48.5 F
Los Angeles
Friday, March 14, 2025

50 K-pop Idol Group Members to Collaborate on the Stage of KBS Song Festival

Image in courtesy of KBS
Image in courtesy of KBS

50 rising stars are to present a special collaboration on the stage of KBS Song Festival.

KBS Song Festival, which is to take place on Thursday, December 29, announced the special collaboration performance of 50 idol group members. Six selected K-pop idol groups – Oh My Girl, LABOUM, UP10TION, WJSN, Astro, and NCT Dream – will collaborate to present a special stage as “rising stars.”

Groups to collaborate are selected among recently debuted groups. Oh My Girl, LABOUM, and UP10TION debuted in 2015 and WJSN, Astro, and NCT Dream debuted this year. As 50 K-pop artists from six groups are coming up onto the stage, their performances are expected to be large in scale.

2016 KBS Song Festival is hosted by Park Bo-gum and Seolhyun. Historic artists of Korean music like Jeon In-gwon Band, Uhm Jung-hwa, and Shinhwa, as well as K-pop superstars like Hwang Chi-yeol, Taeyeon, Davichi, SHINee, CNBLUE, Infinite, Jung Eun-ji, B.A.P, BtoB, Exo, VIXX, AOA, BTS, Got7, Mamamoo, Red Velvet, Han Dong-geun, GFriend, Monsta X, Seventeen, Twice, I.O.I, Oh My Girl, LABOUM, UP10TION, WJSN, Astro, and NCT Dream have confirmed to be featured in the KBS’s end-of-the-year music festival.

The event will be held on Thursday, December 29, for 220 minutes from 8:30 PM KST.

 

Original article by Park Pan-seok
Translated by Heewon Kim

The Korea Daily
The Korea Daily
Founded in 1974, The Korea Daily (미주중앙일보) is the largest Korean media outlet in the U.S., providing in-depth coverage of local, national, and international news with a strong focus on immigration, business, and the Korean-American community. While covering major cities across the U.S., including New York, Washington D.C., Atlanta, Chicago, San Diego, San Francisco, Denver, and Dallas, as well as Vancouver and Toronto, Canada, The Korea Daily primarily focuses on news in Los Angeles County and Orange County. Headquartered in Koreatown, Los Angeles, it serves as a key news source for Korean Americans in Southern California.