美国国家公共电台 NPR Parade Floats And Altered K-Pop Songs Mark South Korea's Coming Election(在线收听) |
STEVE INSKEEP, HOST: Tensions may be rising over North Korea's nuclear program, but South Korea remains outwardly calm. A presidential election comes next week, and the scene in the capital, Seoul, includes parade floats and K-pop. NPR's Lauren Frayer is there. LAUREN FRAYER, BYLINE: Presidential election season in South Korea is when Korean pop songs like this one, "Cheer Up" by the girl band Twice... (SOUNDBITE OF SONG, "CHEER UP") TWICE: (Singing in Korean). FRAYER: ...Get turned into this. UNIDENTIFIED MOON SUPPORTERS: (Singing in Korean). FRAYER: Moon Jae-in, the name of the frontrunner in next week's election. Freelance film producer Lee Eun-ji, a volunteer on Moon's campaign... LEE EUN-JI: (Speaking Korean). FRAYER: ...Explains how they've changed the words to insert their candidate's name. Each campaign has its own set of songs drawn from what the world knows as K-pop. (SOUNDBITE OF SONG) UNIDENTIFIED SINGERS: (Singing in Korean). FRAYER: For weeks, dancers have been riding around the South Korean capital, Seoul, on huge parade floats, belting out K-pop in favor of one candidate or another. They wear their candidate's signature color with matching hats, umbrellas, even clown wigs and fake animal ears. UNIDENTIFIED SINGERS: (Singing in Korean). FRAYER: So just in case you thought South Korean youth were cowering under their desks Cold-War style because of the nuclear threat from North Korea, meet volunteer K-pop dancer and lyricist Jeong Min-hong, fresh from the South Korean army, a people's soldier, he says. JEONG MIN-HONG: I am a people's soldier. Army - army, yeah Korean army, and now no job. FRAYER: No job. JEONG: (Speaking Korean). FRAYER: "Never mind North Korea's provocations," he says. Youth unemployment is his generation's issue in this election. And he wrote it into the Moon campaign's alternate K-pop lyrics, along with care for the elderly. (SOUNDBITE OF SONG) UNIDENTIFIED SINGERS: (Singing in Korean). FRAYER: Morning commutes during election season here mean ducking past rival campaign floats blasting K-pop at one another. HONG YOUNG-RAE: (Speaking Korean). FRAYER: It's part of Korean culture and community spirit, says 60-year-old Hong Young-rae. Even he knows most of these teen beat songs, though he says he's able to tune them out when he needs to - easy for him to say. (SOUNDBITE OF SONG) UNIDENTIFIED SINGERS: (Singing in Korean). FRAYER: Covering an election in South Korea has given this visitor a pretty acute case of ear worm. Come Wednesday, this country will have a new president, and the streets of Seoul may seem eerily quiet. (SOUNDBITE OF SONG, "GANGNAM STYLE") PSY: (Singing in Korean). FRAYER: Lauren Frayer, NPR News, Seoul. (SOUNDBITE OF SONG, "GANGNAM STYLE") PSY: (Singing in Korean). |
原文地址:http://www.tingroom.com/lesson/npr2017/5/406616.html |