Advertisement
Advertisement
Korean peninsula
Get more with myNEWS
A personalised news feed of stories that matter to you
Learn more
Members of K-pop girlband Red Velvet before departing. Photo: AFP

K-pop stars Red Velvet headline group travelling north for performance in Pyongyang as ties continue to thaw on Korean peninsula

The two neighbours have a date for next month’s inter-Korean summit – the third ever of its kind following 2000 and 2007 meetings – at Panmunjom truce village

K-pop stars led a group of South Korean musicians departing for Pyongyang on Saturday to take part in the latest set of cross-border cultural performances ahead of next month’s rare inter-Korean summit.

The 120-member group including top girl band Red Velvet flew from Seoul’s Gimpo airport aboard a chartered civilian flight to Pyongyang via the rarely used direct air route between the two Koreas, as a rapprochement on the peninsula gathers pace.

“This performance in Pyongyang will add momentum to inter-Korean exchanges and cooperation that resumed with the Pyeongchang Winter Olympics [in the South],” said Culture Minister Do Jong-hwan, who led the group.

South Korean singer Cho Yong-pil. Photo: AFP

Under the theme title “Spring is Coming”, South Korean musicians will perform a concert in Pyongyang on Sunday before a joint show with North Korean artists at the capital’s 12,000-seat Ryugyong Jong Ju Yong Gymnasium on Tuesday.

While in Pyongyang, Do said, he will meet with North Korean officials to discuss further cultural and sports exchanges between the two Koreas that have restarted after a decade-long hiatus.

The two rivals on Friday agreed a date for next month’s inter-Korean summit – the third ever of its kind following 2000 and 2007 meetings – at Panmunjom truce village on the heavily fortified border on April 27.

This performance in Pyongyang will add momentum to inter-Korean exchanges and cooperation
Do Jong-hwan, culture minister

Following the meeting between the North’s leader Kim Jong-un and the South’s president Moon Jae-in, landmark talks are planned between Kim and US President Donald Trump, which could come by the end of May.

The rapid rapprochement was kicked off by last month’s Winter Olympics in the South and comes after a year of heightened tensions over the North’s nuclear and missile programmes, which saw Kim and Trump engage in a fiery war of words.

Together with athletes and cheerleaders, the North sent musicians led by Hyon Song-wol – founder of the country’s popular Moranbong band – to the South to celebrate the Games.

The shows in the North – the first of which will take place at the 1,500-seat East Pyongyang Grand Theatre on Sunday – will be taped and edited by a South Korean video crew to be made into a joint TV programme for both countries, Yonhap news agency said.

The South Korean musicians taking part include singers and bands from a variety of genres, ranging from traditional folk songs to trendier K-pop, while some 20 taekwondo performers have also travelled.

Among those due to perform are Cho Yong-pil, the influential 68-year-old “King” of K-pop who performed a solo concert in Pyongyang in 2005, and Choi Jin-hee, 61, who took to the stage in the North in 1999, 2002 and 2005.

South Korean actress and singer Seohyun. Photo: AFP

Her 1984 mega hit Love Maze was reported to be late North Korean leader Kim Jong-il’s favourite song, and is credited with helping South Korean pop culture gain a following in the socialist state.

Love Maze is often heard playing in Pyongyang restaurants, with its romantic lyrics altered to adulation of their leader.

Top K-pop girl band Red Velvet will also perform in Pyongyang, venturing onto stages more traditionally occupied by North Korea’s own mega girl group the Moranbong band, who are famous for their fast-paced patriotic songs.

Seohyun, a 26-year-old star from K-pop group Girl’s Generation, will act as a master of ceremony for the events in Pyongyang.

She made a surprise appearance alongside a North Korean classical music ensemble during their performance in Seoul last month.

Many North Korean defectors say they have seen South Korean TV dramas and heard K-pop music through black-market USB drives in the North despite an official ban on the “decadent capitalist culture”.

This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as: Pop stars gear up to perform on Pyongyang stage
Post