BIGBANG review – K-pop heroes deliver candyfloss hooks with a sharp edge

1000.jpg

So entrenched by now is K-pop as a global phenomenon that arena-scaled spectacles like BIGBANG’s US tour closer at the Prudential Center, towards the back end of a 15-country marathon in support of their third full-length studio album MADE, are all but incapable of surprises. Every familiar accoutrement of the boy-band genre was expected and accounted for on Sunday night and dutifully dialed to 11: the lasers, strobes, confetti cannons and pyrotechnics, the finely tuned choreography, the sleek, modern production ingeniously calibrated with a pitch-perfect touch of Vegas schmaltz.

Yet BIGBANG, the first and best idol group of Korean pop-music conglomerate YG Entertainment (whose exponents include Psy and 2NE1) and approaching their 10th year together, still manage to subvert conventions enough to set themselves apart from a billion-dollar industry’s rank and file – and validate a mania that saw tickets changing hands for hundreds of dollars outside the venue. The group’s five members, all established superstars as individuals in the Pan-Asian belt that represents K-pop’s core market, blend the cotton-candy hooks typical of boy bands with a shimmery edge of sex and violence and sophomore-year nihilism, all within a catchy hip-hop package that draws from elements as far-flung as metal and dubstep. The result could be best described to your parents or the otherwise pop-illiterate as a far, far, far superior One Direction. This is fully realised pop as its inventive and sophisticated peak.

The multicultural mass of fans that on Sunday packed the multi-purpose indoor arena to the corners, many holding tulip-shaped lightsticks aloft throughout, squealed full-throatedly as the group ran through a breathless 21-song set that drew from their biggest hits, including viral smashes Fantastic Baby, Loser and Stupid Liar. For two and a half hours, each of the five members’ individual talents and personalities were showcased, often as the show made way for their solo material: G-Dragon, the profoundly talented frontman whose formidable musical chops are matched only by his androgynous, chameleon-like fashion sense; TOP, the oldest of the five and best rapper of the group; Daesung, the playful ne’er-do-well with the exaggerated bangs who showed off his drumming talents with an extended solo during Sober; Seungri, the youngest member and “glue guy” who offers a little bit of everything; Taeyang, the standout dancer known for his soaring falsettos and creative coiffure – and who during one break declared his love for Shake Shack burgers to coos from the crowd. All of it was underpinned by an expert six-piece band and stage production helmed by Gaga and Beyoncé collaborator LeRoy Bennett.

After BIGBANG closed the show with the three-song encore of Bang Bang Bang, Good Boy and Bae Bae, the crowd spilled deliriously into the Newark night. Although my own proficiency in BIGBANG’s native language is limited to the kamsahamnida that once got me through 10 days in Seoul, the BIGBANG experience – mostly in Korean with the occasional English hook or chorus – affirms pop as universal touchstone and cultural panacea.

Source: The Guardian

BIGBANG’s Taeyang Is Getting a New Tattoo

BIGBANG’s Taeyang Is Getting a New Tattoo

It seems BIGBANG‘s Taeyang is getting a new tattoo!

On the morning of October 14, Taeyang’s teammate T.O.P posted on his Instagram account a picture of Taeyang getting inked, with the caption, “YoungBae (Taeyang) with AnilGupta.”

In the picture, Taeyang is in the middle of his session with Anil Gupta, a renowned tattoo artist based in New York City. This will be Taeyang’s second tattoo from the artist, who also inked the piece located across Taeyang’s shoulders on his back.

Source: anilgupta.com

Source: anilgupta.com

Are you excited to see his new tattoo?

Source (1)

Source: Soompi


K-pop band BIGBANG doing booming business in Toronto

K-pop band BIGBANG doing booming business in Toronto

K-pop band BIGBANG’s ACC show proving a hot ticket.

thestar.com_tab-en-bigbangband24jpg.jpg.size.xxlarge.letterbox.jpg

By: Nick Patch Entertainment Reporter, Published on Sat Sep 26 2015

South Korean boy band BIGBANG is coming to Toronto next month — and demand is out of this world.
All tickets for the Seoul heartthrobs’ Oct. 13 engagement at the Air Canada Centre, which originally ranged from $95 to $275, are sold out.

Resale prices, meanwhile, are astronomical. StubHub’s hopeful entrepreneurs are asking anywhere from $285 to $1,000, while Ticketmaster’s resale website doesn’t offer a single seat for less than $400. (Live Nation refused to disclose how many tickets were originally available.)

This BIGBANG gig is “by far” the biggest K-pop show ever staged in Canada, said Gerald Belanger of Kpopcanada.
“It seems like Korea finally caught up with what Toronto knew the whole time: that there’s a lot of fans here,” said Belanger, who claims tickets were gone in three hours.

The show will conclude BIGBANG’s six-date North American sojourn and mark the hip-hop quintet’s first performance in Canada (an aborted 2012 show here during their only previous American tour still rankles fans).

Formed in 2006 and captured in fledgling stages by reality TV cameras, BIGBANG is a Pan-Asian sensation, with a dozen-plus chart-topping hits in Korea and ravenously faithful followings in Japan and China.

Their music videos have accumulated hundreds of millions of views on YouTube, with “Fantastic Baby” standing as their most-watched clip with 170-million-plus clicks.

It’s easy to see why. The video opens with rapper G-Dragon perched atop a concrete throne clutching a bejewelled cane, his metres of fiery orange hair splayed majestically across the floor. His face is smudged with makeup and his Beetlejuice-like pinstripe suit is covered in stars.

It’s not even the most outlandish outfit in the four-minute clip.

The group’s hotly anticipated third album, Made, is their first in three years — which, by the furiously prolific standards of Korean pop, might as well be a century.

BIGBANG has released two-song teasers for months to pique hysteria for the full-length, with the four singles selling more than 10 million copies combined.

The new singles are diverse — if not as stylistically adventurous as the group’s flamboyant fashion — with sounds spanning strobe-lit pop-rap (“Bang Bang Bang”), finger-plucked guitar balladry (“If You”) and minor-key piano shuffles (“Loser,” which features the English chorus: “I’m a loser.”)

Given BIGBANG’s relative veteran status, their fan base skews older than the tweens who Belanger says populate many K-pop gigs.
“They’re a national treasure,” said Belanger, whose organization is handling local promotion for the show.
“When the show was announced, people from the (Korean) consulate were calling us.”

That said, Belanger stresses that K-pop audiences are richly diverse. He estimates that Korean fans comprise no more than five per cent of a typical crowd.

“Walk into a full TTC subway car and you’ll same diversity of a K-pop audience,” he said.

Source: The Star Toronto