ONTD

1:14 pm - 11/17/2012

Bring The Boys Out: The Divine Nine Ready Culture-Redefining World Domination



After Psy's Gangnam Style, here come Korea pop princesses Girls' Generation

Psy's electropop song was a global hit. Now a nine-piece K-pop girl band have made an album in English to break out of the K-pop market


Almost two months after a portly 34-year-old armed with a catchy chorus and a comical line in choreography soared to the top of the British pop charts, the world doesn't appear to have had its fill of Gangnam StylePsy, the Korean rapper whose viral video sensation (the YouTube view count stands at 738 million and rising) spawned myriad copycat videos by everyone from the US navy to pupils at Eton, became the first Korean artist to gain household-name status outside K-pop's main hunting ground of Asia.


It now seems certain that he has blazed a trail. Girls' Generation , a nine-member Korean girl group who had racked up millions of sales throughout east Asia long before Psy made "air" horseriding socially acceptable, are poised to release their first album recorded entirely in English.



Tentatively due for release next year by Lady Gaga's label, Interscope, the album will mark the group's first serious effort to court English-speaking music fans. The women, all aged between 21 and 23, are the obvious choice to take up Psy's mantle in the UK, where artists who sell millions of albums in Korea and Japan are known only to a small number of K-pop devotees.


Since their debut in 2007 with Into The New World, the highly polished band with a penchant for unfeasibly tailored hotpants, have been at the apex of Hallyu, the wave of Korean pop culture that has cracked even the famously tricky Japanese market, the second-biggest in the world after the US.


"It doesn't surprise me at all that Girls' Generation are doing this," said Steve McClure, the Tokyo-based executive editor of McClure's Asia Music News. "The South Korean market is limited, so winning over new fans overseas has always been part of the K-pop strategy. The fact that they are riding on the coat tails of Psy is just pure luck – it has just made it easier than it might have been without him."


The group's biggest overseas success to date has come in Japan – which is responsible for about 80% of K-pop's total revenues – where they immediately stood out among their saccharine counterparts from the world of J-pop. After a string of hits and awards spawned by their breakthrough 2009 hit, few K-pop watchers expected to wait long before Girls' Generation turned their attention to the English-language market.


They have overcome the language barrier with ease. Two of their five studio albums were released in Japanese, three of the singers were born and raised in the US and all are comfortable speaking English, which made for a comfortable appearance on the Late Show with David Letterman earlier this year.


In the five years since they made their debut, Girls' Generation have racked up sales of well over 30m in digital singles and 4.4m albums, assisted by clever promoters and a Korean management agency, SM Entertainment, that has been nurturing their talents, and their unimpeachable image, for more than a decade.


The group's 2011 single The Boys was released in English as well as in Korean and Japanese. That year the band earned more than $88m for SM Entertainment, and they are expected to earn double that this year. "GG's songs are infectious pop," said Robert Poole, chief executive of SomethingDrastic, a Tokyo-based Asian music promoter. "It's hard not to like Gee, and as soon as I heard Mr. Taxi, I thought they had to make an English version."


Industry experts say the group's brand of electropop and brilliantly produced videos will ease them into unfamiliar markets outside Asia. "Girls' Generation totally fit the bill," said Mio Scobie, overseas editor of Us Weekly magazine. "They produce feelgood beats, instantly memorable choruses and, as I'm sure people have already noticed, they're stunning.


"British listeners are used to genres being full of variety, so in terms of people getting disappointed that other K-pop acts aren't like Psy, I doubt that'll be the case," said Scobie, adding that Psy had been "brilliant marketing" for the K-pop genre. "The album will be a hit regardless of how many new listeners jump on board. Girls' Generation fans are fiercely loyal and will be ready to buy and download in their droves."


The band's carefully manufactured image is evident everywhere from their myriad product endorsements to support for causes ranging from Unicef's work with children in Africa to aid for the victims of last year's tsunami in Japan.


They reportedly live together, sleeping two to a room apart from Tiffany , who has a room to herself. It should surprise no one who has seen them perform that they receive more requests than any other K-pop artist to perform for the South Korean military.


If Psy pushed open the door to an unsuspecting international fan base, Girls' Generation could be the second stage in K-Pop's assault on Britain, McClure says. Fellow girl group 2NE1 and boy band Super Junior are rumoured to be preparing material for release in the UK, while Psy has promised to record an English-language follow-up to Gangnam Style.


"Psy is by definition a one-off and I'd be surprised if he had another international hit," said McClure. "But bands like Girls' Generation have more staying power. The question is: will K-pop become a permanent fixture? I don't know, but I have a feeling that Girls' Generation will stick round for a while."


KOREAN KOMEBACK

Girl's Generation will be making a comeback in January.

The girls had been originally scheduled for a comeback in late October. However, these plans were scrapped and they had to push back their comeback date. This will be their first Korean comeback after a long 15 months since “The Boys” was released. The girls had no Korean promotions as a full group in 2012, so fans are looking forward for the January comeback.


Girls’ Generation has always garnered good results through a January comeback with hits such as “Gee” (2009) and “Oh!” (2010) both being released in January which attributed greatly to their incredible popularity. With the January comeback, they’re looking forward to another hit next year as well.


PORTRAITS FOR G-STAR RAW


YURI



YOONA


TIFFANY



TAEYEON



SUNNY



SOOYOUNG



SEOHYUN



JESSICA



HYOYEON



SEOHYUN, SUNNY, TAEYEON



SOOYOUNG, HYOYEON, YURI



TIFFANY, JESSICA, YOONA 



Girls’ Generation has also revealed the tracklist for their second Japanese album “Girls’ Generation II ~Girls & Peace~”, followup to their flawless self-titled debut, to be released November 28th. Previews of the album below.

1. FLOWER POWER
2. Animal
3. I’m a Diamond
4. Reflection
5. Stay Girls
6. T.O.P
7. BOOMERANG
8. Oh!
9. All My Love Is For You
10. PAPARAZZI
11. Girls & Peace
12. Not Alone




FLOWER POWER

The third single from THE GIRLS' sophomore Japanese album was released digitally last week, and the Divine Nine have been slaying performances of the song across Japan. The release includes a b-side entitled "Beep Beep."








SOURCES 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5

cantbetamed 17th-Nov-2012 06:51 pm (UTC)
Well, Gangnam Style did open doors of opportunity for K-pop stars. Not all of them have to go about it the way PSY did, but people all around the world are aware now, now people know there is a country named South Korea in which hot popstars are fabricated, and while I don't think PSY is the actual trailblazer for K-pop, I do think he opened some doors.
pistol_eyes 17th-Nov-2012 06:59 pm (UTC)
ida, he's definitely brought some attention (but that was already happening) to kpop. I don't think the American powers-that-be will be calling Korea in hopes of getting the next big star.

But we'll see.
cantbetamed 17th-Nov-2012 07:03 pm (UTC)
It wasn't happening in this proportion before PSY. I'm not even saying the Girls HAVE to make it in America, or that they will, but two Asian stars won EMA's last weekend, and they weren't even prominent names in the Asian music scene. So saying one of the most powerful girlgroups in Asia could chart at least one single on an international chart, I don't think is very far-fetched.
pistol_eyes 17th-Nov-2012 07:23 pm (UTC)
I've never said that a kpop act can't be successful internationally. While most people are claiming that it won't happen because the US is ~racist~, I've always said that it can happen with the right level of promotion, catchy music, management that knows what they're doing, etc. My point is that PSY's success won't help other acts. And by successful, I don't mean meaningless awards, I mean platinum singles and large media attention.
cantbetamed 17th-Nov-2012 07:27 pm (UTC)
My point is that PSY's success has already helped other acts. I don't understand why you think his success should be disregarded? He brought more awareness to K-pop than it had, so yeah, he is helping K-pop acts.
pistol_eyes 17th-Nov-2012 07:36 pm (UTC)
Sorry, but "awareness" ain't really help to me.
cantbetamed 17th-Nov-2012 07:44 pm (UTC)
What is help to you, then? PSY isn't going to collaborate with every single K-pop act for them to garner attention if that's the kind of help you're referring to.
pistol_eyes 17th-Nov-2012 08:16 pm (UTC)
Help would have been BoA and Seven making it big. My orig comment was directed to kpop acts and their labels thirst for American chart success. Has PSY brought some international attention to korean pop music? Absolutely. That's a wonderful thing. My comment was how his chart success won't translate to chart success for the next korean act that decides to make an english record (which could be SNSD). Especially if they follow the same old formula. A lot of people think that PSY was made the road to success easier for korean acts but he hasn't. I don't want to get into stereotypes and the real reason why I think GS was successful. PSY is on a totally different side of the kpop spectrum. The man was sitting on a toilet in his video. That's not gonna help SNSD or any other act.

cantbetamed 17th-Nov-2012 08:56 pm (UTC)
I get what you're referring to, as if PSY had tarnished the K-pop industry. But even with the silliness, you've mentioned it, it brought attention. Attention that may not translate into chart success for himself or any other act but attention that may help people realize that K-pop isn't just about gimmicky dance routines or men sitting on toilets. I would love if people saw the complex choreography-filled side of K-pop. And with PSY raising awareness, wether it's on the same side or the other side of the spectrum, I think it's possible.
kawaiisis86 17th-Nov-2012 08:13 pm (UTC)
This is very true for Europe, which has its own niche of Kpop but now since Psy slayed the charts, people here are very interested in Korean culture as a whole. Businesses in central london that play Kpop and sell korean items are doing VERY well right now (i could cite so many places). Big Bangs tour of Wembley arena sold out in a day. The hallyu finally arrived in Europe on a larger scale thanks to Psy. It is what it is.
cantbetamed 17th-Nov-2012 08:14 pm (UTC)
Thank you!
kawaiisis86 17th-Nov-2012 08:19 pm (UTC)
NP, I'm getting a bit sick of the negativity-yes Psy's success was a kind of fluke, but the main reason it was able to sell so well was because famous people saw it and posted it. Of course the song and video are hilarious and Psy is charismatic as hell, but so are GG (as a collective), Big Bang, SHINee, Suju and others.

My thing is, if they want to break proper ground in America, they are going to have to do proper footwork, learn english, play schools/universities, do the city radio tours, and do signings and performances everywhere they can from clubs to small venues. They need to do it as if they are starting out from scratch.

One thing Psy keeps saying is how he's a rookie, and he treated his Gangnam Style promo as if he was just starting out again the US. That's why everyone got to know him and kept him in the charts for so long (i think he's still in the Billboard top 10 right?).

Edited at 2012-11-17 08:20 pm (UTC)
delicious_pocky 17th-Nov-2012 11:53 pm (UTC)
he brought LOTS of attention. a huge kpop article on the new yorker, a 20/20 segment on SM entertainment. i mean, this guardian article on girls generation wouldn't be happening without PSY.
pistol_eyes 18th-Nov-2012 03:05 am (UTC)
He brought attention and I've stated plenty of times that he brought attention. It's a bit obvious that he brought attention. But will that attention translate into chart success to other acts is the point I've tried to make in this thread.
fwee_prower 17th-Nov-2012 07:46 pm (UTC)
amazing comment.
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