Lee Hoyang, a prolific producer and songwriter of South Korean pop music who was professionally generally known as Shinsadong Tiger and who helped create among the greatest Ok-pop hits of the 2010s, died in Seoul on Friday. He was 40.
His administration company confirmed his demise in a assertion. It didn’t point out the reason for demise, however mentioned {that a} personal funeral was being held in Seoul. The company, TR Leisure, didn’t reply to an emailed request for remark. A police detective in Seoul additionally confirmed Mr. Lee’s demise, however wouldn’t disclose additional particulars.
Mr. Lee was typically credited with shaping the musical model that outlined Ok-pop within the early 2010s: catchy, upbeat and repetitive with a robust hook. He produced many commercially profitable songs all through the last decade, principally for younger feminine artists. Among the many hits had been “Roly-Poly” and “Bo Peep Bo Peep,” each by T-ara; “NoNoNo” by Apink; and “Bubble Pop!” by HyunA.
“He created an thrilling, funky, beat-driven Ok-pop model that continues to be repeated again and again,” mentioned Do Heon Kim, a pop music critic in South Korea. “There isn’t any place the place his affect hasn’t been felt.”
Mr. Lee was born on June 3, 1983, in Pohang, a metropolis on South Korea’s southeastern coast. With no formal music training, he immersed himself in music beginning in center college, when he performed in a band and remixed songs along with his buddies, he mentioned in an interview in 2011.
He debuted as a songwriter in 2004, when he produced a music referred to as “Man and Lady” for the South Korean pop band the Jadu, he mentioned. The music, which had a pulse of Brazilian bossa nova, was launched in 2005.
Mr. Lee’s profession took a downturn within the late 2010s as his music got here to be more and more thought to be repetitive and he was confronted with plagiarism accusations, which he denied, Mr. Kim mentioned. The songwriter targeted extra of his vitality on producing and helped kind the lady teams EXID, which debuted in 2012, and Tri.be, which debuted in 2021.
Jin Yu Younger contributed reporting.