Music_Bank_(TV_series)

<i>Music Bank</i> (TV program)

Music Bank (TV program)

Korean television program


Music Bank (Korean: 뮤직뱅크; RR: Myujikbaengkeu) is a South Korean music program which airs every Friday at 17:15 KST on KBS2. As of 2015, the show is also broadcast in more than a hundred countries through KBS World. Episodes are filmed at the KBS New Wing Open Hall in Yeouido-dong, Yeongdeungpo-gu.[1] The show also organizes the global live concert Music Bank World Tour.[2][3]

Quick Facts Music Bank, Genre ...

History

Prior to Music Bank, Top 10 Songs (가요톱10) debuted in 1981 airing live at 6:30 (KST) on Fridays and aired until 1998. For the first few months of 1998, Bravo New Generation took its place, but due to low ratings, it was quickly replaced by Music Bank on June 18, 1998. The chart format that was used since Top 10 Songs was abandoned in late 2001 due to controversy and was changed into a request format.

In 2005, the show was moved to Sunday afternoons at 12:45 (KST) and became a recorded broadcast. Due to sinking ratings, in September 2007, the show returned to its original time slot of Fridays evenings at 6:30 (KST) and returned to a live format. The charts were revived as category-based charts.

In January 2008, the category-based charts were combined into the K-Chart which is the familiar countdown chart and the only program to do so. In June 2008, the show extended to 70 minutes, airing from 6:30 (KST) to 7:40 (KST) making it the longest music program on air. In November 2008, as part of the Autumn format changes, the show began airing from 6:40 (KST) to 8:00 (KST) for 80 minutes. In May 2010, as part of the Spring format changes, the show began airing from 5:50 (KST) to 7:10 (KST) for 80 minutes.

On August 27, 2010, Music Bank began airing live to 54 countries around the world through KBS World, and included new interactive features for international viewers through Twitter.

On November 11, 2011, as part of the autumn format changes, the show began airing for 105 minutes from 6:10 (KST) to 7:55 (KST), following KBS News 6.

In August 2012, Asian American cable network Myx TV began airing the first English dubbed version of Music Bank.

Since October 25, 2013, the show began airing for 80 minutes from 6:30 (KST) to 7:50 (KST), following KBS Global 24, which was transferred from KBS1 with effect from October 21, 2013.

Since February 10, 2023, it is hosted by Lee Chae-min and Le Sserafim's Hong Eun-chae. Past hosts include Song Hye-kyo, Rain, Ji Sung, Song Joong-ki, Park Seo-joon, Yoon Bora, Irene, Park Bo-gum, Choi Bo-min, Shin Ye-eun, Choi Soo-bin, Arin, Park Sung-hoon and Jang Won-young among others.[4][5]

K-Chart

K-Chart is the countdown charts of Music Bank. The charts are calculated by combining the Digital Music Charts (60%), Album Sales (5%), Number of times broadcast on KBS (20%), K-POP Fan Voting Charts (Mubeat App) (10%), and social media charts (5%).[6] This charts tracking from Monday to Sunday, and the Top 50 songs of the week are featured on the show, where the Top 50–21 songs are shown via marquee and the Top 20–3 songs are featured by the hosts. The hosts showcase the Top Two songs in beginning of show and announce who will be the winner of the week. The Number 1 song on the chart is the winner of that week's chart and receives an award.

During the last week of June, the most popular song of the first half of the year is awarded the Music Bank First Half 1st Place award. During the last week of December, the Music Bank 1st Place award (or Music Bank MVP in 2008) is awarded to the most popular song of the entire year.

Prior to the combined K-Charts, category-based charts were used. From September to December 2007, every week a different category (Digital Music Charts, Karaoke Charts, Viewers Choice Charts, Album Sales Charts) was featured. Technically, each category would only be featured once a month. It was similar to K-Chart except the results each week could only be based on a specific chart, and not all the charts combined. From January 2008 to April 2009, two charts were used. Every week, the Digital Music Charts and Album Sales Charts were used, and at the end of the month were the combined charts (Album Sales Charts (20%) + Digital Music Charts (50%) + Viewers Choice Charts (30%)). In May 2009, this was abandoned for the combined charts featured every week. Note that the Music Bank ranking system is different from other previous and current televised K-Pop music shows, in that an artist can win an unlimited number of times for the same song (other shows generally remove it from the charts after three wins, for Music Core it's after five wins or two months since release). While other music chart shows have a full score of 10,000 or 11,000, Music Bank's full score is 200,000, meaning Digital Music Charts category have 120,000 score as full score, 40,000 for Broadcast, 20,000 for K-POP Fan Voting Charts (Mubeat App) 10,000 for Album Sales, and finally 10,000 from Social Media. The new criteria for Music Bank took effect in the January 6, 2023 episode, where the Digital Music Chart percentage decreased from 65% to 60%, the Album Sales are will now be acquired from Gaon instead of the previous Hanteo chart, the KBS Broadcast Plays now added its digital channel in the aggregation scoring alongside its TV and radio channels, and the Social Media Charts will be sourced from the YouTube and TikTok data gathered from the Gaon charts.

Winners

Hosts

More information Date, Hosts ...

Achievements by artists

More information Rank, Artist ...
List of most No. 1 winners
More information Rank, Artist ...
List of longest consecutive No. 1 songs
More information Rank, Artist ...
List of most awarded songs
More information Rank, Artist ...
List of top 10 highest scores (20th system)

Top 10 highest scores (20th system) February 25, 2022 – December 30, 2022

Scoring system: digital music charts (60%), number of times broadcast on KBS (20%), viewers choice charts (10%), album sales (5%) and social media charts (5%)

More information Rank, Artist ...
List of top 10 highest scores (current system)

Top 10 highest scores (current system) January 6, 2023 – present

Scoring system: digital music charts (60%), number of times broadcast on KBS (20%), K-pop fan vote (10%), album sales (5%) and social media charts (5%)

More information Rank, Artist ...
List of top 10 highest scores (January 2013 - present)

Top 10 highest scores (all time) January 2013 – present

Tours

Since July 2011, the Music Bank World Tour has been held in multiple cities across Asia, Europe and Latin America with an estimated global live audience of 200,000.[11]

Similar programs

See also


References

General

  • "List of winners since 2013" (in Korean). Korean Broadcasting System. Retrieved January 2, 2017.

Specific

  1. "How to apply for K-Pop Music Shows". Korea Tourism Organization. Archived from the original on 11 February 2012. Retrieved 3 June 2012.
  2. "Music Bank' to restart its world tour starting in August". Allkpop. Archived from the original on 2017-08-20. Retrieved 2017-04-28.
  3. "Park Bo-gum, Irene to emcee Singapore tour of 'Music Bank'". The Korea Herald. 28 April 2017. Archived from the original on 28 April 2017. Retrieved 28 April 2017.
  4. Shim Yeon-hee (June 16, 2016). [문화광장] 뮤직뱅크. KBS News (in Korean). Archived from the original on August 12, 2016. Retrieved June 27, 2016.
  5. "[리폿@이슈] "송중기♥서효림→박보검♥아이린"...'뮤뱅' 역대 커플 MC" (in Korean). Naver. June 16, 2016. Archived from the original on December 24, 2021. Retrieved June 27, 2016.
  6. "1월 1주 순위" [Music Bank ranking for the first week of January]. KBS Music Bank (in Korean). January 6, 2022. Archived from the original on January 6, 2023. Retrieved February 20, 2022.
  7. "Jung Jin-woon & Park Se-young, the New Hosts of Music Bank". KBS World. 18 April 2013. Archived from the original on 25 July 2017. Retrieved 14 July 2017.
  8. "이서원, '뮤직뱅크' 새 MC 확정...박보검 뒤 잇는 스타될까" [Lee Seo Won Appointed as New Music Bank Host]. thestar.chosun.com. 4 November 2016. Archived from the original on 24 October 2018. Retrieved 4 November 2016.
  9. Hwang Chae-hyun (September 27, 2021). "장원영·엔하이픈 성훈 '뮤직뱅크' MC 발탁 [공식]" [Jang Won-Young and Sunghoon of Enhypen Selected as MCs for 'Music Bank' [Official]] (in Korean). Sports Kyunghyang. Archived from the original on April 11, 2022. Retrieved September 27, 2021 via Naver.
  10. Kim, Ji-young (August 3, 2022). "[단독] '지우학' 박지후, '뮤직뱅크' 스페셜 MC 낙점". JoyNews 24 (in Korean). Archived from the original on August 3, 2022. Retrieved August 3, 2022.

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