Three separate little stories for you, using the old The Good, the Bad and the Ugly theme.

First, the Good, which was the Jisan Valley Rock Festival. I was there on Friday and had quite a good time. The concert site is pretty far from Seoul, but it is a very picturesque location, nestled between the hills at a ski resort.

3rd Line Butterfly played soon after I got there, and were their usual solid selves (although 3:40pm and in sunshine is not really their ideal slot). Martina Topley-Bird was really good — a wonderful voice and delightful stage presence.

After enjoying the excellent Belle & Sebastian, I found a good seat at the back, by the food stalls but with a good view of the stage, and basically sat there for the rest of the evening. But I am old, so unapologetic about being lazy.

Anyhow, Jisan is clearly the top music festival in Korea now, in term of acts, professionalism, turnout and general ambiance. There is a decent write-up about how Jisan went over here.

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The Bad would be the Korea Times, for adding two paragraphs to my big feature on the Korean entertainment industry without asking or informing me (the third-last and last graphs in the main story). Thanks a lot. Is basic courtesy too much to ask for from an editor?

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As for the Ugly, that would be the unsurprising demise of the Peace in the DMZ concert. Just days before it was to start, organizers announced it was being canceled. The only thing I find surprising is that it took the organizers so long to announce what everyone had long suspected.

Peace in the DMZ had faced a lot of troubles from the beginning. They lost a couple of big investors when Artie Kornfeld told them they could not use “Woodstock” in the name of the festival (which, given that the organizer called itself Woodstock Korea and used the Woodstock URL, they apparently really wanted to use). The lineup of bands was a strange jumble that did not really make sense together. But I do find it amazing that in 2010, we are still having this basic, ugly concert problems in Korea.

Now the big question is, will Kanye West really be performing at the Summer Week&T concert in Naksan Beach this weekend? He is still listed on the posters and website, but there is no signs of any mention on Kanye West’s websites, Myspace page, Facebook page, etc. Hopefully it is just an oversight. I find it hard to believe that SK Telecom (a cosponsor of Summer Week&T) would attach their name to an event that misleads about its lineup.