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why k-pop gets to us so much
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korian



Joined: 26 Feb 2004

PostPosted: Tue Jul 17, 2007 3:23 pm    Post subject: why k-pop gets to us so much Reply with quote

i have to preface this by saying it's not just k-pop, but probably all pop in this manufactured bubble-gum music world. but k-pop is particularly grating to so many of us, especially with videos added.

there may be an explanation - that we can point to officially anyway...^^ - the DAG factor.

article here

http://www.smh.com.au/news/music/dagometer-proves-it-schmaltz-is-out/2007/07/10/1183833517568.html

while it may seem a little silly i think the point stands. music has meaning, and it means something to us if we can identify with it. i think it's identifying on different levels. for me it is anyway. if we can identify with the lyrics, if we can identify with the singer, if the singer has written the lyrics and feels the lyrics and we can appreciate some originality.

for me, that's why i can't stand k-pop and the boy/girl bands. they don't write their songs, they don't have any feelings in the songs, the lyrics have no depth, and what's worse, i have to listen to a 20 y.o kid who's life experience is pc bangs, starcraft and lotte world trying to make me believe in the pain of love and loss, all the while singing with make-up on and dancing a choregraphed routine with 6 others.

i'm sure we're not their target audience but i think that gap in identifying with k-pop or most pop is what affects us.

and just to prove i'm not just k-pop bashing, here is another great clip about the silliness of boy-band shmaltz

http://youtube.com/watch?v=1dmVU08zVpA
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korian



Joined: 26 Feb 2004

PostPosted: Tue Jul 17, 2007 3:24 pm    Post subject: Re: why k-pop gets to us so much Reply with quote

i have to preface this by saying it's not just k-pop, but probably all pop in this manufactured bubble-gum music world. but k-pop is particularly grating to so many of us, especially with videos added.

there may be an explanation - that we can point to officially anyway...^^ - the DAG factor.

article here

http://www.smh.com.au/news/music/dagometer-proves-it-schmaltz-is-out/2007/07/10/1183833517568.html

while it may seem a little silly i think the point stands. music has meaning, and it means something to us if we can identify with it. i think it's identifying on different levels. for me it is anyway. if we can identify with the lyrics, if we can identify with the singer, if the singer has written the lyrics and feels the lyrics and we can appreciate some originality.

for me, that's why i can't stand k-pop and the boy/girl bands. they don't write their songs, they don't have any feelings in the songs, the lyrics have no depth, and what's worse, i have to listen to a 20 y.o kid whose life experience is pc bangs, starcraft and lotte world trying to make me believe in the pain of love and loss, all the while singing with make-up on and dancing a choregraphed routine with 6 others.

i'm sure we're not their target audience but i think that gap in identifying with k-pop or most pop is what affects us.

and just to prove i'm not just k-pop bashing, here is another great clip about the silliness of boy-band shmaltz

http://youtube.com/watch?v=1dmVU08zVpA
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Dev



Joined: 18 Apr 2006

PostPosted: Tue Jul 17, 2007 3:47 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

K pop doesn't bother me as much as Korean hip hop. They've taken a serious music genre and made it cutesy, cutesy.

On top of that, almost every K rapper sounds the same. But then again, maybe this is because I try to ignore it.
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korian



Joined: 26 Feb 2004

PostPosted: Tue Jul 17, 2007 3:56 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

but wouldn't you agree that k-hip-hop is the same as k-pop in that it just doesn't connect and isn't real.

hip-hop singers/bands are, for the most part, people who've lived in poorer areas, people who've experienced a lot of ups and downs, seen a lot more than most middle-class people, experienced death of friends, gangs etc etc. note i said for the most part.

hip-hop is a reflection of their lives.

then you get k-hip-hop or j-hip-hop etc with guys who've experienced life on the streets of apkujeong, seen death on the screens of starcraft games and held a gun at seoul land's shooting parlour to win their girlfriend a teddy bear, wearing gangbanger clothing, grabbing their crotches and wanting us to believe they're straight outta compton.

it's the massive disconnect and inability to identify with the person singing and what they're singing about.

that's why we throw things at the screen when we see k-pop or k-hip-hop etc......
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Dev



Joined: 18 Apr 2006

PostPosted: Tue Jul 17, 2007 4:16 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

korian wrote:
but wouldn't you agree that k-hip-hop is the same as k-pop in that it just doesn't connect and isn't real.

hip-hop singers/bands are, for the most part, people who've lived in poorer areas, people who've experienced a lot of ups and downs, seen a lot more than most middle-class people, experienced death of friends, gangs etc etc. note i said for the most part.

hip-hop is a reflection of their lives.

then you get k-hip-hop or j-hip-hop etc with guys who've experienced life on the streets of apkujeong, seen death on the screens of starcraft games and held a gun at seoul land's shooting parlour to win their girlfriend a teddy bear, wearing gangbanger clothing, grabbing their crotches and wanting us to believe they're straight outta compton.

it's the massive disconnect and inability to identify with the person singing and what they're singing about.

that's why we throw things at the screen when we see k-pop or k-hip-hop etc......


Yeah, but to be fair, most of the American hip hop artists are middle class kids pretending to be from the projects. We just ignore the fact because they're good song writers and have great voices and flow when they rap.

K hip hop and K pop's quality problems lie within the music industry. Serious artists are rarely picked up by record labels here in favor of more marketable performers. Hell, my middle school has a teachers band and I think they're a lot better than the music I hear on the TV.
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PeterDragon



Joined: 15 Feb 2007

PostPosted: Tue Jul 17, 2007 4:17 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

I kinda find K-Pop to be indistinguishable from American pop-diva/boy band stuff, and K/J-hip-hop to be indistinguishable from performers like Sno and Vanilla Ice back home (and a lot of the cherry picked radio-friendly songs of otherwise sincere hip-hop artists).

Havng said that, the funniest thing one will ever see in Korea is the affluent kids in the Hongdae clubs, with their baggy jeans, medallions, and sideways visors. It's actually even funnier than watching white kids in the Minneapolis suburbs pull the same act.
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PeterDragon



Joined: 15 Feb 2007

PostPosted: Tue Jul 17, 2007 4:22 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Dev wrote:

K hip hop and K pop's quality problems lie within the music industry. Serious artists are rarely picked up by record labels here in favor of more marketable performers.


Well, basically, they're taking the worst practices of the American industry and making them standard here. In the U.S., "real" music stars look down at the manufactured, computer-enhanced sound of people like Ashlee Simpson. In Korea, every pop star is trying to be Ashlee Simpson, even the male ones, really. Is this where the American music industry is headed? I hope not, but I've got my qualms.
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twg



Joined: 02 Nov 2006
Location: Getting some fresh air...

PostPosted: Tue Jul 17, 2007 5:09 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

I think it's more of a case of us not growing up with it and thus thinking it's the most brilliant music ever.

The stuff back home, even the artists who are "real", are manufactured image machines and nothing more. We just think it's brilliant because it has meaning to us. K-Pop doesn't.
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pkang0202



Joined: 09 Mar 2007

PostPosted: Tue Jul 17, 2007 5:10 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

I like Eminem. He rapped what everyone thought. Korea would never allow a rapper/singer/artist like Eminem. The media would never air someone who speaks their mind so freely.

Needless to say, there IS real music here in Korea. You won't hear it on the radio or see it on TV. I guarantee you walk around some bars/clubs and you'll hear them playing.
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jaganath69



Joined: 17 Jul 2003

PostPosted: Tue Jul 17, 2007 5:16 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Problem is there is no grass-roots music scene here, at least not one that survives after the members get conscripted or get real jobs. All the music you see on TV here is top-down, some middle-aged A&R man's idea of what the main single-buying demographic (girls in their early to mid teens) want. Thus you get the endless procession of boy bands, wailing 'palladeu' and some camp hip-hop thrown in. My theory is that it will take some kind of event, like the economic crisis that Japan had, for kids here to have enough time on their hands to make an organic youth culture viable. Until then, enjoy DongBanShinGi.
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NAVFC



Joined: 10 May 2006

PostPosted: Tue Jul 17, 2007 5:17 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Turtles Rule.
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korian



Joined: 26 Feb 2004

PostPosted: Tue Jul 17, 2007 5:28 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Quote:
I think it's more of a case of us not growing up with it and thus thinking it's the most brilliant music ever.

The stuff back home, even the artists who are "real", are manufactured image machines and nothing more. We just think it's brilliant because it has meaning to us. K-Pop doesn't.


sure i can accept that what's real to some isn't real to another. and i guess that the sheltered lives - relative to most of us in travel and world exposure terms - gives many koreans a perception of reality that we might deem unreal or slightly skewed.

but at the same time, i don't agree that artists back home who are 'real' are 'manufactured image machines and nothing more.' i don't know who you see as real or not, but for me it's s.one who has grit and experience in their lyrics and an originality that sets them apart. as well as something that sounds good too.

sure once s.one gains some notoriety they will be advertised, but that's our world these days with all the forms of media. just because s.one is advertised or has media exposure doesn't automatically make them 'manufactured image machines and nothing more.'

s.one who has everything put on a platter for them from choreography, to lyrics, to look, to make-up, to appearances, to what to say in interviews and where to be seen and who to be seen with is manufactured. s.one who has genuine quality and does everything themselves, and then gets plaudits and air time for it is not. in my eyes.
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Alyallen



Joined: 29 Mar 2004
Location: The 4th Greatest Place on Earth = Jeonju!!!

PostPosted: Tue Jul 17, 2007 5:35 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Korean hip hop and rap annoys me endlessly. Korean music influenced by reggae is also irritating. But to be fair, I don't know what the lyrics are exactly.

There is one rapper who talks about her life as abiracial child in Korea. That seems real but the rest of them I don't know and really don't care. Not really into rap anyway.

But if nothing else, it gives me something to laugh about...

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zY2R-gr0opE
This song uses a Jamaican curse word about 60,000,000 times. Makes me laugh every time I hear it....
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eamo



Joined: 08 Mar 2003
Location: Shepherd's Bush, 1964.

PostPosted: Tue Jul 17, 2007 5:51 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

K-pop sounds just great to Korean teenagers. They love it.



Quote:
Problem is there is no grass-roots music scene here, at least not one that survives after the members get conscripted or get real jobs. All the music you see on TV here is top-down, some middle-aged A&R man's idea of what the main single-buying demographic (girls in their early to mid teens) want. Thus you get the endless procession of boy bands, wailing 'palladeu' and some camp hip-hop thrown in. My theory is that it will take some kind of event, like the economic crisis that Japan had, for kids here to have enough time on their hands to make an organic youth culture viable. Until then, enjoy DongBanShinGi.


This is a problem. Teenagers in Korea don't wanna be rockstars. They want to be doctors and CEO's. They don't form bands in the same way western teens do. And, vitally, they tend to not listen to older music. Their influences are too often what is already in fashion. So there is no range. No diversification.

If it wasn't for the pretty healthy Korean punk scene I would despair totally.
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RACETRAITOR



Joined: 24 Oct 2005
Location: Seoul, South Korea

PostPosted: Tue Jul 17, 2007 6:05 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

I actually prefer most Korean pop to most American pop. Mostly because the lyrics can't invade me the way English lyrics can. Also, I've never seen a Korean popstar as skanky as Christina Aguilera or the virgin queen Britney.

The one hope of this country is that the majority of Koreans have nursed their musical talents far more than average westerners have, and it's not hard to find competent guitarists or pianists or singers here.
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