If someone were to ask where they should look in order to understand the origin of K-pop, many people would direct them to the iconic trio of Seo Taiji and Boys. Debuting in 1992, this group was arguably the first to create music completely different from what was in the Korean music scene today, pulling influences from the west to create a foreign sounding song about South Korean issues. In some regards, this would be the correct answer to their question. When looking at K-pop today, there is no other group that fully shows the birth of a music genre which has taken over nationally and globally. Seo Taiji and Boys were the first to take western music influences, such as R&B, hip-hop, rap, jazz, etc., and use them to create a new hybridity of music, which appealed massively to the younger audiences. This hybridity, combined with their colorful visuals, eclectic fashion, and big dance moves, is a big fundamental of K-pop today, making Seo Taiji and Boys a prime example of K-pop’s beginnings.
However, many people would forget to direct them to a different trio that may show just as much of K-pop’s beginnings as Seo Taiji and Boys. This trio is the Kim Sisters, three young girls who performed music in South Korea for American Soldiers during the Cold War. Formed in 1954, the Kim Sisters first began to perform for GIs that were stationed in South Korea by the American army during the Korean war, performing songs for them in night bars. The girls were young at the time, ranging in ages between 11 and 13, but they garnered an extensively large amount of attention and popularity among the soldiers, which was just one example of a larger trend taking place at the time: a rise in popularity of all-Asian girl bands. The girls ended up having such an impact among the GIs that they were able to perform in America, even on the Ed Sullivan show in 1959, performing songs, mainly all in English, that showed off their singing abilities, and wearing western outfits that showed off their figure.
The Kim Sisters were very talented, and their performances contained many of the elements that even Seo Taiji and Boys followed, including some dancing and songs influenced or taken from the west. In this way, their group shows an origin of modern day K-pop, albeit in a more diluted manner than Seo Taiji and Boys. The success of the Kim Sisters performing on The Ed Sullivan Show is a good example of the additional cultural exchange that took place during this time period, since it shows their success in presenting the American television audience with a foreign group. But even more than that, the success of the Kim Sisters with the American GIs showed a different aspect of their popularity which may still be present in K-pop today.
When the Kim Sisters began to perform in Korea, one of the reasons they became so popular, even though they were very young, was because of the fetishization of young Asian girls and women at the time of. Because of America’s troops stationed abroad in Korea, there became an increasing amount of sexualization of the Asian female figure due to the prostitution and interracial romances which occurred there. This is a sad reality for the all girl group, but one which can hold true even in today’s K-pop. As K-pop began to grow past Seo Taiji and Boys, the artists began to be idealized by their fans, even going so far as to have artists in the K-pop industry be called idols due to the way they were romanticized by their fans and put on a pedestal. Especially as K-pop becomes more global, a resurgence in the sexualisation of the Asian figure is growing as well. This is another fundamental that was first seen with the Kim Sisters, and one which is just as much apart of K-pop today.

The Kim Sisters and Seo Taiji and Boys were two very talented groups that contributed a lot to the Korean Music industry, and more specifically the K-pop industry, and although what their groups and their success provided were different, they both became important examples of K-Pop’s beginnings, and the fundamentals and characteristics, both positive and negative, that were created by them which are still a big part of K-pop today.










