USA TODAY US Edition

Blackpink conquering U.S. charts

K-pop girl band from Korea has big potential.

- Maeve McDermott

BTS isn’t the only K-pop group breaking records stateside.

While the phenom boy band was making headlines performing on “Saturday Night Live” last weekend, Blackpink – a four-member, all-female group also hailing from Korea – was celebratin­g their career-best week of U.S. successes.

If U.S. listeners aren’t acquainted with Blackpink by now, that’s likely to change. With the group conquering U.S. charts faster than any female K-pop act in history, Blackpink has the potential to become one of the country’s biggest girl groups, period.

Blackpink’s big week included a performanc­e at Coachella on Friday, simulcast on a billboard in Times Square.

The first K-pop women to play the festival, the group earned coveted second-line billing on the poster that splashed their name higher than Kacey Musgraves, Ella Mai and several other of the day’s names who likely were more familiar to many U.S. listeners.

On Monday, they made Billboard chart history by landing their new EP “Kill This Love” at No. 24 on the Billboard 200 chart with 19,000 album units.

Their single of the same name came in at No. 41 on the Hot 100, the highestcha­rting debut ever by a K-pop girl group.

Blackpink’s U.S. momentum, in which they burst onto the scene seemingly in the blink of an eye – though the group has been around since 2016 — is a fortuitous combinatio­n of industry support, changing listening habits and the group’s own special sauce.

Blackpink’s four members – 21-yearold Lisa, 22-year-old Rose, 23-year-old Jennie and 24-year-old Jisoo – are breathtaki­ng performers, executing intense choreograp­hy while rap-singing largely Korean lyrics for songs that sound made for U.S. radio regardless of the language barrier.

The women’s talents are backed by Interscope, which signed Blackpink in 2018, partnering with the South Korean music company YG Entertainm­ent to manage the group and produce and release their music.

Blackpink has netted a string of successes since signing with Interscope, from their recent chart momentum to their coming arena tour of the United States, which kicked off Wednesday in Los Angeles.

Thanks to their establishe­d social media fan army, listeners around the world are paying attention.

In addition to their streaming-driven charts achievemen­ts, the group’s “Kill This Love” video, released April 4, broke a YouTube record previously set by Ariana Grande’s “thank u next” by racking up 56.7 million views in its first 24 hours.

Like BTS’ own influentia­l fan base, that floods social media with updates and praise for the boy band’s every move, Blackpink has powerful backing from its own internatio­nal cadre of fans, who call themselves “Blinks.”

Blackpink, like BTS, has landed huge musical achievemen­ts in the U.S. while not yet managing to land massive breakthrou­gh singles that would earn them mainstream radio airplay.

But as the past few years’ proliferat­ion of Spanish-language singles on pop radio has shown, listeners in the U.S. are more open than ever to hits that take cues from different languages and cultures.

Whether Blackpink will land a “Despacito”-level hit before BTS remains to be seen.

But if the group’s four women and their fans have anything to say about it, the title of the biggest girl group in America may yet be theirs for the taking.

 ?? RICH FURY/GETTY IMAGES FOR COACHELLA ?? Blackpink performs last week at the Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival in Indio, California. The group was the first K-pop female act to play the event, a performanc­e that was simulcast in Times Square.
RICH FURY/GETTY IMAGES FOR COACHELLA Blackpink performs last week at the Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival in Indio, California. The group was the first K-pop female act to play the event, a performanc­e that was simulcast in Times Square.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States