Los Angeles Times

A local Kamp for K-pop fans

Festival will bring Monsta X, Kai and more to the Rose Bowl in October.

- By August Brown

SoCal will get a second Kpop mega-festival this October.

Kamp, a new two-day Kpop festival that launched in Singapore in 2019, announced its L.A.-area debut Tuesday. The fest, slated for Oct. 15 and 16 at the Rose Bowl in Pasadena, will bring establishe­d stars like Monsta X and Kai (of Exo and Super M), a long-awaited L.A. return from veterans Super Junior, and rare stateside sets from BamBam and Jeon Somi.

The announceme­nt comes three days before

KCon — the giant fan convention and concert that helped establish K-pop in the U.S. — kicks off in downtown L.A. The Asian pop and hip-hop label 88Rising’s Head in the Clouds festival also returns this weekend to Brookside at the Rose Bowl.

Jason Miller, CEO of Eventim Live Asia, Kamp Global’s partner, says there’s plenty of demand in SoCal for multiple events of this scale.

“L.A. is a unique, diverse market, probably the biggest K-pop market in world,” Miller said. “There’s so much pent-up demand from fans, and there’s interest from acts to tour as much as possible coming out of COVID-19.”

Tickets for Kamp Los Angeles go on sale Friday.

Kamp’s 2019 Singapore debut — with Super Junior, NCT 127, Stray Kids, Momoland

and GFriend on the bill — quickly establishe­d the Korea-based entertainm­ent company as a global player in the K-pop arena. Miller, who ran Live Nation’s Asia division before joining Eventim, said that the touring market for K-pop in America has evolved from fan convention­s and an L.A./ New York axis into longer runs in more markets.

With BTS’ J-Hope headlining Lollapaloo­za, 2NE1’s surprise reunion at Coachella and a new album from Blackpink likely heralding a big swing at U.S. arenas and festivals, this could be the season when K-pop fully meshes with the broader U.S. festival scene.

“The U.S. is a tremendous opportunit­y for festivals and touring,” Miller said. “Management companies recognize the need to spend more time here; you can’t just play New York and L.A. and expect it to be enough. Right now, six of the top 10 selling albums in the U.S. are K-pop, that’s a crazy number. All acts recognize they need to do more touring here.” It’s never easy to debut a new festival, especially in a COVID-weary, inflations­piraled summer. Miller hopes that Kamp’s lineup, deep with rare sets from acts without much of a recent U.S. touring history, will be enough to make it destinatio­n-worthy for the K-pop faithful.

“We wanted to expose these young acts to a big audience alongside older acts and acts no one had the opportunit­y to see before,” Miller said. “The sheer passion of this fan base means they go see acts not once, not twice, but as many times as possible. There’s definitely more than enough room for more than one K-pop festival in L.A.”

 ?? Owen Sweeney Invision/AP ?? MONSTA X perform in concert during the Q102 iHeartRadi­o Jingle Ball 2019 in Philadelph­ia.
Owen Sweeney Invision/AP MONSTA X perform in concert during the Q102 iHeartRadi­o Jingle Ball 2019 in Philadelph­ia.

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