Author: samar khouri

K-Pop’s SuperM Members Touch Down In Dubai

K-Pop’s SuperM Members Touch Down In Dubai

The remaining SuperM members have arrived down in Dubai yesterday. Following Exo members Baekhyun and Kai’s arrival on Sunday, Lucas and Ten from NCT’s Chinese sub-unit WayV were seen striding Dubai International Airport yesterday early afternoon and were joined by SHINee’s Taemin and NCT 127’s 

Exo’s Kai And Baekhyun Spotted In Dubai, Fans Freak Out

Exo’s Kai And Baekhyun Spotted In Dubai, Fans Freak Out

UAE fans have spotted the two members of the prominent K-Pop boy group Exo walking through Dubai International Airport early Sunday afternoon. The arrival of Kai and Baekhyun led to excitement on social media from their fans or Exo-Ls, with some even questioning the reason they 

How To Be A K-Pop Dancer: Your 7-Step Guide

How To Be A K-Pop Dancer: Your 7-Step Guide

All K-Pop groups have their own distinct, sleek choreographies that go well with their catchy songs. It’s one of the key features that makes the song memorable to fans.

Gulf News tabloid! wanted to get a taste of the dancing skills that South Korean acts pull off so breathtakingly. Along with more than a dozen other participants, we attended a K-Pop dance class at the fourth annual K-Pop Academy hosted by the Korean Cultural Center in Abu Dhabi, where we were taught the dance routine to now-disbanded K-Pop boy band Wanna One’s song ‘Kangaroo’ by professional trainers KyungJin Roh and GyoengA Lee.

Dance Instructor from Left to Right, kyung jin Roh and GyeongA Lee, during The Kpop Academy dance classes at the Korean Cultural Center, Abu Dhabi. Photo: Antonin Kélian Kallouche/Gulf News

If you’re a fan of the global cultural phenomenon and love dancing, here’s a quick guide that might encourage you to take up a K-Pop dance class or even prepare you to become a K-Pop dancer:

1. Join a K-Pop dance class

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During The Kpop Academy dance classes at the Korean Cultural Center, Abu Dhabi. Photo: Antonin Kélian Kallouche/Gulf News

Whether you want to pursue a career as a K-Pop dancer, sharpen your dancing skills or you simply love Korean pop, sign up to a dance class. The hands-on experience will give you an idea of how K-Pop idols train together and what it’s really like to learn from a professional K-Pop dancer. Roh, one of our dance trainers, is exclusive to Korean entertainment agency Starship Entertainment and has shared the stage with groups such as BlackPink, Winner, AOA and iKon as a backup dancer.

Aside from the K-Pop Academy, there aren’t many such dance classes held in the UAE. An alternative would be watching dance tutorials from YouTubers like Brian and Ellen, imlisarhee, and RPM Dance Crew and many more to help break down the moves easily. There are also mirrored dance practice videos of K-Pop groups’ performances and as well as fancams of a specific member performing on stage on YouTube.

2. Learn the song and basic dance moves

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During The Kpop Academy dance classes at the Korean Cultural Center, Abu Dhabi. Photo: Antonin Kélian Kallouche/Gulf News

There’s so much to learn in so little time. So, if you’re a slow learner, try to find out the name of the K-Pop song and watch the live performances or dance practice videos of the stars on their official YouTube channels beforehand.

If you prefer to learn during class, that’s fine too. The instructor will simply teach you the moves step-by-step that even a beginner can follow. Either way, you’re good to go!

3. Stay in sync

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During The Kpop Academy dance classes at the Korean Cultural Center, Abu Dhabi. Photo: Antonin Kélian Kallouche/Gulf News

K-Pop choreographies are often complex, energetic and fast-paced, but, most importantly, it comes with precise synchronisation that K-Pop artists achieve through endless repetition and practice. At the K-Pop Academy, it was, of course, less intense and had a more flexible approach. Though, it really educates you on just how much effort K-Pop acts put into their craft and to be one. So, it’s important to stay in synch with your teammates and to pay attention to every movement.

4. Be a team player

K-Pop members sing in unison while switching dance positions in an orderly fashion. Because K-Pop choreographies come with multiple formation changes and high-speed synchronisation, it can only be done by working as a team, which was seen between breaks when trainees were interacting and helping each other out to get the moves right. It’s all about teamwork!

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During The Kpop Academy dance classes at the Korean Cultural Center, Abu Dhabi. Photo: Antonin Kélian Kallouche/Gulf News

5. Possess some passion

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During The Kpop Academy dance classes at the Korean Cultural Center, Abu Dhabi. Photo: Antonin Kélian Kallouche/Gulf News

If you want to take on K-Pop dancing as a profession and share the stage with your favourite artists, you have to be determined, passionate and hardworking. The Korean music industry is highly competitive and is known for its tough training system. The dance trainers shared that it may be difficult at the start but it’s important not to give up.

6. Practice your movements and monitor your facial expressions

Monitor your moves and check the parts you fall short in. K-Pop’s signature dances have visual cues and gestures that are characteristic to a song. So, your emotions, aura and facial expressions are just as important. The majority of K-Pop songs are in Korean, so it’s essential to understand the meaning and feeling behind the lyrics to be able to control the power of each movement.

To help perfect your moves, film yourself dancing to see the areas you need to work more on. Overall, practicing is the way to go!

7. Have fun

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During The Kpop Academy dance classes at the Korean Cultural Center, Abu Dhabi. Photo: Antonin Kélian Kallouche/Gulf News

The sounds and beats of K-Pop songs are just as infectious as the dance moves. You don’t have to have some serious dancing skills on your first day. Whether you’re new to the phenomenon or a dance pro, just enjoy and move your body to the hypnotising rhythm. If you’re really serious about making it to the K-Pop music scene or becoming a backup dancer, try auditioning.

Hongdae district of Seoul is filled with youngsters dancing to K-Pop covers, and there are tonnes of online videos of talented groups around the world dressed in the band’s signature colour-coordinated clothing and wowing the crowd for carrying out perfectly synchronised dance routines.

You can also spice it up by adding your own touch and freestyle moves, like Korean-based group K-Tigers Zero, known for including a few Taekwondo moves to the choreographies here and there. It’s all about enjoying every moment and just having fun.

Client: Gulf News tabloid!

Meet K-Pop Songwriter Melanie Fontana

Meet K-Pop Songwriter Melanie Fontana

Fresh off their newest record-breaking album ‘Map of the Soul: Persona’, BTS’ addictive song ‘Boy With Luv’ featuring American artist Halsey represented a new and higher apex for the boy band this year.

K-Pop Group Exo To Get Dubai Star In October

K-Pop Group Exo To Get Dubai Star In October

K-Pop superstars Exo will be awarded a star at Dubai’s Walk of Fame in Downtown Dubai this October. The big news was officially revealed by The Dubai Stars on its social media handles last night. “We’ve seen the legendary @WeAreOneEXO take the music industry by 

Dubai’s Hollaphonic Find Their K-Pop Groove

Dubai’s Hollaphonic Find Their K-Pop Groove

Dubai-based DJ and production duo Hollaphonic has teamed up with K-Pop singer Kevin Woo on new song ‘Over You’.

Written alongside soul/pop singer, songwriter and producer SYPS with Hollaphonic and record label Tokyo Monsters on the production, ‘Over You’ is an electro pop track that seamlessly blends with Woo’s smooth vocals about being over a lover and just wanting to dance.

First revealed via a lyric music video on YouTube on July 3, the upbeat English song, which Woo had a hand in co-writing, gives off a refreshing vibe perfect for the summer.

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The idea of working on a track for Woo came when the duo was told that the K-Pop singer was going to perform at US-based Korean music and culture convention, KCON. So, Hollaphonic — made up of Greg Stainer and Olly Wood — and the music production team at a studio in Thailand “decided to put something together for a gig that was effectively 10 days away”.

“I’m really really happy and excited about how it sounds. His voice is great, and his energy is just super,” Wood tells Gulf News tabloid!.

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Wood said that they enjoyed working with the singer and they’re “getting a really good reaction from his fans.”

Formerly a member of K-Pop boy band U-Kiss, Woo performed the Hollaphonic X Kevin debut track for the first time on stage at KCON New York over the weekend.

“It’s a little bit of K-Pop and electro pop. It’s a sound that I’ve never done before and it’s a feel-good song for the summer. I can’t wait for you guys to jam out to it,” the singer said in a video posted online.

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Though Hollaphonic has worked with Asian artists such as J-Pop idol group PrizmaX and Thai superstar Peck Palitchok, their new track marks the duo’s first cross-cultural K-Pop collaboration. It’s also a first for a UAE musician to work with a Korean artist.

“We just loved the way that Asia moves so quickly and is so energetic and is so creative that I think for us we are looking forward to making a lot more music in that part of the world, especially in the K-Pop world,” Wood said.

He went on to confirm that we should expect more K-Pop collaborations in the works.

“I’m sure we’ll do some more stuff with Kevin and then we got a few more acts from the K-Pop world that we’re in discussions with and talking to and being introduced to. So, I’m quite excited about that,” Wood added.

As for Hollaphonic’s side, Wood shared that they’re “looking and very focused on bringing K-Pop a little bit more to the UAE and to the region” and are in discussions with Korean music labels on bringing a version of KCON called K-Wave, created for the region.

The chart-topping DJ duo was the first electronic act to sign under a major record label in the Middle East. They have shared the stage with the likes of David Guetta, Seal, Tiesto, Coldplay, Major Lazer, and is Dubai’s first airport resident DJ in the world. Their single 2017 ‘Spaceship’ will be featured on Nasa’s moon tunes playlist.

As for Woo, he debuted with K-Pop boy band U-Kiss in 2008 under NH Media. In 2017, he departed from the group after his contract expired. Woo was also an MC for Arirang TV’s idol variety show ‘After School Club’ for nearly four years but left to pursue a solo musical career.

A music video and release of the digital single is yet to be announced.

Client: Gulf News tabloid!

Inside The YG Entertainment Scandal Shaking Up Korea

Inside The YG Entertainment Scandal Shaking Up Korea

A slew of scandals has hit YG Entertainment, one of Korea’s biggest entertainment agencies, since the start of 2019. It all began with the highly-publicised ‘Burning Sun’ scandal that involved former YG star and Big Bang member Seungri. Last Wednesday, the K-Pop industry and fans 

K-Pop Group Super Junior To Perform In Saudi Arabia

K-Pop Group Super Junior To Perform In Saudi Arabia

Iconic South Korean boy band Super Junior is heading to Saudi Arabia in July. The K-Pop sensation will stage their first ever concert in the country on July 12 and 13 at Al Johara stadium. Jeddah Season announced the news on social media with a 

Are B.I.G The Next Big K-Pop Crossover?

Are B.I.G The Next Big K-Pop Crossover?

K-Pop’s high-quality earworm songs, sharp choreography and charismatic performers have experienced a boom of global interest, spearheaded by record-breaking boyband BTS. But the focus on our side of the world is B.I.G, who are proving to be K-Pop’s next sensations.

Throughout the years, K-Pop acts have chosen to record songs in English. For a Korean act to cover a song entirely in Arabic is a rarity, making them a refreshing presence in the highly competitive industry. B.I.G is the next K-Pop group poised to cross over.

B.I.G — an acronym for Boys In Groove — was formally introduced in 2014, but it wasn’t until this year that Benji, Gunmin, Heedo, Minpyo and Jinseok grabbed our attention for their rendition of The5’s ‘La Bezzaf’, an Arabic song that got them praise from fans and from members of the Middle Eastern boy band.

The success of B.I.G’s version was followed up by another rendition of Abu and Yousra’s popular 2017 track, ‘3 Daqat’, featuring female singer Soya. This is all part of their ‘Global Cover Project’ in which they cover international songs.

It’s springtime in Seoul and B.I.G’s English-speaking member Benji just wrapped up his two-hour radio segment of ‘Music Access’ at Arirang Radio, which he has had since last November.

In the recording studio at the broadcasting station’s headquarters, Benji is remarkably candid and upbeat, ready to reveal all to Gulf News tabloid!.

When deciding what songs to cover, Benji and his bandmates wanted to find something that was a “little bit more unique” and that could “actually correlate to something that is called a ‘Global Cover Project’”, rather than the usual pop track or the latest hit song on the Billboard charts.

“Global does not mean a song that everybody knows. It could mean a song that is particular to a certain country, a certain region, or a certain language,” he says.

When the five members were going through tracks, they first found ‘La Bezzaf’. For Benji, the Arabic song was personally interesting for him. Having been born in America and raised on American pop and hip hop, he wasn’t familiar with K-Pop until he came to South Korea.

“You know, you hear the occasional ‘oh, this is Korean music’. But similarly, when I was listening to Arabic music, I didn’t know what to expect for the first time. You have ideas in your head, but then I heard The5’s ‘La Bezzaf’ and it was amazing,” Benji says.

“When it came to ‘La Bezzaf’, we were looking it up and this song really stood out as something that not only we could handle, but also it was a song that we thought we could kind of bring our own style too as well. So, when we started with ‘La Bezzaf’, we didn’t think it would get as much love and support as it did,” he continues.

For the group, Benji admits that starting off with ‘La Bezzaf’ was better for the band as the song makes it something that is “approachable” for them.

“Honestly, if we started with ‘3 Daqat’, I don’t know if we would have been able to do it as we did because that’s a much more difficult track in terms of like pronunciation and rhythm,” the singer says.

The main vocalist of the group confessed that although he loves ‘3 Daqat’, ‘La Bezzaf’ was one of the tracks that was “a gateway into other music”.

He points out that he manages to always listens to a wide variety of music, but in terms of getting absorbed in Arabic music it was definitely after recording and releasing ‘La Bezzaf’.

“To find something that you don’t know and then have that experience turn into something beautiful is something that doesn’t happen that often,” says Benji.

“We were also taken aback when we first heard what we were recording because as people who sing in Korean and in English sometimes, to hear ourselves singing in Arabic, it’s crazy. And to have people come through and say your pronunciation is good, is even crazier.”

It’s a well-known fact that K-Pop songs have few English lines, but singing a whole new language is a quite a challenge. For B.I.G, it took the quintet “so many times” to get the recording right, most importantly, the pronunciation, all with the help of a teacher by their side at their studio.

And B.I.G certainly got the pronunciation spot on and are bringing a new solid fanbase, known as Biginning, as each cover video racked up a total of 3 million views to date on YouTube.

“It’s crazy because that has more views than our music videos,” Benji says with a laugh.

“I think the thing that really took us aback the most was the fact that people loved it from the fact that people appreciated it as a culture,” he explains.

Viewers didn’t hold back their love for the video covers, evident from the rising number of views and messages coming from countries like Algeria to Egypt. The singer found it “very heart-warming to receive that kind of response”.

B.I.G went on to drop another Arabic song. As a thank you to fans, the all-male group released an Arabic version of their own Korean single ‘Hello Hello’. Benji admits that it’s “one of the best ways of showing an expression of gratitude” and “it’s something that you can understand in a way that is much more approachable”.

As for the Arabic language, not only does Benji find it beautiful but his members have taken their love for it to a whole new level, just after they released their renditions.

“They’re studying the language, they know how to read, they know how to write,” Benji reveals.

“I’m doing something else right now, a survival programme on the side called ‘Super Bad’. So, while my members have been studying Arabic, I haven’t really had the chance to participate in as many of the classes they have.”

Benji went on to add that if they get then opportunity to go to Arabic-speaking countries, his members would have a blast and hopes they’ll get the opportunity to show off their hard work.

As for coming down to the UAE for a concert or a visit, local fans might be in for a treat.

“Honestly, I’m not 100 per cent [sure] of the details, but from what I hear, they’re trying to work something out,” he says.

“So, given the chance would be super awesome. I know [B.I.G member] Minpyo really wants to try on like the turbans and the whole outfit [and] maybe ride a camel,” he adds.

A self-confessed foodie, Benji would like to experience all the food and even mentioned that they’d all like to fast for Ramadan for a day.

“If we’re going to do a global cover project, it should extend beyond ‘we sing different languages’. Experience the culture,” he says. “If you’re going to do something and you’re going to receive that much support, that’s the least you can do.”

As K-Pop spreads further into the western mainstream, there has been an increase interest in cross-cultural collaborations with K-Pop artists, seen with the likes of BlackPink and Dua Lipa, BTS and Halsey, EXO’s Lay, NCT 127 and Jason Derulo and more.

For B.I.G, it’s no different. Benji previously mentioned in an interview that he’d love to collaborate with The5 and its member Mohammad Bouhezza aka BMD. When asked about this pending collaboration or any other upcoming ones, Benji didn’t reveal too much.

“Of course, English will probably be in there as a bridge. But what if there was a section in Arabic and a section in Korean or something that’s totally in Arabic but it’s released in Korea under a K-Pop group? There’s endless possibilities about what could happen, which is why I’m saying I have no idea.”

What’s next for B.I.G? As for any upcoming music, fans will just have to wait as they are still working on getting something out there. They want to make sure that they are ready and it’s of good quality.

K-Pop acts thrive in their own right and are known for a particular concept. When it comes to what B.I.G want to be known for as a group, Benji jokingly says that “it’s six goofballs now because our leader [J-hoon] did go to the army but five goofballs” that show their true selves on the main stage.

In terms of music, it’s more of “someone who always was able to do whatever they tried to do,” he adds.

Benji thanks fans for the amazing support and response and adds they’d like to put on a performance in front of Biginnings when they get the chance.“We kind of sing the stuff live, you know, it’s a waste to just have it online and I’m sure people want to hear it too.”

“We kind of sing the stuff live, you know, it’s a waste to just have it online and I’m sure people want to hear it too.”

Client: Gulf News tabloid!

Images provided

Imfact Stir K-Pop Mania In Dubai

Imfact Stir K-Pop Mania In Dubai

K-Pop boy band Imfact gave their UAE fans a day to remember at their concert in Dubai on Saturday. The ‘maknae’, or youngest member, Ungjae told Gulf News tabloid! in an interview days before their performance that they’re “much more energetic and powerful on the