Op-ed, kinda.
2009-08-10 02:10 pmThere is a fairly decent overview of the contract situation faced by entertainers in Korea over in today's Joongang Ilbo. Using the lawsuit Dong Bang Shin Gi (aka TVXQ) has filed against SM Entertainment as the peg, the article looks at the long and onerous contracts that most entertainers in Korea have to have, especially singers.
As you have probably heard, on July 31, three members of DBSG filed suit against its management company, claiming their contract is unfair. DBSG is one of SME's most popular bands these days, and is doing especially well in Japan, where they recently played two nights in the Tokyo Dome. The band's complaints were mostly the same things we have heard over and over again in Korea over the years -- their contracts are too long, their contracts do not pay enough, the penalties for leaving the management company are too severe, the performers do not have enough control over their own careers, the performers are not paid enough (probably the biggest issue).
I do not want to get into the details of DBSG's particular case. That is something for the Korean courts to decide. But I do think that cases like these bring up a much bigger point.
Arguing about the "fairness" of idol contracts -- how many years should they be, how much should the performers be paid, etc. -- misses the big point. I am tempted to call it "Rearranging deck chairs on the Titanic," but that is probably a bit harsh -- after all, the Korean entertainment industry is showing few signs of sinking any time soon. It is more like arguing about what kind of pain reliever is best for a critically ill patient. That is, such talk deals mostly with the symptoms of the disease and misses out entirely on the causes.
Korea's pop idols are not paid poorly and overcontrolled because the management companies are evil. The management companies are just doing their best within the current system. And judging by the long list of big stars who have emerged from Korea's music system over the years, they are apparently doing something right.
The trouble is, Korea's music system itself, which is very resource-intensive and very top-down (like far too much of the Korean economy in general). Because the burden of developing stars and marketing them falls solely on the music companies, it takes a huge amount of money to create new stars. The biggest companies have over 50 performers (mostly young people) in training at a time, taking dance classes, singing classes, learning how to act like stars, and usually living in company housing, eating food paid for by the company, being driven everywhere by the company. All this adds up pretty quickly.
So when a band gets paid pennies for an album sale, you have to remember that the performers spent years in training before they earned any money, and that for each performing earning money and doing well, there are many other aspiring young people who never make it, but who nonetheless burn through company money. How many hopefuls does each company have for each performer who makes it? Five? Ten? I do not know, but it is big enough.
The real problem (as I argue in my book, POP GOES KOREA) is the lack of diversity in Korea's music business, in particular the lack of a live music scene. In most countries, live music is the core, the heart. Young people pick up instruments and play in their parents' garages or wherever. Some get good enough to play in clubs. A few get good enough to put out albums (or MP3s or whatever). A very few make money. Basically, the cost and inconvenience of developing acts falls on the wanna-be performers. By the time they get to the music labels, a lot of the winnowing and development has already happened.
Even in Japan, where J-Pop is big business, you have J-Rock and jazz and a fairly wide range of choices. And choices drive competition, when reduces the stranglehold that music companies otherwise might have.
Strangely, Korea used to have a great live music scene. It was a long time ago, but back in the 1960s and 1970s, most of the big performers had a live music background, whether playing on the US Army bases around the country or playing the live clubs of Myeong-dong or wherever. Even in the 1980s, as Korea's music scene turned more poppy and synthesized (and saccharine), there was still a live foundation most of the acts had -- Cho Yong-pil, Shin Hae-chul, Jo Sung-mo, and the like were all live performers first.
But in the early 1990s, the scene began to change, especially with the coming of Seo Taiji. Even though Seo Taiji wrote his songs (well, mostly) and performed them himself, he typically performed them prerecorded, with The Boyz dancing away furiously beside him. It was the formula that Korea's music companies would use to create their boy- and girl-bands. And soon the manufactured dance bands came fast and furious. Within a few years, they dominated the TV music shows, Mnet, and the like.
For a generation of young people in Korea, being a "star" has meant being a dancer first, a pretty face and perhaps a singer. Very few young people pick up a guitar with dreams of making it big. Sure, plenty of kids play music, for any number of reasons. But few harbor serious dreams of using the guitar (or whatever) to become rock stars.
And as long as the live music scene is not a viable route to becoming a star in Korea, the local music scene will remain dominated by the music labels and manufactured pop music.
The funny thing is, for all the talk of the dominating power of the music companies, the truth is they are actually very weak. They are merely responding to the economics they are given. If young people were to choose different music, the whole system would fall apart. If playing in Hongdae became a route to fame and fortune, then the system would have to change. But as long as Korean young people show no interest in anything but K-Pop, all they will be given is K-Pop. And the system will not really change.
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Date: 2009-08-10 07:57 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-08-10 07:58 am (UTC)what does this mean for them??
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Date: 2009-08-10 04:31 pm (UTC)As for DBSK who started out as an idol band and now have to deal with the consequences (the long contract, the relatively influence on the group's music), they probably now want more creative freedom because they've developed into artists and musicians who want to do their own stuff...
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Date: 2009-08-10 08:11 am (UTC)and I don't think that F.T. Island counts.
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Date: 2009-08-10 08:15 am (UTC)This makes me a little sad, but I kind of agree. Some of the top groups have great singers, but the in-betweens are LOTS of pretty with little musical talent.
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Date: 2009-08-10 08:18 am (UTC)It's not talking about how DBSK doesn't get any money or that SM is greedy and takes back. Its that its a dog-eat-dog world out there, and when you train people and they fall through that costs money. So that money that DBSK makes from album sales goes towards fallen album sales and going to pay through for the other shit that the boys and other performers need.
Mics, sparks, electricity, shitty light stands that fall over after/during a performance. You know the stuff that goes into it.
Its not that Sm is being greedy (or it might be because everyone's being greedy during this lawsuit) but that if there was the money to give they would give it. But because the funds are so limited, they're going to keep as much as they can to keep the performers, performing.
I think also a change of music and not having the same type (lyrics that are catchy with beats that are continuous. I mean Nobody = Again & Again. Again & Again is the boy version of Nobody) and being able to get out there and do something different without being afraid of being a social taboo.
I mean come on! It's about time K-pop gets out there and does something different. FT Island comes out with a song its not HALF as popular as a Wonder Girls song but they've got more talent than all of WG put together.
So what does that tell you? Change is scary and for Korea its a step towards something nobody is prepared for.
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Date: 2009-08-10 08:21 am (UTC)(no subject)
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Date: 2009-08-10 08:21 am (UTC)ugh would totally love the k-rock too D: and more rap
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Date: 2009-08-10 08:22 am (UTC)...my first thought was at least suju can't be liked for their pretty faces. xD oh suju i love you all, even if you are a bunch of awkward beautiful boys ♥
but i'm really glad we finally have someone not running around screaming how terrible the companies are. :/
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Date: 2009-08-10 08:35 am (UTC)I agree that it's not entirely SM's and the other companies' fault, it's just that the whole Korean entertainment business is pretty messed up. Well, as a matter of fact, entertainment companies everywhere can be pretty messed up. Ahhh capitalism.
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Date: 2009-08-10 08:41 am (UTC)This. I haven't seen two sentences that makes so much sense in a long while.
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Date: 2009-08-10 08:44 am (UTC)too bad they turned down a contract in korea.
(at least, i think they did)
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Date: 2009-08-10 08:41 am (UTC)I don't even get the whole dorm business. Isn't Changmin from Seoul? He could have just lived at home.
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Date: 2009-08-10 08:51 am (UTC)But who invented the system. In Korea, SM was arguably one of the pioneers of the current Kpop music scene, yeah?
If a system isn't efficient or profitable for companies, it wouldn't have existed this long. In fact, it might be arguable that it's existed so long precisely because it benefits the music companies ... at the expense of the artists.
Taking in more trainees than you can comfortably give financial support to is something companies can only blame themselves for. It's called biting off more than you can chew :/ though I guess you can argue that companies do it to stay competitive and make sure they're getting all the best trainees.
But yeah, I get what he's saying in the last para. Seems like he doesn't think that Kpop in its current form can exist without such "unfair" contracts etc. etc.
lol this just makes me wonder how Johnny's manages to stay profitable especially when they have a gazillion undebuted juniors/seniors and debuted artistsno subject
Date: 2009-08-10 10:49 am (UTC)Because tbh, we all know that Yamapi's solo Toshiba campaign alone can make him a lot more richer if he got a FULL pay. XD
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Date: 2009-08-10 09:22 am (UTC)Anyway, I think there's other ways to improve things and even if there were diversity, I don't think it'd be the magical solution to everything. It'll always be a big competition and the survival of the fittest.
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Date: 2009-08-10 09:36 am (UTC)And ngl I'd really like to see more variety in the Korean industry. It'd be better for them internationally anyway. Because let's be honest, boy and girl pop groups aren't universally popular. Add some rock or something and they'd probably get a lot more profits from the U.S. because how many boy bands or girl groups are really popular there?
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Date: 2009-08-10 02:04 pm (UTC)(no subject)
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Date: 2009-08-10 09:59 am (UTC)Diversity might be able to help the system but it won't really cure all the major flaws... There would always be people on top and some just take advantage of that.. and that, i think is the problem..
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Date: 2009-08-10 10:46 am (UTC)Whenever I think of the music I used to be 100% into and what I listen to now I think about how there just isn't much diversity in the actual music.(pop + rap here and there, yet each music group is different in style)
Really I don't mind, but I would just love some Krock(with FT Island I was like yay they play the music I'm hearing!).
They want the kpop give them the kpop:)
[well this comment sorta relates to the article -.-]
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Date: 2009-08-10 02:31 pm (UTC)If there were more artists who had that kind of genre... I'd be all over that.