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Pages in category "Japanese K-pop singers" The following 21 pages are in this category, out of 21 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. A. Yuto Adachi; G.
The following is a list of notable individual K-pop artists. [1] [2] Male. A. Yuto Adachi; Danny Ahn; Tony An; ... For the list of idol bands, see List of South ...
Known as the first Korean pop singer to advance into the Japanese market, Choi Gyuyeop sang the translated version of "Arirang," a famous Korean folk song, under the Japanese stage name "Hasegawa Ichiro." [1] By 1932, Gyuyeop was a star in Japan, and in 1933, he held a successful Japanese tour. In 1935, he was voted the most popular singer in ...
AKB48 is a Japanese idol girl group formed on December 8, 2005. As of 2024, the group consists of 45 members, including 29 official members and 16 trainees. [1] [2]The member lineup often changes as members graduate from the group and are replaced by members promoted from trainee status.
Nogizaka46 (乃木坂46, Nogizaka Forty-six) is a Japanese female idol group produced by Yasushi Akimoto, created as the official rival (公式ライバル, kōshiki raibaru) of the group AKB48. They are the first group from the Sakamichi Series , which also includes sister groups Sakurazaka46 (formerly Keyakizaka46), Yoshimotozaka46 , and ...
[8] [24] In Gallup Korea's annual music poll for 2018, Sana was voted the 17th most popular idol in South Korea, the highest-ranked Japanese individual in the poll. [25] She ranked 15th in the 2019 poll. [26] [27] In 2019, Sana also ranked as the most popular female K-pop idol in a survey of soldiers completing mandatory military service in ...
NiziU (Japanese: ニジュー; Korean: 니쥬) is a Japanese girl group formed by JYP Entertainment and Sony Music Entertainment Japan through the reality-survival program Nizi Project (2020). The group is composed of nine members: Mako, Rio, Maya, Riku, Ayaka, Mayuka, Rima, Miihi, and Nina.
Japanese-Korean idols (日韓アイドル, Nikkan aidoru): While Japan and South Korea agencies have created collaborative idol groups in the past, with Route 0 in 2002, [55] during the third Korean wave in the mid-to-late 2010s, the term saw usage again to refer to collaborative idol groups promoting primarily in Japan, but with music, styling ...