SuperM Brings The Future Of K-pop To Madison Square Garden
the opening time I saw Taemin perform at Madison Square Garden, we were both babies. Relatively speaking. It was October 2011, and I was 22, fresh out of college and working my first media job; he was 18, already three years into his idol career because the fresh-faced main dancer and youngest member of
SHINee, one of South Korea's most promising boy groups. He moved with precision (in white skinny jeans, no much less) on the SM Town Live stage, his round face and shaggy blond bowl cut
bobbing to the beat of the group's early hits: their smooth R&B debut "Replay," the frenetic "Ring Ding Dong," and the thrilling, iconic "Lucifer." My memory from that night is a little bit hazy — 2011 feels like a lifetime ago and, admittedly, I was very distracted by the mere presence of SHINee's older, more arresting members Jonghyun and Key — nevertheless I remember the overwhelming feeling of being in an arena full of people who were witnessing history.
Finally, K-pop was being celebrated indoor New York City's most iconic venue, a significant symptom of the industry's growing global influence at the time. We were years away from K-pop
topping U.S. Charts and dominating social media eats, yet that moment felt like the starting of something.
On Tuesday night (November 19), more than eight years soon after SM Town Live gave me a glimpse into the future, I saw Taemin perform at MSG again — and he and his categorize mates pushed the limits even further. This time, he took the stage as a member of
SuperM, the latest supergroup from Korean powerhouse SM Entertainment. Dubbed the "Avengers of K-pop," SuperM is an ambitious project that combines the best talents from SM's most famed male groups: SHINee's Taemin; EXO's Baekhyun and Kai; NCT 127's Taeyong and Mark; and Chinese categorize WayV's Ten and Lucas. The risk has began to pay off for SM and Capitol Records; SuperM
debuted at the best of the
Billboard 200 albums chart with the release of their self-titled EP in October.
Courtesy of SM Entertainment SuperM members from left to right: Mark, Lucas, Taeyong, Taemin, Baekhyun, Kai, and Ten
At its core SuperM is comprised of seven singular artists, and their
We Are the Future Live tour proved as much with a set list consisting of sort performances — including the boisterous lead single "
Jopping" and a unreleased new song, the flirtatious "Dangerous Woman" — and solo stages for each member. It was no surprise that immediately after initial their tight 90-minute set with the sweeping electro-pop song "I Can't Stand The Rain" — a sparkling B-side track that combines established Korean drums with Western beats — SuperM exited the dark stage, leaving only Taemin behind.
At just 26 years old, Taemin is the senior member of the categorize, not by age (Baekhyun, 27, is older and the group-appointed leader of SuperM) however rather in experience. SHINee debuted in 2008, and Taemin has since become one of the industry's most pioneering solo artists, known for his fluid fashion and genre-defying music. The sudden appearance of his silhouette on the MSG stage ignited the arena in deafening screams (my own screams included). He performed his 2014 solo debut single "Danger," an electro-pop banger, plus a piece of his sweeping 2016 single "Goodbye" (otherwise known by its Japanese title "Sayonara Hitori"). This mini-set encapsulated what makes Taemin the performer of his generation; his movements are both soft and electrifying — the epitome of power and grace in one petite package. The floppy-haired teen who once glided across the MSG stage alongside his SHINee categorize mates was right now commanding the hallowed arena all by himself, and in a sheer black blouse.
Each artist had a chance to shine on their own, proving that SuperM is more than the sum of its individual parts. As soon as rapper Taeyong took the stage next to perform his new solo track "GTA," I required several minutes to recalibrate my senses. He was wearing a glittery silver mask; it sparkled under the sharp, red lights. It was a disorienting efficiency — just the way the 24-year-old leader of NCT 127 intended. He is, right considering that, a handsomely disorienting performer striking features along with a breakneck flow. He attacked beat because the choreography highlighted the theatrics of the efficiency, which ended with Taeyong being physically dragged off stage.
Courtesy of SM EntertainmentChinese performer Lucas also leaned into the spectacle of it all, accountable for the night's most meme-able stage. His solo song, "Bass Go Boom," is bright and chaotic. It's everything that fans have come to love about Lucas since the 20-year-old rapper made his NCT debut on 2018's standout release "Boss." As he shimmied his way across the stage shouting, whenever THAT BASS GO BOOM," vibrant,
wildly expressive images of Lucas dancing flooded the screen in back of him. Think Lisa Frank meets NCT-stan Twitter.
Meanwhile, Mark, also 20, forewent theatrics for a mesmerizing solo efficiency, just him and the mic. The Canada-born rapper is known by fans as one of the hardest-working artists at SM. Not only is he an important segment of SuperM — as a rapper although also as their assigned English language speaker — nevertheless he's also a mobile member of NCT 127 and has participated in NCT's various other units. He's been training with SM since he was 13 years old, however the Mark on this stage came with a new energy, raw and gritty. Watching him perform his solo track, "Talk About," for a sold-out crowd felt like witnessing a teenage Taemin all over again — a symbolic passing of the torch from one SM prodigy to another.
"We're all big fans of each other," Mark tells the audience throughout one of their earlier breaks, right after Baekhyun performed a snippet of Taemin's "Danger." "Baekhyun sings Taemin's songs a lot. We sing Baekhyun's songs a lot. We're really big fans of each other, so it's really cool that we're all doing this together."
To his credit, Baekhyun understands what he's doing. As EXO's — and right now SuperM's — cheeky main vocalist, he understands how to drive fans wild. Confident and care-free, he was the night's most comfortable performer, singing two tracks from his first solo EP released earlier this year: the playful R&B B-side "Betcha" and his slinky "UN Village." The power of SuperM, and of K-pop's growth in the U.S. At large, can be best described by one scene: 19,000 fans screaming the name of a location (in this case, "Hannam-dong UN Village hill," per the song’s lyrics) 7,000 miles away from MSG.
Courtesy of SM Entertainment SuperM at Madison Square Garden on November 19, 2019
His EXO order mate Kai brought his own sensual sensibilities to the stage with his solo song "Confession" — a performance-driven hip-hop track that showcased both his versatility as an artist and his oiled-up abs. It's easy to mention that he oozes sensuality (he does), although he's more than his sex appeal; Kai is an impactful dancer whose power comes from his subtleties. He makes grinding the floor throughout the seductive "No Manners" look effortless.
Nevertheless once it comes to SuperM, no song signifies the group's potential quite like Thai member Ten's "New Heroes." Ten is an ethereal performer; his movements are fluid and delicate. As his song moves into its eruptive chorus, the aspirational lyrics put the SuperM project in an entirely new perspective. "Through all the fears / Taste of the sweat and dirt / We all live for the day / They'll be screaming our names," he sings, his crystalline voice filling the arena.
Soon considering that, the label "Avengers of K-pop" comes at a personalized price. The expectations surrounding SuperM are massive. They are piece of a larger wave of artists
bringing Korean culture the masses, but as K-pop keeps it up and continues to forge previously uncharted ground in the West, every milestone comes with the question: "How will they top
this?" Mark hinted at this while in the night. "I'm not going to lie," he mentioned to the crowd. "I was really nervous about performing today." They take this responsibility seriously. Taemin added, "We prepared hard for this show."
But, at the end of the day, you don't become “living legends,” as Ten's lyrics recommend, through hard work alone. The reason these seven performers were chosen goes far in back of their aptitude and skill; they're charismatic and personable. Mark's earnestness is piece of his brand, as is Kai's brotherly affection toward younger members Mark and Lucas an aspect of his. While SuperM assembled seven singular artists, the group's real power comes from these smaller interactions — the way an embarrassed Taemin runs away, his hands at his sides, soon after failing to throw an autographed ball more than two feet; and why Baekhyun sneaks finger-hearts to the camera throughout "With You."
Getty Images SuperM at their global press conference at Capitol Records in Los Angeles, California, in October 2019
MSG marked the last stop of
We Are the Future Live in 2019. The tour will resume in early 2020 soon following the members finish their other end-of-year schedules (which features a long-awaited EXO comeback for Baekhyun and Kai). With that, hopefully, comes new music and fresh stages. There is lots of pressure on SuperM's shoulders — the future of their firm and the future of the K-pop industry as a whole. Although you do not get to perform at MSG on myth alone, and SuperM proved that they have the capacity to play even bigger stages.
Every superhero origin story needs a sequel, and one may already be in the works. "It's not the end, right?" Taeyong instructed them crowd. "Come spring, we'll be back."
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