South Korea celebrates K-pop's 'Golden' historic Grammy win
- - South Korea celebrates K-pop's 'Golden' historic Grammy win
KIM TONG-HYUNG February 2, 2026 at 3:15 AM
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The team from "KPop Demon Hunters" pose in the press room with the award for best song written for visual media for "Golden" during the 68th annual Grammy Awards on Sunday, Feb. 1, 2026, in Los Angeles. (Photo by Richard Shotwell/Invision/AP)
SEOUL, South Korea (AP) â South Koreans celebrated on Monday as âGolden,â from the Netflix animated film âKPop Demon Hunters,â claimed K-popâs first Grammy Award, a milestone that critics say highlights the genreâs global appeal and signals broader acceptance in the American mainstream.
The win for best song for visual media capped a highly visible night for K-pop at the Grammys â an institution where the genre has long been undercelebrated despite its massive international following.
RosĂ© of the juggernaut girl group Blackpink joined Grammy favorite Bruno Mars on stage to belt out their megahit âAPT.,â which was a song of the year nominee. The girl group Katseye, launched by a partnership between South Koreaâs HYBE and U.S. label Geffen Records, earned two nominations, including best new artist, for their song âGabriela.â
The awards captured a moment in which K-pop is surging as a youth-driven global phenomenon and increasingly attracting interest from the U.S. film and music industries.
U.S. legacy studios, struggling to reach younger audiences, have taken note of K-popâs viral strength on social media and short-form platforms â a momentum that has driven collaborations such as RosĂ© and Bruno Mars and projects like Katseye and âKPop Demon Hunters,â according to music critic Lim Hee-yun.
The Grammy win for âGolden,â which also contended for song of the year, could help further strengthen K-popâs American foothold and boost the genreâs prospects at future awards, he said.
There is debate over whether âGolden,â an English-language pop song from a Sony Pictures Animation film, qualifies as K-pop. Still, the Grammy award sparked joy in South Korea, where the film inspired Demon Hunters-themed ramen and other products and boosted tourism to Seoulâs old fortress walls and other cultural sites featured in the film.
âIt feels unreal,â said Kim Na-young, a 50-year-old who said she saw the movie at least five times. âSony made it, Netflix released it, but the film was definitely about Korea.â
'Outstanding vocal performance'
âKPop Demon Hunters,â released by Netflix last June, follows the three members of the fictional Korean girl group HUNTR/X as they use their music and martial arts skills to keep demons out of the human world.
The film went on to become Netflixâs most popular release of all time, with songs like âGoldenâ and âSoda Popâ climbing global music charts and its characters becoming popular Halloween costume choices in the United States. The singers behind HUNTR/X â Ejae, Audrey Nuna and Rei Ami â gained huge followings.
After winning their award at the Grammysâ Premiere Ceremony, the songwriters of âGoldenâ delivered their acceptance speech in both English and Korean, highlighting its bilingual appeal.
Some South Koreans saw the Grammy win as the latest significant moment marking the rise of South Korean pop culture, following the 2020 Oscar triumph of Bong Joon Hoâs âParasite.â
âWhen Parasite won, it felt like South Korean culture had entered the global mainstream. The Grammy win takes that recognition even further,â said Park Jeong-eon, 48, recalling trips abroad in the 2000s when she felt that South Korea was little known.
Seo Ga-yeon, who studies K-pop at a university, said she could emotionally relate with the personal story of Ejae, who struggled as a young K-pop trainee in South Korea before establishing herself as an artist in the United States.
âI think it was above all her outstanding vocal performance â overflowing with emotion, as if she was singing about her own life, almost like a cry â that made âGoldenâ a success,â she said.
South Koreaâs governing Democratic Party said the Grammy win was a historically significant moment in which K-pop âfinally overcame the long-standing Grammy barrier.â
Boosted awareness of K-pop
The Recording Academy had long overlooked major K-pop acts like BTS and some analysts question whether âGoldenâ should truly be considered K-popâs first Grammy win.
âThe film, of course, used K-pop as material and helped bring it global attention, but I feel thereâs a distance between âGoldenâ and K-pop,â said Jinmo Lim, another music critic, who described the Grammy win as recognition of K-popâs growing international appeal rather than a victory for the genre itself.
Lim Hee-yun said âGoldenâ sounds more like American pop â âKaty Perry or early Lady Gagaâ â than a typical K-pop idol track, which may have helped it reach a broader audience. While K-pop groups usually have four or more members who rotate vocal parts to engage fans, âGoldenâ is carried almost entirely by a single lead vocalist â Ejae.
Group composition, precision in style and choreography, and passionate â almost religious â fan bases are key elements that define K-pop, he said, though the genre has become increasingly difficult to pin down musically.
âFor people who knew little about K-pop, or had only heard of BTS or Blackpink, âKPop Demon Huntersâ certainly boosted awareness of the K-pop world and even sparked interest in traveling to South Korea,â Lim Hee-yun said. âK-pop groups are likely to receive far more attention in the future than they would have without the film.â
Source: âAOL Entertainmentâ