Gulf News

Psy says ‘no more Gangnam Style’

Korean pop star is happy being just another artist

- Angnam Style PSY-Da,

Gstar Psy acknowledg­ed on Monday that he could never repeat the phenomenal global success of his 2012 hit, but said he was perfectly happy being “just another” K-pop artist.

The quirky South Korean singer was catapulted to unlikely internatio­nal stardom after the Gangnam Style music video, with its invisible horse-riding dance, went viral.

The song — a satirical take on the luxurious lifestyle of residents in Seoul’s glitzy Gangnam district — remains the most-watched video of all time on YouTube, with more than 2.4 billion views.

The 37-year-old singer said the success of the song and the expectatio­ns that came with it were sometimes difficult to cope with.

“The pressure and stress was simply too huge,” he told a press conference in Seoul ahead of the launch of his new album, Chiljip

on Tuesday. Asked if he imagined another global hit, Psy shook his head.

“No chance,” he said. “I don’t think something like Gangnam Style will ever happen again.”

“The sheer weight of Gangnam was so heavy, I don’t even go to Gangnam anymore,” he joked.

Chiljip PSY-Da, which means “This Is PSY’s Seventh Album” in English, comes about a year and a half after the release of his single Gentleman.

STILL DANCING

It’s his first album since 2012’s PSY 6. It contains nine songs including Daddy and Bell Bottoms — both dance tunes.

PSY’s new album includes songs from various genres including dance music, hip hop and punk.

He said he tried to include many emotions including happiness, anger, sadness, joy, love, hatred and greed, as he had done in his previous albums.

“Because this is an album that retains my continued desire as a lyric writer who wants to try things other than love songs in a movie-like way, there are several genres,” he said.

Before Gangnam Style conquered the globe, Psy had already been an establishe­d star at home for more than a decade, famous for provocativ­e lyrics and rambunctio­us stage performanc­es.

BACK TO BASICS

Some fans at home felt that the singer lost his edge after travelling the world.

Psy admitted that he had found himself trying too hard to please a global audience and vowed that his new album — his seventh — marked a return to “his roots”.

“While I was writing songs, I often found myself wondering, ‘will this be as good as Gangnam Style? Or what if foreign fans don’t understand this lyric?’” he said.

“It took me a while to force such thoughts out of my mind,” he said, adding he would be perfectly content being “just another K-pop artist” for a while.

 ?? Photo by AFP ?? Psy promotes his seventh album, Chiljip PSY-Da, in
Seoul, on Monday.
Photo by AFP Psy promotes his seventh album, Chiljip PSY-Da, in Seoul, on Monday.

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