Books, blog and other blather

Author: Mark (Page 72 of 90)

Rank Music

Fairly lame article at The Korea Herald today (big surprise, I know) about pop music television programs that manages to repeat a lot of silly notions, reverse cause and effect, and in general misunderstand the music industry’s woes. You can read it here.

The point of the article is that Korea’s TV channels are thinking of bringing back chart shows, counting down the top songs of the week. Those shows were common and popular on Korean TV until a constant barrage of ranking scandals forced all those shows to give up their ranking schemes

That type of program was abolished in 2001 as debate over the fairness of such criteria gathered momentum. A big part of the controversy involved the recognition that such popularity-based programs were biased too much in favor of the tastes of teenyboppers, and more seriously, regarding possible favoritism resulting from the access which artists’ agents had to programmers.

Note: The Korean Herald story claims the chart shows were discontinued in 2001, but I believe only KBS’s Music Bank ended its countdown then. SBS’s POP CHART LIVE went until January 2003. I cannot find my notes right now, but I think MBC, Mnet and KMTV all discontinued their charts later in 2003 when some big payola scandals broke.

Anyhow, the story was mostly okay up until that point, then it continues with this:

With the pop music market always redefining the term “worst possible,” regarding really poor sales, (there have been only two albums which have sold over 100,000 copies in the first half of this year), networks are considering resurrecting such programs as a way of revitalizing the local pop music scene, which, once again, is triggering a controversy.

Not really the writer’s fault, but what a stupid notion — that chart shows will bring back interest in the music scene. Ratings were falling for the music chart shows for some time, as were sales.

“The depressed pop music market is related to the unpopular pop music programs,” Kang Young-sun, producer of Munhwa Broadcasting Corporation’s “Show Music Center” said in an interview. “The rating system should be positively encouraged if it can help the market regain its old popularity,” he continued.

Ugh. No, the depressed music market is not a result of the unpopular music programs. The programs are unpopular because the music is unpopular.

Whatever angle you approach it from, the controversy boils down to a dispute over the fairness of the programs’ criteria in deciding rankings.

Well, yes and no. Having reliable, fair charts is important. Certainly in the past, Korea’s various charts were blatantly unfair, biased against artists who did not promote on a particular channel, and highly influenced by payola. Today, though, there is a lot less money being made and a lot more outlets for music (albeit the same music most of the time).

No, the real problem is not the current lack of charts but the continual reliance on teen-pop music to the complete disregard of almost all other genres. Sure it worked for Seo Taiji and H.O.T, but you can only go to the well so many times. It has been 14 YEARS, and the Korean music industry is still cranking out the same, tired formula.

When the Backstreet Boys stopped selling, the American music industry moved on and found new acts. Pop rises, pop falls, rock rises, rock falls, same with hiphop, country, and all the other genres. Just imagine what the American music industry would be like if, once Backstreet Boys stopped selling so well, the music industry kept pumping out more and more Backstreet Boys (and Backstreet Boys-like music). Of course sales would plummet.

But that is what the Korean music industry has done. A little bit of “techno” has been added to the mix, some “urban” (god, I hate the euphemism), but for the most part, it is the same gruel as ever. Sure, middle school kids deserve their bubblegum pop, but what about the rest of the country? Are 25-year-old men supposed to listen to that music? Are 40-year-old women?

Pop music desperately needs other genres to recharge its batteries. The annoying thing (to me) is that Korea once had that diversity. It had folk, rock, trot (of course) and more. But the military governments killed a lot of that, and then the huge success of dance-pop and ballads made way too many producers focus that music, which they did very well, but at the expense of almost everything else.

The movie industry revived in the late 1990s and early 2000s when it discovered new voices and variety (although that had given way to an ominous sameness in the last couple of years). Korean TV dramas did well around Asia for a time because they were so different than local fair (although they, too, are showing signs of losing popularity due to sameness).

When will producers in all of Korea’s media realize that it is to their advantage to keep trying new things, instead of safely repeating the same thing, over and over? Korea’s writers, directors and songwriters have all shown themselves to be incredibly talent and creative when given the chance. What is it going to take for them to get the chance again? Or, better yet, when will they demand their creative freedom again?

Korea Weekend Box Office – Aug. 31-Sept. 2

A quiet, wimpy weekend at the box office as we have entered that lull between summer and Chuseok. With not many people going to the theater and nothing too popular, we have some strange things going on, such as the No. 10 movie appearing on more screens than the No. 1 movie.

At long last, neither D-WAR nor MAY 18 were the top movies. Instead, DISTURBIA led the box office. Zzzzzz.

D-WAR is really crashing hard and fast now. On Friday, barely 15,000 people went to see it. As of Sunday, though, D-WAR’s total admissions were now at 8.22 million, officially making it the fifth-biggest movie in Korean history. With zero chance of moving up the charts, thankfully.

MAY 18, on the other hand, still has some legs, chugging along in third. Unfortunately, I have not heard from CJ Entertainment what its “real” total is so far, so I only have the KOBIS estimate of 6.52 million admissions.
(UPDATE: Aha. Just got the CJ email. As of Monday evening, MAY 18 has just topped 7 million admissions. 7.003 million to be exact).

Nice to see STARDUST still holding up, despite being such a non-hit. All the films launched last week that made their debuts above STARDUST have quickly fallen below the quirky fantasy film.

After dipping to just 42 percent of the year’s box office at the end of July, Korean films have now recovered to a more presentable 48.5 percent. Quite a nice rebound in just one month.

This Week Title…………………………………….. Release Date Screens Nationwide Weekend Attendance Total Attendance
1. Disturbia 8.30 210 177,017 211,464
2. Nae Saengae Choeak-ui Namja (Korean) 8.30 306 164,436 199,030
3. May 18 (Hwaryeohan Hyuga – Korean) 7.26 282 159,460 6,528,717
4. No Reservations 8.30 168 104,544 138,023
5. D-War (Korean) 8.01 266 98,019 7,714,468
6. Stardust 8.15 143 73,945 756,776
7. Love Now (Jigeum Saranghaneun Sarang-gwa Salgo Issseumnikka? – Korean) 8.15 200 60,093 945,574
8. Underground Rendezvous (Mannam-ui Gwangjang Hanguk – Korean) 8.15 200 57,872 1,151,617
9. Flyboys 8.30 158 55,777 66,777
10. Swindler in My Mom’s House (Sarangbang Seonsu-wa Eomeoni – Korean) 8.22 231 53,176 458,374

(Source: KOBIS – Figures represent 94% of nationwide box office)

Happy Birthday to Blog

While posting my previous story about the fake degree scandal, I suddenly realized that KOREA POP WARS is exactly one year old. That is kind of nifty. The first article I wrote is here. Kind of amusing that it was about a Japanese band, but such are the gentle ironies of life.

For the first couple of months, almost no one knew about KOREA POP WARS, with just a couple of visitors a day. Then in November, Darcy Paquet mentioned the blog over at KOREANFILM.ORG, and that gave me a little bump… to around a dozen or two visitors a day. Things changed pretty radically in early December when I posted the first online review of Park Chan-wook’s I’M A CYBORG, BUT THAT’S OK. That grouchy little review got linked and quickly my hits spiked into the hundreds. Things died off, but then spiked again for my even grouchier RESTLESS review (both those articles still regularly show up in my Google search results).

Feb. 1 was my biggest day ever, thanks to a prominent endorsement at THE MARMOT’S HOLE. I appreciated his enthusiasm, but honestly I would not consider this blog a “must read” by any stretch of the imagination.

All told, KPW’s first year, I wrote 187 articled (about one every other day, on average), and received 45,992 page loads and 35,834 unique visitors. Not exactly DEADLINE HOLLYWOOD DAILY, but not bad, I guess, considering the subject matter.

Certainly the blog has unfolded differently than I thought it would. At first, I thought I might do something anonymous and full of all the fun gossip and stories I come across in my work. But I quickly realized that if I wrote the really good stuff, it would be rather obvious who I was, and people would stop talking to me about the good stuff.

Then I thought I might be publishing extracts from my book… try to get a little feedback from people as I cranked the thing out… kind of like Chris Anderson’s THE LONG TAIL. But that did not work out, either. For one, my writing process did not work like Anderson’s, and did not lend itself to excerpting.

For a while, I thought about translating the tabloids and sports newspapers, but there are already plenty of people doing that (Shenyue, Pop Seoul, etc.) … and besides, those papers’ considerable inaccuracy would have driven me bonkers quickly.

So, in the end, what you see before you is what I did. Not quite sure how I got here or where this little project will continue to go. But for now I am here. Thanks for reading.

6 Degrees of Obfuscation

There has been much ink spilled over the last couple of months in Korea over the fake degree scandal, with dozens of leading figures and celebrities caught having lied about their university education and other qualifications. Good overview of the story at the IHT here (and at the New York Times, too, but the IHT links do not expire after a week).

I find this whole scandal to be particularly amusing because years ago I was actually on the receiving end of the exact opposite situation, where I was denied a job because the prospective employer did not believe my credentials were real (even though, I assure you, they are).

Many years ago, before this journalism thing was working for me, I applied for a teaching position at a university outside of Seoul, and I needed a Master’s Degree for the position. Which I have. But the strange thing is, I earned my Master’s while I was still an undergraduate. It is called “submatriculating,” which is starting work on graduate school while still an undergraduate. Not all universities allow this, but mine did, and through a quirk of scheduling and my idiosyncratic interests, I ended up taking a lot of graduate level classes in my junior and senior years. End result was that I received my BA and MA at the same time.

But the school to which I was applying had not heard of submatriculating and they told me they did not believe I could really have earned both degrees at the same time. This was despite my having original transcripts and diplomas for both degrees. They had not heard of this before, therefore I was lying. They did not bother calling my university to check out my degrees.

Which is, I suppose, how my story intersects with all the fake degree stories in the news now — not checking. Anyhow, I thought it was kind of an interesting flipside to the current scandals.

Personally, I am pretty ambivalent about the whole idea of “qualifications” in the arts and writing. I never took a journalism course in my life, but I seem to have figured out how it works okay (thanks to a lot of help from some very kind journalists and editors). And the world if full of MFA graduates who make terrible art. When I go to the doctor, I want someone who is qualified. When I get legal advice, I want someone who is bar certified. But for writing, art, criticism? Screw it, I want someone creative, intriguing and who can do a good job.

The interesting follow-up story on the fake-degree scandal I would like to read is how good of a job did all those fakers do. What did people think of Shin Jeong-ah’s work as a curator/critic? Were Lee Chang-ha’s buildings well designed? Were they even structurally sound? Did the monk Jigwang have less enlightenment because he never really graduated from Seoul National University? Heck, he should have just claimed to have transcended transcripts and overcome the materialism of the degree.

BCWW

We are now most of the way through the annual BroadCast WorldWide exhibition and conference, otherwise known as BCWW. BCWW has been going on for seven years now, and I have been attending since around the second year (although I have skipped a couple along the way).

BCWW is definitely an industry event. No celebrities or glitz. Just exhibitions halls and conference rooms and oodles of buyers and sellers walking around. I doubt many civilians would find it too interesting (actually, I doubt how many professionals find it interesting, but we all have jobs to do).

All day long, people not in meetings can amuse themselves listening to endless talks about the state of the industry, new media, trends and the like. See how many times each speaker can use words like “convergence” or “IPTV” (hrm… some real drinking game potential there).

This was the biggest BCWW yet. Thanks in part to organizers wisely flying in as many buyers as possible. If you have buyers, you have happy exhibitors. BCWW has come a long way since the first couple of years, although it certainly does not compare to the mega-markets, like MIPTV and MIPCOM (both held in Cannes, France). But I heard a lot of exhibitors saying nice things about the event.

Personally, I wish the nice BCWW folks would merge their event into the Pusan International Film Festival’s movie market. Or at least hold BCWW at the same time in Pusan. Yeah, Pusan is a pain in the butt for all the Seoul-based VIPs, but the schmoozing synergy would be intriguing.

Korea Weekend Box Office – Aug. 24-26

After a three-week break, MAY 18 is back on top of the box office, proving to be the tortoise to D-WAR’s hare. Or something like that. Anyhow, CJ Entertainment’s big movie of the summer, about the Gwangju Massacre, has now pulled in 6.61 million admissions, or about $45 million.

D-WAR may be declining fast, but it is still raking in the money. As of the end of Sunday, it had topped 8 million admissions (or about $54 million). D-WAR is now the sixth-biggest film in Korean history and is a lock to pass FRIEND to become No. 5. But considering how quickly D-WAR is falling now (down by over 50% from last weekend, which was over 50% from the weekend before that), it looks like it will not make the magical 10 million admissions level.

Even better than last week, Korean films accounted for the entire top-5 and eight of the top-10 movies this week. Impressive.

Also impressive was the staying power of STARDUST. Despite a mediocre opening and plenty of competition, Neil Gaiman’s fairytale dropped barely 11% from its opening weekend. As I said in yesterday’s post, the Art Reon theater in Shinchon actually moved STARDUST from the smallest screen to the second-largest.

SIMPSONS – THE MOVIE had a less than impressive debut, with just over 140,000 admissions. At the screening I attended over the weekend, everyone seemed to enjoy the film a lot, and very few jokes got lost in translation.

This Week Title…………………………………….. Release Date Screens Nationwide Weekend Attendance Total Attendance
1. May 18 (Hwaryeohan Hyuga – Korean) 7.26 336 326,319 6,229,145
2. D-War (Korean) 8.01 375 319,895 7,545,029
3. Swindler in My Mom’s House (Sarangbang Seonsu-wa Eomeoni – Korean) 8.22 345 232,569 318,690
4. Underground Rendezvous (Mannam-ui Gwangjang – Korean) 8.14 284 199,826 1,017,975
5. Love Now (was “Changing Partners,” or Jigeum Saranghaneun Saram-gwa Salgo Isseumnikka? – Korean) 8.14 297 162,143 785,354
6. Stardust 8.14 223 160,707 610,595
7. Simpsons – The Movie 8.23 202 109,334 138,584
8. Someone Behind You (Du Saramida – Korean) 8.23 232 105,360 154,980
9. Jukeodo Haepiending – Korean 8.23 206 86,986 113,798
10. Return (Riteon- Korean) 8.09 64 22,687 614,886

(Source: KOBIS – Figures represent 94% of nationwide box office)

Buena Hongdae Social Club

You know that experience where you walk past some place (a sign or an entranceway or wherever) hundreds of times without giving the location a second thought, then one day, for no particular reason, you decide to go inside and discover an amazing place? Something really special was right under your nose the whole time, but you had no idea. Well, that happened to me on Thursday night.

The location in question was MOONGLOW, a jazz club kind of in Hongdae, kind of outside the usual Hongdae limits (somewhere between Hongdae proper and Hapjeong Subway Station).

Moonglow is owned and operated by Shin Kwan-Woong, one of Korea’s early jazz musicians. He’s apparently been playing professionally since 1966, and is an interesting character. He plays piano pretty much every night at the club, with the band accompanying him changing each night.


I have not been there every night of the week, but Thursday nights are pretty cool, as the band consists of all his old friends and bandmates from the 1960s. Some pretty solid names playing him, and they still can groove. Somewhat like the guys in BUENA VISTA SOCIAL CLUB (to use a rather uncreative comparison).

According to the Moonglow website, on drums is the amazing 76-year-old Choi Se-jin, who has been playing since 1947 (but last Thursday, I think someone else was playing… looked different from the photos of Choi).

Anyhow, I’ll try to write more about these guys some time soon.

If I have a complaint (and me being me, of course I do), it is how typical their repertoire was. If I could get through the rest of my life without hearing Chuck Mangione, I would not be unhappy (Feels So Bad). But I imagine they playlist reflects what people are always asking them to play. And at least the band played the hell out of those tunes, turning them into something special. That club is definitely a great find. Highly recommended.

(Sorry, could not find an English map).

  • This is kind of random. STARDUST had a pretty understated opening on Aug. 14 across Korea. I saw it at the local Art Reon theater, where it was playing on the smallest screen they had. Well today I checked out the Art Reon movie listings, and lo and behold, STARDUST is now playing on the second-biggest screen in the multiplex. Is this a sign the movie is getting really good word of mouth? Or is it just one of those inexplicable things?
  • I finally checked out SHIM”S TAPAS in Hongdae. Wow, their food is really first-rate. Coffee, too. Homemade bread, plenty of choices… The group I was with ordered about eight things (not including dessert), and seven of them were excellent (their pizza was okay, but not great). Another big recommendation — if you can get a seat. I will post a map if I can ever find one. It is located in Seogyo-dong, if that helps, not far from Sanulim Theater (even closer to the bar Stereo, if you know where that is).
  • Last Chance to Hear an Echo

    One thing I am trying to enjoy, now that the weight of my book is off my shoulders, is a little more live music. Last weekend, for instance, I went to the album release party for ANAKIN PROJECT, a quirky “folk punk” band that has Zho Yoonsuk on bass. Very much a stripped-to-the-basics affair over at Yogiga (an art/music space that I quite enjoy), but it was fun little evening.

    This weekend, however, promises a fairly significant show — the last Korean concert ever for Jet Echo. And Jet Echo is not alone. They will be playing with Sato Yukie, Mineri, Galaxy Express and a bunch of other bands (which can be seen on this incredibly funky poster below).


    To be honest, Jet Echo was never really my favorite band. Although the last time I saw them play, in January, it was quite a good show — a lot of energy and fun. I think they have gotten a lot better since the first time I saw them play, 2-3 years ago in Gongjung Camp. Since then, Jet Echo has become quite a staple of the Hongdae live scene. Definitely worth a look now, while you still can.

    The concert begins at 9pm at Club Ta. Strangely, though, the Club Ta website seems not to have a map of their venue (unless it is hidden somewhere my Mac browser cannot see). Somewhere in Seogyo-dong (the north side of Hongdae).

    Korea Weekend Box Office – Aug. 17-19

    It was a fairly busy week last week, thanks to the 8.15 holiday, which saw plenty of new films released on Tuesday. The top two films remained unchanged, D-WAR and MAY 18.

    D-WAR keeps on wreaking havoc, having now topped 7.45 million admissions (about $50 million) (well, maybe a little less, considering how many tickets are lower-priced children seats). That makes Shim Hyung-rae’s dragon movie the seventh biggest film in Korean history, and it is certain to at least make it to fifth soon — FRIEND and WELCOME TO DONGMAKGOL are going down. But I still doubt the “big four” (SILMIDO, TAEGUKGI, THE KING AND THE CLOWN and THE HOST) are in danger.

    As of the end of Sunday, MAY 18 has officially passed 6 million admissions, or about $40 million. That makes it the 12th biggest Korean film ever, as is certain to pass MY BOSS, MY TEACHER and SHIRI this week. I think it should make it past the 7 million mark, depending on the new releases over the next couple of weeks.

    It is going to feel strange, though, living in a world where SHIRI is not even in the top-10 biggest Korean films anymore. What a completely different movie country Korean has become since SHIRI blew everyone away back in 1999.

    Two new Korean movies took the Nos. 3 and 4 spots, with respectable openings – UNDERGROUND RENDEZVOUS and CHANGING PARTNERS. I hope having the top four movies going to Korean movies (and four of the top six) will quell the worst of the fears of local filmmakers.

    STARDUST did pretty good in Korea, at least in contrast to its lousy opening in the United States, taking in $2.4 million. I actually found it a little loud and heavy-handed for my tastes (fairy tales should be delicate, not bombastic, imho), but the other people in the cinema seemed to quite like it.

    This Week Title…………………………………….. Release Date Screens Nationwide Weekend Attendance Total Attendance
    1. D-War (Korean) 8.01 491 580,846 6,902,034
    2. May 18 (Hwaryeohan Hyuga – Korean) 7.26 443 416,747 5,609,005
    3. Underground Rendezvous (Mannam-ui Gwangjang – Korean) 8.15 325 309,768 609,807
    4. Changing Partners (Jigeum Saranghaneun Saram-gwa Salgo Isseumnikka? – Korean) 8.15 356 227,538 435,770
    5. Stardust 8.15 221 180,388 315,243
    6. Return (Reteon – Korean) 8.09 247 72,013 539,493
    7. Zodiac 8.15 120 55,367 107,619
    8. Mr. Bean’s Holiday 8.15 169 50,359 91,977
    9. Fantastic Four: The Rise of the Silver Surfer 8.08 267 43,930 553,889
    10. Surf’s Up 8.09 164 43,403 243,525

    (Source: KOBIS – Figures represent 94% of nationwide box office)

    D-War on the Rise

    Showbox is reporting that Shim Hyung-rae’s silly monster movie just broke the 6-million-admissions level. In fact, by the time I type this (5:10 on Tuesday), it has probably topped 6.1 million, to make it the 10th-biggest Korean film ever. That is enough to knock MY BOSS MY TEACHER out of the top 10 altogether, which brings me no end of happiness. SHIRI will doubtlessly fall tomorrow.

    I was feeling somewhat ambivalent about D-WAR (it is pretty dumb and bad, but marginally tolerable for a children’s movie), but reading Shim’s latest is rapidly making me downgrade my already low opinion.

    “If this movie had been made by James Cameron, it would have turned the whole world upside down.”

    Uh, no. Feel free to read the VARIETY review for a good sense of the movie. (I do not mind linking to the competition because they just linked to my blog the other day).

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