The Rise Of Korean Pop

by Zack Beauchamp

Michael Arthur breaks down the conventions of "K-pop," South Korea's heavily exported musical genre:

Much of K-pop today is performed by large prefabricated groups of sometimes more than a dozen fussily styled members. Often one of them is designated to contribute various rap breakdowns scattered throughout each song. Difficult choreographed dancing is a really, really, big deal. Music videos always look very expensive and involve rapid costume changes in a weird empty white room, or rapid costume changes in a multi-colored Missy Elliot-style nightmarish puzzle dimension. Not every member is chosen for their singing ability, and people are refreshingly candid about this.

Like I said, this all sounds like a twisted throwback to the boy and girl groups no one in their heart of hearts truly misses. The thing is, Kpop is blowing up.

(Video: "Nobody" by the Wonder Girls, the first Korean song to break the American Billboard Top 100.)