From music to movies, technology to food, the world has fallen in love with everything South Korean. Ahead of a big London exhibition, Tim Adams visits Seoul in search of the origins of hallyu – the Korean wave

Last week, I was standing in a huge dance studio – one of 12 – near the top of a funky new office tower just north of the Han River in the South Korean capital, Seoul. The building is home to a company called SM Entertainment, which has strong claims to have invented one of the most potent cultural movements of the 21st century, the phenomenon of Korean pop music – K-pop.

Each generation creates hit factories in its own image. The “SM Culture Universe” was originally the vision of a Korean pop entrepreneur called Lee Soo-man who, after a brief career as a singer and DJ, studied computer engineering in the States in the 1980s. He returned to Seoul “with the dream of globalising Korean music”.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Bayonetta Origins: Cereza and the Lost Demon review – Bayonetta but not as we know her

BAYONETTA 3 was my favourite game of 2022, and from the snippet…

Rishi Sunak hails ‘right deal for country’ as UK returns to EU Horizon programme

Britain rejoins EU’s flagship £85bn science research programme in long-anticipated deal welcomed…

Sunak urged to block anyone convicted of sexual offences from standing as MP

Formal rules to block relevant candidates will make it easier to ‘weed…

Arsenal liaising with police over antisemitic messages in Ashburton Army fan group

Organisation receives tickets and assistance from Arsenal Club condemn historical messages on…