BIGBANG Planning To Stage Japan Dome Tour This Year?


South Korean band BIGBANG performs on stage during the closing ceremony on day fifteen of the 2014 Asian Games at Incheon Asiad Main Stadium on October 4, 2014 in Incheon, South Korea.
 

Is a BIGBANG Dome tour happening this year? It’s possible, according to a market expert who pegged the earnings of YG Entertainment to reach over 346 billion won at the end of the year because of BIGBANG members’ concert tours.

According to a report by The Business Post, YG Entertainment stands to earn 346.4 billion won and 36.1 billion won in operating profit. The BIGBANG concerts account for 48.4 billion won in earnings for the label so it seems likely that YG will tap into this market, based on the analysis provided by Kim Hyun-seok, a researcher at Shinhan Investment & Securities.

Kim said that YG is planning to stage 34 profitable concerts this year including 14 BIGBANG tours for the MADE tour, Daesung’s Japan Dome tour, G-Dragon’s “Act III” MOTTE” World Tour and Taeyang’s ongoing “White Night” tour. The source said that it is possible that a Dome Tour at the last quarter could send YG Entertainment’s profits skyrocketing because of the strong following of BIGBANG.

It can be recalled that BIGBANG was supposed to go on hiatus as a five-member group due to the scheduled enlistment of its members. BIGBANG rapper T.O.P. was the first to enlist last February but was unfortunately discharged from is police unit after he was embroiled in a marijuana controversy.

Daesung and G-Dragon have released their solo comebacks and filled arenas with their respective tours while Taeyang is expected to release his solo album in August even as he is in the middle of his “White Night” tour.

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Source: Koreaportal

A K-Pop Primer to Prepare You for G-Dragon’s Miami Show

On July 25, an international pop music mega-star will swoop down upon American Airlines Arena. He’s sold millions of albums and drawn countless screaming fans to his side, and it’s likely you’ve never even heard of him. His name is G-Dragon, and he’s the most popular singer in South Korea.

It might seem perplexing that an artist from a tiny East Asian nation, one that doesn’t even rave about nuclear weapons, could draw enough people to fill the AAA. The reason, as it turns out, has as much to do with politics as music. In the late '90s, South Korea began to aggressively subsidize its entertainment industry in an attempt to compete with Japan and the United States as a cultural exporter. Along with film and television dramas, the nation flooded money into pop music, funding enormous labels that created dozens of pop groups and drew from the latest international trends in music. By every measure, K-pop and the Hallyu — "Korean Wave" — succeeded in increasing Korean global stature, but they also resulted in some of most exciting popular music being made today.

Bigbang, "Bang Bang Bang" (2015)
Girls Generation may have the best song, but Bigbang is the undisputed king of K-pop. They are not subtle about it — the band's symbol, which you’ll see at any show by them or one of their members, is a golden crown. If you want to know what the Hallyu is all about, it’s right here in one of the behemoth group’s bombastic videos: insane costumes, dynamic dancing, and production values that match, even surpass, those of their Western competitors. And this isn't even their best song — the group has a massive back catalog, having been active since 2006.

Source: Miami New Times

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