Groups where the members are more involved with the songwriting process?
- reddit.com language
- 2025-10-12 09:12 event
- 2 hours ago schedule
Domain BOYICON.com for sale! This premium domain is available now at Kadomain.com
For example, Itzy's Loco instrumental could be in an action movie. Maybe some could fit well in science fiction or fantasy, or a drama or whatever. You could either bring up other types of media such as video games. Or what would best for a rave. submitted by /u/SpecSlayerSC [link] [comments]
for me it is the rui pride flag moment. FLIP YOU 271 YOUR ONLY THRIVING BECAUSE OF MY LITTLE 4 DIVAS RAHHHHHHHH submitted by /u/Ssqpphirc1111 [link] [comments]
submitted by /u/impeccabletim [link] [comments]
submitted by /u/Funwithnugukpop [link] [comments]
submitted by /u/Funwithnugukpop [link] [comments]
I was recently watching some of Le Sserafim's 'Hot' stages and noticed the barrage of hearts they did on the final stage on Music Core. I also remembered this cute moment on Dayoung last Body performance where the dancers all made hearts for her. Do y'all have any favorite moments like this? submitted by /u/IceSanta [link] [comments]
credits to @jade57774 on tiktok my favourite is from are you alive? by triples omg that one is SO good submitted by /u/0x1trinity [link] [comments]
submitted by /u/Funwithnugukpop [link] [comments]
Just wanted to share this with yall! this was my senior capstone project for college :) it’s a dance film made up of kpop and jpop covers! submitted by /u/YoruBloo [link] [comments]
One thing that's always bothered me about K-pop (and a lot of pop music in general) is that the singers usually don't write the songs, or even get a say in the process. Are there any K-pop groups out there where the members write a lot of the songs, or participate more in production, etc.? submitted by /u/_specialcharacter [link] [comments]
I try not to spam my reactions here but I really enjoy this song and want others to know about it ❤️ submitted by /u/DdogPlaysGames [link] [comments]
I would say Jimin and Jungkook from BTS! V and Jin are the official visuals though. Also Soyeon from G-Idle. She's genuinely so attractive I was actually shocked when I found out she wasn't the main visual. Han from Stray Kids too. submitted by /u/Sea-Republic8892 [link] [comments]
This has almost every group/song ive listened to and enjoyed! It hasnt been updated a lot in a while, but anyways! Go for it! submitted by /u/Jjong_Hariibo [link] [comments]
I genuinely don’t understand how xlov is gender neutral(understand being the operative word). Like I love me some xlov music and I’ve been with Wumuti since day 1, but I don’t get their concept. It honestly seems like they are trying to portray a specific gender, so I don’t get really get the “neutral” part. This is mostly a terminology thing and not me having a problem with their concept, I look at them and I don’t see gender neutrality, I see femininity, which, imo, is far from neutral. I guess I just have a very different of what gender neutrality would look like, anyways, I’m def open to corrections and yall’s 2cents submitted by /u/Mobile-Structure5702 [link] [comments]
How do you define whether a group is truly underpromoted, or just not resonating with a larger audience? And what does proper promotion look like in a market this saturated and fast-moving? are music show stages enough? Is a tiktok "viral" video with 3M views considered good promotion if no one outside the fandom is checking for the group? Does buying subway ads count as promo, or is that just fandom noise? At what point do we say it's “lack of promotion” rather than maybe the music didn’t connect, or the group didn't attract enough people? What do you consider a well-promoted comeback in 2025-2026? Are there any recent examples where you thought a group got everything they needed promo-wise and still didn’t take off? Or vice versa, comebacks with barely any push that ended up thriving? Sorry if this is all over the place, I'd just love to hear more perspectives on this. Most of the groups I follow aren’t from the Big 4, so I often find myself thinking about these things. Sometimes it’s obvious that the company dropped the ball, but other times it’s less clear (at least to me). Yet fans still default to blaming the lack of promotions or a “bad promo strategy,” and that leaves me more confused. I know luck plays a huge role in success, but it’s definitely not the only factor, and I think we oversimplify the conversation when we pretend otherwise. submitted by /u/CrownDaysThieves [link] [comments]
I was doing research for a PowerPoint I was making on what defines 5th Gen boy groups (if anyone is curious send me a message I’ll let you know when it’s done) and in my hunt to find a list of 4th Gen Boy Groups (I am looking at data from both to help define the difference) I ended up on the Wikipedia page for South Korean Boy Bands and found that there was no category for 5th Gen and they had all up until now had been included as 4th Gen. This confused me as I thought that the consensus is that we are in 5th Gen and that it started in 2023 so I thought to do a poll to check the waters. I’ve made a simple poll on what seems to be the two main opinions but if people have opinions outside this please comment them below and explain why. View Poll submitted by /u/ARG_obesessed [link] [comments]
It feels like soloists have played a much bigger part in Kpop this year compared to previous years. submitted by /u/randomnarwhalaccount [link] [comments]
Just in the last 3 - 4 months we've had mischaracterized or completely fabricated stories make the rounds on k-pop Reddit. From people falling for the story stating orphans were forced to support Jimin for food to everyone bringing out their pitchforks on Ju Haknyeon. There was also the huge mix-up about BabyMonster's Asa where people convinced themselves she didn't graduate elementary school and RESCENE's company having to take legal action because people fell for edited clips and fear mongering. Even the members speaking up in defense of themselves didn't stop calls for boycotting at the time. Even today, thousands of people (assuming all upvotes and comments are from real people) fell for this news on Kep1er when even two seconds of research would've shown this headline to obviously be false. And I'm sure there's been more fake stuff that blew up on k-pop Reddit recently. Matter of fact, I know there is, but considering the topic, I figure I shouldn't reference them if I don't have tangible proof (damn you, deleted threads). And of course during controversy, misinfo is even worse. The truth is, Reddit is an aggregation of news from all other sites, so the info and misinfo that spreads on other sites also comes here. It's a bit easier to combat it with the convenient hyperlink feature, but by the time the truth starts getting out, the false info is firmly cemented and taken as fact. Even when explanations, proof, or accurate translations are provided, it isn't always guaranteed that people will accept the truth. So yeah, make sure your prove things to yourself first before you believe what you see on here. There's fake stuff all over the place and just because it's Reddit, you're not any less likely to be tricked by misinformation than on other sites. Be open to being wrong if your find out you initially fell for something. It happens to the best of us. submitted by /u/SageSageofSages [link] [comments]
submitted by /u/reverseharam [link] [comments]