Ok-pop star J-Hope of boy band BTS will carry out this month as the ultimate present on the annual Lollapalooza present in Chicago, turning into the primary South Korean artist to headline a significant music competition within the US. organizers mentioned on Tuesday.
J-Hope, 28, who debuted with BTS in 2013 and launched his first solo mixtape 5 years later, is because of finish the four-day Lollapalooza competition with a efficiency on the primary stage on July 31, in line with Reside. nationwide leisure.
J-Hope’s invoice comes only a month after the seven members of BTS (brief for the Korean phrase Bangtan Sonyeondan, or “Bulletproof Boys”) mentioned they had been taking a break from music ventures as a gaggle to pursue solo tasks.
Reside Nation additionally introduced that five-member South Korean boy band Tomorrow X Collectively, also called TXT, is about to carry out at Lollapalooza on July 30, marking their US competition debut.
Welcoming each artists to the “Lollapalooza household,” competition founder Perry Farrell mentioned in an announcement, “Their international viewers speaks many languages however has a powerful ardour for his or her music… They’re the superstars of the worldwide Ok-Pop phenomenon. .”
J-Hope, a rapper, songwriter and dancer, was the third member to affix BTS, also called the Bangtan Boys, as a septet trainee after RM and Suga.
In line with Wikipedia, his 2018 debut solo mixtape “Hope World” peaked at quantity 38 on the Billboard 200, making him the highest-earning Korean solo artist on the US album chart on the time.
Nevertheless, his solo success pales compared to the worldwide success of BTS, the best-selling act in South Korean historical past with over 30 million albums bought, and one of many few recording teams because the Beatles within the Sixties to chart 4 instances. . #1 albums within the US in lower than two years.
Lollapalooza, which started as a touring present in 1991, has since made Chicago’s Grant Park its annual venue and is taken into account one of many main occasions in US music festivals…Reuters
No comments: