The 1980s for Korea began with “Seúl, Corea,” and the promise of hosting the next Olympic Games brought a sense of hope even amid political instability. That optimism also spread to Korea’s arts and culture, including the gayo pop scene, which was recovering after the 1975 marijuana scandal and the restrictive “gayo purification movement.” A key symbol of renewal was Cho Yong-pil’s single “Short Hair” (단발머리), which felt like a sign that the 1970s were over—and that mood influenced Korean pop music more broadly.
A new pop-influenced youth generation emerged, and the way music was consumed diversified. After the nighttime curfew was lifted in January 1982, neon-lit nightlife expanded, with clubs becoming central spaces for dancing and romance, powered by music. This environment intensified competition among DJs, who began adopting and responding to “cutting-edge” mixing styles from foreign DJs; Korean DJs increasingly presented their sets more like performances. Different sounds also flourished by area—Euro dance in Gangnam alongside more black music in Itaewon—while many early DJs later grew into producers, musicians, and managers.
Yet the decade was full of contradictions: music was not freely enjoyed because a notorious pre-censorship system remained in place, and questionable tracks could be removed from licensed records, with what counted as “subversive” being arbitrary. These restrictions persisted until the downfall of the 5th Republic in 1987. The album <Hodori Rocks: Uncanny New Wave Sound from the 88 Olympic Land> captures this “uncanny” era: tracks that weren’t mainstream nor truly underground—new sounds created by mainstream artists—blend influences from Western and Japanese trends with distinct Korean vocal and stylistic elements. Though some songs sounded “weird” at the time and were later forgotten, they can now be appreciated as a Korean new-wave yearning: common, new, and unmistakably strange.