Okay, K‑pop stans — meet 1VERSE (fans say “Universe”), the new five‑member rookie group that just dropped their first album and is already planning an international push to the U.S. This isn’t just another debut: two members, Sok and Hyuk, are North Korean defectors whose journeys to Seoul and into K‑pop feel like a next‑level underdog story.
Sok and Hyuk both escaped North Korea as children via China, reunited with family who had fled, and eventually moved to South Korea. They signed with boutique label Singing Beetle in 2022 and trained the usual brutal trainee hours — morning warm‑ups, late rehearsals, daily evaluations — to become idols. The label says the full lineup includes Aito (Japan), Kenny (California) and Nathan (Arkansas), making 1VERSE a truly international mix.
Their new music leans emotional and honest. Lead single “Shattered” is a melancholic ballad built around the line, “Who will save us now?” — a lyric Sok says is meant to capture the need for support and the universal anxieties of youth. Hyuk, who discovered music later after being spotted writing lyrics in class, talks about rap as the spark that led him to idol life. They’re clear about one thing: they don’t want to be reduced to one label. Their past informs their art, but they want to be seen as artists with many paths ahead.
1VERSE’s U.S. debut is described as both bold and sensitive by industry watchers. Details of their American schedule are still under wraps, but the team is already building a fandom called “Starz” and focusing heavily on streaming and social engagement via Singing Beetle’s app b.stage, TikTok, and Instagram — and they’re already pulling in millions of views and followers.
On collabs, Hyuk name‑drops Post Malone as an artist he admires and would love to co‑write with; Sok hinted at a cross‑cultural musical fusion too. For a small label group, that global reach and those ambitions are huge — especially when the plan is to break one of the world’s toughest markets.
Why this matters:
- Seeing defectors in mainstream K‑pop is rare and draws attention to different life stories within the industry, but 1VERSE insists their identity is only one part of who they are.
- Their mix of nationalities (Japan + U.S. members) follows a growing pattern of globally made K‑pop groups aiming straight for international charts.
Quick fan‑friendly context:
- There are about 30,000 North Korean defectors living in South Korea — a small but visible community whose members’ stories occasionally surface in media and pop culture.
- Typical K‑pop trainee life really does include long daily rehearsals, evaluations, and intense preparation before debut — it’s how most idols get stage‑ready.
- BTS and BLACKPINK are often used as benchmarks for global K‑pop success because they broke major U.S. charts and built massive international fandoms.
- Giving a fandom a name (like 1VERSE’s “Starz”) is a standard move — it helps groups organize engagement and build loyalty early on.
As a fan, I’m rooting for them — the voice, the honesty in their lyrics, and their story make 1VERSE the kind of rookie group you want to follow from day one. I’ll be watching for U.S. dates and any live stages of “Shattered” — this summer could be the moment they start turning heads worldwide.
Source: mezha.net
























