In my eternal quest to shut up those people asking me to review shit all the time, here's a review... of a book. Unlike song reviews, I figure that a book review might actually be vaguely useful to some of you. Sure, reviewing the latest written-while-taking-a-shit song from SM or YG might be good for web traffic and ego-stroking but what's the point of me throwing down my worthless, annoying opinion on a song when you can just go to YouTube, listen to it yourself and make up your own mind? On the other hand, books are less of a try-before-you-buy proposition so you might actually want to know a bit about what's in these fucks before you buy them, so in my mission to get k-pop fans to occasionally put down their iMaxipads and read a fucking book (those things with the pages, you've seen them, right?) I now bring to you this review. Please enjoy it. Or not.
Kpop Now - The Korean Music Revolution
Author: Mark James Russell
The first thing I noticed about this book when I picked it up is the picture of f(x) in the bottom right corner of the front page - taken from f(x)'s "Rum Pum Pum Pum" promotions, it means that this book is less than a year old (late 2013). This is relevant because any book about k-pop is obviously fighting a battle of cultural relevancy as soon as it appears - the genre is just beyond its first major quality peak, and moving and developing so fast right now that anything written about it in printed format is going to be out of date almost the minute it leaves the printing press. The story of k-pop is a story that is very much still being written, and for the same reason that nobody could have ever penned the definitive book about heavy metal or rap in 1990, we'll have to wait at least two decades before the definitive text of k-pop history and development appears. In the meantime, we'll have to make do with fairly lightweight snapshots, which is basically what this book is, and that's not really the fault of the author - a snapshot is all that this can be, by definition. "K-pop Now" is therefore light on text, heavy on pictures, and someone reasonably literate will plow through it all in about an hour.
The book splits itself into several small chapters, here's what they contain:
After this is some short information on traveling to Korea (because one chapter of boring travelogue bullshit that you don't care about and can find in any travel guide anywhere if you really want that kind of thing wasn't enough) and some acknowledgements.
And that's it, that's all you get. The same author wrote the 2008 book "Pop Goes Korea", and while I haven't read that one, maybe he covered off more of the in-depth discussion in that book and didn't want to revisit it too much because "Kpop Now" just doesn't seem to have much to say - don't come here if you want any searing insight into your favourite k-pop stars, because you won't get it. Any in-depth discussion of musical content is generally side-stepped, instead we get fluffy stuff like
"k-pop is overwhelmingly genuine ... when a singer loves, he loves completely. When he misses his love, it is a deep, soul-crushing ache"Oh please. K-pop is more brazenly the opposite of "overwhelmingly genuine" than just about any musical style I can think of. If it's genuine about only one thing, it's only about how incredibly artificially constructed it all is. An author who looks even older (and balder) than me shouldn't be writing like a 13 year old fangirl buying into the insipid lyrical bullshit, and yes his picture is on the inside rear dust cover. At least I have the decency to use pictures of Eunjung in my blog as a substitute for my own ugly bald head.
Other notable aspects of the book include:
- Brown Eyed Girls' "Abracadabra" dance being used in PSY's "Gentleman" is mentioned, and of course PSY is mentioned all over the place in every chapter of the book with a nauseating "golly gee whiz wasn't he successful" tone, because there just isn't enough writing about his videos' YouTube performance out there.
- T-ara's Hwayoung controversy is one of the only ones discussed in the entire book (albeit fairly rationally i.e "we'll never know the truth but it's a reminder that k-pop stars are human"). Meanwhile, the Open World Entertainment controversy passes by completely untouched - unforgivable, given that the book has a tone of "helping out the k-pop hopefuls" with its needless audition and travel information.
- The author obviously doesn't give a shit about T-ara because the image captions laughably mistake Ahreum for Dani, but spare a thought for TVXQ fans who get an even rawer deal - nowhere in their own write-up does it mention their issues with SM Entertainment or even that they were once a five-member group! JYJ fans will probably suspect SM encouraged the author to not discuss the former members at all, and they may not even be wrong - SM Entertainment are listed in the acknowledgements as one of the companies "who participated in this book", so who knows what that really means.
- KARA's "butt dance" for "Mr." rates a mention, I guess the author is a KARA fapper like the rest of us, also there's a brief discussion of the KARA contract issue. The TVXQ controversy is referenced here but not explained, suggesting that perhaps it was in fact explained in further detail in an earlier draft of the book, adding weight to my theory that the TVXQ split was deemed "too hot to handle" and chopped out during book editing.
source : http://antikpopfangirl.blogspot.com, http://okezone.com, http://liputan6.com
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