Who is your favourite 5th gen center? boygroup or girlgroup
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- 2025-09-05 08:48 event
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aespa - Rich Man (The 6th Mini Album) Release Date: 5th September 2025 Track Lyrics by Composed by Arranged by 1. Rich Man Le'mon (153/Joombas) Cody Tarpley / Rachel Kanner / Ben Samama / RYAN JHUN 2. Drift 이그린 (lalala studio) Stian Nyhammer Olsen / Herbert St. Clair Crichlow / Paulos Solbø / Stephny Ko / Julia Finnseter Stian Nyhammer Olsen 3. Bubble 강은정 Gingerbread / Rachel West / Olivia Ruby Gingerbread 4. Count On Me Mola Bryan Fryzel / Kella Armitage / Stephanie Jane Lang Frequency 5. Angel #48 Wilhelmina KENZIE / Greg Bonnick / Hayden Chapman / Wilhelmina LDN Noise 6. To The Girls 이스란 Andreas Öhrn / Peter Boström / Andrea Danielsson Peter Boström STREAM ON: Melon Spotify YouTube Music Apple Music submitted by /u/CronoDroid [link] [comments]
I’m listening to and ranking all the singles, EPs and albums by K-pop and K-pop-adjacent girl groups using a tier list. Including: Original Japanese singles/albums Subunits and solos within official group albums OSTs Not including: Solos and subunits outside of group albums Covers, remastered versions, or remixes First slide: ranking of songs within the group Second slide: ranking in the context of other girl groups These are just my personal opinions, music is subjective! What I like and how I rank these songs may not line up with your tastes. I won’t take into account scandals, popularity, or other outside factors, only the music itself. For Y, I listened to: Young Posse Heard their name often but haven't given them any fair chances, apart from hearing XXL quite often. Gotta say, this group has very high highs and very low lows. I fell in love with “Skyline” at first listen. I highly recommend this song, a very unique blend between R&B, jersey club, and hip-hop, and also a comfortable length of 3:22. The group fares best with this sound. And then there are songs like Mac & Cheese, where I'm wondering what the hell I just listened to. Some of their rap songs are nice, and some are too hood unnie-esque. They sound very Dr. Dre inspired, and 80s-90s rap inspired in general. Top 3: Skyline Cooing (ahhh, I wish this was longer!) Blue Dot Bottom 3: Mac & Cheese Money Bank XXL Would love to hear what everyone else thinks of their discography too! submitted by /u/Armys_blink_once [link] [comments]
I keep wondering how the trainee system at SM Entertainment actually works. I’ve heard there are so many people who train there but end up leaving or getting dropped. Does SM split people into “new” vs “advanced” trainees? It sometimes seems like most of them don’t even train together?? I’ve also heard about “summer trainees” who only train for a short period of time.. One example that really confused me: Wonbin from RIIZE was a new trainee, yet he ended up training alongside Sungchan and Eunseok, who had already been there for years. How does a newcomer get placed with the older trainees like that? And he was also forced to join the trainee showcase after two weeks of being there.😭😭 Also, Sohee was at SM back in like 2021 and none of the members saw him there? How many trainees are usually there at once… 30, 50, 100? And in the end, how do they decide which specific people make the debut team? If anyone has insight or experience, please share! submitted by /u/slummy_dum [link] [comments]
I think it's their best yet and I can atleast listen without thinking I am a fan. Also the vfx,the location it's totally different from their previous work. They literally changed the genre and sounds so good submitted by /u/fuckingsexx [link] [comments]
idk if it’s a reach but..sometimes i wonder why he says odd things like this?? submitted by /u/Impossible_Roof_479 [link] [comments]
🥇FIFTY FIFTY - Athena (30 upvotes) 🥈CORTIS - Martin (9 upvotes) 🥉KATSEYE - Lara (7 upvotes) Main Vocalist: NMIXX - Lily Main Dancer: KATSEYE - Daniela Main Rapper: SEVENTEEN - Vernon Leader: Stray Kids - Bangchan Center: Stray Kids - Felix Visual: KATSEYE - Manon Ace: NCT - Mark FOTG: BLACKPINK - Rosé Maknae: FIFTY FIFTY - Athena submitted by /u/CynthiaRH142857 [link] [comments]
submitted by /u/CherryBlossomEnding [link] [comments]
submitted by /u/CherryBlossomEnding [link] [comments]
EJAE, singer, songwriter, mega hit producer of Netflix's biggest original movie: KPOP Demon Hunters did an emotional interview with Good Morning America where she discussed her journey into songwriting and producing. In the segment, she talked about joining SM entertainment at 11 years old and training for 13 years. She speaks about how "rigorous" the training program was and how devastated she was to be dropped by SM at the age of 23, due to their "different visions". After being dropped by the company, EJAE met songwriter (and now director) at SM, Andrew Choi who she says mentored her and invited her to SM's infamous songwriting camps. There she produced massive hits, Red Velvets Psycho (her first big kpop hit) and Drama and Armageddon. Watching her get emotional on how she felt like she let down her 11 year old self when she was dropped by SM and failed to debut made me wonder just how many other talented trainees SM has hoarded in their system, falsely promising it was almost their time, only to drop them for whatever reason. We know that SM kept NCT's Johnny on the hook for years and he also almost left after a decade plus of training (only to be convinced by Doyoung to stay for a few more months), Sohei ended up having a back injury but he was also a trainee for years before SM decided to do anything with him, Yuqi said SM recruited her but couldnt promise her a quick debut so she left to join Cube (who did make that promise), Enhyphens Jungwon trained with SM and left, LSF's Yunjin also trained at SM. Im sure theres plenty of other kpop idols that went through the SM system only to get frustrated and leave for another company before they get "too old" to debut. SM also has a bad habit of introducing their SM Rookie cohorts to publicly claim these trainees as theirs. This happened with the female Mickey Mouse crew that were in the Dream cohort in 2015, Yeri's friends who she trained with for years who were dropped, the trainees that were supposed to debut with Aespa, most famously Hansol who was supposed to debut with NCT. SM is a shitty company in general but the way they keep these trainees for a decade and let them go eventually has to be one of the worst parts about them. It worked out for EJAE in the end, but not many of these former trainees got that lucky. submitted by /u/127ncity127 [link] [comments]
"Center" roles are becoming more vague among 5th gen groups, and I understand the trends are changing. I came from an era where the center position is clear and undisputable and I'm not even talking about Kpop, but I'm referring to JPOP, where the notion of centers were birthed! I mean, the notion of everything idol-related is birthed in jpop actually. hahaha. But anyway, I find myself having a hard time these days following a group with a loyal dedicated heart if their center position is not clear to me. If their center role is inconsistent, meaning not set, then I get distracted and quickly move on from the group and become a casual. I recently became a Kiiikiii casual now, since they keep changing from Jiyu to Leesol as the center, and now putting Haum in the center too. They lost me, and I'm not deliberate in checking out kiikiii anymore because of this. 5th gen girlgroup clear center roles for me: 1. Say My Name - Kim Dohee H2H - Ian ILLIT - Wonhee Meovv- ella. I dont follow much bgs since bigbang, but so far for the 5th gen: Zerobaseone - Zhang Hao 2. TWS- Dohoon RIIZE - Wonbin All day Project - Tarzzan? Unsure since they are co-ed, they go by genders in their positioning. But I like Tarzzan, and my eyes go to him a lot. submitted by /u/thecolorofmycapisRED [link] [comments]
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submitted by /u/CherryBlossomEnding [link] [comments]
The song “yeah yeah” by Jaden has the same naming quirk as “ah ah” by Teen Top. The chord progressions are also the exact same. Is there any relationship or just coincidence? submitted by /u/dixon2500 [link] [comments]
submitted by /u/CherryBlossomEnding [link] [comments]
submitted by /u/CherryBlossomEnding [link] [comments]
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Hi, long time lurker, first time poster—I’ve hashed this out on twitter in the past, but no one wants to hear it over there, my bad if it’s already been talked about here before :) I really think excessive album/song variants in k-pop has really spoiled the prestige of Billboard achievements. It’s been ongoing for a few years now, and obviously it’s not exclusive to k-pop either, but k-pop is certainly the worst offender. Back when I got into k-pop, each group sold maybe 2-4 versions of an album, dropped one remix, and that was that. Assuming most western acts at the time were selling both CDs and vinyls—this was well within reason, and selling 100k+ was truly impressive. At that level most fans, even the most dedicated, would be buying one copy of each version and calling it a day. Maybe they’d stream the remix once or twice, maybe they wouldn’t. But the numbers genuinely reflected the audience (to a degree). But around mid-2023, I feel like we totally lost the plot. I feel like the year started off well enough (I’m just using a group I’m familiar with as an example, no hate to anyone) back when TXT’s “Temptation” took a BB200 #1 and a “Sugar Rush Ride” a Bubbling Under #2. There were four versions of the album (8 if you count each member version on its own) and no remixes. This was genuinely reflective of a song/album that had the attention of the american k-pop audience, and the charts reflected as much. But as the year continued, groups suddenly began dropping more and more versions—suddenly we had compact versions, groups with 8, 10, 12+ member versions, extra jewel case versions, etc., and by the time we got to 2024, groups were dropping merch versions, postcard versions, blind box versions, hell—some are straight up just a Pokémon pack of photocards at this point. At the same time, groups went from one remix (like an english version), to 4, 8, 12, random remixes and some even started selling “albums” that were just their title track and remixes as a physical item too. Now it seems like the average fan went from buying 2-4 versions to buying double, or triple that. Fans are running campaigns to “cheat” the billboard 4 per person rule, fans spread infographics explaining spotify filters to “mass stream effectively”, and fans are crowd funding internationally so the same people can buy 10+ copies of the digital singles/albums. Don’t get me wrong, it works—they get their headline, and the fans RUN with it. Fanwars are FUELED by who has what number, where, when, and how many times…But do we not feel it’s a little shallow now when you hit a BB #1 with 20+ versions? Or when the fan campaigns end and groups fall off the chart completely in just a week? Or breaking into the Hot100 mid-chart for one week just to drop off completely the next? These epic highs and lows don’t earn these groups radio play or general public recognition (outside of BTS/BP), and it really just feels like these companies are selling the illusion of popularity at the expense of the same fans at this point. Idk I really just have mad respect for groups that have stuck to smaller variant runs, or limited (or delayed) remix releases nowadays. submitted by /u/OuterFreakinSpace [link] [comments]
I wanted to make this post as an attempt to try to make at the very least some people feel a bit more better. I have been a kpop fan for two years, and I do not know if things were better in the past or not, but I have seen across my short journey in this new world of music that people are being affected by the toxicity caused by their fandom's stans that just ruin the vibe of whatever is going on, with either fanwars or obsession over streaming. This does not apply to just one group in particular and I have these issues in most fandom spaces. Kpop is a very competitive place where participants in it essentially push and make efforts to stand out like athletes do before a competition or even the Olympics. I have only noticed recently the similarity and ever since then, that has helped me take a different perspective across the whole industry. Its natural to have a liking towards your favorite artists, and taste is subjective at the end of the day. As such, never let yourself affected by the fans who go "If you stan XYZ you cannot stan other groups". Kpop is meant to be enjoyed as a source of entertainment first and foremost, not a part-time job that pays in serotonin. Simply think about it: Why would you let a stranger literally dictate your taste, what you like and what you dislike? Not only that, but if you do like something, why would you let a stranger dictate how you should like that thing as well? You shouldn't. So no matter what happens, it will be fine. You know you are a fan of whatever group you decide to support, and no matter how much support you decide to show, or not show, as long as you know in your heart that you identity as a fan, thats all it is worth in the end! You don't have to be obsessed with your passions to be a fan, after all. Hope this will help some of you deal with the toxicity of certain kpop spaces, even if little. Sending hugs your way and I hope you all have an amazing day!!! submitted by /u/Stephan2005 [link] [comments]