 2 2013 Retrieved December 7 2012 ADD4 amp KOREAN PSYCH ROCK amp FOLK POP reissues ADD 4 psychemusic org Archived from the original on July 28 2013 Retrieved February 27 2012 Csomagolhattok es mehettek vissza Szoulba Mia Kim a Quartnak in Hungarian Quart hu September 12 2011 Archived from the original on March 8 2012 Retrieved February 27 2012 a b K Pop A New Force in Pop Music pp 54 57 a b K Pop A New Force in Pop Music pp 60 61 DJ DOC KBS World Archived from the original on January 7 2015 Retrieved December 10 2012 Hartong Jan Laurens 2006 Musical terms worldwide a companion for the musical explorer Semar Publishers p 15 ISBN 978 88 7778 090 4 Since the 1990s popular genres like rap rock and techno house have been incorporated into Korean popular music which often emulates American models a b c d e K Pop A New Force in Pop Music pp 63 66 a b MacIntyre Donald July 29 2002 Flying Too High Time Archived from the original on July 28 2002 Retrieved July 3 2012 Gingold Naomi January 8 2019 Why The Blueprint For K Pop Actually Came From Japan National Public Radio Archived from the original on May 13 2021 Retrieved March 22 2020 a b Shim Doobo Hybridity and the rise of Korean popular culture in Asia Media Culture amp Society 29 a b Oh Ingyu 2013 The Globalization of K pop Korea s Place in the Global Music Industry Korea Observer 44 3 389 409 Archived from the original on September 28 2021 Retrieved July 4 2018 Critical Interpretation of Hybrid K Pop The Global Local Paradigm of English Mixing in Lyrics Popular Music amp Society 37 120 Critical Interpretation of Hybrid K Pop The Global Local Paradigm of English Mixing in Lyrics Popular Music amp Society 37 119 Walsh John Korean Wave pp 20 21 a b Hong Euny August 5 2014 The Birth of Korean Cool How One Nation Is Conquering the World Through Pop Culture 1st ed New York Picador ISBN 978 1 250 04511 9 OCLC 881387185 Ryoo Woongjae 2009 Globalization or the logic of cultural hybridization The case of the Korean wave Asian Journal of Communication 19 2 139 doi 10 1080 01292980902826427 S2CID 144161463 Breaking amp Entering The Wonder Girls Billboard November 20 2009 Archived from the original on March 17 2013 Retrieved April 12 2016 K Pop Hot 100 BIGBANG Is Unstoppable Billboard March 14 2012 Archived from the original on January 18 2021 Retrieved April 12 2016 Oliver Christopher February 10 2012 South Korea s K pop takes off in the west Financial Times Archived from the original on November 12 2020 Retrieved October 11 2012 Constant Linda September 23 2012 K Pop Soft Power for the SK Government Huffington Post Archived from the original on March 2 2018 Retrieved February 20 2020 South Korea pushes its pop culture abroad BBC November 8 2011 Archived from the original on September 6 2012 Retrieved September 7 2012 South Korea s soft power Soap sparkle and pop Archived August 29 2017 at the Wayback Machine The Economist August 9 2014 Retrieved on August 12 2014 The first video on MTV K BoA My Name MTV K June 26 2006 Archived from the original on July 5 2006 Retrieved September 29 2008 a b K Pop A New Force in Pop Music pp 67 71 K pop the story of the well oiled industry of standardized catchy tunes INA Global Archived from the original on November 3 2013 Retrieved May 2 2013 South Korea s K pop craze lures fans and makes profits BBC April 26 2011 Archived from the original on October 6 2013 Retrieved May 2 2013 According to South Korea s Trade and Investment Agency income from cultural exports like pop music and TV shows has been rising by about 10 a year In 2008 it was worth almost 2bn K pop the story of the well oiled industry of standardized catchy tunes INA Global Archived from the original on November 3 2013 Retrieved May 2 2013 It accounts for most of K pop albums overseas sales As of 2008 Japan accounted for 68 percent of Korea s total music industry exports in 2008 while the Chinese and U S markets accounted for only 11 2 percent and 2 1 percent respectively TVXQ rakes in over 92 million in overseas concert revenues Allkpop Archived from the original on May 5 2013 Retrieved May 3 2013 How Korean culture stormed the world South China Morning Post Archived from the original on September 15 2017 Retrieved September 14 2017 Gangnam Style hits one billion views on YouTube BBC News December 21 2012 Archived from the original on January 15 2014 Retrieved April 12 2016 Gangnam Style statue built in South Korea s Seoul BBC News November 6 2015 Archived from the original on April 23 2016 Retrieved April 12 2016 Psy Gangam Style 강남스타일 M V July 15 2012 archived from the original on December 3 2020 retrieved December 20 2020 CHOE SANG HUN MARK RUSSELL March 4 2012 Bringing K Pop to the West The New York Times Archived from the original on March 22 2012 Retrieved September 12 2012 K Pop Idols And The Formidable American Debut KultScene KultScene October 22 2014 Archived from the original on June 6 2016 Retrieved April 12 2016 Benjamin Jeff March 6 2015 Will a K Pop Girl Group Take Over the U S Soon Or Ever Billboard Archived from the original on July 20 2018 Retrieved July 20 2018 Liu Marian K pop band BTS beats US stars to win Billboard Music Award CNN Archived from the original on September 13 2017 Retrieved September 13 2017 Gore Sydney Watch BTS make their official U S television debut at the American Music Awards The FADER Archived from the original on November 20 2017 Retrieved March 10 2018 On the Charts BTS Become First K Pop Act to Reach Number One Rolling Stone May 27 2018 Archived from the original on May 28 2018 Retrieved June 10 2018 Lefkowitz Andy November 8 2019 Lortel Winning Immersive Musical KPOP Eyes Broadway Run Talent Search Launched Broadway com Archived from the original on November 9 2022 Retrieved April 4 2022 Sullivan Lindsey April 4 2022 Kevin Woo Min Young Lee amp More to Join Luna in KPOP on Broadway Broadway com Archived from the original on November 9 2022 Retrieved April 4 2022 a b The big 3 of Korean pop music and entertainment The Dong a Ilbo July 26 2011 Archived from the original on October 11 2013 Retrieved February 5 2012 United Asia Management to hold a talent meeting at the 16th Busan International Film Festival Allkpop September 8 2011 Archived from the original on January 2 2012 Retrieved March 1 2012 Global Star Agency United Asia Management HanCinema May 6 2011 Archived from the original on August 26 2011 Retrieved March 1 2012 UAM United Asia Management uam asia Archived from the original on March 13 2016 Retrieved April 12 2016 S M Entertainment 041510 KOSDAQ Financial Statements Bloomberg Businessweek Archived from the original on March 2 2010 Retrieved March 29 2013 YG Entertainment 122870 KOSDAQ Financial Statements Bloomberg Businessweek Archived from the original on July 23 2013 Retrieved March 29 2013 JYP Entertainment Corp 035900 KOSDAQ Financial Statements Bloomberg Businessweek Archived from the original on July 23 2013 Retrieved March 29 2013 Korean Pop with Online Help Goes Global Time August 26 2010 Archived from the original on August 29 2010 Retrieved April 3 2013 DFSB Kollective was the first company to begin direct distribution of Korean music acts on iTunes in 2009 It began with more than 50 Korean artists in the alternative hip hop and electronica genres now there are hundreds of Korean artists available in the online music store a b 이 동연 January 11 2012 케이팝에 왜 열광하지 케이팝의 두 얼굴 Pressian in Korean Archived from the original on March 2 2013 Retrieved March 11 2012 PSY s riches from Gangnam Style not made at home Associated Press Archived from the original on January 13 2013 Retrieved December 30 2012 South Koreans pay less than 10 a month for a subscription to a music service that allows them to download hundreds of songs or have unlimited access to a music streaming service That makes the cost of a downloaded song about 10 cents on average The average price for streaming a song is 0 2 cents South Korea s Greatest Export How K Pop s Rocking the World Time March 7 2012 Archived from the original on September 16 2012 Retrieved April 28 2013 Kwak Donnie PSY s Gangnam Style The Billboard Cover Story Billboard Archived from the original on February 18 2013 Retrieved November 2 2012 The Korean music industry grossed nearly 3 4 billion in the first half of 2012 according to Billboard estimates a 27 8 increase from the same period last year BTS tops Billboard 100 list How K pop helped Korea improve its economy The Economic Times July 30 2019 ISSN 0013 0389 Retrieved January 29 2024 Global Music Report 2019 State of the Industry PDF Report 2019 Archived from the original PDF on June 6 2020 Retrieved January 28 2024 Abramovitch Seth October 2 2019 BTS Is Back Music s Billion Dollar Boy Band Takes the Next Step The Hollywood Reporter Retrieved January 29 2024 S M Entertainment 041510 KOSDAQ Financial Statements Archived from the original on June 1 2022 Retrieved May 11 2021 JYP Entertainment 041510 KOSDAQ Financial Statements Archived from the original on June 2 2022 Retrieved May 11 2021 YG Entertainment 041510 KOSDAQ Financial Statements Archived from the original on October 9 2021 Retrieved May 11 2021 EXO K s Overdose EP Enters Billboard 200 Billboard Archived from the original on April 24 2021 Retrieved June 4 2014 BTS make history as they become the first Korean band to enter the Official Albums Chart with Wings Official Charts The Official UK Charts Company October 18 2016 Archived from the original on February 9 2017 Retrieved February 3 2017 Benjamin Jeff BTS Wings Sets New U S Record for Highest Charting Best Selling K Pop Album Billboard Archived from the original on October 19 2016 Retrieved February 20 2020 BTS Spring Day Not Today Reach Top 20 On US iTunes Sales Chart You Never Walk Alone Also Rising Headline Planet February 12 2017 Archived from the original on March 25 2017 Retrieved March 25 2017 Copsey Rob Foo Fighters secure their fourth Number 1 on the Official Albums Chart with Concrete and Gold Archived from the original on September 25 2017 Retrieved September 22 2017 Thomas C 2018 BTS The K Pop Group That Finally Won America Over Forbes Com 5 Trust Gary August 31 2020 BTS Dynamite Blasts in at No 1 on Billboard Hot 100 Becoming the Group s First Leader Billboard Archived from the original on September 1 2020 Retrieved September 4 2020 Zellner Xander June 25 2018 Blackpink Makes K Pop History on Hot 100 Billboard 200 amp More With DDU DU DDU DU Billboard Archived from the original on October 4 2019 Retrieved August 8 2018 Lee Soo Man Taking Korean Pop Culture Global Stanford Graduate School of Business Archived from the original on April 12 2020 Retrieved April 12 2016 Seabrook John October 8 2012 Factory Girls The New Yorker ISSN 0028 792X Archived from the original on July 24 2019 Retrieved April 12 2016 Flatley Joseph October 18 2012 K Pop takes America how South Korea s music machine is conquering the world The Verge Archived from the original on October 20 2012 Retrieved October 19 2012 K Pop A New Force in Pop Music p 39 Leong Melissa August 2 2014 How Korea became the world s coolest brand Financial Post Archived from the original on January 8 2015 Retrieved January 18 2015 Woo Jaeyeon May 3 2012 Journey to K Pop Star I Am Korea Real Time The Wall Street Journal Archived from the original on June 23 2012 Retrieved September 17 2012 KPop s Frontiers How Does the Big 3 Teach Foreign Languages to Their Trainees Kpopstarz com February 7 2012 Archived from the original on February 10 2012 Retrieved March 1 2012 Herman Tamar May 7 2018 Temporary K Pop Acts Like Wanna One JBJ amp I O I Are the New Norm Billboard Archived from the original on January 18 2019 Retrieved March 9 2019 Sung Si Kyung to feature debut process of idol stars through Mydol Archived from the original on March 3 2016 Retrieved March 28 2012 Jellyfish Male Trainees Revealed Ahead of My Dol Premiere CJ E amp M enewsWorld Archived from the original on March 29 2016 Retrieved March 19 2016 Sung So young January 21 2016 TV competition aims to form a K pop supergroup Korea JoongAng Daily Archived from the original on January 26 2016 Retrieved January 25 2016 Kim Ji young Produce 101 girl group to be named IOI Kpop Herald Archived from the original on April 24 2016 Retrieved April 2 2016 Ko Dong hwan April 4 2016 101 girls down to I O I The Korea Times Archived from the original on August 4 2017 Retrieved April 7 2016 Herman Tamar December 11 2017 K Pop Audition Shows Produce Big Results But Cause Concerns Over Industry s Future Billboard Archived from the original on November 19 2020 Retrieved July 20 2018 Hong Dam young October 25 2017 Yet another idol competition show The Unit unveiled The Korea Herald Archived from the original on July 20 2018 Retrieved July 20 2018 Survival Reality Shows thekrazemag com May 24 2021 Archived from the original on March 25 2023 Retrieved March 25 2023 a b The dark side of South Korean pop music BBC June 14 2011 Archived from the original on December 31 2011 Retrieved January 6 2012 a b c d South Korean Law to Protect Young K Pop Stars From Sexualization Overwork The Hollywood Reporter July 8 2014 Archived from the original on July 12 2014 Retrieved April 13 2016 Will TVXQ Stay Together KBS World October 28 2009 Archived from the original on September 17 2023 Retrieved October 28 2009 한경 SM 非정상적 활동강요 Archived July 22 2011 at the Wayback Machine Star News December 22 2009 Retrieved May 1 2012 in Korean a b South Korea Passes Law Regulating K Pop Industry Archived August 4 2014 at the Wayback Machine WonderingSound com July 8 2014 Retrieved on August 3 2014 Park Gil Sung 2013 Manufacturing Creativity Production Performance Korea Journal 53 4 14 33 doi 10 25024 kj 2013 53 4 14 New contractual changes cause concern within music industry Korea Boo March 9 2017 Archived from the original on March 10 2017 Retrieved May 6 2018 South Korea Passes new regulations for unfair trainee contracts Korea Boo March 7 2017 Archived from the original on March 9 2017 Retrieved May 6 2018 Lee David D June 17 2022 No money in it why has BTS been silent on discrimination in South Korea South China Morning Post Archived from the original on March 6 2023 Retrieved March 6 2023 a b Power John July 20 2011 Should a law ban sexualizing of K pop teens The Korea Herald Archived from the original on April 11 2018 Retrieved April 10 2018 Oakeley Lucas April 24 2018 How K pop became a propaganda tool The Outline Archived from the original on April 26 2018 Retrieved April 25 2018 a b Wang Amy X February 21 2019 K Pop Has So Many Lookalikes That the Government Stepped In Rolling Stone Archived from the original on March 14 2023 Retrieved March 14 2023 a b Kim Jae heun February 18 2019 TV guidelines on look alike K pop singers spark controversy The Korea Times Archived from the original on March 14 2023 Retrieved March 14 2023 a b c Herman Tamar April 23 2018 2018 Sees K pop Stars Addressing Mental Health Stressors in Industry Billboard Archived from the original on July 25 2020 Retrieved December 5 2019 a b c Kil Sonia December 19 2017 Jonghyun Suicide Note Points to Brutal Pressure of Korean Spotlight Variety Archived from the original on May 28 2019 Retrieved January 27 2019 History of K pop 1992 1995 The Beginning seoulbeats January 10 2016 Archived from the original on January 4 2019 Retrieved January 27 2019 Park Ju won November 28 2019 Singer Goo Hara s Death Shines Light on the Dark Side of K Pop Time Archived from the original on November 28 2019 Retrieved December 5 2019 Kwon Jake December 2 2019 After another K pop death spotlight turns to difficulties faced by industry s perfect stars CNN Archived from the original on December 1 2019 Retrieved December 5 2019 Are Jonghyun Sulli and Goo Hara victims of the K pop industry South China Morning Post December 18 2019 Archived from the original on December 18 2019 Retrieved February 24 2021 Wang Fan Ku Yuna April 21 2023 Moonbin Star s death renews scrutiny on pressures of K pop BBC News Archived from the original on April 23 2023 Retrieved April 22 2023 a b Tai Crystal March 29 2020 Exploding the myths behind K pop The Observer ISSN 0029 7712 Archived from the original on November 15 2020 Retrieved March 24 2023 A Korean Idol s Life Sweat and Sleepless Nights Korean JoongAng Daily February 18 2010 Archived from the original on January 11 2013 Retrieved February 2 2012 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link K pop dictionary maknae MTV Korea Archived from the original on August 18 2011 Retrieved January 30 2012 ソロでの活躍がめざましい各グループのマンネたち Archived June 29 2017 at the Wayback MachineHwaiting Hallyu News amp Magazine Retrieved February 23 2013 Winners from the 21st Seoul Music Awards Allkpop January 19 2012 Archived from the original on March 2 2013 Retrieved January 1 2013 Big Bang first to achieve Perfect All Kill in 2012 Allkpop February 26 2012 Archived from the original on February 27 2012 Retrieved February 26 2012 IU achieves a certified all kill with The Red Shoes Allkpop October 9 2013 Archived from the original on November 2 2013 Retrieved October 31 2013 An Instiz certified all kill AK occurs when an individual song sweeps all of South Korea s major music charts simultaneously placing first on both the real time and daily charts a b c K Pop Culture Glossary Soompi 2012 Archived from the original on January 11 2013 Retrieved January 31 2012 Mahr Krista March 7 2012 K Pop How South Korea s Great Export Is Rocking the World Time Archived from the original on September 16 2012 Retrieved September 17 2012 Latest K Pop Invasion The Fans The Wall Street Journal June 15 2012 Archived from the original on August 25 2019 Retrieved December 19 2012 JYJ First K Pop Band to Perform Solo in Europe The Chosun Ilbo October 13 2011 Archived from the original on August 14 2021 Retrieved December 19 2012 Mukasa Edwina December 15 2011 Bored by Cowell pop Try K pop The Guardian London Archived from the original on July 8 2017 Retrieved January 25 2013 The result according to a survey conducted by the Korean Culture and Information Service is that there are an estimated 460 000 Korean wave fans across Europe concentrated in Britain and France with 182 Hallyu fan clubs worldwide boasting a total of 3 3m members Bruner Raisa October 8 2019 The Mastermind Behind BTS Explains the K Pop Group s Success Time Archived from the original on January 8 2020 Retrieved March 20 2023 Ramstad Evan Behind K pop s Pop The Work of Fans The Wall Street Journal Archived from the original on August 18 2012 Retrieved January 26 2013 Others handle things like publishing lyrics translations of lyrics or spreading news about K pop groups and stars To get a feel for this micro business we asked the operators of a K pop lyrics translation site called pop gasa com to provide a glimpse of their role in the Korean Wave Our takeaway it s as competitive as any business What s Your Name A Compendium of K pop Fandoms seoulbeats May 19 2014 Archived from the original on April 25 2016 Retrieved April 12 2016 Official Fan Clubs and Fan Colors Kpop Lists Archived from the original on April 3 2016 Retrieved April 12 2016 span, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.