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P s y gangnam style video
P s y gangnam style video












p s y gangnam style video

p s y gangnam style video

Jeomjanha boijiman nol ttaen noneun sana-i Karyeot-jiman wen-manhan nochulboda yahan yeoja Ittaeda shipeumyeon mukkeot-deon meori puneun Jeongsu-khae boijiman nol ttaen noneun yeoja

P s y gangnam style video how to#

Keopi shikgido jeone wonsyas ttaerineun sana-iīami omyeon shimjangi teojyeobeorineun sana-iĪ girl who is warm and graceful during the dayĪ classy girl who knows how to enjoy a cup of coffeeĪ girl whose heart gets hotter when night comesĪ guy who is as warm as you during the dayĪ guy who downs his coffee before it cools downĪ guy whose heart bursts when night comes Naje-neun neomankeum ttasaroun geureon sana-i Keopi hanjanye yeoyureuraneun pumkyeok i-nneunīami omyeon shimjangi tteugeowojineun yeoja PSY has expressed conflicting views regarding this interpretation in multiple interviews. The song's unexpected popularity has also led to more in-depth readings of its lyrics in the news media, including the widespread assertion that the song is a satire about South Koreans' materialist obsession with Seoul's Gangnam district, a symbol of opulence and socioeconomic status. The basic premise of the song is about a self-proclaimed hotshot looking for "the perfect girlfriend who knows when to be refined and when to get wild." The refrain of the song, "Oppan Gangnam Style," can be translated as "Your Boy's Gangnam Style" with PSY referring to himself as such. However, PSY later revealed in interviews that he came up with the dance during a talent contest at a post-concert event in August 2011. PSY Doing the "Horse Riding Dance" in "Gangnam Style" M/Vĭuring its onset, speculations arose in Korean Internet communities that the dance may have been pioneered a year earlier by a Korean pop group Girls' Day in their 2011 debut single Tilting Head. The mass appeal of the music video has been attributed to its signature dance move known as "the horse-riding dance," which combines the stylistic elements of shuffle dancing and hand movements resembling the posture of a horseback rider. By mid-September, PSY's "Gangnam Style" overtook LMFAO's "Party Rock Anthem" as the most liked video on the site with more than 1.6 million likes. The video continued gaining viral momentum at an average rate of more than nine million views per day in the span of two months, surpassing Carly Rae Jepsen's "Call Me Maybe" to reach the number one position on the YouTube Top 100 Music Videos chart during the last week of August. Upon its release, the song took off on virtually all Korean billboard charts, portal search sites and online music stores, but it began garnering international attention after the music video went viral on YouTube during the third week of July 2012. The song was released on July 15th, 2012 along with the music video via PSY's official YouTube channel. The song "Gangnam Style" was written, produced, and recorded as the lead single of PSY 6 (Six Rules), Part 1 the sixth studio album of South Korean singer and rapper PSY, who is best known for his quick-witted sense of humor and comical dance moves.














P s y gangnam style video