It's been tricky to figure out because I don't have any soundclips or text to go by. I can just tell you the song has a sad mood to it, love song I guess. I'm not good at categorizing songs but I don't think it would fall under pop, sorry. I know there is r/NameThatSong/ but I just thought people here would still be the best place to ask.

Before tablets, PCs, and smartphones were introduced in Korea, children played with games that are related to the nature around them, such as flowers, trees, pebbles, animals, and insects. There are numerous Korean traditional folk songs based on nature, and Jamjari kkongkkong ( ) is one such example for kids.


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Hi, I'm looking for an old disco song that I know for a fact I really enjoyed when I listened to it but I lost it somehow, here are a few pointers:

~ probably 80s 90s

~ the video has neon lights and hand puppets

~ male artist

I keep hearing this sound on TikTok and I never bother to search for the actual song. It seems like a k-drama ost but I'm not exactly sure. It has one woman and one man. The woman sings a line and the man sings another line and then the woman sings a line that rhymes with her previous line and then the man sings another line that rhymes with his previous line. ? I honestly don't know how to describe it and my friend said that it might have been akmu but I'm not sure? Each line was somewhat short.

I feel like titles play a really important part in the first impressions of a song, and I always thought that knowing both Korean and English titles made it a lot more fun for me to interpret and imagine the lyrics.

Hi, i've been trying to find out what is the song title for Pink Lie EP 3 at the end credits. I've tried using Shazam, SoundHound and AHA Music but unable to find. Also unable to use Naver due to location issues. Please help thanks!

I have made a fun Boom Cards flashlight game for this song if you are interested in extending this lesson. Students shine a flashlight through different landscapes and landmarks in Korea to find the butterflies. Once they find a butterfly, they can listen to and/or sing the song!

An advocate of performing arts and showcasing young artists in their communities, Kim has founded a non-profit organization, Glow Music. In 2022, she presented piano solo pieces by Korean composers to audiences in Cincinnati, and is planning future Glow Music to highlight songs from Eastern languages. Kim has also developed a passion for teaching. She maintained a private studio in Cincinnati and has taught piano group classes and private lessons as a graduate assistant at CCM. Kim has also presented her pedagogy research regionally and nationally at the National Conference of Keyboard Pedagogy (Frances Clark Center) and Music Teachers National Association Conference. Most recently, her article on asynchronous teaching video was featured in American Music Teacher, a peer-reviewed journal of MTNA.

A very deservedly popular composition consisting of five contrasting variations on a lyrical Korean folk song. Stated first in unison by the woodwinds, the material is brilliantly explored and developed. The percussion section is used extensively, both rhythmically and melodically.

This folk melody will be familiar to many directors - it was used by John Barnes Chance in his Variations on a Korean Folk Song. The song is called Arirang, and it's a lovely tune in a legato setting as arranged by Mark Williams. A lot of different percussion instruments are used to create the indigenous sounds of the Far East, although the texture is always light and delicate. Your students will develop their phrasing and melodic skills when they play this composition.

Students can get into groups and change the movements of Santoki to include these traits. You will probably have to sing the song at a slower tempo for this to work. They can practice the moves to the music in the YouTube video first.

There is more than just one Korean alphabet song! In this article, we will go over what a Korean alphabet song is and introduce you to a few different songs so that you can choose for yourself your favorite Korean alphabet song!

Singing these alphabet songs, many of which were similar to a Korean alphabet song, helped us tremendously as children when we were still trying to learn the alphabet. And now it can do the same for us in learning the Korean alphabet, too!

Just as listening to a Korean song is helpful in learning vocabulary, using a Korean alphabet song may be helpful in learning the Korean alphabet faster. It can also be a fun additional way to do so!

This is the same alphabet song as the first one linked in this article. However, this video is directed in particular at foreigners learning Korean. It encourages you to also sing along, so it may work great as a quick practice to memorize each alphabet and how to pronounce them.

Do you think a little bit of movement helps you with learning new things, such as the Korean language learning? Or are you simply perhaps eager to get some moving done after hours in front of the computer learning Korean? Then this Korean alphabet song from the Global Language Network is the perfect solution for you!

This song is an anthem of Han. Like Han, Arirang is embedded in the blood of the Korean people. Both Han and Arirang describe the sorrow of the Korean people, but also show the hope for happiness and peace. Like Han, Arirang has many different interpretations and meanings, and can easily be molded to fit a certain feeling in Korean society. For example, in the 1926 film about a Korean freedom fighter, Arirang describes the longing for freedom and hope to be reunited with their freedom again. Arirang uses the idea and emotions of Han and puts it into a song to be used when the Korean people need it.

"Hong's Korean Market Song" is a song sung by Bobby Santiago and Mr. Hong in the episode "Bo Bo Business". This song was part of a commercial Bobby created for Mr. Hong's Korean Market to spite Hector for rejecting his ideas to help the mercado.

Hyangga was a form poetical 'country song,' distinct from contemporary Chinese songs, which were written in the Silla and Goryeo kingdoms of ancient Korea between the 7th and 10th century CE. The indigenous songs cover such topics as love, loss, and Buddhist devotion. The majority are written in couplets arranged in four-line stanzas with each line having four syllables. The ninth line, where there is one, invariably begins with an interjection, raising the speaker's intonation and signalling the finale of the song which usually contains a wish, command, or exclamation. The poems were designed to be sung accompanied by music and dancing. Only 25 hyangga survive, but they were once widely written and performed, including by such famous figures as Won Hyo, the Buddhist philosopher-monk. All translations are taken from A History of Korean Literature edited by P.H. Lee.

'Ode to Yangji' (Pungyo) is by an unknown poet and dated to c. 635 CE. It praises one Yangji, a monk master-artist credited with creating the massive statue of Buddha at Yongmyo Monastery. The song reminds of the Buddhist belief that all things perish and good deeds should be done while possible.

'Ode to Knight Kipa' (Chan Kiparang ka) was composed c. 742-765 CE and is a song of praise for Kipa, a member of the aristocratic youth group, the hwarang. It was written by Master Chungdam.

'Meeting with Bandits' (Ujok ka) was composed by the monk Yongjae c. 785-798 CE and describes his encounter with a band of 60 bandits while in the mountains. Fortunately, the thieves knew of Yongjae's talents and asked him to compose a song. So moved were they by the composition that the bandits shaved their heads and became monks themselves.

'Song of Choyong' (Choyong ka), composed in 879 CE, is perhaps the most famous of all hyangga. The title character is the son of the Dragon King of the Eastern Sea who one night after a party returns home to find his beautiful wife being seduced by the Spirit of Smallpox. Choyong was forgiving, though, and in return, the spirit promised never to enter a house which had a portrait of our hero on the door. Choyong has been identified as a shaman for his calm yet magical success in dealing with the spirit, while the latter may be a metaphor for the ills of the world. This is the song which Choyong sang so charmingly to the spirit so that he left in peace:

The remaining surviving hyangga all come from the 'Ten Vows of Bodhisattva Samantabhadra' (actually eleven songs) collection written by the great poet-scholar monk Master Kyunyo (923-973 CE). The most celebrated of these calls for the turning of the dharma wheel. In the last couplet, the moon is used, as was typical in Buddhism, as a metaphor for enlightenment.

Park and Kim partnered in the project for the shared work and dedication to the art song traditions in Korea. Park and Kim, both originally from Korea, are both acclaimed sopranos and noted pedagogues in vocal studies. Their book, Korean Art Songs: An Anthology and Guide for Performance and Study, comes in two volumes.

Volume 1 includes two articles on the Korean art song tradition: "The Birth and the History of Korean Arts Song" by Kyung Chan Min (translated by Park and Kim) and "Lyric Song and the Birth of the Korean Nation" by Kathy Brous. The volume includes a valuable resource on Korean lyric diction not previously available. Volume 1 features eight songs with text, translation, International Phonetic Alphabet transcriptions, and scores in the original keys. Volume 2 features 11 more songs including the well-known Korean folk-tune, "Ari Arirang," set in the art song tradition.

The authors note in the preface that the vast majority of Korean art song tradition are composition based on the Western music tradition. These songs are written in a variety of compositional styles that demonstrate the highest level of artistry. They note that, "the biggest barrier for the non-Koreans to access the Korean art song literature would be the language." 17dc91bb1f

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