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Hybe chairman says a sense of crisis, global firms like Samsung, Hyundai needed for K-pop
  • March 16, 2023 | Music


Hybe chairman says a sense of crisis,
global firms like Samsung,
Hyundai needed for K-pop

K-pop 11:43 March 15, 2023
 

Bang Si-hyuk, chairman of Hybe

 

Bang Si-hyuk, chairman of Hybe, is seen in this photo provided by Billboard. (PHOTO NOT FOR SALE) (Yonhap)

 

By Shim Sun-ah

SEOUL, March 15 (Yonhap) -- Bang Si-hyuk, chairman of Hybe, the K-pop powerhouse behind global superstar BTS, said Wednesday it is time for the music industry to have a sense of crisis rather than being satisfied with what it has achieved.

He also raised the need to cultivate global entertainment companies in South Korea to compete with major players in the world market, speaking to a forum organized by the Kwanhun Club, an association of senior South Korean journalists, in Seoul.

Bang founded Big Hit Entertainment, the predecessor of Hybe in 2005, and debuted BTS in 2013. As the boy group rose to global stardom, Hybe has built a multi-label system, with Belift Lab (representing Enhypen), Source Music (Le Sserafim), Pledis Entertainment (Seventeen), KOZ (Zico) and ADOR (NewJeans) under its wing.

"As BTS has become loved all over the world, and I have come to do business in the global market based on this, I came to reflect on the meaning of 'K' in 'K-pop,'" Bang said. "K-pop is becoming an axis of amplifying the power of the letter 'K' both as a culture and an industry."

But despite all the glories of K-pop, "there are still many mountains left to climb" when the whole global music market is considered, he emphasized.

He pointed out major K-pop companies based in South Korea still have less than 2 percent of the global market, saying the K-pop industry is David in comparison to the three global music giants -- Universal, Sony and Warner -- who are like Goliath.

He also noted that the growth of K-pop music is slowing in the United States and other mainstream markets, and the number of K-pop songs hitting the Billboard Hot 100 singles chart decreased by about 53 percent last year from 2021. Exports of K-pop albums have also declined since 2020, he added.

"It's time to have a sense of crisis rather than be satisfied with the proud achievements (of K-pop)," he said.

"Just as there is Samsung in the global semiconductor market and Hyundai in the global automobile market, the K-pop industry needs to have global entertainment companies that will break through the current situation facing it."

Bang said he has exerted much effort to prepare for a "post-Bang Si-hyuk" era in Hybe, and that building a multi-label system with multiple producers and creators was a result of such an effort.

He suggested in order for K-pop to continue its growth, it is necessary to strengthen its foundation by expanding awareness and influence in the mainstream markets, and improve music production systems and introduce healthy management methods. Developing platforms to broaden the industry's reach to the global music fans also can be a way, he added.

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Reporter : sshim@yna.co.kr