Posts Tagged ‘krnb’

Best of 2024: Top 10 K-Pop Albums

This is one of the hardest intro paragraphs to write each year, because it’s the list most intensely personal to my tastes, and yet is often the one that lasts the longest, as it tends to get the most attention late into the following year and beyond. Most years all I can really point out is the pattern of album types making the list each year, so here we go:

Oh my word; the boys sure did come out to play in 2024. Seven of the ten total albums on this sub-divided page (honourable mentions aside) and all five of the full-album entries come from male acts, which I’m pretty sure is unprecedented. In addition, for the first time ever there are no girl groups on either of the two top fives. I don’t know why that is; I wasn’t trying to do that as I worked on the lists. It just so happened that I liked more of the lads’ work throughout the year.

Predominantly English/Japanese albums don’t count for this page, so Rose’s much-hyped rosie won’t be here, but it’s pretty good – and you should also check out Milena’s Foggy if you enjoy relaxed R&B.

1-3 tracks = not eligible

4-7 tracks = mini album

8+ tracks = full album

-◊-◊-◊-◊-

VR BEST OF 2024 DISCLAIMER

This list represents my opinion only. I am not asserting any kind of superiority or self-importance by presenting it as I have. My opinion is not fact. Nobody ever agrees with me 100%. Respectful disagreement is most welcome.

-◊-◊-◊-◊-


MINI ALBUMS

5. ACT – Kang Daniel

Kang Daniel’s 2024 EP puts its MV track in the crucial third track slot, which is such a rare move even this far into K-Pop’s globalised album production era that I had to take notice as soon as a mate recommended ACT to me. But it turns out it’s no quirky, showy play: that very song, the catchy bounce and double-keyboard drive of Electric Shock, needs a full track’s worth of distance between itself and opener Losing Myself, which is simply one of the best B-sides of the year and was at risk of overshadowing the lead single. That chorus build-up and the chaotic ensuing breakdown takes over any pair of headphones, threatening to collapse upon itself with a gloriously cacophonous breakdown. The rest of the EP is no slouch: soft harp vibes contrast with crunchy garage beats to beautiful effect in Chung Ha duet Come Back to Me, and closer 9 Lives turns up the bassy synth as Daniel proudly declares he’s “leveling up”. I’ll say.

4. The Winning – IU

Another *ahem* winner of an EP from one of the most reliable artists in the business, IU not only makes The Winning sound effortless, she gives off the unmistakable vibe that she’s enjoying every note. Trademark wispy vocals saunter through Holssi over the kind of offbeat backing not seen since her Chat-shire days, and the way everything harmonises together should not come as a surprise – but it still sounds so fresh. Immediately afterwards comes Shh.., one of the most indulgent songs at its conservative BPM level I have ever heard. Jazzy, sassy and fabulously supported, the track has the gall to end with an acting segment even though the EP is nowhere near over – which still works because Love wins all starts real soft. That’s an IU power ballad, though, so you just know it’ll be swelling with sheer orchestral scale soon enough – and it sure does. If anything, the opening and closing tracks are the most vanilla of the package, but of course they’re still produced and performed to the highest standard.

CLICK HERE TO KEEP READING

Best of 2024: Top 15 K-Pop Singles

I may have celebrated a decade of K-Pop appreciation a couple of years ago on this site, but 2024 marked a less glamorous – though no less important – milestone for me: it has now been ten years since a slate of Korean label drama that felt no less than calamitous at the time knocked the proverbial scales of fandom off my eyes and I began to listen to K-Pop without loyalty to specific groups, or without even really taking into account music videos until a song or album had already lodged itself in my brain. So basically how I approach the hobby now.

2014 also brought about enough real-life situation shifts that my curated sources of new K-Pop dried up for the majority of the year, and I had to rush my countdown; despite a few time-honoured bangers at the top, that 2014 Top 15 list is still the playlist I repeat the least in my personal listening time. Though nowhere near that dramatic, 2024 at times felt functionally similar: indefinite podcast hiatuses, changes to curated public playlists, and simple differences in the people I see regularly had me scrambling to do a lot more of my own legwork than usual to find the songs I liked.

But 2024 is not 2014; there are a lot more decent tracks around these days and an awful lot more sources to recommend them.

To make this list, a song has to either have a music video or be the clear lead release from its album or EP. To clear up increasingly blurry fringe examples, only songs containing Korean lyrics count, but you should still listen to H1-Key’s Thinkin’ About You and from20’s Demon. It’s also worth mentioning that much of this year’s playlist is defined by simple audio elements produced well, so I recommend the best set of headphones you’ve got.

-◊-◊-◊-◊-

VR BEST OF 2024 DISCLAIMER

This list represents my opinion only. I am not asserting any kind of superiority or self-importance by presenting it as I have. My opinion is not fact. Nobody ever agrees with me 100%. Respectful disagreement is most welcome.

-◊-◊-◊-◊-

15. APT – Rosé feat. Bruno Mars

We are immediately stretching technicalities for this first inclusion, as the relentlessly catchy single-word repetition coursing through the chorus of viral worldwide hit APT seems both too basic and yet too significant to ignore with my “inclusion of Korean lyrics” eligibility rule. So here it is, in all its irrepressible ear-worminess. The song starts with a crunchy beat that doesn’t overcomplicate itself, and Melbourne’s own Rosé is having so much fun it’s infectious, but the track isn’t much to write home about until Bruno Mars appears to add those famous ad-libs and then triple the impact of the chorus with some of the most satisfying harmonies of the year. By the time the bridge arrives APT is firing on all cylinders, and it has solidified itself as one of the most successful western collabs in K-Pop history.

14. Funk Jam – n.SSign

There’s some interesting distortion echoing around the background of the verses in this one, but the core appeal of the song is simple. In fact, it’s so simple that the title – and the pivotal chorus line – pretty handily tells you everything you need to know: you’re listening to a funk jam. It’s not a world-changing funk jam, but it still slaps pretty hard. In the ongoing race to find the worst K-Pop group name of all time, n.SSign put in a strong effort when they debuted last year, but none of their early music moved the needle in quite the same elite way until the boys boiled it all down to a simple keyboard / guitar setup and started messing around with blues-y sliding notes.

CLICK HERE TO KEEP READING