K Pop
K Pop
K Pop
electropop, hip hop, rock, R&B and electronic music originating in South Korea.[5][6][7][8][9] In addition to music, K-pop has grown into a popularsubculture among teenagers and young adults around the world, resulting in widespread interest in the fashion and style of Korean idol groups and singers.[10] Through the presence of Facebook fan pages, availability on iTunes, Twitter profiles, and music videos on YouTube, the ability of K-pop to reach a previously inaccessible audience via the Internet is driving a paradigm shift in the exposure and popularity of the genre[11] South Korean popular culture is today serving as a major driver of youth culture all across the Pacific Rim, with special reference to China, Hong Kong, Japan, Taiwan, Thailand, Philippines, Indonesia,Malaysia, and Vietnam. The genre is currently moving towards a position in the region, similar to that of American music in Europe during the 1980s and 1990s
1990s: Diversification
The debut of Seo Tai-ji & Boys in 1992 was a turning point for popular music in South Korea, incorporating elements of rap rock and techno. Hip hop duos such as Deux were also popular in the early 1990s.
[edit]Beginning of Hallyu See also: Hallyu The founding of South Korea's largest talent agency, S.M. Entertainment, in 1995, by Korean entrepreneur Lee Soo Man led to the first K-pop girl groups and boy bands.[13] By the late 1990s,YG Entertainment, DSP Entertainment, and JYP Entertainment had burst onto the scene and were producing talent as quickly as the public could consume it.[10] Groups such as, S.E.S., Fin.K.L, H.O.T, Sechs Kies, G.o.d., Fly to the Sky and Shinhwa had huge success in the 1990s, not only in South Korea, but also outside of the country as well. Especially, artists such as H.O.T, Kim Wan-Sun, Clon, Baby V.O.X, NRG saw a huge success inChina and Taiwan in the mid-90s. Also during this period was the emergence of hip hop and R&B music in Korea, leading to the success of artists including Drunken Tiger. [edit]2000s:
Many of K-pop's biggest idol groups and solo acts, including BoA, Rain Bi, Wonder Girls, TVXQ,JYJ, SS501, 2PM, BIGBANG, Miss A, KARA, Super Junior, SHINee, After School, Brown Eyed Girls, Se7en, Secret, MBLAQ and [[2NE1[14] By 2011, K-Pop has become the mainstream genre in most East and South East Asia, including Japan, Malaysia, Mongolia, the Philippines, Indonesia, Thailand, Taiwan, Singapore, China, Vietnam.[15] Through the internet, recently, K-pop started to expand to the rest of the world as well, but it yet has not become well known enough to be mainstream in those countries. K-pop is steadily gaining influence in foreign markets outside of Asia, however, most notably in the United States,[16] Canada, and Australia. </ref>[17] In 2009, Wonder Girls, one of Asias most successful music artists who sold millions of singles including the international #1 songs Tell Me, So Hot and Nobody, debuted on the Billboard Hot 100 singles chart.[18] In a push to further globalize the genre, K-pop artists are increasingly working with talent outside of Korea. In the United States, Korean artists are touring with groups such as the Jonas Brothers[19]and collaborating with well-known producers including Kanye West, Teddy Riley, Diplo, Rodney Jerkins, Ludacris,[20] and will.i.am.[21]
In 2011, Billboard implemented the K-Pop Hot 100 Chart. [edit]Apprenticeship Today, apprenticeship is the universal strategy for nurturing girl groups, boy bands, and solo artists in the K-pop industry. To guarantee the high probability of success of new talent, talent agencies fully subsidize and oversee the professional lives and careers of trainees, often spending in excess of $400,000 to train and launch a new artist.[22] Through this practice of apprenticeship, which often lasts two years or more, trainees hone their voices, learn professional choreography, sculpt and shape their bodies through exercise, and study multiple languages all the while attending school.[2]