Start Here: Your Guide To Getting Into K-Pop (2024)

A song by the K-pop group BTS, shown here performing during the 2019 Billboard Music Awards, is included in our starter kit. Kevin Winter/Getty Images for dcp hide caption

toggle caption

Kevin Winter/Getty Images for dcp

Start Here: Your Guide To Getting Into K-Pop (2)

A song by the K-pop group BTS, shown here performing during the 2019 Billboard Music Awards, is included in our starter kit.

Kevin Winter/Getty Images for dcp

The last half-decade of Western pop music has been dominated by whisper-singing: a deliberately dry, almost ASMR-like performance style popularized by the likes of major label "indie pop" artists Julia Michaels, Selena Gomez, Lana Del Rey and Billie Eilish. The sound is hushed and pacifying, a response to the chaos of the world, the millennial's music equivalent to minimalistic interior design — why belt when you could soothe?

K-pop idol music, meanwhile, took hold in the United States during the exact same era, and it was the opposite: a maximalist dreamland full of color, high concept-performances and videos, a plethora of performers and unrivaled choreography. If Top 40 in America wanted solo singers so soft every breath was caught on mic over a mid-tempo chorus, K-pop appeared to offer a genre-less alternative: constant stimulation, euphoria delivered in eight to 10 melodies and fantastical harmonies in a single track. (That is, K-pop idol music— in the West, "K-pop" is frequently used synonymously with Korean idol music, pop with a high-production value and produced in a deliberate studio system, as it is in this piece.)

Music Features

Korean Pop, Away From The Hit Factories

K-pop is music that is stuffed but never bloated; music that is fun and meant to elicit joy when listened to and seen (K-pop is designed to be enjoyed visually as much, if not more, than it is meant to be heard). And it is music that is now nearing total global ubiquity. Boy band BTS is the most popular group on the planet, bringing in billions to South Korea each year between No. 1 albums (three of which hit that particular benchmark in less than a year,) history-making late-night television performances and music videos that double as art films. K-pop fans themselves have dominated headlines in and outside of the pop culture arena for their recent political successes: using their digital native understanding to overwhelm white supremacist hashtags, crashing President Trump's Tulsa rally attendance numbers and police apps meant to solicit information about Black Lives Matter protesters, pressuring their Idols to take a stance and contributing millions in donations. For those Anglophone audiences learning about K-pop for the first time, this particular music discovery probably feels like missing the boat on a voyage you didn't know was taking off. How could the needle shift so quickly? K-pop is overwhelming.

Hear The Songs

And that's understandable. In the history of popular music, American audiences have been hesitant to embrace music recorded in a different language, save for a few Spanish-language superstars. Artists from other cultures are expected to cross over — to translate their work, to white-wash themselves and their performances to sell to the United States, the world's largest music market. For many, a dominant pop form that isn't in English is inconceivable. And yet, here's K-pop, music largely recorded in Korean, born in the early 1990s and now one of the most popular forms of music on the planet, enjoyed by multiple generations of listeners. The numbers may be intimidating, but getting into the music shouldn't be.

Learning to experience K-pop means first ridding yourself of common misconceptions. The basics: K-pop is not a genre, nor do K-pop fans behave like a monolith. The term means "Korean pop," but like "Latin pop," the title is more of a geographic designation for the industry than a sonic one. An "idol system" for auditioning and creating pop talent, not unlike the mechanization of Berry Gordy's Motown in the 1960s and '70s, and financial support for the arts by the South Korean government is responsible for K-pop's dominion, but the music's current popularity in the United States is a relatively new phenomenon: born online, retweeted, streamed and shared ceaselessly.

K-pop music traverses genre with incredible ease — in one moment, taking cues from the dubstep drops that defined pop in the early 2010s, or Swedish hitmakers, or hip-hop, or R&B balladry, or new jack swing, or soul, or euro-pop, or Caribbean dancehall, or salsa and beyond — border-less eclecticism identifiable by the performers themselves, their seismic aesthetic judgments, and their multi-lingual singing. K-pop performers run the spectrum from girl groups and boy bands to soloists and rappers. The evolution of K-pop is defined by indistinct "generations" of the music, the parameters of which are frequently contested by fans and critics alike. Listening to K-pop is only one aspect of getting into industry, as well: The path to discovery is designed so that fans participate online, which means the most ardent supporters are vocal and engage in coordinated publicity efforts, such as streaming new music videos on an endless loop. That said, it is possible to get into K-pop by simply listening to it, and that's what the below playlist hopes to accomplish.

Like any introduction, this should serve as a subjective primer — one curated to best satiate curious Western listeners and give them a skeletal foundation in which to build upon. In truth, the world of K-pop is expansive and exponentially evolving. It is not a matter of if you can find a K-pop artist whose work you'll fall for, it's when. Start digging below.

Editors' Picks

K-Pop's Digital 'Army' Musters To Meet The Moment, Baggage In Tow

FIRST GENERATION: The Origins of Idols

Seo Taiji and Boys, "Nan Arayo (I Know)" (1992)

Most critics tend to agree that K-pop's origin story begins on April 11, 1992, when the trio Seo Taiji and Boys performed its soon-to-become a hit "Nan Arayo (I Know)" on South Korea's Munhwa Broadcasting Corporation. For many South Korean youths, the track was their first exposure to hip-hop and New Jack Swing (never mind the popularity of both genres in boy band history) and a welcome alternative to traditional styles of music, including "trot," a form of Korean folk.

H.O.T., "Candy" (1996)

H.O.T. (aka. High-Five of Teenagers — consider them formative to the trend of naming your group with an initialism for easy comprehension in the global marketplace) is largely credited as the first idol group in K-pop history, meaning that its members were brought together by a company — in this case, Lee Soo-man, founder of SM Entertainment. "Candy" is bubblegum pop at its brightest, cute music no doubt constructed in the model of American boy bands and J-pop.

S.E.S., "I'm Your Girl" (1997)

The girl group S.E.S., also put together by Lee Soo-man, was initially positioned as the female counterpart to H.O.T., though its sound differed drastically as the group's profile grew. On "I'm Your Girl," the group bears a striking resemblance to TLC — it's '90s R&B-pop, to a tee.

SECOND GENERATION: The Idol Industry Evolves

Rain, "Rainism" (2008)
(This song is not currently available on streaming in the United States.)

YouTube

After training to debut in a boy band that never took off, Rain pursued a career as a soloist, eventually becoming the first K-pop star to break internationally. "Rainism" is his most successful single, with a sound not unsimilar to Usher and Justin Timberlake. It is especially noteworthy that many of the lyrics are in English.

Wonder Girls, "Nobody" (2008)

Girl group Wonder Girls' retro concept proved to be super successful in 2008, the beginning of a time period routinely referred to as "the golden age of K-pop." The quartet frequently sourced elements from vintage sounds, including Motown — the members embody the Supremes in the video for "Nobody," the first K-pop song to ever chart on the Billboard Hot 100.

SHINee, "Ring Ding Dong" (2009)

Boy band SHINee's "Ring Ding Dong" encapsulates the genre-hybridity of golden age K-pop: it's futuristic R&B, with percussion built on congas, Euro-pop production and heavily auto-tuned vocals.

Girls Generation, "Gee" (2009)

Consider Girls Generation's "Gee" the framework in which all future PG-rated K-pop girl groups would follow: It's sugar-y sweet, bouncy pop music all about love and crushing — and its earworm chorus made it almost instantaneously viral, the most valuable currency of all.

SE7EN ft. Lil' Kim, "Girls" (2009)

It's not just that K-pop, like all forms of popular music, is founded in Black music — as K-pop's presence grew in America, BET was one of its first supporters. Soloist SE7EN's collaboration with American rapper Lil' Kim, "Girls," premiered on 106 & Park.

IU, "Good Day" (2010)

Not all of the biggest K-pop artists become the biggest K-pop artists in the U.S., and such is the case for IU — she is one of the most successful K-pop musicians in South Korea and "Good Day" is proof. Her signature single is as striking as the lead musical number in a beloved Disney classic, and just as orchestral.

Super Junior, "Mr. Simple" (2011)

Super Junior's "Mr. Simple" is soul from Seoul — there's a scat-like, dark jazz club element to song's intro before it explodes in vivid, repetitive techno.

2NE1, "I Am The Best" (2011)

2NE1's "I Am The Best" is Euro-pop excellence — an empowerment anthem for the club.

Psy, "Gangnam Style" (2012)

The virality of Psy's "Gangnam Style," and it's easily mimicked horse-riding dance move, was the first K-pop song to make a major splash in the United States, but in the greater K-pop story, he's an outlier. The song is ironic and subversive, a criticism of a wealthy neighborhood in Seoul and a larger commentary on inequality. The others on this list are sincere love odes constructed to attract the widest audience.

Planet Money

Gangnam Style: Three Reasons K-Pop Is Taking Over The World

BoA, "Only One" (2012)

BoA is formative in the K-pop story — she sang in English long before having a few key phrases in the chorus became a norm, and on "Only One," she tackled R&B breakup balladry with total expertise.

BIGBANG, "Fantastic Baby" (2012)

Before there was BTS, there was BIGBANG, the break-dancing boy band slated to take over the West. "Fantastic Baby" is the group's biggest hit, a gargantuan EDM-hip-hop beat so popular it was covered in the hit show Glee.

THIRD GENERATION: The Idol Industry Goes Transnational

2PM, "My House" (2015)

Boy band 2PM's "My House," is seductive, romantic R&B that will charm even the most staunch genre purist.

GOT7, "Just Right" (2015)

Some may find GOT7's child-like wonder on "Just Right" cheesy, but "twee-rap" might be a better categorization. The chorus, however, screams early One Direction.

EXO, "Monster" (2016)

The 12-member EXO offer a darker take on the electro-pop boy band formula on its single "Monster."

Jennie, "Solo" (2018)

In K-pop, it isn't uncommon for girl group and boy band members to pursue solo work outside of their collective duties — it allows them space to explore other creative avenues without breaking the band up, and doubles as a fan service for those listeners who prefer one member to the others (in K-pop, that member is your "bias"). Blackpink's Jennie, and her solo single "Solo," is the exemplar of a member "going solo," as she sings, without diverting too much from the integrity of the group. This one is for fans of big pop anthems and old school hip-hop whistle.

April, "Oh My Mistake" (2018)

Girl group April's "Oh My Mistake" is '80s synthpop with shimmering production — it is impossible to hear this and not feel giddy.

Blackpink, "Kill This Love" (2019)

The biggest girl group on the planet is Blackpink, a K-pop quartet without a full-length LP under its belt. With singles as ferocious as the air horn-adorned stadium anthem "Kill This Love," it's easy to see why: the single marries military cadences with trap, emphasized with gargantuan synthesizers.

BTS ft. Halsey, "Boy With Luv" (2019)

Any number of BTS songs would be appropriate to include here — check out "No More Dream," the group's first single, to get a sense of their range. That song rallied against a rigid education system that places untenable pressure on young people in South Korea, while "Boy With Luv" is an earworm single featuring one of the greatest American popstars of the 21st century. It's also one of BTS's most irresistible singles, a roller rink disco number punctuated with an almost house-like bass drum.

FOURTH GENERATION: K-pop Breaks Down Borders

Atee*z, "Say My Name" (2019)

The latest generation of K-pop superstars are no longer bound by borders—they can debut or train outside of South Korea and become just as, or even more successful in the West than they are back home. They also continue to expand upon K-pop's constant musical experimentation. Eight-person boy band Atee*z's hit "Say My Name," for example, is built around a pan flute, and main rapper Mingi, with his raspy tone so low it recalls Scandinavian post-punk more than any other vocalists on this list, sings the chorus. It is so distinctive, listeners will have no choice but to forgive them for giving their song the same title as a Destiny's Child classic.

Maria Sherman is a senior staff writer at Jezebel and the author of the book Larger Than Life: A History of Boy Bands from NKOTB to BTS.

Start Here: Your Guide To Getting Into K-Pop (2024)

FAQs

Where to get started with K-pop? ›

If you're trying to get into KPOP or explore what KPOP has to offer, that's where I'd suggest you start. Look at what music you already like and find KPOP songs which fit or are similar to this. After this you'll find yourself branching out. You'll find more songs you like and other artists you like.

What is the best age to become a K-pop idol? ›

If you look in a professional way, companies prefer trainees to be around 10–17 years old. If you look in a more human way I would say you need to be at least 16. If I ever had a son/daughter who wants to audition, I'll let them only after they turn 16/17 (depends on how mature they are).

How to get into the K-pop industry? ›

If you desire to become Korean pop music, you need to get yourself enrolled in voice and dance training. Getting a full two years of experience in singing and dance training before auditioning. If you're younger than 14, you must go to your auditions with a legal guardian.

Can I be a kpop idol if I don't know Korean? ›

Though many companies will accept non-Korean trainees, you will still be catering to a largely Korean audience. It's smart to learn about the culture if you aren't already familiar. Study popular K-pop groups, spend time on Korean fashion websites, and read up on etiquette and social norms.

Can a 13 year old become a K-pop idol? ›

Aspiring K-pop idols, known as "trainees," sign contracts with management agencies when the trainee is as young as 12 or 13 years old. It may take ten years for an agency to groom the trainee and for them to debut on stage, according to the former head of the Korea Entertainment Law Society.

Do K-pop stars get paid? ›

As of Aug 17, 2024, the average hourly pay for a Kpop Idol in the United States is $70.17 an hour. While ZipRecruiter is seeing hourly wages as high as $95.43 and as low as $16.59, the majority of Kpop Idol wages currently range between $60.58 (25th percentile) to $79.81 (75th percentile) across the United States.

Which K-pop company has no age limit? ›

WAKEONE online audition has no restrictions on gender, age or nationality.

Is 17 too late to audition for K-pop? ›

You are not old at all. It's the perfect age to audition. Most kpop hopefuls are 12–16 so you need to audition soon. You could probably be older if you really wanted to try but you will have to work that much harder and you still might not make it.

Does weight matter for a K-pop audition? ›

These K-Pop Idols Reveal Exactly How Strict “The Big 3″ Are About Your Weight. “When I was a trainee… I was told I had to lose 7kg no matter what.” K-Pop companies are quite strict about the weight of their trainees, and “The Big 3” (YG Entertainment, JYP Entertainment, and SM Entertainment) are no different.

Can I become a kpop idol if I can't dance? ›

If you're confident as you sound, I have a feeling you'd pass an audition. Yes , of course. You can became a kpop trainee if you have skills in singing or rapping you can be a kpop. If you don't have skills in singing , rapping or dancing you have to be good in visual.

Is K-pop training free? ›

Depends on the agency. The Big 3 and Pledis, among others, do not have fees because they have enough money to invest in their trainees. Others, usually smaller companies like G-Friend's Source Music, still do have training fees. In fact, G-Friend just received their first paycheck this year.

What is the age limit for YG audition? ›

There is actually no age limit for the audition as shown in the website itself.

Can I be a K-pop idol if I don't look Korean? ›

Of course!! I can give you examples of sooooo many kpop artists/idols who are not Koreans but Asians. Jackson (GOT7) : He is from Hong Kong.

Does JYP accept non-Asians? ›

May I apply as a foreigner? A. Yes, you may apply for the JYP Publishing Composer Audition at any time, any place. This audition is open for every new Producers & Songwriters.

Can you audition for K-pop if you cant speak Korean? ›

YOU DON'T HAVE TO KNOW SUPER GOOD KOREAN. THEY WILL TEACH YOU WHILE TRAINING BUT IT WILL BE EASY FOR U IF YOU KNOW JUST BASIC WORDS TO COMMUNICATE WITH OTHER TRAINEE OR JUDGES. ( THERE'S MANY FOREIGNER IDOL WHO DIDN'T EVEN KNEW THE MEANING OF HI IN KOREAN.

How can I join a K-pop Idol? ›

Well, the most common way to start off on a long journey to become a k-pop idol is to take part in various k-pop agencies' auditions. K-pop agencies usually have year-round audition schedules, and they always pay attention to find talented would be singers. You can take part in k-pop auditions either online or offline.

How much does it cost to be a K-pop trainee? ›

According to a survey conducted in South Korea in 2023, the average training cost per entertainment trainee in South Korea amounted to around 1.1 million South Korean won. Training costs made up the bulk of money entertainment companies spent on their trainees monthly that year.

Which K-pop song is best for beginners? ›

8 best K-pop songs that will help you learn the language
  • Just One Day by BTS. ...
  • Love Scenario by iKon. ...
  • Solo by Jennie. ...
  • Lilac by IU. ...
  • Next level by aespa. ...
  • Hello Future by NCT Dream. ...
  • Dynamite by BTS. ...
  • Fantastic Baby by BigBang.
Feb 7, 2024

References

Top Articles
Warhammer: Vermintide 2 Warrior Priest of Sigmar Build and Guide
To Keep June27 In Your Heart Every Day - intothecest
Kathleen Hixson Leaked
Z-Track Injection | Definition and Patient Education
Best Cav Commanders Rok
Strange World Showtimes Near Cmx Downtown At The Gardens 16
How Quickly Do I Lose My Bike Fitness?
Oriellys St James Mn
Animal Eye Clinic Huntersville Nc
7 Fly Traps For Effective Pest Control
Bx11
Ou Class Nav
Commodore Beach Club Live Cam
Parent Resources - Padua Franciscan High School
Dark Chocolate Cherry Vegan Cinnamon Rolls
Union Ironworkers Job Hotline
Sprinkler Lv2
Vigoro Mulch Safe For Dogs
The Largest Banks - ​​How to Transfer Money With Only Card Number and CVV (2024)
Hctc Speed Test
D2L Brightspace Clc
15 Primewire Alternatives for Viewing Free Streams (2024)
Gilchrist Verband - Lumedis - Ihre Schulterspezialisten
Churchill Downs Racing Entries
Meijer Deli Trays Brochure
Mobile Maher Terminal
Indiana Jones 5 Showtimes Near Jamaica Multiplex Cinemas
Kltv Com Big Red Box
Japanese Pokémon Cards vs English Pokémon Cards
Teenbeautyfitness
How to Get Into UCLA: Admissions Stats + Tips
Workday Latech Edu
Unlock The Secrets Of "Skip The Game" Greensboro North Carolina
Metro By T Mobile Sign In
The 38 Best Restaurants in Montreal
Craigslist Boats Eugene Oregon
Regis Sectional Havertys
Bbc Gahuzamiryango Live
Hingham Police Scanner Wicked Local
Temu Y2K
Sabrina Scharf Net Worth
Encompass.myisolved
Bcy Testing Solution Columbia Sc
More News, Rumors and Opinions Tuesday PM 7-9-2024 — Dinar Recaps
Tricia Vacanti Obituary
Ladyva Is She Married
844 386 9815
Greatpeople.me Login Schedule
Pas Bcbs Prefix
CPM Homework Help
Used Sawmill For Sale - Craigslist Near Tennessee
Peugeot-dealer Hedin Automotive: alles onder één dak | Hedin
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Trent Wehner

Last Updated:

Views: 6506

Rating: 4.6 / 5 (56 voted)

Reviews: 87% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Trent Wehner

Birthday: 1993-03-14

Address: 872 Kevin Squares, New Codyville, AK 01785-0416

Phone: +18698800304764

Job: Senior Farming Developer

Hobby: Paintball, Calligraphy, Hunting, Flying disc, Lapidary, Rafting, Inline skating

Introduction: My name is Trent Wehner, I am a talented, brainy, zealous, light, funny, gleaming, attractive person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.