K-Pop, A Personal View

K-pop: the answer to the question no one asked in the 2010s.   

In the last few years Korea has become a worldwide fascination, with its food, music, fashion and celebrities being put at the forefront of the media.

What used to be everyone’s niece and nephew’s Japanese anime phase has now been replaced by girls with straight drawn eyebrows crying for their Oppas and fantasizing about the day they finally hop on a plane to the motherland.  

And I suppose I am one of them. 

I discovered K-pop about 5 years ago when it came up randomly on my recommended page on YouTube. I didn’t know anything about it except that people were talking about it, so out of curiosity I clicked. And clicked. And clicked.

Red_Velvet
Red Velvet (레드벨벳) is a five-member girl group under SM Entertainment. They debuted as four on August 1, 2014 with the single “Happiness“. Yeri was added on the group in March 2015.
Got7
GOT7 (갓세븐) is a 7-member boy group. They
debuted on January 16, 2014 with their first mini
album Got It?.
Members from South Korea, Hong Kong, Thailand  and the United States.
Black Pink
BLACKPINK (블랙핑크; stylized as BLΛƆKPIИK) is a four-member girl group. They debuted on August 8, 2016 with their digital single album “Square One
One undeniable thing is its power to suck you in. Before I knew it, I was drawn in to an exclusive community of interactive Idol (=K-pop artists) videos and internet fan culture. 
 
And personally, I think that’s the reason behind its success; yes, the music is silly and fun and the dances are cool, but the world that surrounds it has a way of making everything more personal.
 
The relationship between fans and stars feel more like partners working as a team; the idols will release songs and music videos, and in exchange the fans follow their comeback schedule and stream their songs for the goal of getting music show wins.  
 
Now make of that what you will, I’m sure a lot of people might –reasonably so- feel uncomfortable with this hyper-manipulated formula and blind support system. It is one of the reasons K-pop is so frowned upon, being called over produced, over manufactured plastic music. And while that is not NOT true, I would like to point out something I think vital to understanding the genre. K-pop artists are not Korea’s answer to musicians. They are considered to be performers and influencers, in a completely different category to actual singers.  
 
And although the line is blurring as more and more idols gain control over their music, producing and writing the majority of their songs, the music industry in Korea is diverse with genre bending singers and song writers.
And while you may show disdain for the robotic world of Korean pop music, there is something quite satisfying about it. The manipulated and calculated presentation of it all is very transparent. There is no illusion to its perfection, which gives permission to indulge all the more. When watching a stage performance, everyone is so tight, so in sync with each other that you know that they have choreographed every turn wink and smile, and they never miss.  

Now you may be thinking, well if they all are equally good and well trained, surely there is no distinction between groups?  

But they all seem to manage to be every bit manufactured as they have their own unique sound and authenticity. Which brings me to my next point: 

 The TALENT. 

Call it taught  skills all you want, but if you’re willing to look out for it the number of people coming out of the genre with impressive lyrical creativity, stage presence, high notes surpass I think a lot of the artists overseas. 
Now I know that K-pop isn’t perfect, it’s full of toxicity and injustice towards its idols and especially in the last few years its fair share of scandals, however looking past that I think it’s worth having a look at. 
 
And while I understand it is not everyone’s cup of tea, I still believe that it is more than the over-the-top, strange Asian fantasy world that it gets pinned as being. More than you realise there is something there for everyone to enjoy. Maybe this will inspire you to look for some, or maybe it hasn’t changed your mind at all and you still hate it and think it’s tacky 80’s music revisited. 
 
Whatever the case, I hope the music you listen to brings you joy and happiness, because that’s ultimately what it’s all about. 

Alphabet Street

Alphabet Street – Prince
 
!988, Russia  announced its withdrawal from Afghanistan, the US tests nukes like a modern day N Korea, Celine Dion wins Eurovision (wtf) and the US stops us smoking on domestic flights. (if less than 2hours.)

And the glorious and undervalued  10th studio album Lovesexy is released by Prince.
It took a mere 7 weeks 2 put together & replaced the pulled Black Album and extolled the virtues of good vs bad (kinda), maybe trying 2 show Prince in a more spiritual (minus the orgasm on the supersex funk Lovesexy title track.

Following from the previous years Sign ‘O The Times it never really got the praise it deserved. 
That usual “Well how can u follow up that album and the oh my God single” came from critics and the consumer ending as his least successful (commercially) release in 7 years.
 

But wait a moment. It’s 2020 and we have some time right?

So hit your streaming service, dig out the vinyl, tape, CD (delete as nec) and if u want help then here, go listen to the title track and see the fight for and against unbridled joy and sex Prince style then, Anna Stasia, the hypnotic beauty that may be his resurrection from the Black Album then the last track Positivity, where our daring darling Prince gets his good vibes back and then…
Prince_AlphabetSt
alphabet1
Lovesexy Cover
Alphabet Street.
 
The first single and most successful hitting top 10 on both sides of the Atlantic Alphabet Street is not  just the quick fit happy song it appears.
Rich in horns, it opens in Prince sexy MF mode ..
 
I’m gonna talk so sexy
She’ll want me from my head to my feet”  
 
and then takes us on a ride through that Cat Rap which even the man is not sure about
 
Cat, we need you to rap (no)”
 
to the shout of “Lovesexy.“
 
In the middle of this we need the video for a visual connection that everyone should see and watch it burn itself into your consciousness for eternity..At approx 45 seconds Prince tells us
 
“I’m gonna drive my daddy’s Thunderbird.
A white rad ride, ’66 (’67) so glam it’s absurd”
 
and wholly shit he does and I still do that to this day. (alone, in my garage next to my Camry.)
 
Lovesey Tour 88
Lovesey Tour 88
Lovesey Tour 88
A great song?
It was good enough for Arrested Development to base a song around Prince’s Tennessee intonation that cost them a hundred grand.
It is a much better album than it looks like in reviews.
A cover of a nude Prince got it banned or covered up in some places. A DIY video to this song that made it a little less than the whole and the insane decision not to release the full song (5:39 on the album) but a baby 2:35 single also placed some heavy weight on the brake.
 
But it is more than a track.
 
From the mentioned album version to the Lovesexy Tour that is only (maybe) topped by the Sign ‘O The Times tour the song is joy and hope.
 
Why is it on a list of songs that changed a thought?
 
Alphabet Street was the end of the Purple Kings commercial reign supreme before Hip Hop grabbed the crown of the airwaves but it was, for me, the birth of the Prince 2.0 and the dawning of the Hip Hop revolution.