Dubai Telegraph - Forbidden K-pop to centre stage: North Koreans set for music debut

EUR -
AED 3.995257
AFN 76.638205
ALL 98.797686
AMD 424.290064
ANG 1.955554
AOA 994.728411
ARS 1155.476842
AUD 1.732046
AWG 1.960623
AZN 1.85345
BAM 1.955754
BBD 2.190849
BDT 131.836913
BGN 1.955754
BHD 0.40759
BIF 3215.824694
BMD 1.087725
BND 1.447166
BOB 7.497824
BRL 6.23767
BSD 1.085075
BTN 93.619808
BWP 14.793654
BYN 3.551017
BYR 21319.400758
BZD 2.179549
CAD 1.568662
CDF 3127.208413
CHF 0.961515
CLF 0.026329
CLP 1010.056347
CNY 7.885187
CNH 7.8946
COP 4527.093988
CRC 542.487296
CUC 1.087725
CUP 28.8247
CVE 110.262418
CZK 25.149718
DJF 193.225475
DKK 7.502911
DOP 68.358399
DZD 144.742611
EGP 54.68172
ERN 16.315868
ETB 143.097449
FJD 2.501169
FKP 0.843381
GBP 0.841957
GEL 3.018479
GGP 0.843381
GHS 16.818606
GIP 0.843381
GMD 76.688768
GNF 9382.780281
GTQ 8.360804
GYD 227.684668
HKD 8.457113
HNL 27.75935
HRK 7.577964
HTG 142.20667
HUF 399.695677
IDR 17975.735558
ILS 4.043185
IMP 0.843381
INR 93.539419
IQD 1421.466713
IRR 45806.803356
ISK 144.889055
JEP 0.843381
JMD 169.826023
JOD 0.77124
JPY 162.446263
KES 140.356713
KGS 93.441089
KHR 4345.898231
KMF 495.245105
KPW 978.977987
KRW 1592.215286
KWD 0.335161
KYD 0.904279
KZT 545.937216
LAK 23492.449871
LBP 97226.62322
LKR 321.56247
LRD 217.014918
LSL 19.735238
LTL 3.211768
LVL 0.657954
LYD 5.220878
MAD 10.419056
MDL 19.574542
MGA 5072.881207
MKD 61.528559
MMK 2283.385777
MNT 3784.599059
MOP 8.687397
MRU 43.020993
MUR 49.27799
MVR 16.755024
MWK 1881.455941
MXN 22.014679
MYR 4.811048
MZN 69.509654
NAD 19.735238
NGN 1685.973393
NIO 39.929065
NOK 11.498711
NPR 149.791492
NZD 1.897967
OMR 0.41622
PAB 1.085075
PEN 3.932808
PGK 4.466895
PHP 62.370673
PKR 304.03438
PLN 4.218801
PYG 8675.796837
QAR 3.955307
RON 5.001035
RSD 117.207255
RUB 91.36996
RWF 1561.26344
SAR 4.080306
SBD 9.160801
SCR 15.494637
SDG 653.722811
SEK 11.026682
SGD 1.450376
SHP 0.854781
SLE 24.804108
SLL 22809.040677
SOS 620.085479
SRD 39.536072
STD 22513.701632
SVC 9.494778
SYP 14142.905294
SZL 19.718538
THB 36.891306
TJS 11.854322
TMT 3.807036
TND 3.365121
TOP 2.547564
TRY 41.10551
TTD 7.372827
TWD 35.884432
TZS 2878.132602
UAH 45.065845
UGX 3977.906848
USD 1.087725
UYU 45.848926
UZS 14041.671183
VES 74.211355
VND 27851.186552
VUV 133.593237
WST 3.066216
XAF 655.94164
XAG 0.032927
XAU 0.00036
XCD 2.93963
XDR 0.815781
XOF 655.94164
XPF 119.331742
YER 267.661854
ZAR 19.831949
ZMK 9790.829927
ZMW 31.336266
ZWL 350.246854
  • RIO

    -0.9300

    61.99

    -1.5%

  • AZN

    -1.5900

    74.93

    -2.12%

  • GSK

    -0.1700

    39.24

    -0.43%

  • NGG

    -1.2300

    63.85

    -1.93%

  • CMSC

    0.0400

    23.16

    +0.17%

  • RELX

    0.1200

    50.01

    +0.24%

  • BTI

    -0.2400

    40.83

    -0.59%

  • VOD

    0.0300

    9.73

    +0.31%

  • JRI

    -0.0600

    12.99

    -0.46%

  • BCC

    -0.9700

    99.46

    -0.98%

  • BCE

    -0.3200

    22.7

    -1.41%

  • RYCEF

    0.0800

    10.38

    +0.77%

  • RBGPF

    0.0200

    67.02

    +0.03%

  • CMSD

    0.0000

    23.16

    0%

  • SCS

    -0.4200

    10.57

    -3.97%

  • BP

    -0.2000

    34.55

    -0.58%

Forbidden K-pop to centre stage: North Koreans set for music debut
Forbidden K-pop to centre stage: North Koreans set for music debut / Photo: Jung Yeon-je - AFP

Forbidden K-pop to centre stage: North Koreans set for music debut

Growing up in North Korea, Hyuk's childhood was about survival. He never listened to banned K-pop music but, after defecting to the South, he's about to debut as an idol.

Text size:

Hyuk is one of two young North Koreans in a new K-pop band called 1Verse -- the first time that performers originally from the nuclear-armed North have been trained up for stardom in South Korea's global K-pop industry.

Before he was 10, Hyuk -- who like many K-pop idols now goes by one name -- was skipping school to work on the streets in his native North Hamgyong province and admits he "had to steal quite a bit just to survive".

"I had never really listened to K-pop music", he told AFP, explaining that "watching music videos felt like a luxury to me".

"My life was all about survival", he said, adding that he did everything from farm work to hauling shipments of cement to earn money to buy food for his family.

But when he was 13, his mother, who had escaped North Korea and made it to the South, urged him to join her.

He realised this could be his chance to escape starvation and hardship, but said he knew nothing about the other half of the Korean peninsula.

"To me, the world was just North Korea -- nothing beyond that," he told AFP.

His bandmate, Seok, also grew up in the North -- but in contrast to Hyuk's hardscrabble upbringing, he was raised in a relatively affluent family, living close to the border.

As a result, even though K-pop and other South Korean content like K-dramas are banned in the North with harsh penalties for violators, Seok said "it was possible to buy and sell songs illegally through smugglers".

Thanks to his older sister, Seok was listening to K-pop and even watching rare videos of South Korean artists from a young age, he told AFP.

"I remember wanting to imitate those cool expressions and styles -- things like hairstyles and outfits," Seok told AFP.

Eventually, when he was 19, Seok defected to the South. Six years later, he is a spitting image of a K-Pop idol.

- Star quality -

Hyuk and Seok were recruited for 1Verse, a new boy band and the first signed to smaller Seoul-based label Singing Beetle by the company's CEO Michelle Cho.

Cho was introduced to both of the young defectors through friends.

Hyuk was working at a factory when she met him, but when she heard raps he had written she told AFP that she "knew straight away that his was a natural talent".

Initially, he "professed a complete lack of confidence in his ability to rap", Cho said, but she offered him free lessons and then invited him to the studio, which got him hooked.

Eventually, "he decided to give music a chance", she said, and became the agency's first trainee.

In contrast, Seok "had that self-belief and confidence from the very beginning", she said, and lobbied hard to be taken on.

When Seok learned that he would be training alongside another North Korean defector, he said it "gave me the courage to believe that maybe I could do it".

- 'We're almost there' -

The other members of 1Verse include a Chinese-American, a Lao-Thai American and a Japanese dancer. The five men in their 20s barely speak each other's languages.

But Hyuk, who has been studying English, says it doesn't matter.

"We're also learning about each other's cultures, trying to bridge the gaps and get closer little by little," he said.

"Surprisingly, we communicate really well. Our languages aren't perfectly fluent, but we still understand each other. Sometimes, that feels almost unbelievable."

Aito, the Japanese trainee who is the main dancer in the group, said he was "fascinated" to meet his North Korean bandmates.

"In Japan, when I watched the news, I often saw a lot of international issues about defectors, so the overall image isn't very positive," he said.

But Aito told AFP his worries "all disappeared" when he met Hyuk and Seok. And now, the five performers are on the brink of their debut.

It's been a long road from North Korea to the cusp of K-pop stardom in the South for Hyuk and Seok -- but they say they are determined to make 1Verse a success.

"I really want to move someone with my voice. That feeling grows stronger every day," said Seok.

Hyuk said being part of a real band was a moving experience for him.

"It really hit me, like wow, we're almost there."

G.Koya--DT