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Moranbong Band

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Moranbong Band
Moranbong Band in Beijing, 2015
Background information
OriginNorth Korea
Genres
Years active2012 (2012)–present
MembersKim Hyang Sun (김향순)
Kang Phyong Hui (강평희)
Ri Sol Ran (리설란)
Ri Yun Hui (리윤희)
Son-u Hyang-hui (선우향희)
Korean name
Chosŏn'gŭl
모란봉악단
Hancha
牡丹峰樂團
Revised RomanizationMoranbong akdan
McCune–ReischauerMoranbong aktan

The Moranbong Band (Korean모란봉악단; MRMoranbong aktan, lit.'Tree Peony Peak Band'), also known as the Moran Hill Orchestra,[1] is a North Korean girl group. Performing interpretive styles of pop, rock, and fusion, they are the first all-female band from the DPRK, and made their world debut on 6 July 2012.[2] Their varied musical style has been described as symphonic because it is "putting together different kinds of sounds, and ending in a harmonious, pleasing result."[3]

The band has been referred to in the West as "North Korea's version of the Spice Girls".[4] They have also been noted for providing a "fascinating glimpse of what contemporary North Korean culture is like".[5]

History

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The need for a modern pop band in North Korea has been attributed to the regime's necessity to please important social strata: Pyongyang elites, military and technical professionals,[3] women,[6]: 167  and in particular, young people.[6]: 165  The existence of the band suggests the acceptability of fashion items such as mini-skirts and high heels for women,[6]: 167  and their short hairstyles have become popular among middle-class Pyongyang girls.[7] The band quickly became a cultural symbol of limited openness to Western influences to the young of North Korea.[6]: 167  In addition to the targeted elite groups, the band's exposure has concerned virtually the whole population with TV sets.[3]

The founding of the new, more modern band can be seen as an acknowledgement that several other light-music bands, such as the Wangjaesan Light Music Band and Pochonbo Electronic Ensemble, have gone out of fashion.[7] Features of the Moranbong Band suggest that it is a response to the success of South Korean hallyu, Korean Wave, of contemporary pop music.[7] Sherri L. Ter Molen goes on to say that the band's debut roughly coinciding with the release of Korean Wave star Psy's "Gangnam Style" was not incidental.[8] With the advent of the Moranbong Band, groups created by Kim Jong Un's father Kim Jong Il have diminished in importance. The Unhasu Orchestra has disappeared and the Sea of Blood Opera Company demoted.[9]

According to KCNA, "Kim Jong Un organized the Moranbong band as required by the new century, prompted by a grandiose plan to bring about a dramatic turn in the field of literature and arts this year in which a new century of Juche Korea begins".

The band was set up to perform regular televised concerts as entertainment.[6]: 166 

Concerts

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The band debuted on 6 July 2012.[3] Their first performance featured Western popular culture imagery and music, including Disney characters Mickey[10] and Minnie Mouse and Snow White,[11] Winnie the Pooh,[10] the "Theme from Rocky" and Frank Sinatra's "My Way".[11] Other Western music included "Czardas", "Zigeunerweisen", "La Reine de Saba", "Menuet", "Penelope", and "Serenade de l'Étoile", as well as "The Duel", described as "a popular song"; '"Victory", introduced as "a rap song"; and "Dallas": "a country music selection". Twelve cartoon film scores were also presented in a piece called "The Collection of World Fairy Tale Songs".[12] Kim Jong Un's wife Ri Sol-ju, made her first public appearance in the audience. These two novel policies — openly celebrating Western popular culture and publicly acknowledging the leader's spouse, along with considerable coverage of the event in the West  — is thought to have served Kim's agenda. The event allowed Kim to flaunt openness while not making any substantial promises about changes in policy.[6]: 166  As the debut was also officially set up to inspire textile workers, it can be seen as carrying a message of improvement of living-standards.[6]: 167  As South Korean media raised questions about a fundamental opening up of North Korea's culture being foreshadowed by the concert, North Korea responded that "there would be no such policy shift as expected by enemy countries",[11] and that the performance followed Kim Jong Il's maxim to "plant feet in our land, and lift eyes to see the world."[13]

Since its debut, the band's extremely Western look has been toned down considerably.[3] The band's second appearance, at a Korean War commemoration, acted as a reminder that the exceptional repertoire of the debut was not a complete shift in North Korean cultural policy. In August 2013, the band disappeared from public in midst of rumors of a purge of classical musicians in Pyongyang. When the band returned after four months,[14] they performed alongside the much more conservative State Merited Orchestra and Chorus.[6]: 166  Differences in style are highlighted by the joint performance of Moranbong Band's arrangement of "Without a Break", originally a military march, the rhythm of which the State Merited Orchestra and Chorus had trouble maintaining. During the 2013 New Years concert, at the end of the song "Without a Break" videos are shown behind the band of nuclear missiles being launched and destroying the United States of America[15] and the crowd stands and cheers during the launch and subsequent destruction of the U.S. In the first of the two joint concerts, the State Merited Orchestra and Chorus dominated. However, by the second concert the Moranbong Band was again the more prominent one.[3]

The band just several months old raised its curtain for its significant demonstration performance proclaiming its birth before the world."[16] The repertoire of the performance divided into two parts included colorful numbers such as light music "Arirang", female vocal quintet "Let's Learn(배우자)", light music "Yeppuni(예쁜이)", light music and song "Victors(승리자들)", female trio "Silk Weaving Girl of Nyongbyon(녕변의 비단처녀)", string quartet "We Can't Live without his Care(그 품 떠나 못살아)", foreign light music "Chardash", "Victory", "Song of Gypsy", female sextet "Fluttering Red Flag(붉은기 펄펄)" and light music and song "Suite of World Fable Songs".[16][17] The July 7, 2012 audience was composed of Choe Ryong-hae, Jang Song-thaek, Kim Ki-nam, Hyon Chol-hae, Kim Yang-gon, Kim Yong-il, Kim Phyong-hae, Choe Pu-il, Kim Myong-guk, Kim Yong-chol, Jo Kyong-chol and "officials, creators, artists, writers and journalists of literary and art, media and art educational institutions".[16]

On 7 or 28 April 2015,[18] the Moranbong Band performed for the first time in nine months. The concert marked the last public appearance of Minister of People's Armed Forces Hyon Yong-chol before his apparent purge later that month. Band leader Sonu Hyang-hui was also absent from the band's ranks despite the performance featuring highly technical instrumental pieces. The songs performed were noticeably non-political and influenced by Western popular music leading Adam Catchart to conclude that the performance was "uncomfortably approximate to the nightclub experience".[19] However, the band also sported a new song directly in praise of Kim Jong Un: "We Will Go to Mount Paektu" (Korean가리라 백두산으로).[19]

From 15 July until 7 September 2015, the band were not seen in public or live on television sparking rumours that they had disbanded or 'disappeared' and been replaced by the Chongbong Band.[20] However, on 7 September, the band performed in front of a state delegation from Cuba together with the State Merited Chorus in Pyongyang, including the popular North Korean song "Pyongyang Is Best" and "Guantanamera" for their Cuban audience, quashing these rumours.[21][22]

In December 2015, Kim Jong Un sent the band to perform in a series of shows in Beijing to improve relations between China and North Korea; these would have been the band's first performances outside of North Korea.[23][24] However, the band left Beijing on a scheduled flight to Pyongyang only a few hours before their performance was scheduled.[25][26] China's Xinhua news agency stated that all of the band's performances had been cancelled due to "communication issues at the working level".[27] The Korea Herald reported that North Korea had cancelled the tour because China had requested that North Korea's missiles should not be shown during performances.[28]

The band performed in a concert in Pyongyang, celebrating the start of 2019, without previous band leader Hyon Song-wol.[29]

On July 27th 2023, for the first time in 3 years, multiple singers from the Moranbong Band made an appearance during the 'Grand Performance to Celebrate 70th Anniversary of Great War Victory' concert.[30]

Performances

[edit]

The Moranbong Band has brought forth many propaganda songs in praise of Kim Jong Un, many of which feature Songun, or military-first, themed lyrics,[6]: 166  and music videos. In one video they show a nuclear missile being launched and exploding over and destroying the United States. Another song promotes attacking South Korea. The party organ Rodong Sinmun printed full notation of such songs on its first page as a signal for service people of the Korean People's Army to memorize the tunes and lyrics. The drastic changes of key in the musical composition of the songs has been interpreted to carry a message "that rapid change is coming, and things may end very differently than where they began".[6]: 167 

Members

[edit]

The Moranbong Band consists of only women.[14] In contrast to South Korean girl bands, the members of the Moranbong Band play their own instruments. Due to North Korean musical education aspiring for precision and accuracy, their playing abilities are described as "very accomplished and tight".[7] The large number of members has enabled them to play a variety of different styles of music as well as some technically challenging arrangements. Changes in the lineup have not changed the musical style of the band, suggesting that members are swapped because of their technical ability rather than artistic input. Members of the band hold high ranks in the military and, with the exception of the debut, have appeared in public in uniforms and with insignia. Thus the band is in fact a "military orchestra" instead of a "pop band". After the debut, the extravagance of the clothes and jewelry was toned down, hairstyles shortened, and the band members reportedly were placed on a diet to make them appear uniform in size.[3]

As of May 2013, the band's lineup was as follows.[14]

Member

[edit]
  • Sonu Hyang-hui (선우향희) – Violin and Band Leader
  • Hong Su Kyong (홍수경) – Violin
  • Cha Yong Mi (차영미) – Violin
  • Kim Un-Ha – Violin
  • Yu Un Jong (유은정) – Cello
  • Ri Hui Kyong (리희경) – Synthesizer
  • Kim Hyang Sun (김향선) – Synthesizer
  • Kim Yong-Mi – Piano & Synthesizer
  • Choe Jong Im (최정임) – Saxophone, Clarinet & Percussion
  • Sonu Jang-Hyok – Saxophone
  • Kim Jong Mi (김정미) – Piano
  • Ri Yun-Hui – Drums
  • Han Sun Jong (한순정) – Drums
  • Kang Ryong Hui (강령희) – Guitarist
  • Jo Kyong-Hui – Guitarist
  • Ri Sol-Lan – Bass
  • Jon Hye Ryon (전혜련) – Bass
  • Merited Artist Kim Yu Kyong (김유경)- Vocals
  • Merited Artist Kim Sol Mi (김설미) – Vocals
  • Merited Artist Ryu Jin A (류진아) – Vocals
  • Pak Mi Kyong (박미경) – Vocals
  • Jong Su Hyang (정수향) – Vocals
  • Pak Son Hyang (박선향) – Vocals
  • Merited Artist Ra Yu Mi (라유미) – Vocals
  • Ri Su Kyong (리수경) – Vocals
  • Ri Myong Hui (리명희) – Vocals
  • Merited Artist Ri Ok-Hwa – Vocals
  • Jo Guk-Hyang – Vocals
  • Kim Hyo-Sim – Vocals
  • Yu Pong-Mi – Vocals
  • Kim Chong-Ye – Vocals
  • People's Actress Kim Ok-Ju – Vocals

In 2017 Hyon Song-wol (현송월), the leader of the band, was appointed to the Central Committee of the Workers' Party.[28] In 2018, she led a four-person team which visited South Korea to discuss arrangements for the Winter Olympics.[31]

Reception

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The band is immensely popular in North Korea, and visitors to the country have reported people dancing to Moranbong Band's songs in the streets and shops closing during television performances.[3]

One reviewer said, "The Moranbong girls are not what you'd expect from an unfashionably totalitarian regime where grey is the new grey. Their skirts are short, the hair is trendy, the music danceable. It could just about pass as a Eurovision entry from Azerbaijan."[32]

Another reviewer said, "We must take care, however, not to see these talented performers dressed in flashy costume as new archetypes for the New Modern Woman in the DPRK. According to Nicola Dibben's theorizing of the female representation in popular music, "It would be hopelessly naïve to declare that such tactics are exclusively empowering in their influence." Rather, the gender division of the performance as a whole—from the stage through the audience space—should be examined for context.[14]

A third commentator said, "If state propaganda is to be believed, the Moranbong Band's first performance was also meant to stimulate production in the textile sector, an important node of which Kim Jong Un and his female companion had visited the day before the ensemble's premiere in Pyongyang."[33] "Consider the jewelry line-up on the Moranbong singers..."[33]

Another commentator said, "If a candidate exists that might represent the edge of a possible NK-pop invasion, it is surely the Moranbong Band, which debuted at a concert for Kim Jong Un in July 2012—not incidentally, the same month in which Psy's "Gangnam Style" was released."[8]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Clara Fontana (May 16, 2015). "Far from the Moran Hill Orchestra..." Daily NK. Retrieved July 9, 2012.
  2. ^ Boehler, Patrick (July 6, 2013). "Moranbong style: North Korea's first girl band may be a sign of change". South China Morning Post.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h Pekka Korhonen (March 4, 2014). "Rock Gospels: Analyzing the Artistic Style of Moranbong Band". Sino-NK. Retrieved April 18, 2015.
  4. ^ Zarya, Valentina (December 11, 2015). "Kim Jong-Un's Girl Band Is Everything You Thought It Would Be". Fortune Magazine.
  5. ^ Dwek, Joel (April 26, 2021). "NORTH KOREA: Moranbong Band - Moranbong Band". 200worldalbums.com. Retrieved October 7, 2024.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Adam Cathcart; Christopher Green; Steven Denney (December 2014). "How Authoritarian Regimes Maintain Domain Consensus: North Korea's Information Strategies in the Kim Jong-un Era" (PDF). The Review of Korean Studies. 17 (2): 145–178. doi:10.25024/review.2014.17.2.005. S2CID 143418729. Retrieved April 15, 2015.
  7. ^ a b c d Daniel Tudor; James Pearson (April 14, 2015). North Korea Confidential: Private Markets, Fashion Trends, Prison Camps, Dissenters and Defectors. Tuttle Publishing. pp. 72–73. ISBN 978-1-4629-1512-5. Retrieved April 15, 2015.
  8. ^ a b Ter Molen, Sherri L. (June 25, 2013). "The Korean Wave's Northern Undertow: Cultural Hybridity and the Moranbong Band". SinoNK.com. Retrieved July 15, 2013.
  9. ^ Korhonen, Pekka (May 20, 2014). "Is He or Is He Not? Political Authority, Media Appearance, and the DPRK Leadership Question". Sino-NK. Retrieved July 30, 2015.
  10. ^ a b The Korea Foundation (March 30, 2013). Korea Focus — September 2012. i-ePUB, Inc. p. 2. ISBN 978-89-86090-89-5. Retrieved April 15, 2015.
  11. ^ a b c The Korea Foundation (March 30, 2013). Korea Focus — October 2012. i-ePUB, Inc. p. 2. ISBN 978-89-86090-90-1. Retrieved April 15, 2015.
  12. ^ Jimin Lee (April 8, 2013). "Moranbong Band: Joseon Style Electronic Music on a New Level". Sino-NK. Retrieved April 18, 2015.
  13. ^ Jae-Jung Suh (2013). Origins of North Korea's Juche: Colonialism, War, and Development. Rowman & Littlefield. p. 26. ISBN 978-0-7391-7658-0.
  14. ^ a b c d Draudt, Darcie; Lee, Jimin (May 3, 2013). "Packaged and Controlled by the Masculine State: Moranbong Band and Gender in New Chosun-Style Performance". SinoNK. Retrieved June 2, 2013.
  15. ^ "Without A Break". YouTube. June 15, 2017.
  16. ^ a b c "Kim Jong Un Appreciates Demonstration Performance of Newly Organized Moranbong Band". Korean Central News Agency. July 7, 2012. Archived from the original on September 10, 2009. Retrieved June 2, 2013.
  17. ^ Samheroyang channel on YouTube
  18. ^ Korhonen, Pekka (May 2, 2015). "2015.04.27". Moranbong Band Discography 2012.07.06 - 2015.04.27. Retrieved July 30, 2015.
  19. ^ a b Cathcart, Adam (May 16, 2015). "Purges, Baekdu, and the Moranbong Band: Data Points around General Hyon". Sino-NK. Retrieved July 30, 2015.
  20. ^ "N. Korea's all-female music band disappears from broadcasts". NK News. September 7, 2015. Retrieved September 9, 2015.
  21. ^ Evens, Stephen (September 9, 2015). "Moranbong, the non-vanishing North Korean band". BBC News Asia. Retrieved September 9, 2015.
  22. ^ Dubuis, Anna (September 8, 2015). "Kim Jong Un's favourite girl band re-emerges after fears over 'disappearance'". The Daily Mirror. Retrieved September 9, 2015.
  23. ^ Griffiths, James (December 9, 2015). "Kim Jong Un is sending his personal girl band to Beijing". CNN. Retrieved December 9, 2015.
  24. ^ Ryall, Julian (December 9, 2015). "Kim Jong-un's pop propaganda girl group to perform in China". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved December 9, 2015.
  25. ^ "N Korean pop band Moranbong ends China goodwill tour". BBC News. December 12, 2015. Retrieved December 13, 2015.
  26. ^ Perlez, Jane Mystery Cloaks a North Korean Pop Band's Canceled Beijing Dates New York Times. December 26, 2015
  27. ^ Blanchard, Ben (December 13, 2015). "North Korean pop band cancels Beijing concert, leaves for home". Reuters. Retrieved December 13, 2015.
  28. ^ a b Hyun-ju, Ock (January 15, 2018). "Hyon Song-wol, Moranbong Band leader and more". The Korea Herald. Retrieved January 30, 2018.
  29. ^ Zwirko, Colin (January 1, 2019). "North Korea rings in new year with midnight concert, drone show". NK News.
  30. ^ 위대한 조국해방전쟁승리 70돐경축 대공연 Grand Performance Given to Celebrate 70th Anniversary of Great War Victory, July 29, 2023, retrieved July 31, 2023
  31. ^ Regan, Helen (January 25, 2018). "Meet Hyon Song Wol, North Korea's Pop Star Turned Diplomat". Time. Retrieved January 30, 2018.
  32. ^ Stanley, Tim (May 29, 2013). "Meet North Korea's new girl band: five girls who just wanna have state-sanctioned fun". The Telegraph. Archived from the original on June 8, 2013. Retrieved June 1, 2013.
  33. ^ a b Cathcart, Adam (August 9, 2013). "Songun Mini-Skirt: Ri Sol-ju, the Moranbong Band, and North Korean Fashion Norms". Sino-NK. Retrieved June 2, 2013.

Further reading

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