Thursday, 11 December 2014

Kpop | K-Pop's Global Influence Reflected In Tumblr's Year In Review ...

Kpop | <b>K-Pop&#39;s</b> Global Influence Reflected In Tumblr&#39;s Year In Review <b>...</b>


<b>K-Pop&#39;s</b> Global Influence Reflected In Tumblr&#39;s Year In Review <b>...</b>

Posted: 10 Dec 2014 07:50 AM PST

Tumblr just released its year in review, and K-Pop made it onto two of the website's lists.  

K-Pop as a genre was included on Tumblr's "Most Reblogged Music Genres"  list, while SM Entertainment girl group f(x)'s song "Red Light" was included on the "Most Reblogged Songs" list released by the popular website. The lists were compiled by Tumblr staff, and reflect the actions of Tumblr's users. K-Pop's inclusion on multiple charts expresses how K-Pop fans interact online, and the popularity of the genre.

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K-Pop came in second to hip hop and punk genres of music out of the twenty that Tumblr took into account, and was the only single genre of Asian music that made the list. "rap chileno" was the only other international genre of music to make the "Most Reblogged Music Genres" list.

 

 

Most Reblogged Music Genres

  1. hip hop
  2. punk
  3. k-pop
  4. rap
  5. pop punk
  6. metal
  7. punk rock
  8. edm
  9. rock and roll
  10. pop
  11. rap chileno
  12. classic rock
  13. metalcore
  14. country
  15. acoustic
  16. heavy metal
  17. jazz
  18. reggae
  19. indie rock
  20. black metal

 

 

 

"Red Light" was in twentieth place on the "Most Reblogged Songs" list, following songs from Disney's Frozen, Nickin Minaj, Beyonce, One Direction, Taylor Swift, Lana Del Ray, Miley Cyrus, and many other artists.

f(x) was the only Asian artist included on the list.

 

Most Reblogged Songs

  1. Nicki Minaj - Anaconda | Official Tumblr
  2. Frozen - Let It Go | Official Tumblr
  3. Lana Del Rey - Ultraviolence | Official Tumblr
  4. 5 Seconds of Summer - She Looks So Perfect | Official Tumblr
  5. Fall Out Boy - Centuries | Official Tumblr
  6. Frozen - Do You Want to Build a Snowman | Official Tumblr
  7. BeyoncĂ© ft. Jay-Z - Drunk in Love | Official Tumblr
  8. One Direction - Steal My Girl Official Tumblr
  9. Taylor Swift - Shake it Off Official Tumblr
  10. 5 Seconds of Summer - Don't Stop | Official Tumblr
  11. Troye Sivan - Happy Little Pill | Official Tumblr
  12. Lana Del Rey - Shades of Cool | Official Tumblr
  13. Frozen - Love Is an Open Door | Official Tumblr
  14. BeyoncĂ© - Partition | Official Tumblr
  15. Miley Cyrus - Wrecking Ball
  16. A$AP Rocky - Fashion Killa | Official Tumblr
  17. Arctic Monkeys - Do I Wanna Know?
  18. One Direction - Fireproof | Official Tumblr
  19. One Direction - You & I | Official Tumblr
  20. f(x) - Red Light

 

According to Tumblr, the Year In Review "is a showcase of the best stuff on the Internet from 2014. Follow along for a daily dose of creativity, humor, humanity, fandom, and sharing."

"And GIFs. Lots of GIFs!"

Tumblr is a popular website for fans to express their love for artists, and K-Pops inclusion on both of the lists express how popular K-Pop is on Tumblr.

Tumblr's full Year In Review can be found HERE.

 

© 2014 KpopStarz. All rights reserved. Do not reproduce without permission.

<b>K-Pop</b> BFFs: G-Dragon Explains His Life-Long Friendship With <b>...</b>

Posted: 09 Dec 2014 06:16 PM PST

GD and Taeyang remained friends through the early days of Big Bang to their current state of fame.

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(Photo : YG Entertainment/Paris Fashion Week )
GD and Taeyang remained friends through the early days of Big Bang to their current state of fame.

Big Bang's G-Dragon recently spoke fondly about his thirteen-year friendship with group mate Taeyang during a promotional interview for the pair's new single together.

G-Dragon and Taeyang met with members of the media on November 25 for a round table discussion in support of their project single "Good Boy." During the interview session, G-Dragon weighed in on promoting with Taeyang. Taeyang gave his perspective on their friendship and spoke about their working relationship as members of Big Bang.

Korean media outlet Enews published one of the first English language translations of the interview session. One of the questions which prompted the discussion of the friendship focused on the reasons behind the formation of their new unit GD x Taeyang. Taeyang explained that he and G-Dragon formed the unit after hours spent working on his solo album "Rise."

According to Enews, Taeyang stated, "G-Dragon and I didn't come up with the project after deciding to go for unit activities. My album was released this year and G-Dragon took significant participation in my album."

Taeyang then provided further explanation about the unit through his statement, "Since G-Dragon and I spent a lot of time together in the recording studio, the song was produced naturally."

G-Dragon explained the creative process behind Big Bang, while providing context for the dynamics of his working relationship with Taeyang. He referred to Taeyang as being better than a brother, while admitting that he and Taeyang often provide the demos for Big Bang's albums. During the interview, he stated, "Even for Big Bang albums, I would make the demos, and Taeyang and I would always be the ones to record the other members' parts together."

G-Dragon and Taeyang have maintained a friendship since their adolescence.

(Photo : G-Dragon Instagram )
G-Dragon and Taeyang have maintained a friendship since their adolescence.

G-Dragon's explanation for their extensive time spent together in the studio, included the points that T.O.P was in the midst of filming his movie while Daesung promoted his solo release in Japan. He also explained that "Seungri had something to do, so Taeyang and I spent a lot of time together." This statement provides context for the delay in the upcoming Big Bang comeback release while giving further insight into the creation of the GD x Taeyang hip-hop unit.

The tone of the round table conversation then shifted from their musical process to their iron-clad friendship. After G-Dragon made a warm statement about Taeyang, the reporters at the round table asked Taeyang to make a positive remark about him. In regards to G-Dragon, Taeyang stated, "I think he is a really good person. His heart itself is really good-natured."

English media outlet Soompi continued the translated portion of the interview. G-Dragon then went on to examine Taeyang's strengths and weaknesses, happily accepting the compliment from his friend. G-Dragon stated, "Taeyang's strength and weakness is that he is really stubborn. It's because he perfectly carries through according to his thoughts that the current Taeyang exists."

GD and Taeyang remained friends through the early days of Big Bang to their current state of fame.

(Photo : Taeyang Instagram )
GD and Taeyang remained friends through the early days of Big Bang to their current state of fame.

The Big Bang members are considered to have one of the strongest friendships in K-Pop which led to their recognition from Fuse as one of "Music's 17 Greatest Bromances." G-Dragon and Taeyang became friends after they met each other as trainees at YG Entertainment at age thirteen.Since becoming friends as teens, the duo have had the opportunity to work together through the group but this is the first time they have had an official release as a unit. GD x Taeyang is especially significant to the friends, as it is representative of their on-going relationship.

G-Dragon then went on to provide a strong, emotional statement regarding his friendship with Taeyang. Drawing on some of Taeyang's best qualities he stated, "Taeyang doesn't talk much and he doesn't act out loud, but he's a friend that brings a lot of feeling when he's next to you." G-Dragon then went on to give the heartfelt comment, "If there could be one friend next to me when I die, I hope it's Taeyang."

© 2014 KpopStarz. All rights reserved. Do not reproduce without permission.

Anti <b>Kpop</b>-Fangirl: Like money - <b>k-pop</b> music video production costs <b>...</b>

Posted: 06 Dec 2014 11:31 PM PST

In k-pop the music video is often as important as the song.  I'd even go out on a not-very-dangerous limb and say it's a lot more important than the song in most cases, and for a bunch of different reasons, ranging from building a brand, to building interest in the performers, to product placement, to connecting to global audiences and more.  K-pop is at least as much of a visual phenomenon as it is an auditory one, this much is obvious.  What's a little less obvious to a lot of people is how much money and effort is involved, so that's what this post is going to discuss... hopefully in a way that doesn't bore you to shit.
hyomcam

What makes a music video "cheap" or "expensive"?  How do I tell which is which?  Attentive readers will note that one of my recent Nugu Alert posts touched on the topic of video expenses.  However I didn't go into a lot of detail in that post, and I've been getting requests to write something more in-depth about music video costs ever since, so here we go.

Let's start off by saying that k-pop fans have a funny idea about what the word "cheap" means, k-pop fans will call just about anything that they don't happen to like "cheap" just because they fell out of the wrong side of the bed that morning or mummy didn't put enough milk in their breakfast cereal.  The average k-pop video costs easily two or three times as much as the average major label western music video, and the average major label western music video costs between $50k and $150k.  Expensive high-gloss productions from the likes of SM, YG, CUBE, MBK, JYP, TS etc... you'd be lucky to see any change out of half a million dollars in terms of total expense.

So, what's costing all that money?  Let's look at some of the various aspects of making a music video so we can get a picture of where all the money is going.

STAFF


Firstly, you need some people to actually make the shoot happen, obviously.  What does the typical staff list on a music video shoot look like?  A k-pop film crew may contain most or all of the following:
This is by no means a complete list, just the basics for a high-production music video, like the ones you see in k-pop.  All of these people obviously need to be paid, usually at hourly rates, plus the equipment they use needs to be hired, usually at daily rates, or sometimes you pay a flat daily rate for a person and their equipment together if they have special gear (a crane or drone operator is a good example of this).  Given that these are specialist fields, the wages aren't cheap, you're looking at a bill of several thousands of dollars just to get the above staff members together for one day of shooting.  Most video shoots are done in one day around-the-clock (i.e no sleep until complete) but if the shoot stretches over multiple days, them double or triple the fees.

LOCATION


Location shoots obviously require access to a location over a consistent time period (several hours) with no interference.  There aren't very many good "free" locations that would work well for any type of k-pop music video (which is why you see certain ones reused in different videos a lot), landlords of prime locations know this and will rent their weird and wonderful areas out to k-pop film crews and rake in the cash.  Access to a good location therefore requires one of two things - connections, or money.   Even apparently "free" locations can contain a large hidden expense - walking down a street in Gangnam might be free but having a 4-12 member group do their dance unobstructed in that same street so they can look cool and trendy requires a city permit to block off the traffic, which requires money.
trendcopy

The above pic is a still from nugu group TREN-D's "Candy Boy".  We can see that a street has been blocked off from traffic access.  Also look at the angle of the shot - from way above.  They've either hired a crane operator, or used a drone to get this shot.  We're already talking thousands of dollars for just this scene alone which is one of several in the video, all of which occasionally feature sweeping high camera angles.  They might be a nugu group but their video doesn't have a nugu price tag.

FABRICATION vs CGI


K-pop "box" sets such as the ones many SM Entertainment artists dance in are often the prime target of people who like to complain about k-pop music videos being "cheap".  In truth, these sets require extensive fabrication (i.e they need to be built out of some real stuff), or they require extensive CGI (computer generated imagery) whiz-bang effects.  Neither are exactly dirt-cheap (if you want the result to look any good, that is), but what's the most common option for k-pop these days?  Let's take a quiz with some popular high-technology box MVs!
KARA - PANDORA - physical set or CGI?  Answer here.
ORANGE CARAMEL - MY COPYCAT - physical set or CGI?  Answer here.
EXO - WOLF - physical set or CGI?  Answer here.
F(X) - RUM PUM PUM PUM - physical set or CGI?  Answer here.
SUPER JUNIOR - MR. SIMPLE - physical set or CGI?  Answer here.
T-ARA - SEXY LOVE - physical set or CGI?  Answer here.
F(X) - ELECTRIC SHOCK - physical set or CGI?  Answer here.
RED VELVET - HAPPINESS - physical set or CGI?  Answer here.
EXO - OVERDOSE - physical set or CGI?  Answer here.
couchnima

How many did you get right?  Almost all of the videos have completely 100% physical sets.  Only Super Junior's "Sexy, Free & Single" made heavy use of CGI and even in their case, the CGI wasn't completely green-screened in but added as extensions to existing physical props that were already quite extensive.  Now think about the amount of staff needed and hours of labour required to design and build each of those sets, as well as the materials and the scale involved.  It's more than a bathroom renovation (and a typical domestic bathroom renovation costs about $10k).  Never again will you think of an SM box video as "cheap" - the fabrication costs for these videos are insanely high and a large percentage of the total budget.

LOGISTICS


Introducing one of the most expensive k-pop videos of all time: "Honey Honey" by Gangkiz.  This video's expenditure came in at about $900k, just under T-ara's "Cry Cry/Lovey Dovey" and B.A.P's "One Shot" which were a cool $1M each.
What is it that makes "Honey Honey" so expensive?  Various scenes in the film were shot in three different European countries, and there's multiple locations for each country.  Now take another look at that staff list above.  Every time you pick up your k-pop girls from one location and plonk them down in a new location, all those other people above have to go with them, plus all their equipment.  In music video industry terminology this is called a "company move", and "Honey Honey" would have had dozens of company moves before the shoot was over.  The MV might look like one cute rented Kombi van full of hot k-pop girls trekking around Europe but there's probably another rented Kombi plus a minibus behind it driven by far less attractive people and full of all the tech gear.

On top of all this, when you're shooting your music video all those people in the list above, on top of your idols, are all getting hungry and thirsty.  They need to be fed, however if you're shooting in a snow dune or a desert somewhere or whatever, it's not like you can go down the road to the local milk bar and get a malted.  Even if there was a milk bar there, time is money and there's not time to be spent acquiring snacks on a busy film set.  The answer to this dilemma is "craft services", friendly guys and gals who provide all-day snack food for your video shoot so your camera guys don't get grumpy and Krystal doesn't faint.  Of course, they don't do this for free - from the perspective of anyone wandering onto the film set it's "free food" (and worth stealing), but it isn't really because the agency still pays for craft services to be there.  And of course, if you're doing a company move, craft services have to move too or there is no food and Krystal faints again.

craft0

POST PRODUCTION


So you've got your video shot at great expense but now what?  Well, assuming that your digital image technician had their shit together during the filming process, you should immediately have a bunch of hot sexy video files ready to post-process and turn into a music video.  You guessed it... it's time to pay another bunch of people a chunk of money to do a bunch of stuff!

Firstly there's the editor, and you probably all know what this is but I'm going to explain it anyway for those that don't.  The editor chops up the footage from the initial long cuts into something that today's kids raised on crappy Michael Bay films actually have a mild chance of paying attention to.  The more cuts, the longer this takes.  Yes, T-ara's "Sugar Free" would have taken a fucking long time.



Some poor sap had to sit there and make all those edits one at a time.  What do you mean you don't fucking like it?  The editor slaved away for days getting this just right so you could whine about it like a little baby.

Then there's the colourist, and no that's not another word for a racist (a colourist may be racist as well, but if so that's just coincidence).  A colourist is someone who makes sure colours match between different takes and different cameras and angles, and that the footage is correctly colour-graded.  This is super important because films without the right colour grading look seriously amateur-hour, and stuff with good colour-grading (i.e everything SM has done in the last 7 or 8 years) looks hot as fuck.  Most people don't know about stuff like colour-grading in any detail so here's a short and fun video explaining it visually.


Then you've got visual effects design.  This mainly means CGI these days, there are other types of visual effects but they are used increasingly rarely, and probably almost never in the high-tech world of k-pop.  CGI in most k-pop videos is fairly subtle when it appears - as covered above, many videos have some CGI content but surprisingly few are just a group dancing in front of a pure CGI backdrop.  CGI when it appears is usually the icing on the cake, not the cake itself.

Lastly, you have sound design which is adding the music content (obviously) and also anything else that may be needed.  A lot of k-pop videos have extensive preambles, sound effects and other stuff that needs to be inserted.

I haven't even discussed other things like teasers, photo sessions and other promotional expenses toed to music videos, this is all just the basic stuff.  By now you probably have realised that even the most basic k-pop music videos are in fact very expensive and you'll be no doubt asking yourself...

HOW DOES ANYONE AFFORD ALL THIS FUCKING CRAP?


It's no secret that the music industry has been on the downturn and there isn't much money to be had.  So where are k-pop companies getting the money for this shit?  From other industries that do have money, that's where.
AOA's "Like A Cat" is an expensive fucking video, I don't know the exact cost but I'd ballpark it as within the $300k-$500k range (and I'm possibly being a little conservative).  It's got more than one expensively-fabricated "box", some melee action, hot outfits, sexy props and set design... and a couple scenes where the AOA girls pass time playing a computer game on their phones.  The amount of money that the computer game company paid the k-pop agency for that promo probably paid for a good chunk of the video's expenses.  If you ever see a k-pop video where there's an easily identifiable product, like a computer game, or a phone with its logo clearly visible, or a conspicuously-displayed (and always rented) car, now you know where the money is coming from.  Phone and car companies love k-pop because it's like an ad that consumers actually want to watch!  Think about how many videos have performers singing in front of cars... that half the time they're not even old enough to drive, let alone rich enough to afford.
evolp

The above still (from EvoL's "Get Up") looks more like a car advertisement than a music video - and that's no accident because in reality, it's actually both.  Sure, the product placement is cheesy and obvious, but without it the high-end productions of k-pop probably couldn't continue to exist.

That's not to say that you can't theoretically make a video for $500... with today's technology and a bit of outside-the-box thinking you certainly can, but it won't look like a k-pop production, it'll look like something you created for $500.  I'll leave you with my favourite $500 handicam video of the year, and I know most of my readers have already seen this before but I don't care, I'm going to shove 912 Crew's "Roller Skate" down your throat again and again until you like it.  Peace.


Running Man Brothers Bring <b>K-Pop</b> to Queens College - NY1

Posted: 09 Dec 2014 09:07 PM PST

NY1's Lewis Dodley takes a look at Korean pop duo The Running Man Brothers, who are set to play Queens College on December 12. Watch the video above for a preview of their performance.

New York City continues to be the center of the so-called Korean Wave, primarily the wholesale exportation of the country's culture, food and music. With the influx of entertainers, the groundwork is laid for another wave of Korean stars to make their mark.

On Friday, the city meets the dynamic duo of Kim Jung Kook and Haha, the Running Man Brothers, as they're called. They're named for the wildly popular TV show. In fact, Running Man is seen as the embodiment of Hallyu or the Korean Wave, having been translated online in English, Spanish, French, Thai, Malay, Vietnamese, Chinese, Arabic and Brazilian Portuguese.

Its star is Yoo Jae Suk, but the spice is Kim Jung Kook and HaHa – Kim for his boyish likeability, upbeat personality and masculinity and HaHa for his insatiable sense of humor and free spirit – but the two are also quite the musical duo. In fact Kim made his mark with the duo Turbo in the late 1990's when he teamed up with the singer Mikey and churned out several hits.

Their so-called return to their musical roots is already reaping rewards as some 3,000 fans turned out in Palm Springs this summer as they performed their hits to an enthusiastic crowd, laying the ground work for stops in New York City and Dallas. Their show on the Korean network SBS has become some popular, a Chinese spinoff is in works. Would an English adaptation be totally out of the question?

Kim and HaHa follow former 2pm frontman Jay Park, his AOMG labelmates SIMON Dominic, GRAY, Loco, and DJ Pumkin, and legendary K-Pop group G.O.D who recently made appearances in the area.

Stay tuned as NY1 will have a complete wrap-up in our next report.

The Running Man Brothers will be performing at Friday, December 12 at Queens College's Colden Auditorium, 8 p.m.

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