HowL


WOW…Im anticipating :) , and also the OST – the producer is HowL :) …I wonder will they make another MV – with just the scenes from the drama although I dont mind the current version that they are planning to release in 2 weeks’ time.

Jo Sung-mo Returns with “Garden of Wind”

Singer Jo Sung-mo finished serving his mandatory two years in the military and returns to the spotlight with the theme song of the SBS TV drama “Garden of Wind,” set to air in September.

His military service ended in May, and he was requested to sing a Lee Seung-hwan original as the theme song for the drama. K-pop artist HowL is in charge of the overall production of the drama’s original soundtrack, which will be released online around September 10th.

“He will start recording next week, and the music video for the theme song will star Jo Sung-mo,” said Jo Sung-mo’s agent.

A period piece about the Joseon dynasty’s well-renowned artist Kim Heung-do, “Garden of Wind” stars Park Shin-yang and Moon Geun-young. The drama is set to air on September 24th.

Source: KBS Global

This week have quite a number of new songs. HowL Vol 2, Wheesung new single and his collaboration with Moon Ji Eun, Suga Shikao, etc.

Note: Please do not hotlink files

(more…)

Singer: Mose

Album Title: It’s Love, Love…

Release Date: 6th March 2007

Tracklist:

01 사랑이죠..사랑 / It’s Love, Love…
02 내 사랑 / My Love
03 같은 맘 같은 곳에 (Duet with Bae Seul Gi) / Same Heart, Same Place
04 우린 그런 사랑해요 / Let’s Love Like That
05 선물 / Present
06 기억하나요 / Do You Remember?
07 사랑해서 웃는 나 / I Who Shed Tears Because I Love
08 소중한 사람 (Feat. Jung Jae Wook, HowL, The Name) / Precious Person
09 우리 행복하자 / Let’s Be Happy
10 내가 사랑하는 법 / My Rules To Love

Track #2 is Title Track.

Wow! Look at Track #8 – It has all the singers that I like. I like the album cover – it has that soft fantasy artsy cover. It remind me of the Impressionist paintings.

Source: z-degrees.net forums (korean tracklist), Melon.org (cover), edward1849 and purpletiger86 @ soompi.com (translated tracklist)

Stars from Korean soap opera TV shows will be featured in “K-Drama Music Festival II,” at 6 p.m. March 10, at the Waikiki Shell.

Seoul favorites Jung Jae Wook, Howl, J and Tak Jae-Hoon will co-star in a musical program to be presented by Beauty Touch, with part of the proceeds benefiting the Kalihi Education Coalition and the Korean Cultural Center.

Howl and J, known for their hit song “Perhaps Love” from the soap show “Palace,” will headline.

Reserved seats are $100, $75 and $50, on sale at the Blaisdell Center box office and Ticketmaster outlets, including Times Supermarket locations.

Source: The Honolulu Advertiser

ADVANCE TICKET SALES:
$100 tickets for the front center section will go on sale outside Don Quijote’s (same place where Kim Bum Soo tickets were sold)
on Saturday Jan. 27 and Sunday Jan. 28 from 11:00 a.m. till 4:00 p.m.

Other ticket prices are $75 and $50
Those may be purchased at Ticketmaster or Neal Blaisdell, or any Times Supermarket beginning on Feb. 3.

Only $100 concert tickets will be sold on Sat. and Sun.
You will receive a voucher to claim your ticket at Don Quijote’s Beauty Touch beginning on Mar. 3.

If you do not purchase your $100 tickets on Saturday or Sunday–
$100 tickets may still be available at Beauty Touch, Kaheka.

Limited Seats for Dinner

Meet and Greet Dinner
Meet and take photos of FOUR talented singers!!

Tickets will also be sold on Saturday Jan. 27 and Sunday Jan. 28 from 11:00 a.m. till 4:00 p.m. for $100 each.

The dinner will be held on Friday, March 9 at 6:00 p.m. at the Sheraton Waikiki

Source: yujah52 @ soompi.com forums (HowL official thread)

For all HowL fans in Hawaii….

I wonder when his 2nd album will be out … very hard to find news on HowL.


The lovely Baek Ji Young (left), (right top) veteran Lee Seung Chul, (right middle) Park Hyo Shin, (bottom right) Sung Si Kyung.

It seems that digital technology has met its analog counterpart.

The current ballad trend in the Korean music industry is sizzling as the music charts, both on and offline, are flooded with songs that tell stories. Ballads have been on the rise for two or three years, but the trend has reached a new level. Medium tempo ballads are steadily becoming more popular, and stars from the genre’s past, as well as new balladeers, are gaining ground with a vengeance.

Ballads have always been a big part of the Korean music scene along with dance, hip-hop and rock, but now they are replacing all other genres on the charts. Seasonal drifts of the past, including dance music being popular during the summer, are fading.

Last year, only the Turtle’s dance number, “Airplane,” managed to stay in the No. 1 spot for five weeks beginning in late August. SG Wannabe’s “My Love,” Baek Ji-young’s “Will Not Love Again,” Lee Seung-chul’s “Calling,” Sung Si-kyung’s “On the Street” and “Black Glasses” by Eru were all super players in last year’s ballad craze.

Even singers who are labeled as dance music artists are joining in. The dance music group Typhoon released their ballad “I Will Wait” earlier this year. Former members of idol groups have also released ballad singles including Sohn Ho-young, a former member of the boy band god, and his single “Crying” and Gan Mi-yeon, a former member of the girl band BabyVox, who released “Old-Fashioned Woman.” Lee Jae-hoon, from the group Cool, also released the sentimental single “Illusion.”

The new wave of balladeers ― Park Hyo-shin, Lee Ki-chan and Tei ― have all taken advantage of this trend and released full-length albums “Memories Resemble Love,” “Beautiful Woman” and “The Same Pillow” respectively, which reviewers said have taken hip-hop and rock undertones and softened them to fit a mellower sound.

Many experts attribute this shift to the change in how people buy music ― from record stores to online. With a boom in producing digital single albums that feature one or two songs, there has been a tendency for music producers to concentrate on making mostly ballads because they are easier to sell.

“Ballads are the most accessible musical form for Koreans, as they like strong melody lines, accentuated choruses and sentimental lyrics,” said Kim Seung-hyeon, a manager in the marketing team at Bugs, an Internet music download service. “As the market for music is in decline, ballads, which are often seen as the most marketable genre in Korea, are chosen,” he added.

Another important reason for the trend is music being used as a sort of accessory for personal spaces online, such as in mini-homepages (in the Korean portal Cyworld) and on blogs.

Music is also used for ringtones and other mobile phone services. In this case, ballads are preferred as consumers want a comfortable, softer song that allows visitors (or callers) to concentrate on something besides the background music.

Suh Hae-sik, the director of Muz, another online music site, commented: “For background music on mini-homepages and for bell tones, soft ballads are favored, much more than other genres. Many music producers say that the ballad genre is the only money-making genre for this ‘music accessory trend.’”

It seems that digital technology has met its analog counterpart. According to a statistic by Muz, the top-10 background music singles for mini-homepages last year are almost all ballads, including Vibe’s “That Man That Woman,” “My Love” by SG Wannabe and HowL’s “Is This Love.” Among the top 100 songs, 70 percent were ballads.

This solitary long-running trend of ballad music is likely to continue as the music market moves online.

“Record producers are now asking songwriters to write more ballads,” said Lee Chang-hui of CJ Music.

A songwriter who wished to remain anonymous said, “A producer asked me to make the last part of a song last a specific time period to fit this trend so that it can gain popularity in the digital contents market.”

There are voices of concern regarding this shift, saying that quality does not meet the rise in quantity of ballad songs.

Music critic Kim Jakga (a pen name, jakga meaning author) said: “The music industry is targeting the online digital market. Songs are now made to have a strong impact in a short time. Therefore, ballad singers’ vocals are emphasized, oftentimes accompanied by melodramatic melodies and vocal techniques that seem to scream and cry rather than sing. This is not the way our industry should turn.”

By Jung Hyun-mok JoongAng Ilbo [jainnie@joongang.co.kr]

Source: JoongAng Ilbo

I 100% whole-heartedly recommend all the songs mentioned in this article. I love Korean ballads :) . There were some songs from the above list that I do not have their MVs like SG’s My Love (don’t seem to come across this mv even though I have collected almost ALL of their MVs), Lee Seung Chul’s Calling (hmm…don’t remembered this title also), Typhoon’s I Will Wait and Gan Mi Yeon’s Old Fashioned Woman. XD maybe time to go and search for them.

List of ballad songs mentioned in this article:

  • SG Wannabe – My Love
  • Baek Ji Young – Will Not Love Again – this is the MV starring the late Jung Da-Bin
  • Lee Seung Chul – Calling
  • Eru – Black Glasses – this is the first song that I like from his Vol 2.
  • Sung Si Kyung – On the Street – he filmed this in Japan
  • Typhoon – I Will Wait
  • Son Ho Young – Crying – his album is worth a listen
  • Gan Mi Yeon – Old-fashioned Woman
  • Lee Jae Hoon – Illusion/Fantasy
  • Park Hyo Shin – Memories Resemble Love – download MV here
  • Tei – Same Pillow – download MV here
  • Lee Ki Chan – Beautiful Woman
  • Vibe – That Man, That Woman – the MV has Jo Hyun Jae and Kim Ji Soo and was like an extension to their Romance movie.
  • HowL – Is This Love? – hmm… I think this song is that duet song with J for Goong theme song called “Perhaps Love”.

An album for ballad lovers.

HowL - Transparent Blue - CD Cover Front

I didn’t “discover” him through music videos compared to my other new (or old) singers’ discovery. I discovered him when I downloaded his album via z-degrees. His album didn’t make a big impact on me until I watched “Goong” where his song was constantly featured in the drama (track #3 “Parrot”). I then listened to his album again and well, I admitted not paying enough attention to it – which I should have. I love this album. It was a very good ballad album.

Now, wouldn’t you be curious why he picked “HowL” as his artist name? His real name is Kim Dong-Wook (gosh O_O, now only I realized the name “Dong-Wook” always appeared in my artists list – Lee Dong-Wook, Choi Dong-Wook and now Kim Dong-Wook!) The name “HowL” was from a novel by Japanese writer Murakami Ryu.

When “Goong” used 2 of his songs (“Parrot” and “Perhaps Love” – a duet with J, which was released in “Goong” OST), his became very popular as both songs topped the chart at the same time. He has 2 other songs which was used in OSTs – track #5 “Deo eesang” which was used in “A Love To Kill” drama (starring Bi and Shim Mina) and track #4 “Eel nyeon jjae” / “For A Year” which was used in the Korean anime version of “I’m Sorry, I Love You”.

Most of the songs are mellow, some a bit sad and of course, all of them are ballads. I like a lot of the tracks in this album (refer to my ratings); especially track #2 to #5 – those four are killer ballads (^_^). The last 4 tracks (track # 9 to #12) were good ballad songs, too.

I like the album design – which was in light blue color, like the sky. It fits the album title perfectly. The front of the CD has his name “HowL”, in Korean, etched on it.

Singer: HowL
Album Title: Transparent Blue
Released: 15 November 2005
Label: Sponge Entertainment
Genre: Ballad

Track List:
01 Monologue / Intro *****
02 Go Jeeb *****
03 Aeng Moo Sae / Parrot *****
04 Eel nyeon jjae / For a Year *****
05 Deo eesang *****
06 Keu raett ji, Keu raett eott ji ****
07 Keu rae yo ***
08 Jan so ree ****
09 Hon Jat Mal *****
10 Kyeo ool sarang *****
11 Amooree *****
12 Een Yeon *****

Music Video from this album:
01 Aeng Moo Sae
02 Eel nyeon jjae – “I’m Sorry I love You” Korean Anime

Album Pictures: