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The Globalization of K-pop:
Korea’s Place in the Global Music Industry
Ingyu Oh*
K-Pop is a new buzz word in the global music industry. Korean
pop singers such as TVQX, SNSD, Wonder Girls, and Psy currently
attract unprecedented followers in Asia, Europe, and North America.
The dominant explanation behind this unique cultural phenomenon
rests on the concept of cultural hybridity or Pop Asianism (i.e., continuation and expansion of Japanese, Chinese, and Indian subcultures in the global cultural market). I argue that the globalization of
K-Pop involves a much more complicated process of globalizinglocalizing-globalizing musical content that originates from Europe
than what hybridity or Pop Asianism arguments suggest. Specifically, the rise of K-Pop in the global music industry involves a new
technique of locating new musical content in Europe or elsewhere,
modifying it into Korean content, and then redistributing it on a
global scale. Furthermore, K-Pop represents an effort to network
global talent pools and social capital in the formerly disconnected
music industry rather than an effort to emulate and slightly modify
* Ingyu Oh is Professor of Hallyu Studies at the Research Institute of Korean Studies,
Korea University, Korea. He received his Ph.D. from the University of Oregon.
His recent publications include “From B2C to B2B: Selling Korean Pop Music in
the Age of New Social Media” (2012) and “From Nationalistic Diaspora to
Transnational Diaspora: The Evolution of Identity Crisis among the Korean
Japanese” (2012).This work was supported by the National Research Foundation
Grant funded by the Korean Government (MEST) (NRF-2007-361-AL0013). I
thank Jeong-ha Park and Dr. Hannah Jun for research and editorial assistance.
E-mail: oingyu@korea.ac.kr.
KOREA OBSERVER, Vol. 44, No. 3, Autumn 2013, pp. 389-409.
© 2013 by THE INSTITUTE OF KOREAN STUDIES.
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Ingyu Oh
The Globalization of K-pop
Japanese pop culture. As such, within the global music industry,
Korea occupies a structural hole that exists between Western and
East Asian music industries.
Key Words: K-Pop, Music Industry, Globalization, Structural Hole
I. Introduction
A
s the trendy magazine Monocle put it recently: “The Korean
Wave movement is the biggest soft power success story of the region,
acquiring global — and still growing — adulation over the past
decade, with the fevered export of South Korea’s pop culture, from
music to drama to anime to computer games” (Monocle 49, Dec. 2011Jan. 2012: 48). Particularly, the rise of K-pop or Korean popular music
in the global music scene came as a coup de main to many music fans,
commentators, and business people in Asia. The Anglo-American or
European domination of the global music industry has rarely faced
challenging competitors from Asia prior to the sudden K-pop epidemic.
Psy’s “Gangnam Style,” for example, ranked number one in the world
in terms of YouTube click counts, reaching more than 1.7 billion hits
as of July 21, 2013. The second most hits recorded in YouTube history
by Justin Bieber comes in at just 0.9 billion.
Before Psy’s ascendance as a global pop star, other boy and girl
bands from Korea have enthralled a massive number of young Asian
and European fans who rushed to quickly sold outlive concerts and/
or YouTube for instant and free access to music videos. In countries
like China, where YouTube is banned, young fans relied on alternative
social networking service (SNS) sites for free music videos from Korea.
Girls’ Generation, Wonder Girls, TVXQ, Big Bang, 2PM, 2NE1, and
Rain are particularly popular among a diverse and long list of young
entertainers from Korea who currently dominate the Asian music
industry (see inter alia, Ho, 2012; Lee, 2012; Lie, 2012; Oh and Park,
2012; Hübinette, 2012; Hirata, Forthcoming; Iwabuchi, Forthcoming).
391
Against this backdrop, many scholars of popular culture and mass
media have tried to theorize K-pop’s sudden and global popularity
using various perspectives from cultural studies, mass media theories,
and other social science disciplines. The dominant explanation of the
global K-pop phenomenon is the “hybridity” view that advances a
liberal argument about Chinese, Japanese, and Indian cultures as a
grand Asian Culture (AC) that may countervail the dominant Western
Culture (WC)as a whole (Chua, 2004, 2012; Iwabuchi, 2004, Forthcoming). These authors conclude that the rise of K-pop therefore is only
natural, given the expanding forces of AC vis-à-vis WC. In this sense,
K-pop is not a new cultural force in the global cultural system as long
as it originates from Japan and/or China (i.e., hybrid), both of which
have already hybridized their pop culture with the mix of WC since
the 19th century (Iwabuchi, 2004, Forthcoming; Park, 2006; Hirata,
2008; Ryoo, 2009; Shim, 2011).
On the opposite side of this theoretical spectrum is a grounded
view of K-pop as Korea’s new export industry that “denuded and
destroyed whatever exists of received (South) Korean culture and
tradition” (Lie, 2012: 361). K-pop has nothing that can be considered
“Korean,” as it is a timely, commercial combination of: (1) the global
liberalization of music markets in Asia and the rest of the world; and
(2) the rapid advancement of digital technologies like YouTube which
prefers to select and feature perfectly photogenic performers from all
over the world, including Korean girl and boy bands. According to
Lie (2012), no other J-Pop groups and their producers could have
imagined this new export opportunity partly due to the lack of
economic need or the lack of technological advancement. Perhaps
even now, J-Pop singers or bands may not be able to imagine matching
Koreans’ success simply because of the lack of photogenic appeal that
Koreans have demonstrated in their music videos and on concert
stages. In this sense, K-pop is not Japanese or Chinese, even though it
is Asian. Rather, K-pop is global and more Western than ever.
Despite this enlightening explanation of K-pop’s global success,
Lie’s analysis lacks insight into the anatomy of the whole production
process of the export business (i.e., the K-pop industry). To provide an
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Ingyu Oh
example, Japanese cars have dominated the global car market due to
several externally crucial and timely factors. However, exogenous
factors are just as important as endogenous ones. If global factors are
significant for an export industry like automobiles, there is also a need
to understand why automakers such as Toyota created the Just-inTime System (JIS) and Kanban. As Lie (2012) succinctly puts it, if SM
Entertainment is “the single most important” factor behind the global
success of K-pop, a meaningful analysis demands an understanding
of the inside organizational dynamics of an industry dominated by
firms like SM.
SM Entertainment’s core business competence was bifurcated
within the organization into: (1) creativity management; and (2) export
management. In one of the extant studies, Oh and Park (2012) focused
on export management, characterized by SM’s business focus shifting
from B (business) to C (customers) to B (SM) to B (YouTube). This
transformation of SM’s international strategy necessitated competent
international managers like Youngmin Kim, SM’s CEO, who was
pivotal in successfully introducing BoA and TVXQ in Japan. Hailing
from Japan himself, Kim spent his primary, middle, and high school
years in Japan before coming to Korea University for undergraduate
studies. While Soo Man Lee, SM founder and Chairman, has managed
just the creativity management side, Kim has had full freedom and
power to blandish his sword in export matters. The connection
between YouTube and SM, something that Japanese and Chinese
entertainment managers have not sought to utilize, was first mapped
out by Kim, who accidentally discovered the YouTube icon as it was
permanently pre-installed on a Japanese iPhone first released in 2008.
The story of creativity and export management from SM’s perspective therefore adds richness and flesh to the theoretical skeleton
presented by Lie (2012). In this paper, I continue to present aspects of
creativity management with an emphasis on successful linkages with
export management. I first discuss existing studies of the global music
industry to draw an understanding of the whole business system from
K-pop’s viewpoint. Through a case study on SM’s creativity management, I suggest that the recent rise of the global music industry offers
The Globalization of K-pop
393
many structural holes that can be occupied by linking Asian and Western
networks. However, either the tertiusiugens or the tertiusgaudens in the
music industry must be able to identify audience preferences in each
music genre and geographical segment.
II. Theorizing the Global Music Industry
The plural usage of “music industries” reflects the diverse nature
of the industry in producing and delivering a variety of different
goods and services to music consumers. For example, the classical
music industry, a representative case of “high culture” in Bourdieu’s
(1984) term, has a widely different throughput system from that of the
K-pop industry, an exemplary case of “low culture.” While the classical music industry has prestigious national and international schools
that officially train musical geniuses, the K-pop industry has no such
privilege except for private training camps often labeled as “slave
camps” by antagonistic journalists. Whereas opera is delivered in
luxurious nationally or imperially founded opera houses, K-pop concerts are performed in sports stadiums or open air stages constructed
overnight.
The sociological understanding of the popular music industry
has often assumed the above class line and elaborated on the process
of top-down control of “low culture” contents using institutions, organizations, and technologies (Hirsch, 1971; Peterson and Di Maggio,
1975). According to these cultural classifications, K-pop belongs to
the “Third World” low culture category emanating from a country
unheard of in usual mainstream cultural (both high and low) discourses
in developed countries. Although Hirsch (1971) correctly predicted the
structural nexus between mass media technologies and new popular
music genres, as evidenced in the case of radios after the massive success of TVs and the birth of rock and roll music. However, like other
sociological studies of popular music, he couldn’t predict that the
birth of YouTube and digital music would usher in a new popular
music genre of K-pop. In the dominant sociological study, artists and
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recording companies in the core countries only would invent, develop,
produce, and disseminate popular music.
The picture has changed dramatically since the birth of the global
music industry. The rise of the new Caribbean music genre is one
example, while the spread of J-pop all over Asia was another. Traditional and national music industries have relied on discs and magnetic
tapes (SPs, LPs, tapes, CDs, MDs, LDs, DVDs, etc.), which were
played on playing devices (e.g. audio components). These discs and
tapes carried price tags, although they were easily pirated all over the
world for cheap dissemination. Unless countries enforced strict copyright rules, singers and recording companies found it very difficult to
garner any substantial profit out of their music. Free music also existed
through the broadcasting model of music dissemination (Fox and
Wrenn, 2001). Music was aired on radios or television music channels
without fees to the audiences, as long as they listened to or watched
program sponsors’ commercials. In many countries where piracy was
rampant, appearance on TV programs was one of the important
income sources for artists who had no other option but to appear on
nigh club shows or take a national concert tour with less secure income
guarantees than that of TV programs.
The ascendance of the global music industry has destroyed this
structure. No longer are music audiences required to purchase music
released by recording companies (or labelers), as they have full access
to free music on the internet, especially YouTube. Concerts are still
organized by production managers (who either have or do not have
recording facilities), although more and more regular fans prefer to
watch them online for free. Today, the global music industry allows
music producers and distributors to make their fortunes through
posting free music on the Internet without going to radio stations or
begging recording companies to produce and distribute records
(Hilderbrand, 2007; Mangold and Faulds, 2009; Elberse, 2010; Oh and
Park, 2012). Whereas recording companies owned and managed
copyrights of music they sold, music producers in the global music
industry recruit, train, and own artists in addition to the copyright of
the music sold online.
The Globalization of K-pop
395
The establishment of the global music industry has also destroyed
the thick line between “high” and “low” culture on the one hand, and
“developed” and “developing” country cultures on the other. As the
case of Psy illustrates, virtually anyone can post music content on
YouTube and enjoy instant fame overnight. Unlike what the Birmingham School used to preach, people do not have to resist mainstream
culture by deliberately enjoying subculture music (Hall and Jefferson,
1993). Subculture music from all over the world is easily searchable and
watchable through streaming technology on YouTube. It is therefore
not uncommon now to find K-pop and other popular music artists
form the developing countries who have previously pursued classical
music careers, because their chance of making fortune in the popular
music industry has tripled and quadrupled due to the internet.
The success of subculture music on YouTube, or the new global
music industry, depends on the nature of the organizational ecology
created by a specific home country’s music industry. K-pop has an
industrial ecology that favors a very high level of individual and group
participation in YouTube-based music production and dissemination
based on a new model of popular music venture capitalism. The three
major music venture capitalists (SM, YG, JYP) in Korea actively recruit
and train future K-pop talent on a continuing basis in order to create
an organizational ecology characterized by a large supply of musical
inputs (composers, lyricists, singers, session bands, etc.) and a small
number of producers (SM, YG, JYP) and distributors (YouTube). In this
syphoning type of industry, producers, for their capital investment in
young individuals and groups from their early ages, and distributors,
for their monopolistic position, take the largest cut in the form of
profits, whereas the input elements (e.g. singers) gross relatively
smaller share (Oh and Park, 2012).
The question, then, is what makes these producers qua venture
capitalists legitimate in the whole value chain, where YouTube is the
only powerful distributor in the new free digital music industry? The
answer lies in the fact that these big three K-pop producers have not
chosen to rely on a local pool of talents in Korea for creativity management, but have extended production networks (or musical/cultural
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Ingyu Oh
The Globalization of K-pop
Table 1. K-pop’s Globalization Drive
MNEs
SM Entertainment
Producers
Composers
Choreographers
Name/
K-pop Singers
Name/
K-pop Singers
Name/
K-pop Singers
Teddy Riley/
Girls Generation
Polow da Don/
Girls Generation
Will.i.am/
2NE1
YG Entertainment
Rodney “Darkchild”
Jerkins/SE7EN
JYP Entertainment
Nick Cannon/
WonderGirls
Busbee/
Girls Generation
Alex James/
Girls Generation
KalleEngstrom/
Girls Generation
Oslo Recordings/
Super Junior
Nick Bass/
Jeff Hoeppner/
Super Junior,
f(x)
SHINee
Thomas Troelsen/
Misha Gabriel/
f(x)
BoA, SHINee
WellemLaseroms/
f(x)
NaoKanata/
BoA
RyojiSonoda/
BoA, TVXQ
Thomas Troelsen/
SHINee
Figure 1. K-pop Value Chain
Distributor
Youtube
Daishi Dance/
BigBang
Nagao Dai/
SE7EN
Claude Kelly/
WonderGirls
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Jonte/
WonderGirls
capital) to global cultural centers in Hollywood and Europe (especially
Sweden and the U.K.). As Table 1 shows, the K-pop music industry
represents a global business project encompassing local components
to regional and global inputs and outputs.
Furthermore, Figure 1 shows that these global music suppliers
occupy the middle point between multinational enterprises (MNEs),
which provide funds to K-pop production by buying advertising time,
and Korean producers who buy some of the K-pop music originally
coming from Sweden (melody), England (melody, lyrics, percussions),
and the U.S. (beats, lyrics). Performers (mostly Koreans with some
Chinese, Japanese, Southeast Asian, and other talents) occupy the
lowest value bracket on the value chain, whereas MNEs, producers, and
distributors (YouTube) take the largest cut in the global music industry. As exemplified from this value chain, Korean music producers
have adopted a new globalization strategy that can be referred to as a
“G-L-G’” strategy, to which this paper now turns.
III. G-L-G’: K-pop’s Globalization Strategy
Globalization in the music industry can mean several things.
First and foremost, it can refer to a situation where center music can
dominate the peripheral music markets (music imperialism) (Black,
1994; During, 1997; Fine, 1997; McChesney, 2001). Second, it can mean
cosmopolitanism, where a diverse type of center, peripheral, and
semi-peripheral music is sold in the market with sizable groups of
fans and “buffs” for each subculture market (Cho-Han et al., 2003;
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Iwabuchi, 2004, Forthcoming; Baek, 2005; Hirata, 2005; Chang, 2006).
This is close to an ideal-typical multicultural music market. Third, it
can allude to a possibility that there is a new global division of labor
in music production and dissemination. In the past, for example, Japan
exported vinyl LPs that contained American popular music back to the
U.S. for their high quality and cheap prices. In another case, European
singers and artists went to New York and Hollywood to record and
release their albums due to the sheer size of the pop music market
in the U.S. In a new global division of music production, the music
products sold in each subculture market are produced by a new system of global division of labor that involves European, Asian, and
American music talents, venture capital firms, and distributors (Oh
and Park, 2012).
K-pop belongs to the third type of globalization. By definition,
K-pop entails the export of music “made in Korea” to global consumers, because the domestic music market is drastically hampered
by its trifling size and rampant, albeit diminishing, piracy. However,
before the current K-pop export boom, the Western network of music
producers and distributors did not spot or recruit Korean musical
talents into their production and distribution systems, although a
couple of anecdotal stories exist.1 Korean popular music was simply
not Western at all, as the traditional trot or kayo songs with pentatonic
scales had dominated East Asian popular music (Lie, 2012). The export
of Korean music on a global scale has begun since the 21st century,
mainly due to: (1) Korea’s economic ascendance to semi-periphery in
the world system; (2) massive immigration of Koreans into center
countries (Japan, the U.S., Western Europe, etc.); (3) active participation in global cultural industries by the Korean and overseas Korean
population; and (4) most importantly, participation in the global divi1. In 1963 Louis Armstrong performed with an unknown Korean girl singer, BokHee Yoon, at Walker Hill Hotel, Seoul, in 1963, and later she was featured in the
Ed Sullivan Show (Yoon, 1997). Also, Kim Sisters, three daughters of a legendary
Korean female singer Nan-Yeong Yi, went to Las Vegas with their American
manager, Tom Ball, and eventually appeared on the Ed Sullivan Show several
times (Hankooki.com, July 10, 2008).
The Globalization of K-pop
399
sion of labor in music manufacturing and distribution.
Like in other global divisions of labor in manufacturing and distribution, Korean corporations purchase or outsource raw materials
that will be processed in their own factories in Korea. Finished goods
will then be exported to center markets in the world system, usually
with help from center buyers or distributors. In the 1960s and 1970s,
Korean corporations sold textiles, wigs, and footwear in massive
quantities to the U.S. and Europe. In the 1980s and 1990s, these corporations began producing cars, ships, steel plates, and electronic goods
to be consumed by center customers. In the 2000s and 2010s, these
same firms are now exporting IT-related communication hardware
and devices, such as smart phones and smart pads, while newlyestablished entertainment companies are exporting popular cultural
content called Hallyu products all over the world.
Despite stark differences in manufacturing and distribution
processes, these industries share a similar structure in the global division of labor. Korean firms in the semi-periphery of the world system
have to import or outsource raw materials, advanced technologies,
and financial resources from the periphery or the center. Even raw
materials are often controlled by, and therefore have to be purchased
from, the center capitalists. Like the famous Korean electronics and
automobile industries, K-pop companies must outsource original music
scores to Western (notably Swedish, American, and British) composers.
In a similar vein, the finished K-pop CDs, DVDs, music videos, and
MP3 music files must be distributed by center companies (e.g. iTunes,
YouTube, vevo, SONY Music, Universal, EMI, avex, etc.).
Participation in the global division of music production and distribution (see Table 1) does not necessarily guarantee the global success
of K-pop. From the outset, participation itself is extremely difficult
to begin with, given the domination of European, North American,
Central and South American, and Japanese music producers and
distributors. Equally challenging is sustaining popularity in the global
music market. This is why the entire process of Global (G) → Local (L)
→ Global’ (G’) is untenable if the “L” component of the global division
of labor is not creative or unique (i.e., product differentiation) enough
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Ingyu Oh
to attract producers and distributors, not to mention global fan
groups.
K-pop’s differentiation strategy to make the “L” process attractive
to a global audience is roughly threefold: (1) numbers; (2) physique;
and (3) voice-dance coordination. Every artistic expression has archetypes found in either its own traditional art form or foreign legends
(Barthes, 1972; Jung and Hull, 1980). While the debate about the Korean
archetype of K-pop seems futile, three candidates stand out, namely,
Japanese or Chinese archetypes (i.e., Chinese culture, J-Pop), Korean
horse dancers (i.e., Psy’s Gangnam Style mirroring an ancient Korean
horse dance), and Western origin (i.e., K-pop came from Michael
Jackson). Pop Asianism under the theoretical guidance of cultural
hybridity has proposed circular arguments that K-pop came from
Chinese and/or Japanese popular culture that has had significant
impact on the global pop culture (Iwabuchi, 2004, Forthcoming; Jung,
2011; Shim, 2011). The argument is circular because it cannot explain
why Taiwanese popular music is not globally popular as much as
K-pop is. Nor can it predict when and how Taiwanese popular music
will be globally popular just like K-pop. The circular argument does
not explain the reason why K-pop is successful because it wrongfully
assumes that K-pop is similar to Chinese or Japanese pop music.
Korean cultural pundits have also advanced similar functionalist
arguments that Psy’s mega hit, “Gangnam Style,” came from the traditional horse dance found on the murals from the ancient Shilla dynasty
or that Americans enjoy Psy’s song because they are “cowboys” who
apparently love horses (Kwon, 2012a, 2012b; Ye, 2012; Kim, 2012;
Park, 2012). Furthermore, some Americans have argued that K-pop,
epitomized by male musicians dancing and singing simultaneously in
groups, came from Michael Jackson’s own singing and choreographic
styles (Kim, 2010). All these arguments are also circular because their
logic is based on the absurdity of: (1) Koreans are born horse dancers
and (2) if anyone emulates cowboy dance or Michael Jackson, he/she
will be a global idol. If Koreans are born horse dancers, why didn’t
American cowboys create the horse dance, too? If Michael Jackson
was the key to K-pop’s global stardom, why didn’t Taiwanese singers
The Globalization of K-pop
401
mimic Jackson’s music/dance and become world stars, too?
This paper is not concerned with musical archetypes for popular
music in general and K-pop in particular. Instead, this paper centers
on a K-pop producer’s point of view by focusing on their efforts at
differentiating K-pop from other musical genres. Producers are concerned with singers becoming global stars and eventually generating
high cash returns on initial investments in those would-be stars over a
five- to ten-year period (i.e., K-pop venture capitalism). At first glance,
K-pop’s product differentiation lies in the number of singers staged at
one time. Unlike Chinese popular singers, J-Pop bands, or Michael
Jackson, K-pop’s success initially came from the very large number of
singers and dancers singing and dancing simultaneously on stage.
TVXQ, Girls’ Generation, Big Bang, Super Junior, 2PM, Shinee, Beast,
and others constitute archetypal success cases for the K-pop globalization drive through an attractive “L.” The localization process therefore
includes a special (or Korean) staging formation for boy and girl bands
previously unheard of in other countries. Peculiar only in K-pop,
K-pop music features singer-dancers on stage who maintain changing
dancing formations that quickly change with strict or perfect synchronization. From the beginning to the end of a song, singer-dancers take
turn in occupying the spotlighted center stage one by one, as if there
were no lead vocal for the band. Everyone in the band maintains the
same vocal and dancing talent in a synchronized movement, as in the
Irish river dance, although the river dancers don’t sing at all.
The “number” factor alone, however, is not sufficient. Japan’s top
girl bands, AKB48, SKE48, and HKT48, feature 48 singers and dancers
at the same time, making them constantly visible on the Oricon chart.
However, they have not had any global success much akin to that of
K-pop girl bands, such as Girls’ Generation, which features only nine
members. K-pop’s “physique” factor therefore must be taken into
consideration in its differentiation strategy. In other words, Girls’
Generation and Wonder Girls are at least 10 inches taller than AKB48
or HKT48 members, let alone the fact that the Korean singers show off
much sexier and sophisticated looks and bodies than their Japanese
counterparts. Japan’s top male idol group, Arashi, which features five
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members, also pale in comparison with the physique of their male
K-pop counterparts. TVXQ, originally featuring five members, and
Shinee, also featuring five members, are at least 10 inches taller than
Arashi members. As a result, K-pop music videos and concerts are
much more visually appealing than those of other Asian (especially,
Japanese or Chinese) counterparts. The emphasis on the physique
side of performers simultaneously implies that K-pop idol groups
have different sources of global attraction from those of African or
African-American music artists. Targeting Asian and Western female
fans mostly, K-pop emphasizes thin, tall, and feminine looks with
adolescent or sometimes very cute facial expressions, regardless of
whether they’re male or female singers. On the contrary, Caribbean
and African American singers highlight their colonial-style male
attractions with body looks that are not manicured, cosmeticized, or
thoroughly shaved.
Even though Western Caucasian and other ethnic boy and girl
bands may want to choose to rely on the physique factor for their
immediate rise to stardom, they often fall short of fans’ expectation in
terms of dance-singing coordination in large groups. This is the third
feature predominant in globally popular K-pop idols. The “L” process
within the K-pop industry involves a high level of specific in-house
investments provided by entertainment companies themselves that
act like venture capital firms. The learning process of mastering how
to sing and dance is crucial in the Korean “L” process of the entire
global division of labor, as similar learning processes in the training of
Korean archery and golf players are also pivotal. Particularly, the
length of learning period is noticeably long often ranging from five to
ten years. The three major K-pop managing firms, or K-pop venture
capitalist firms, select potential idols through internal auditions and/
or their K-pop cram schools. Trainees go through vocal, dancing,
language, and theatrical acting lessons for at least five hours a day in
the evening after school. They have to carry out regular physical fitness trainings as well as take skin and other beauty therapies. The
entire program resembles that of a total institution, as trainees are
sometimes banned from using cell phones during training (Ho, 2012).
The Globalization of K-pop
403
Table 2. K-pop’s G-L-G’ Process
Global
Input Process
European, American,
Japanese composers
Competing European,
Manufacturing American, Japanese
Process
entertainment co.’s &
choreographers
Distribution
Process
Competing regional
distributors
Local
Global’
Competing local
composers
Competing non-European,
non-American,
non-Japanese composers
Education &
Training
Choreograph
Musical variation
Refining
Competing Chinese, Latin
American, Middle Eastern,
African, Southeast Asian
entertainment co.’s
Competing local
distributors
Japanese, European,
American distributors
This is why some critics call the learning process very abusive of the
trainees, although K-pop managers defend their programs by arguing
that the K-pop cram school is no different from college prep schools,
exam cram schools, golf school, and other similar institutions. K-pop
managers emphasize the fact that they pay for all the K-pop education
and training, unlike other cram schools in Korea.2 After the entire
period of training, K-pop idols possess very different skills of singing,
dancing, speaking foreign languages, and acting from their competing
singers from China or Japan. They also look much sexier and trimmed
than their competitors from other countries.
With finished products in the form of global concert tours, CDs,
DVDs, and music videos downloaded or streamlined on the internet,
K-pop companies go abroad to market finished goods through global
distributors. Since CDs and DVDs must be protected by copyright, all
K-pop companies rely on Japanese distributors for Japanese and other
Asian markets. For concert tours, K-pop companies rely on local concert organizers who are also label sellers in the specific market. However, income from these finished goods is not big compared to royalty
income from YouTube and other social media sites (SMS). YouTube is
a revolutionary SMS that has provided unexpected opportunities to
2. Based on the interviews with the CEO Youngmin Kim and the A&R Manger
Chris Lee at SM Entertainment on Nov. 13, 2012 and Dec. 20, 2012, respectively.
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Ingyu Oh
K-pop producers, while J-pop Asia and vevo are latecomer competitors
to YouTube in the global music industry.
IV. K-pop’s Place in the Global Music Industry
K-pop’s global ascendance is not a result of its cultural hybridity
that Korea imported from China or Japan. Korean culture, be that
Confucian or hybrid, has never been popular in Asia, let alone the
world. Back in the 1990s, Japanese or Chinese viewers did not tune in
to watch Korean TV dramas or films, listen to Korean music or attend
Korean singers’ concerts in Seoul, eat out in a Korean restaurant or
cook Korean food at home, or drink Korean rice wine or soju (i.e.,
cheap local alcohol brewed and distilled from sweet potatoes).
The global success of K-pop in the 21st century represents a
unique historical and geographical meaning in the present world system. First and foremost, Korean singers have obtained a distinctive
physique, either through a long process of evolution or mutation (or
simply through cosmetic surgeries), which was unimaginable among
Koreans up until the 20th century. Second, the political democratization
of Korea has lifted censorship or bans on both Korean and Western
types of popular music, including the free importation of Japanese
popular culture in Korea. Korean popular cultural content has therefore been far more diverse and creative compared to its history under
dictatorship, and is now easily exported to the Japanese market that
has opened up its market to Korean content at the same time Korea
did for Japanese cultural content. Third, technological advancement
in the 21st century has allowed for a primitive form of cosmopolitanism at least in the virtual world, where fans from all over the
world can enjoy global content from various different countries,
including Korea. Without this new digital technology (or real time
streaming and the new social media), the rise of K-pop as it is recognized today would not have been possible. Fourth, the advancement of
the global capitalist economy that has successfully opened up Chinese,
Indian, Latin American, and the vast Southeast Asian markets, has
The Globalization of K-pop
405
allowed for less biased investments and inputs in the Asian music
industry than before from Western music producers and distributors.
All these factors, however, do not suggest that either Asian or
Korean (or both) cultural content enjoys the same or similar status in
the global popular culture market. The K-pop phenomenon simply
reinforces the world system view where the global economy, including
the cultural market, is more based on the global division of labor than
ever and that K-pop represents a new cultural content that provides
unexpected windfall to Western and Japanese music producers and
distributors by outsourcing manufacturing of the popular music to
Korea. Unless Korea obtains technologies, capital, and social capital
in the global music industry, it will continue to maintain its semiperipheral role of export manufacturing, similar to how Hyundai and
Samsung rest their corporate survival on the continuous export of
finished cars and electronic gadgets to the center markets.
V. Conclusion
K-pop in the 2010s has rekindled global scholarly attention on
Hallyu, which at one point has been considered a declining popular
cultural industry. Korean pop singers such as TVQX, SNSD, Wonder
Girls, and Psy are popular among a large number of consumers in
Asia, Europe, and North America. The dominant explanation behind
this unique cultural phenomenon has rested on the concept of cultural
hybridity or Pop Asianism (i.e., continuation and expansion of Japanese,
Chinese, and Indian subcultures in the global cultural market). In this
paper, however, I argued that the globalization of K-pop involves a
much more complicated process of globalizing-localizing-globalizing
musical content that originated from Europe compared to what the
hybridity or Pop Asianism arguments suggest. Korea’s place in the
global music industry represents a new technique of locating already
common and popular musical content in Europe or elsewhere, modifying it into Korean content, and then redistributing it to the global
music market. K-pop is an effort to network global talent pools and
406
Ingyu Oh
social capital in the formerly disconnected music industry, rather than
an effort to emulate and slightly modify Japanese pop culture. As
such, in the global music industry, Korea occupies a structural hole
between Western and East Asian music industries.
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