The Guardian (USA)

One to watch: NewJeans

- Laura Snapes

When K-pop newcomers NewJeans released their superb single Cookie last August – an effortless combinatio­n of Jersey club and Ariana Grande-cool R&B – fans immediatel­y highlighte­d the innuendo in the girl band’s lyrics. “Looking at my cookie/ Do you ever smell it different/ What if a bite isn’t enough?” they sing in Korean. The five-piece’s agency, Ador, released an unintentio­nally comic statement saying it had consulted “numerous doctors in English literature, interprete­rs and native speakers” who confirmed that “cookie is not widely used sexual slang”. So that’s that!

The vehement denial comes in part because NewJeans are young, their ages ranging from 14 to 18 – which, if we’re talking about age inappropri­ateness, could be seen as a way to reap maximum value from a harddrille­d K-pop group before they become jaded twentysome­things ( just watch the bleak Netflix documentar­y Blackpink: Light Up the Sky to see the latter in action). Although Hanni, Haerin, Minji, Danielle Marsh and Hyein were formed by an industry stalwart of K-pop girl groups, their launch was novel: they landed music-first, without the usual months of teasing. What’s more, they eschew having a leader so they can share equal prominence – and they cowrite their songs.

It worked: in less than a year they have become a chart-topping, award-winning, record-breaking behemoth. Earlier this month they swept the Korean music awards, winning best K-pop album and best K-pop song (for their self-titled debut EP and single Attention respective­ly). The important part is that NewJeans’ songs deserve the hype: they are sleek and lethally hooky, yet playful and teeming with retro synths and experiment­al flourishes (thanks to undergroun­d producers Jinsu Park and 250). Worth a bite, for sure.

 ?? Photograph: ADOR ?? ‘Record-breaking behemoth’: NewJeans.
Photograph: ADOR ‘Record-breaking behemoth’: NewJeans.

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