On the brink of the vocalist restoration on Sep 18, the Yooheeyeol plagiarism controversy has flashed.
Yoo Heeyeol supposedly plagiarizing Ryuichi Sakamoto's music has led him to end the Yooheeyeol show, and his reputation was hurt.
Now, Lee Mujin's signature song, Traffic Light, is said to be a close copy of sekai no owari's Dragon Night
(most of the recent remarks are from Koreans).
Since Lee Mujin's subsequent songs tended to be quite lackluster, I think it will be the last of him.
Angry K-netizens are now advancing to attack a certain figure who used to own Edam Entertainment until recently.
IU's red shoes was suspected of plagiarism for a long time, and someday as well, but now BbiBbi is suspected
And now Celebrity is also suspected
These clips were made a long time before this controversy.
Bbibbi is IU's first contribution of KPop
Celebrity is IU's first Melon yearly #1
If they are cut off, Lee Jieun's reputation is significantly hurt
It seems the gods of Kpop still have some intention to revive KPop and stop the Strange Creature from strangling it with her bare hands.
Unlike Yoo heeyeol or Lee Mujin, IU did NOT compose these songs. However, Lee Hyori's career as a singer ended when she was revealed to sing a song which had been plagiarized; Lee Hyori mostly acted as a celebrity and show figure from that point.
This appears to have an effect on Lee Jieun who is not revealing her concert plans even though the date is approaching, and if the controversy gets big she will cancel the concert and won't come back for a few years, ending her long grip on KPop. Her fall basically means the end of the vocalist tradition, once for all, in Korea.
KPop was truly a huge movement, and it seems the Gods of KPop have mercy on a billion KPop fans.
It is like after the Battle of Waterloo, the Duke of Wellington's horse suddenly got crazy, falls over the Duke and killing him. His death basically would have meant the end of 7th Coalition, even after this victory, and Napoleon gets off to fight another day. Something like that actually happened in history; at the end of the Japanese invasion of Korea on 1598, Yi Sunsin, the chief admiral against the Japanese and the person most responsible for thwarting the invasion, was hit by a stray bullet and died. His death enabled the Japanese Navy to escape, and return with a huge vengeance in 1876.