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K-hiphop : ウィキペディア英語版
Korean hip hop

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Korean hip hop is music associated with South Korea's hip-hop culture, and often that of the Korean diaspora (locally commonly known plainly as hiphop〔(【引用サイトリンク】 title= Hiphop Playa )〕 and internationally as ,〔(【引用サイトリンク】 title= Korean hip-hop music )〕〔'Korean hip hop' and less popular names: 〕〔(【引用サイトリンク】 title= K-hiphop music )〕〔(【引用サイトリンク】 title= K-hip hop music )〕 〔〔〔 and ).〔〔
The movement has had mainstream growth since the early-1990s and has been gaining international attention, with Koreans winning global championships since the early-2000s.
The hip-hop cultural phenomenon has particularly flourished in Seoul, Busan and Daegu. Aside from mainstream K-pop infused hip-hop, there is also an underground scene that has developed throughout South Korea.
The culture is also supported by webzines, including HiphopPlaya Magazine(힙합플레이야).
== Hip hop music ==

Early artists included 3534, Seo Taiji and Boys, Deux, and DJ DOC. The Korean language was used almost exclusively. Seo Taiji, coming from a heavy metal music background, often featured heavy metal guitars in his mixes, and other artists also incorporated techno influences. A few artists, such as Seo Taiji and Yuk Kak Soo (육각수), also incorporated influences from traditional Korean music such as pansori or ''nongak'' (farmers' music). One that was distinctive was Seo Taiji's "Come Back Home", with its vocal/production style resembling Cypress Hill. The first "rap" album that featured rap in every track was Kim Jin Pyo's first album in 1997. First Hip-Hop song in South Korea was Gim-sat-gat (김삿갓) by Hong-seo-bum (홍서범).
According to Epik High's rapper Tablo, "The form (Korean Hip Hop ), at least, has definitely been mastered now — the beats, the rhymes, the performances, the look — it's indistinguishable from the United States scene. The social relevance, however, has a long way to go. The message is slowly catching up to the medium."
Many rap artists have been successful in the mainstream of Korean music, including rappers: Verbal Jint, Double K, Jinusean, T.O.P., G-Dragon, Zico, Outsider,Tymee (former E.via), 1TYM, MC Sniper, Beenzino, Bumkey, Cho PD, Kidoh, Dynamic Duo, Drunken Tiger, Jay Park, Supreme Team, Untouchable, Dok2, Leessang, Epik High and Rhythm Power.
As elsewhere, there has always been a conflict between mainstream and underground listeners. As many K-pop groups use hiphop in their songs, people became used to associating hip-hop with these sugar-coated lyrics. Underground rappers and their fans have heavily criticized this, which fuelled many skilled underground rappers to stick with working as an independent artist rather than under a major mainstream label.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Korean hip hop」の詳細全文を読む



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