K-pop is an abbreviation for Korean popular music, specifically from South Korea. There are many artists and groups, most notably Se7en, TVXQ, Shinhwa, BoA, and Rain, that have branched out of Korea and have become popular in China, Taiwan, Hong Kong and South East Asia. The popularity of K-pop is often considered a part of the rise of the Korean Wave, or "Hallyu", in the region.
Contents |
History
The emergence of the group Seo Taiji and Boys in 1992 marked a turning point for Korean popular music, as the group incorporated elements of American popular musical genres of rap, rock, and techno into its music. The tremendous success of Seo Taiji and Boys in Korea and other experimental groups (such as Panic) set the trend for the present generation of K-pop groups and artists. Following Seo Taiji and Boys, dance-oriented acts were dominant in the Korean popular music scene of the early 90s including the legendary hip hop duo Deux (듀스). By the mid-90s, teen idol groups, which are now often considered "legendary groups" due to their strong popularity during their era, such as Baby V.O.X., Fin.K.L., g.o.d, H.O.T., Shinhwa, Sechs Kies, and S.E.S. were very popular, having strong fanbases and high-selling albums (with some groups having a "million seller", an album selling over one million copies). Starting with the break-up of H.O.T., most of these groups have disbanded, It is often stated that at this stage korean music became slightly better than noise. Although some have continued their success in the following decade; new groups (such as DBSK & Super Junior) have since taken their place. From the "legendary group," Shinhwa is the only group that is still active in Korea, with them being the longest running boy band as of today. Currently, in the 2000s, pop groups are still very popular, although there has been the emergence of Korean R&B and Hip-Hop. Artists such as MC Mong, 1TYM, Rain , Big Bang and Epik High have proven successful. Underground artists such as Drunken Tiger, Tasha (Yoon Mi Rae), and Dynamic Duo have also helped Hip-Hop making its way into the mainstream. Recently, rock music has become noticed by the public, with acts like the Yoon Do-Hyun Band and Seo Taiji gaining national recognition. In addition, there are also some very popular techno/dance artists such as Lee Jung Hyun and Kim Hyun Jung, who both have had very long careers while remaining firmly entrenched in their genre of music. There are also many artists who have had international success as well. BoA has become the highest-selling international artist from Korea, due to her strength in the J-pop market; this was in part due to Lee Soo Man's adaptation of the Blue Ocean Strategy. Since then, artists such as Rain and Se7en have also released albums outside of Korea, becoming well-known throughout Eastern Asia. Rain has also had his international RAINY DAY 2005 Tour, having tour dates at Madison Square Garden, the first Korean star to do so. He also plans to make a U.S. debut. Skull, a Korean reggae artist from YG Entertainment is working on his U.S. debut and is currently listed on the Billboard charts[1]. Se7en who is also from YG Entertainment[2] and Min from JYP Entertainment[3] both hope to enter the English-language music market near the end of 2007. They are not the first Asians to do so - Utada Hikaru and CoCo Lee have released English-language albums before. However, there has yet to be an Asian artist breaking the mainstream American music industry successfully[4].
Current style
K-pop is similar to English pop music, with R&B, dance, and hip-hop being very popular genres in the 2000s. However, unlike English pop music, which had most of its boy bands and girl groups either break up or informally disband, bubblegum pop is still very popular in South Korea. Groups such as Shinhwa, TVXQ, and Super Junior continue to be top sellers in K-pop, and artists like Ahyoomee and LPG have released novelty songs, to varying degress of success. However, the 2000s has seen the rise of R&B vocal groups, with SG Wannabe and Big Mama having success with their first albums. In addition, trot music has made a comeback in mainstream K-pop as well, mostly due to the success of Jang Yoon Jung. Ballads are also very popular, as 2006 has seen the release of ballad singles by non-ballad artists, including Shinhwa and Baek Ji Young; KBS stated that this is likely to continue in 2007 due to the number of high-profile ballad singers releasing albums this year.
Famous Korean Pop artists
See also
- Korean music
- South Korean music
- Korean wave
- Contemporary culture of South Korea
- List of Korea-related topics
- C-pop
- J-pop
- Music of the Philippines
References
External links
- Music Industry Association of Korea
- ALLKPOP - The Source for ALL things KPOP
- Soompi - K-POP for the masses
- Kpop - Korean Music Forum
Pop music | |
|---|---|
| By style | Arabesque pop - Baroque pop - Bubblegum pop - Country pop - Futurepop - Pop rock - Pop punk Pop rap - Power pop - Synthpop/Electropop - Indie pop - Teen pop - Traditional pop - Sunshine pop - Modern Laika - Pop folk - Balkan Pop |
| By region | American pop -Arabic Pop - C-pop (Cantopop, Mandopop) - Taiwanese pop - HK English pop - Europop (Austropop, Nederpop) Indian pop (Bhangra, Filmi) - J-pop - K-pop - SFR Yugoslavia pop- Persian Pop |
| Other topics | Boy band - Girl group - Pop icon - Popular music - Pop culture |

