fbpx
Wikipedia

Music industry of Asia

The music industry of Asia is an industry in which people sell music-related products to earn money.[1] The business structures of the industry include recorded music, live music, radio broadcasting, and digital and online distribution.[1] The Asian music industry consists of music industry of Central Asia, East Asia, North Asia, South Asia, Southeast Asia, and West Asia.[2] The music industry of Asia influences Asian culture and economy.[1] The music industry of Asia also has a worldwide impact.[1]

Music Industry of Asia
LocationCentral Asia, East Asia, North Asia, South Asia, Southeast Asia, West Asia

History edit

Early history edit

Korean modern pop music firstly appeared in 1915, affected by Filipino pop songs.[3] Since Japanese colonial authorities needed to restrict all forms of art in Korea, Korean rarely had the opportunity to establish their own modern music style.[4] In the early 1920s, the recording industry emerged in Shanghai, China.[5] Japanese pop music originated in the Showa Period, which was the heyday of Jazz music.[6]

Modernization Period edit

The development of Japanese music industry was hindered by World War II.[7] Subsequently, when Japan was occupied by the US, the US military played music such as boogie-woogie, mambo, blues ,and country music, introducing new music styles to Japan.[7] In 1948, the ‘Tokyo boogie-woogie’, Chiemi Eri's ‘Tennessee Waltz’, Misora Hibari's ‘Omatsuri Mambo’ and ‘Omoide no Waltz’ became the representative songs, and they were published as music records.[8] During the 1950s and 1960s, pop music was weakening in the mainland of China due to the introduction of Soviet music.[9]

Recent Development edit

And the 1990s were the heyday of J-pop when many records in the music market were broken.[10] Sales revenue was more than 400 billion yen (around 2.7 Billion US dollars) in 1991, 500 billion yen in 1993, and reached an unsurpassed point of 607.5 billion yen in 1998.[10] Music market expansion also brought music style diversification and strong competition. From 1995 to 1997, three major entertainment companies in South Korea (S.M.Entertainment, JYP Entertainment and YG Entertainment), were founded.[11] In the first decade of the 21st century, music brands like BoA, TVXQ, Shinhwa, Super Junior, BigBang, Wonder Girls, Girls' Generation, 2AM, 2PM, emerged one after another, jointly creating the golden age of k-pop idols.[12] At this stage, Korean entertainment companies were more systematic and professional in the idol industry.[12] Underground artists also contributed to hip-hop mainstream.[12] Kim Bum-soo was the first South Korean artist to reach the US Billboard Hot 100 chart and no. 51 in 2001.[12] In 2005, "You are my rose", the first mobile album in China, completely broke the traditional marketing mode released through CD, store, network and other channels.[9] On 19 February 2019, Johnny's Entertainment ( also called 株式会社ジャニーズ事務所 ) will officially launch virtual idols online in cooperation with SHOWROOM, a company providing video live streaming service.[7]

Business Structure edit

Recorded music and radio broadcasting edit

In the early 1920s, EMI Records Ltd from French, whose main businesses are film and music recording, set up a branch in Shanghai, that provided the quickest way to spread European and American pop music in China.[5] In the end of the 1970s, the cassette tapes produced by Sanyo Japan and Pacific Audio & Video Co directly boosted Chinese popular music.[13] In 1990, 180 million cassettes were sold in India, and that makes it the world's second-largest market for cassettes.[14] In this year, Japan was ranked after the US.[14] In China, the new generation of musicians was absorbing nutrition from European, American and Japanese music industry at will.[5] They re-wrote the popular songs in the 1930s, carrying forward the past and forging ahead into the future.[5] In Guangzhou, China, ‘The Old Three Musketeers’, consists of Youzhong Jin, Jialin Ding, and Kang Situ, were leaders in the music recording industry.[5] In 2018, 66% of South Korean consumers listen to music by radio, and 50% of Japanese consumers listen to music by radio.[15]

Live house edit

"Live House", which is a club with live music, is also a popular business structure in Asia.[16] It firstly appeared in Japan, and was one of the four kinds of concert venues: music hall, arena, Dome and Live house.[16] A Live House is the smallest concert venue, and usually has a capacity of 100 to 500 people.[16] Zepp Tour appeared correspondingly, and it is a subsidiary of Sony Entertainment Music, which specializes in Live House.[16] Zepp has six chain stores in Japan, namely, sendai, Hokkaido, Tokyo, Nagoya, Osaka and fukuoka.[16] In Japan, a large Live House like Zepp in Tokyo is also the first choice for many overseas singers.[16] The Zepp Tour is the venue for Japanese premiers by overseas singers and groups.[17] In China, music consumers aged between 22 and 40 are increasingly interested in Live House performances.[18] From 2014 to 2016, Chinese live houses fell into low tide period.[19] Some high-quality Live houses (such as Beijing Sparrow House) closed down, and the well-known MAO Live House once confronted with the survival crisis.[19] However, the small and medium-sized Live industry did not stop growing.[18] With the consumption growth and consumption upgrade, millennials have higher requirements on the interactivity and experience of entertainment products, and the box office revenue of Live House has increased significantly.[18]

Digital and online distribution edit

In 1997, musician Zhe Chen set up the first music website in China.[20] By 2000, there were hundreds of music websites in DMVE cooperated with SINA to promote Lou Geng Sed's new song ‘butterfly flower’ on the website.[20] In 2001, Xuecun's "All the people in northeast China are living Lei Feng" became a hit on the Internet, and it was the biggest news in the Chinese music industry.[20] Since then, many singers have discovered a new possibility.[21] In 2003, South Korea became the first music market where the sales revenue of digital music exceeded physical music sales.[22] In 2004, "Mouse loves rice", "Lilac flower" and "Two butterflies" became popular, and online songs quickly became a popular cultural phenomenon.[21] In 2018, 96% of Indian consumers use smartphones while listening music, and this is the highest rate all over the world, and message apps are the main ways for Chinese consumers to share their favorite songs (65% using Wechat, 64% using QQ and 62% using Weibo).[15] The development of online distribution also caused a decline in the traditional recording industry, and the crisis of record industry lasted for nearly a decade.[15] Compared to the first and second generation, the third generation of Korean idols represented by EXO, Got7, Winner and IKon are more globalized and rely more on the digital and online distribution.[23] In the first quarter of 2018, QQ music, Kugou music and Kuwo music owned by Tencent music had 254 million active users, 227 million active users and 111 million active users respectively.[21] In 2018, 70% of Tencent music's revenue came from users' fees for giving virtual gifts (such as stars and small tangyuan) to artists (or other users). The other 30% comes from paid streaming subscriptions, digital downloads and advertising.[24]

Regional Music Industry edit

East Asia edit

Chinese Music Industry edit

Chinese music market values licensed music, as 96% of Chinese consumers listen to licensed music and 89% of them listen to licensed audio streaming.[15] Message apps are the main ways for Chinese consumers to share their favorite songs (65% using WeChat, 64% using QQ and 62% using Weibo).[24] The most popular music genres in China are C-pop, pop, folk, country and soundtracks.[15] In October 2018, the top 10 Chinese online music APP used by active users were: QQ Music, Kugou music, Kuwo music, 163 cloud music, Xiami music, Migu music, Miaomi music, Yin Yue Tai, iMusic, Baidu Ting Music.[25] China's media and entertainment industries are witnessing a change in the nature of the relationship between fans and the artists/studios they follow.[26] Fans are now influencing the market from sharing their original works as active members of the fan community, and participants in the "gift economy", leveraged by studio content experts seeking to ensure the success of the works before they are released into the market.[26] Chinese media and entertainment companies are embracing the creativity of fans and looking for new ways to develop, invest in and nurture their fan base, co-create products, especially with high level "super fans", and go beyond mere lifestyle to drive purchases.[26]

South Korea Music Industry edit

Until the end of 2018, South Korean music industry is mainly contributed by local music, 66% of South Korean consumers listen to K-pop and 22% of them listen to K-trot.[15] Moreover, 66% of South Korean consumers listen to music by radio.[15] Artist agencies in South Korea cultivate idols from a young age, by signing binding contracts with them, so the trainees learn the essential skills, such as singing, dancing, and foreign languages, in a rounded system which is provided by the agencies.[27] In the first decade of the 21st century, BoA, TVXQ, Shinhwa, Super Junior, BigBang, Wonder Girls, Girls' Generation, 2AM, 2PM and so on, emerged one after another, jointly creating the golden age of k-pop idols.[12] K-pop also gave birth to two of the biggest music groups of 2020s, BTS and Blackpink. At this stage, Korean entertainment companies were more systematic and professional in the idol industry.[12] Korean entertainment companies have a completed idol industry, following a process of "trainee selection – trainee training – marketing planning – idol group selection – music production – release ".[28] The agencies also have strict rules to control pop stars' daily life, including bowing, dating, and even getting married.[28]

Japanese Music Industry edit

In 2012, Japan was analysed as the world's largest music recording market for the first time.[29] In the Japanese music industry, J-pop is very popular since 66% of Japanese consumers listen to it.[15] Music from comics is also listened by 29% of Japanese consumers.[15] Moreover, 50% of Japanese consumers listen to music by radio.[15] Although Japanese idol industry sells multi-million dollars, many Japanese pop stars are paid with low salaries.[28] The private lives of Japanese stars are also controlled by their agencies, or bound by contracts.[28] Many of them have to ask their agencies for permission to date and even get married.[28] While Japan led the world in the adoption of mobile consumer culture, such as ringtones, from the 1990s to the end of the 2000s, it has lagged behind in the adoption of streaming formats.[30] Naming the online streaming service "radio" is not as familiar to new media as it is in the us.[30] The lack of a legal licence further constrains the growth of streaming services, so they must negotiate rights with record labels, which are reluctant to offer Japanese content, including current top charts and out-of-date catalogues, to streaming companies.[30] Finally, smartphones took longer to catch on in Japan because the flip phones of the mid-2000s were so advanced that the iPhone didn't look as groundbreaking when it was released.[30]

South Asia edit

Indian Music Industry edit

The Indian music industry is mainly contributed by local music, and the Indian top 5 favorite genres are new Bollywood music, old Bollywood music, Indian classical music, pop, and rock.[15] 96% of Indian consumers use smartphones while listening to music, and this is the highest rate all over the world. Furthermore, 96% of them listen to licensed music, and 95% of them listen to music through on-demand streaming.[15] However, the music industry in Garhwali (North India) produces popular music clips, which are sung in the local dialect and broadcast mainly on the Internet.[31] This kind of video seems to be a medium for audience engagement: they bring together audiences from diverse geographic and social professional backgrounds whose music-oriented communication facilitates interpersonal and aesthetic or ethical debates.[31] Garhwali clips are uploaded to streaming sites like YouTube, as well as information sites that follow Garhwal's or personal pages and blogs.[31] On all of these platforms, listeners living abroad or outside gawar seem particularly keen to comment on the political and cultural content shown in the music segment.[31]

Bangladeshi Music Industry edit

Bangladesh claims some of the most renowned singers, composers and producers in Asia. Bengali music spans a wide variety of styles. Music has served the purpose of documenting the lives of the people and was widely patronized by the rulers. It comprises a long tradition of religious and regular song-writing over a period of almost a millennium. Currently, the thriving Bangladeshi music industry is one of the best in both quality and market in South Asia. There are many bands and artists releasing songs both independently and for the cinema industry in various genres.[citation needed]

Southeast Asia edit

Singaporean Music Industry edit

There are various music genres in Singapore, such as rock, punk, pop, and western classical music, and Singapore pop stars like Stefanie Sun and JJ Lin are also popular in both Singapore and China.[32] Singaporean music is based on various cultures, such as Chinese culture, Malaysian culture, Indian culture, and classical European culture.[32] The popular music industry in Singapore advocates that the western music is superior to the local music in Singapore.[33] Singaporeans are often sceptical about the quality of Singapore's musicians because they have "unrealistic" stereotypes about music.[33] Therefore, starting from the phenomenon that music types such as J-pop and K-pop have become an indispensable part of music culture in Singapore.[33]

Philippine Music Industry edit

Music of the Philippines (ᜋᜓᜐᜒᜃ ᜈᜅ᜔ ᜉᜒᜎᜒᜉᜒᜈᜐ᜔) include musical performance arts in the Philippines or by Filipinos composed in various genres and styles. The compositions are often a mixture of different Asian, Spanish, Latin American, American, and indigenous influences. From 2010 to 2020, Philippine pop music or P-pop went through a huge metamorphosis in its increased quality, budget, investment, and variety, matching the country's rapid economic growth, and an accompanying social and cultural resurgence of its Asian identity. This was heard by heavy influence from K-pop and J-pop, growth in Asian style ballads, idol groups, and EDM music, and less reliance on Western genres, mirroring the Korean wave and similar Japanese wave popularity among millennial Filipinos and mainstream culture. Famous P-pop music artist who had defined the growth of this now mainstream genre like this five-member Global Pop group SB19, the first Filipino and Southeast Asian act to be nominated in Billboard Music Awards for the Top Social Artist category.[34][35] They are also the first Southeast Asian act to enter the top 10 of Billboard Social 50 weekly and year-end charts.[36][37]

Worldwide impact edit

In the process of the development of Asian music industry, the overseas market has been highly valued. For example, SM Entertainment's business revenue grew rapidly from 96.9 billion in 2010 to more than 300 billion in 2014.[11] At the same time, SM entertainment's overseas revenue accounted for more than 50% of the total revenue in 2012 and 2013, most of which came from the Japanese market and Chinese market.[12] SM Entertainment also actively expands overseas, establishing business in North America, Europe, Western Europe and Asia.[12]

The song "上を向いて歩こう" (a well-known song called ス キ ヤ キ) was a success.[38] It was the first Japanese song to reach No. 1 in the U.S. (four weeks in Cashbox Magazine, three weeks in Billboard Magazine) of Japan and the America region ranking, and was awarded the "Gold record" for selling more than a million copies.[38] In 2008, Sa Dingding won the BBC Radio 3 Awards for World Music and was invited to perform at the Royal Albert Hall to both eastern and western audiences.[39] In 2009, Sa Dingding 's album Alive was listed as one of the 85 nominees for best world music album at Grammy Awards.[40]

Until the end of 2018, three Asian countries joined the top 10 music markets (2nd in Japan, 6th in South Korea, 7th in China). Among the ‘global top 10 albums of 2018’, two albums of BTS are listed, and "Love Yourself 結 'Answer'" took the and "Love Yourself 转 'Tear'" took the 2nd and 3rd respectively, selling 5 million albums in total.[41] Among the ‘global top 10 digital singles of 2018’, Tia Ray's "Be Apart" took the 7th place, selling 10.9 million units.[41] In addition, BTS is the 2nd of ‘global recording artists 2018.[41]Blackpink’s mv for ‘Kill this Love’, premiered on 4 April 2019, has reached over 100 million views on YouTube, breaking a record that reaching the overstepping click volume quicker than any other music video on YouTube.[42]

 
Blackpink, an Asian idol group.

As many Asian countries appear on the stage of the worldwide music industry, the Chinese music industry and the South Korean music industry have a positive influence on market growth.[15] Until 2018, Asia has become the 2nd largest music industry of the combination of physical and digital music for the first time.[15] However, by analyzing the development of the digital music market in Asia, most countries began their music industry with a large proportion of international music-related products, since early music lovers were more likely to be well-educated English users.[15]

Associations and organizations edit

See also edit

Asian music festivals

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d Laing, D. (1986). The music industry and thecultural imperialism'thesis. Media, culture & society, 8(3), 331–341.
  2. ^ Shin, H. (2009). Reconsidering transnational cultural flows of popular music in East Asia: transbordering musicians in Japan and Korea searching for" Asia". Korean Studies, 101–123.
  3. ^ Alechnowicz, K., & Chapman, S. (2004). The Philippine tobacco industry:"the strongest tobacco lobby in Asia". Tobacco Control, 13(suppl 2), ii71-ii78.
  4. ^ K-Pop: A New Force in Pop Music, pp. 47–79
  5. ^ a b c d e Li, F. (2011). The development of China's music industry during the first half of the 20th century. Journal of NEO, 1, 1–20.
  6. ^ Schuller, Gunther (1968). The history of jazz. Oxford University Press. p. 259.
  7. ^ a b c Otmazgin, N. K. (2008). Contesting soft power: Japanese popular culture in East and Southeast Asia. International Relations of the Asia-Pacific, 8(1), 73–101.
  8. ^ . Archived from the original on 19 April 2012. Retrieved 27 May 2019.
  9. ^ a b Jones, A. F. (1992). Like a knife: Ideology and genre in contemporary Chinese popular music (p. 149). Ithaca NY: East Asia Program, Cornell University.
  10. ^ a b Oh, I., & Park, G. S. (2013). The globalization of K-pop: Korea’s place in the global music industry. Korea Observer, 44(3), 389–409.
  11. ^ a b Otmazgin, N. K. (2005). Cultural commodities and regionalization in East Asia. Contemporary Southeast Asia, 27(3), 499–523.
  12. ^ a b c d e f g h Lie, J. (2012). What is the K in K-pop? South Korean popular music, the culture industry, and national identity. Korea Observer, 43(3), 339–363.
  13. ^ Iwabuchi, K. (1994). Return to Asia? Japan in the global audio-visual market. Sojourn: Journal of Social Issues in Southeast Asia, 226–245.
  14. ^ a b Simran Bhargava (15 January 1991). "As music market expands rapidly, India becomes one of the largest producers of cassettes". India Today. Retrieved 16 May 2019.
  15. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o "MUSIC CONSUMER INSIGHT REPORT 2018" (PDF). ifpi.org.
  16. ^ a b c d e f Loubet, E. (2000). Laptop performers, compact disc designers, and no-beat techno artists in Japan: Music from nowhere. Computer Music Journal, 24(4), 19–32.
  17. ^ "Rock the House". Metropolis Magazine. 17 September 2009. Retrieved 5 June 2019.
  18. ^ a b c "北京Live House玩耍指南——燥起来吧年轻人". 简书. Retrieved 11 June 2019.
  19. ^ a b 网易 (20 January 2018). "在北京, Livehouse 还能不能由着性子做下去?|100 个有想法的人". ent.163.com. Retrieved 11 June 2019.
  20. ^ a b c Chiang, E. P., & Assane, D. (2009). Estimating the willingness to pay for digital music. Contemporary Economic Policy, 27(4), 512–522.
  21. ^ a b c Shen, X., Williams, R., Zheng, S., Liu, Y., Li, Y., & Gerst, M. (2019). Digital online music in China–A "laboratory" for business experiment. Technological Forecasting and Social Change, 139(C), 235–249.
  22. ^ "Trade Mission Engages Key Korean Music Professionals". National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences. 13 September 2012. Retrieved 16 May 2019.
  23. ^ Jackson, A., & Balmain, C. (2016). Korean screen cultures: interrogating cinema, TV, music and online games. Peter Lang.
  24. ^ a b "腾讯音乐10月18日将赴美上市 市值达310亿美元". 金融界. Retrieved 5 June 2019.
  25. ^ "2018年10月在线音乐APP活跃用户排行榜TOP10-产业排行榜-排行榜-中商情报网". top.askci.com. Retrieved 5 June 2019.
  26. ^ a b c Liang, Y., & Shen, W. (2016). Fan economy in the Chinese media and entertainment industry: How feedback from super fans can propel creative industries’ revenue. Global Media and China, 1(4), 331–349.
  27. ^ "NYT Draws Attention to K-Pop Idol-Making Factories". english.chosun.com. Retrieved 17 May 2019.
  28. ^ a b c d e Oi, Mariko (26 January 2016). "The dark side of Asia's pop music industry". Retrieved 4 June 2019.
  29. ^ Kyodo. "Japan surpasses US as world's biggest recorded music market". ABS-CBN News. Retrieved 16 May 2019.
  30. ^ a b c d Manabe, N. (2016). Streaming Music in Japan: Corporate Cultures as Determinants of Listening Practice. In Networked Music Cultures (pp. 67–76). Palgrave Macmillan, London.
  31. ^ a b c d Nowak, F. (2018). Indian Regional Music Videos as Dreamcatchers in the Attention Economy. Volume!, 14(1), 161–173.
  32. ^ a b Miller, T., & Williams, S. (Eds.). (2011). The Garland Handbook of Southeast Asian Music. Routledge.
  33. ^ a b c Fu, L. (2015). Popular music in Singapore: cultural interactions and the "Inauthenticity" of Singaporean music. In SHS Web of Conferences (Vol. 14, p. 02013). EDP Sciences.
  34. ^ "The Weeknd Leads All Finalists for the 2021 Billboard Music Awards: See the Full List". Billboard. from the original on 5 May 2021. Retrieved 4 May 2021.
  35. ^ Austria, Josh (11 May 2021). "2021 Billboard Music Awards Opens Voting for Top Social Artist". Village Pipol Magazine. Retrieved 11 May 2021.
  36. ^ "SB19 jumps to top 5 of Billboard Social 50; secures 25th spot on Billboard Emerging Artists". PEP.ph. from the original on 9 November 2020. Retrieved 8 November 2020.
  37. ^ "Global phenomenon? SB19 ranks 6th in Billboard's top social artists of 2020". ABS-CBN News. 5 December 2020. from the original on 7 December 2020. Retrieved 9 December 2020.
  38. ^ a b 冨貴島明. (2008). 団塊世代と歌謡曲. 城西経済学会誌, 34, 37–67.
  39. ^ "BBC – Radio 3 – Awards for World Music 2008 – Winners". BBC. Retrieved 5 June 2019.
  40. ^ Yan, Seto Kit. "Sa Dingding's songs speak to the masses – News | The Star Online". The Star. Malaysia. Retrieved 5 June 2019.
  41. ^ a b c "IFPI Global Music Report 2019". ifpi.org. 2 April 2019. Retrieved 15 May 2019.
  42. ^ "BLACKPINK: New music video gets over 100 million views". BBC Newsround. BBC. 7 April 2019. Retrieved 15 May 2019.

music, industry, asia, also, music, industry, music, industry, asia, industry, which, people, sell, music, related, products, earn, money, business, structures, industry, include, recorded, music, live, music, radio, broadcasting, digital, online, distribution. See also Music industry The music industry of Asia is an industry in which people sell music related products to earn money 1 The business structures of the industry include recorded music live music radio broadcasting and digital and online distribution 1 The Asian music industry consists of music industry of Central Asia East Asia North Asia South Asia Southeast Asia and West Asia 2 The music industry of Asia influences Asian culture and economy 1 The music industry of Asia also has a worldwide impact 1 Music Industry of AsiaLocationCentral Asia East Asia North Asia South Asia Southeast Asia West Asia Contents 1 History 1 1 Early history 1 2 Modernization Period 1 3 Recent Development 2 Business Structure 2 1 Recorded music and radio broadcasting 2 2 Live house 2 3 Digital and online distribution 3 Regional Music Industry 3 1 East Asia 3 1 1 Chinese Music Industry 3 1 2 South Korea Music Industry 3 1 3 Japanese Music Industry 3 2 South Asia 3 2 1 Indian Music Industry 3 2 2 Bangladeshi Music Industry 3 3 Southeast Asia 3 3 1 Singaporean Music Industry 3 3 2 Philippine Music Industry 4 Worldwide impact 5 Associations and organizations 6 See also 7 ReferencesHistory editEarly history edit Korean modern pop music firstly appeared in 1915 affected by Filipino pop songs 3 Since Japanese colonial authorities needed to restrict all forms of art in Korea Korean rarely had the opportunity to establish their own modern music style 4 In the early 1920s the recording industry emerged in Shanghai China 5 Japanese pop music originated in the Showa Period which was the heyday of Jazz music 6 Modernization Period edit The development of Japanese music industry was hindered by World War II 7 Subsequently when Japan was occupied by the US the US military played music such as boogie woogie mambo blues and country music introducing new music styles to Japan 7 In 1948 the Tokyo boogie woogie Chiemi Eri s Tennessee Waltz Misora Hibari s Omatsuri Mambo and Omoide no Waltz became the representative songs and they were published as music records 8 During the 1950s and 1960s pop music was weakening in the mainland of China due to the introduction of Soviet music 9 Recent Development edit And the 1990s were the heyday of J pop when many records in the music market were broken 10 Sales revenue was more than 400 billion yen around 2 7 Billion US dollars in 1991 500 billion yen in 1993 and reached an unsurpassed point of 607 5 billion yen in 1998 10 Music market expansion also brought music style diversification and strong competition From 1995 to 1997 three major entertainment companies in South Korea S M Entertainment JYP Entertainment and YG Entertainment were founded 11 In the first decade of the 21st century music brands like BoA TVXQ Shinhwa Super Junior BigBang Wonder Girls Girls Generation 2AM 2PM emerged one after another jointly creating the golden age of k pop idols 12 At this stage Korean entertainment companies were more systematic and professional in the idol industry 12 Underground artists also contributed to hip hop mainstream 12 Kim Bum soo was the first South Korean artist to reach the US Billboard Hot 100 chart and no 51 in 2001 12 In 2005 You are my rose the first mobile album in China completely broke the traditional marketing mode released through CD store network and other channels 9 On 19 February 2019 Johnny s Entertainment also called 株式会社ジャニーズ事務所 will officially launch virtual idols online in cooperation with SHOWROOM a company providing video live streaming service 7 Business Structure editRecorded music and radio broadcasting edit In the early 1920s EMI Records Ltd from French whose main businesses are film and music recording set up a branch in Shanghai that provided the quickest way to spread European and American pop music in China 5 In the end of the 1970s the cassette tapes produced by Sanyo Japan and Pacific Audio amp Video Co directly boosted Chinese popular music 13 In 1990 180 million cassettes were sold in India and that makes it the world s second largest market for cassettes 14 In this year Japan was ranked after the US 14 In China the new generation of musicians was absorbing nutrition from European American and Japanese music industry at will 5 They re wrote the popular songs in the 1930s carrying forward the past and forging ahead into the future 5 In Guangzhou China The Old Three Musketeers consists of Youzhong Jin Jialin Ding and Kang Situ were leaders in the music recording industry 5 In 2018 66 of South Korean consumers listen to music by radio and 50 of Japanese consumers listen to music by radio 15 Live house edit Live House which is a club with live music is also a popular business structure in Asia 16 It firstly appeared in Japan and was one of the four kinds of concert venues music hall arena Dome and Live house 16 A Live House is the smallest concert venue and usually has a capacity of 100 to 500 people 16 Zepp Tour appeared correspondingly and it is a subsidiary of Sony Entertainment Music which specializes in Live House 16 Zepp has six chain stores in Japan namely sendai Hokkaido Tokyo Nagoya Osaka and fukuoka 16 In Japan a large Live House like Zepp in Tokyo is also the first choice for many overseas singers 16 The Zepp Tour is the venue for Japanese premiers by overseas singers and groups 17 In China music consumers aged between 22 and 40 are increasingly interested in Live House performances 18 From 2014 to 2016 Chinese live houses fell into low tide period 19 Some high quality Live houses such as Beijing Sparrow House closed down and the well known MAO Live House once confronted with the survival crisis 19 However the small and medium sized Live industry did not stop growing 18 With the consumption growth and consumption upgrade millennials have higher requirements on the interactivity and experience of entertainment products and the box office revenue of Live House has increased significantly 18 Digital and online distribution edit In 1997 musician Zhe Chen set up the first music website in China 20 By 2000 there were hundreds of music websites in DMVE cooperated with SINA to promote Lou Geng Sed s new song butterfly flower on the website 20 In 2001 Xuecun s All the people in northeast China are living Lei Feng became a hit on the Internet and it was the biggest news in the Chinese music industry 20 Since then many singers have discovered a new possibility 21 In 2003 South Korea became the first music market where the sales revenue of digital music exceeded physical music sales 22 In 2004 Mouse loves rice Lilac flower and Two butterflies became popular and online songs quickly became a popular cultural phenomenon 21 In 2018 96 of Indian consumers use smartphones while listening music and this is the highest rate all over the world and message apps are the main ways for Chinese consumers to share their favorite songs 65 using Wechat 64 using QQ and 62 using Weibo 15 The development of online distribution also caused a decline in the traditional recording industry and the crisis of record industry lasted for nearly a decade 15 Compared to the first and second generation the third generation of Korean idols represented by EXO Got7 Winner and IKon are more globalized and rely more on the digital and online distribution 23 In the first quarter of 2018 QQ music Kugou music and Kuwo music owned by Tencent music had 254 million active users 227 million active users and 111 million active users respectively 21 In 2018 70 of Tencent music s revenue came from users fees for giving virtual gifts such as stars and small tangyuan to artists or other users The other 30 comes from paid streaming subscriptions digital downloads and advertising 24 Regional Music Industry editEast Asia edit Chinese Music Industry edit See also Music of China Chinese music market values licensed music as 96 of Chinese consumers listen to licensed music and 89 of them listen to licensed audio streaming 15 Message apps are the main ways for Chinese consumers to share their favorite songs 65 using WeChat 64 using QQ and 62 using Weibo 24 The most popular music genres in China are C pop pop folk country and soundtracks 15 In October 2018 the top 10 Chinese online music APP used by active users were QQ Music Kugou music Kuwo music 163 cloud music Xiami music Migu music Miaomi music Yin Yue Tai iMusic Baidu Ting Music 25 China s media and entertainment industries are witnessing a change in the nature of the relationship between fans and the artists studios they follow 26 Fans are now influencing the market from sharing their original works as active members of the fan community and participants in the gift economy leveraged by studio content experts seeking to ensure the success of the works before they are released into the market 26 Chinese media and entertainment companies are embracing the creativity of fans and looking for new ways to develop invest in and nurture their fan base co create products especially with high level super fans and go beyond mere lifestyle to drive purchases 26 South Korea Music Industry edit See also Music of South Korea Until the end of 2018 South Korean music industry is mainly contributed by local music 66 of South Korean consumers listen to K pop and 22 of them listen to K trot 15 Moreover 66 of South Korean consumers listen to music by radio 15 Artist agencies in South Korea cultivate idols from a young age by signing binding contracts with them so the trainees learn the essential skills such as singing dancing and foreign languages in a rounded system which is provided by the agencies 27 In the first decade of the 21st century BoA TVXQ Shinhwa Super Junior BigBang Wonder Girls Girls Generation 2AM 2PM and so on emerged one after another jointly creating the golden age of k pop idols 12 K pop also gave birth to two of the biggest music groups of 2020s BTS and Blackpink At this stage Korean entertainment companies were more systematic and professional in the idol industry 12 Korean entertainment companies have a completed idol industry following a process of trainee selection trainee training marketing planning idol group selection music production release 28 The agencies also have strict rules to control pop stars daily life including bowing dating and even getting married 28 Japanese Music Industry edit See also Music of Japan In 2012 Japan was analysed as the world s largest music recording market for the first time 29 In the Japanese music industry J pop is very popular since 66 of Japanese consumers listen to it 15 Music from comics is also listened by 29 of Japanese consumers 15 Moreover 50 of Japanese consumers listen to music by radio 15 Although Japanese idol industry sells multi million dollars many Japanese pop stars are paid with low salaries 28 The private lives of Japanese stars are also controlled by their agencies or bound by contracts 28 Many of them have to ask their agencies for permission to date and even get married 28 While Japan led the world in the adoption of mobile consumer culture such as ringtones from the 1990s to the end of the 2000s it has lagged behind in the adoption of streaming formats 30 Naming the online streaming service radio is not as familiar to new media as it is in the us 30 The lack of a legal licence further constrains the growth of streaming services so they must negotiate rights with record labels which are reluctant to offer Japanese content including current top charts and out of date catalogues to streaming companies 30 Finally smartphones took longer to catch on in Japan because the flip phones of the mid 2000s were so advanced that the iPhone didn t look as groundbreaking when it was released 30 South Asia edit Indian Music Industry edit See also Music of India The Indian music industry is mainly contributed by local music and the Indian top 5 favorite genres are new Bollywood music old Bollywood music Indian classical music pop and rock 15 96 of Indian consumers use smartphones while listening to music and this is the highest rate all over the world Furthermore 96 of them listen to licensed music and 95 of them listen to music through on demand streaming 15 However the music industry in Garhwali North India produces popular music clips which are sung in the local dialect and broadcast mainly on the Internet 31 This kind of video seems to be a medium for audience engagement they bring together audiences from diverse geographic and social professional backgrounds whose music oriented communication facilitates interpersonal and aesthetic or ethical debates 31 Garhwali clips are uploaded to streaming sites like YouTube as well as information sites that follow Garhwal s or personal pages and blogs 31 On all of these platforms listeners living abroad or outside gawar seem particularly keen to comment on the political and cultural content shown in the music segment 31 Bangladeshi Music Industry edit See also Music of Bangladesh Bangladesh claims some of the most renowned singers composers and producers in Asia Bengali music spans a wide variety of styles Music has served the purpose of documenting the lives of the people and was widely patronized by the rulers It comprises a long tradition of religious and regular song writing over a period of almost a millennium Currently the thriving Bangladeshi music industry is one of the best in both quality and market in South Asia There are many bands and artists releasing songs both independently and for the cinema industry in various genres citation needed Southeast Asia edit Singaporean Music Industry edit See also Music of Singapore There are various music genres in Singapore such as rock punk pop and western classical music and Singapore pop stars like Stefanie Sun and JJ Lin are also popular in both Singapore and China 32 Singaporean music is based on various cultures such as Chinese culture Malaysian culture Indian culture and classical European culture 32 The popular music industry in Singapore advocates that the western music is superior to the local music in Singapore 33 Singaporeans are often sceptical about the quality of Singapore s musicians because they have unrealistic stereotypes about music 33 Therefore starting from the phenomenon that music types such as J pop and K pop have become an indispensable part of music culture in Singapore 33 Philippine Music Industry edit See also Music of the Philippines Music of the Philippines ᜋ ᜐ ᜃ ᜈᜅ ᜉ ᜎ ᜉ ᜈᜐ include musical performance arts in the Philippines or by Filipinos composed in various genres and styles The compositions are often a mixture of different Asian Spanish Latin American American and indigenous influences From 2010 to 2020 Philippine pop music or P pop went through a huge metamorphosis in its increased quality budget investment and variety matching the country s rapid economic growth and an accompanying social and cultural resurgence of its Asian identity This was heard by heavy influence from K pop and J pop growth in Asian style ballads idol groups and EDM music and less reliance on Western genres mirroring the Korean wave and similar Japanese wave popularity among millennial Filipinos and mainstream culture Famous P pop music artist who had defined the growth of this now mainstream genre like this five member Global Pop group SB19 the first Filipino and Southeast Asian act to be nominated in Billboard Music Awards for the Top Social Artist category 34 35 They are also the first Southeast Asian act to enter the top 10 of Billboard Social 50 weekly and year end charts 36 37 Worldwide impact editIn the process of the development of Asian music industry the overseas market has been highly valued For example SM Entertainment s business revenue grew rapidly from 96 9 billion in 2010 to more than 300 billion in 2014 11 At the same time SM entertainment s overseas revenue accounted for more than 50 of the total revenue in 2012 and 2013 most of which came from the Japanese market and Chinese market 12 SM Entertainment also actively expands overseas establishing business in North America Europe Western Europe and Asia 12 The song 上を向いて歩こう a well known song called ス キ ヤ キ was a success 38 It was the first Japanese song to reach No 1 in the U S four weeks in Cashbox Magazine three weeks in Billboard Magazine of Japan and the America region ranking and was awarded the Gold record for selling more than a million copies 38 In 2008 Sa Dingding won the BBC Radio 3 Awards for World Music and was invited to perform at the Royal Albert Hall to both eastern and western audiences 39 In 2009 Sa Dingding s album Alive was listed as one of the 85 nominees for best world music album at Grammy Awards 40 Until the end of 2018 three Asian countries joined the top 10 music markets 2nd in Japan 6th in South Korea 7th in China Among the global top 10 albums of 2018 two albums of BTS are listed and Love Yourself 結 Answer took the and Love Yourself 转 Tear took the 2nd and 3rd respectively selling 5 million albums in total 41 Among the global top 10 digital singles of 2018 Tia Ray s Be Apart took the 7th place selling 10 9 million units 41 In addition BTS is the 2nd of global recording artists 2018 41 Blackpink s mv for Kill this Love premiered on 4 April 2019 has reached over 100 million views on YouTube breaking a record that reaching the overstepping click volume quicker than any other music video on YouTube 42 nbsp Blackpink an Asian idol group As many Asian countries appear on the stage of the worldwide music industry the Chinese music industry and the South Korean music industry have a positive influence on market growth 15 Until 2018 Asia has become the 2nd largest music industry of the combination of physical and digital music for the first time 15 However by analyzing the development of the digital music market in Asia most countries began their music industry with a large proportion of international music related products since early music lovers were more likely to be well educated English users 15 Associations and organizations editHong Kong Recording Industry Alliance HKRIA Indian Music Industry IMI Philippine Association of the Record Industry PARI Recording Industry Association of Japan RIAJ Recording Industry Association of Malaysia RIM Recording Industry Foundation in Taiwan RIT Recording Industry Association Singapore RIAS Thai Entertainment Content Trade Association TECA See also editAsian music festivalsReferences edit a b c d Laing D 1986 The music industry and thecultural imperialism thesis Media culture amp society 8 3 331 341 Shin H 2009 Reconsidering transnational cultural flows of popular music in East Asia transbordering musicians in Japan and Korea searching for Asia Korean Studies 101 123 Alechnowicz K amp Chapman S 2004 The Philippine tobacco industry the strongest tobacco lobby in Asia Tobacco Control 13 suppl 2 ii71 ii78 K Pop A New Force in Pop Music pp 47 79 a b c d e Li F 2011 The development of China s music industry during the first half of the 20th century Journal of NEO 1 1 20 Schuller Gunther 1968 The history of jazz Oxford University Press p 259 a b c Otmazgin N K 2008 Contesting soft power Japanese popular culture in East and Southeast Asia International Relations of the Asia Pacific 8 1 73 101 Full List of Inductees Country Music Hall of Fame Archived from the original on 19 April 2012 Retrieved 27 May 2019 a b Jones A F 1992 Like a knife Ideology and genre in contemporary Chinese popular music p 149 Ithaca NY East Asia Program Cornell University a b Oh I amp Park G S 2013 The globalization of K pop Korea s place in the global music industry Korea Observer 44 3 389 409 a b Otmazgin N K 2005 Cultural commodities and regionalization in East Asia Contemporary Southeast Asia 27 3 499 523 a b c d e f g h Lie J 2012 What is the K in K pop South Korean popular music the culture industry and national identity Korea Observer 43 3 339 363 Iwabuchi K 1994 Return to Asia Japan in the global audio visual market Sojourn Journal of Social Issues in Southeast Asia 226 245 a b Simran Bhargava 15 January 1991 As music market expands rapidly India becomes one of the largest producers of cassettes India Today Retrieved 16 May 2019 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o MUSIC CONSUMER INSIGHT REPORT 2018 PDF ifpi org a b c d e f Loubet E 2000 Laptop performers compact disc designers and no beat techno artists in Japan Music from nowhere Computer Music Journal 24 4 19 32 Rock the House Metropolis Magazine 17 September 2009 Retrieved 5 June 2019 a b c 北京Live House玩耍指南 燥起来吧年轻人 简书 Retrieved 11 June 2019 a b 网易 20 January 2018 在北京 Livehouse 还能不能由着性子做下去 100 个有想法的人 ent 163 com Retrieved 11 June 2019 a b c Chiang E P amp Assane D 2009 Estimating the willingness to pay for digital music Contemporary Economic Policy 27 4 512 522 a b c Shen X Williams R Zheng S Liu Y Li Y amp Gerst M 2019 Digital online music in China A laboratory for business experiment Technological Forecasting and Social Change 139 C 235 249 Trade Mission Engages Key Korean Music Professionals National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences 13 September 2012 Retrieved 16 May 2019 Jackson A amp Balmain C 2016 Korean screen cultures interrogating cinema TV music and online games Peter Lang a b 腾讯音乐10月18日将赴美上市 市值达310亿美元 金融界 Retrieved 5 June 2019 2018年10月在线音乐APP活跃用户排行榜TOP10 产业排行榜 排行榜 中商情报网 top askci com Retrieved 5 June 2019 a b c Liang Y amp Shen W 2016 Fan economy in the Chinese media and entertainment industry How feedback from super fans can propel creative industries revenue Global Media and China 1 4 331 349 NYT Draws Attention to K Pop Idol Making Factories english chosun com Retrieved 17 May 2019 a b c d e Oi Mariko 26 January 2016 The dark side of Asia s pop music industry Retrieved 4 June 2019 Kyodo Japan surpasses US as world s biggest recorded music market ABS CBN News Retrieved 16 May 2019 a b c d Manabe N 2016 Streaming Music in Japan Corporate Cultures as Determinants of Listening Practice In Networked Music Cultures pp 67 76 Palgrave Macmillan London a b c d Nowak F 2018 Indian Regional Music Videos as Dreamcatchers in the Attention Economy Volume 14 1 161 173 a b Miller T amp Williams S Eds 2011 The Garland Handbook of Southeast Asian Music Routledge a b c Fu L 2015 Popular music in Singapore cultural interactions and the Inauthenticity of Singaporean music In SHS Web of Conferences Vol 14 p 02013 EDP Sciences The Weeknd Leads All Finalists for the 2021 Billboard Music Awards See the Full List Billboard Archived from the original on 5 May 2021 Retrieved 4 May 2021 Austria Josh 11 May 2021 2021 Billboard Music Awards Opens Voting for Top Social Artist Village Pipol Magazine Retrieved 11 May 2021 SB19 jumps to top 5 of Billboard Social 50 secures 25th spot on Billboard Emerging Artists PEP ph Archived from the original on 9 November 2020 Retrieved 8 November 2020 Global phenomenon SB19 ranks 6th in Billboard s top social artists of 2020 ABS CBN News 5 December 2020 Archived from the original on 7 December 2020 Retrieved 9 December 2020 a b 冨貴島明 2008 団塊世代と歌謡曲 城西経済学会誌 34 37 67 BBC Radio 3 Awards for World Music 2008 Winners BBC Retrieved 5 June 2019 Yan Seto Kit Sa Dingding s songs speak to the masses News The Star Online The Star Malaysia Retrieved 5 June 2019 a b c IFPI Global Music Report 2019 ifpi org 2 April 2019 Retrieved 15 May 2019 BLACKPINK New music video gets over 100 million views BBC Newsround BBC 7 April 2019 Retrieved 15 May 2019 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Music industry of Asia amp oldid 1219423935, 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.