Words of the Wise: Verbal

Nov 03, 2009 17:07


"For me fashion links directly to music," he says. "I even care what color underwear I wear. When I'm tired, people ask if I use vitamins and supplements and stuff, but I just wear red underwear to remind myself 'today I'm going to be hot!'"

Smart man. I need to invest in some great power underwear. The rest of the article is here. I think he ( Read more... )

!public, music: m-flo, quote

Leave a comment

iaoiua November 3 2009, 14:34:33 UTC
I definitely see your point; I think it's just a matter of nuance. BoA is not regarded the way she is just because she is Korean, but because she is a cross-over arist. The fact that Verbal is Korean has, for what it's worth, never been a "selling" point for (or highly emphasized in) m-flo, in my opinion (I always thought Lisa's mixed ethnicity was more interesting). In contrast, BoA was always marketed as a Korean pop star. She is the first artist from SM that embarked on a serious Japanese career, i.e. releasing Japanese singles that weren't just versions of her Korean singles in Japanese - to the extent that her career in Korea waned (relatively) while she concentrated on Japan so seriously.

As far as my knowledge of kpop goes (only until 2001 or so), the girl group S.E.S. (also of SM Entertainment) were either the first or among the first to attempt some sort of presence in Japan, at least in part because one of its members was supposedly fluent in Japanese (grew up in Japan or something). S.E.S. had a few Japanese versions of their singles, as well as a stand-alone single named Yume wo Kasanete (which was later released in Korean), but they really were never anywhere as popular in Japan as they were in Korea, in contrast to BoA.

At around the same time as BoA, K, a Korean ballad singer, best known for singing the theme song to 1 Litre of Tears, was also widely talked about as one of the first top Oricon charting Korean singers (but he wasn't popular in Korea, in contrast to BoA). Since BoA, every major kpop star has attempted Japan (Shinhwa, Rain, Se7en), some artists started off in Japan and then made it big in Korea (Younha), but only DBSK (and possibly Big Bang in the future) have been successful in both countries.

There's also an issue of when Korean imports were allowed into Japan ... I'm not sure of the details, but it hasn't been that long, supposedly, since Japan re-opened up Korean imports, and Korean entertainment companies decided to pursue the Japanese market more strongly. My guess is that this change correlates with the hallyu wave of Korean pop culture into Japan

Leehom's Japanese album was terrible. I'm quite sure he was just piggybacking off his role in that movie with Gackt and Hyde.

Sorry for the lecture! x:

Reply


Leave a comment

Up