Jun Jin

Jun Jin
Birth name Park Choong Jae (박충재, 朴忠裁)
Born 19 August 1980 (1980-08-19) (age 31)
Origin South Korea
Genres K-pop, J-pop, Dance, R&B
Occupations Singer, Actor
Years active 1998–present
Labels SM Entertainment
(1998-2003)
Good Entertainment
(2004-2007)
Open World Entertainment
(2007-present)
Shinhwa Company
(2011-present)
Associated acts Shinhwa
Website Open World Entertainment
Korean name
Hangul 전진
Hanja 前進
Revised Romanization Jeonjin
McCune–Reischauer Chŏnjin
Birth name
Hangul 박충재
Hanja 朴忠裁
Revised Romanization Bak Chung(-)jae
McCune–Reischauer Pak Ch'ungjae

Jun Jin (Hangul: 전진, Hanja: 前進, literally: "move forward") was born Park Choong Jae (Hangul: 박충재, Hanja: 朴忠裁) on 19 August 1980. is a South Korean entertainer, known as a member and rapper of six-member boy band Shinhwa. He debuted as a dancer and rapper in Shinhwa in 1998 but started singing small parts in 2002; the release of Shinhwa's 5th album. However, he is advancing in his own singing career with the release of his solo single album on 18 November 2006. Besides singing, he has also acted in several dramas and sitcoms.

Contents

Biography

Jun Jin was born as the first child to singer Charlie Park (찰리박), also called Park Young Chul (박영철), who debuted with a solo album 'Casanova Sarang' in 2004. Jun Jin's birth mom left Jun Jin and his two younger siblings when young, due to his father's wandering lifestyle. His father remarried a second wife, but the two divorced during Jun Jin's teenage years. His father soon remarried again. This third wife proved to be a loving mother as she took care of Jun Jin like he was her own son. She also located Jun Jin's real mom and Jun Jin was reconnected with his birth mother. Although he wasn't able to see her frequently, the two did promise to keep in touch.

Career

Debut: Shinhwa

Backed by his high school friend, An Chil Hyun, Jun Jin was able to make it through the audition as a member for Shinhwa. He debuted with them as a rapper, alongside Eric Mun and Andy Lee. However, in the release of Shinhwa's fifth album "Perfect Man," he began singing small parts. He would still continue to sing small parts with the release of Shinhwa's later albums until the band switched to a different label, Good Entertainment. Under Good Enter, Jun Jin advanced further, singing a solo song entitled "Painfully Loving You." Jun Jin soon released a single, "Sarangee Ohji Anahyo" (Love Doesn't Come), thus starting his solo career.

Jun Jin starred in the hit 2004 KBS drama "Forbidden Love" in 2004, alongside popular actress Kim Tae Hee. He also starred in various other Banjun Dramas as well. In 2009, he and the other members of Infinite Challenge appeared in an episode of MBC drama Queen of Housewives.

Solo artist

Jun Jin released his first single in November 2006 titled "사랑이 오지 않아요" (translated to "Love Doesn't Come"), with a total of five songs, including the title song and its instrumental. Surprisingly, he decided to go into ballad even though he is known for his strong dance skills. However, this is because ballads are popular in Korea right now; dance artists such as Baek Ji Young and even Jun Jin's own group Shinhwa have released ballads for their lead singles as well. The single did fairly well on the chart, though not a major hit. In December 2006, Jun Jin was hospitalised; although recommended to stay in the hospital, he quickly left and returned to his promotional schedule.

In early January 2007, Jun Jin filmed a music video with Taiwanese singer Linda Liao. The music video was by the Korean group, The Name, titled "It Could Be Love." He later recorded a duet with Lao, entitled "Forever" and also has a version in Mandarin. He later released a repackage version of "Love Doesn't Come," which included the duet with Lao. The repackage version fared better in sales, selling 44,724 at the end of 2007.[1] In mid-2007, Jun Jin left his group's management company and set up his own call JF Story Entertainment [2] to concentrate on his solo career more.

His first full solo album was released on April 25, 2008. Titled New Decade, the first single from the album was "Wa". The single encountered controversy when the music video was given a 19+ rating due to sexual content, in effect banning the video from major networks.[3]

Jun Jin appeared comic-variety programme Infinite Challenge firstly in April 2008 as a replacement of Haha, with receiving its host of the programme as 'the 7th member' officially in June 2008, and later he joined We Got Married in early 2009 with actress Lee Shi Young as his "wife". The couple was dubbed "Gundam Couple" due to Lee Shi Young's obsession with Gundam. They officially departed from the show May 3, 2009 due to the restructuring of the show's format.

He later released a mini album, titled Fascination. The title-track "Hey Ya" featuring Son Dam Bi and Big Tone did fairy well on the charts but a track on the mini album titled "Like A Fool" featuring his "wife" Lee Shi Young managed to fair better on the charts. The album was a mild succes.

Jun Jin enlisted for mandatory military service on 22 October 2009 as a public service worker after undering four weeks of basis training Nonsan military camp in Chungcheongnam-do Province.[4] He is due to be discharged on 14 November 2011.[5]

Discography

Albums

Album # Album Information Track listing
1st

New Decade

  • Released: April 25, 2008
  • Released Under: Open World Entertainment
  1. Intro
  2. Wa
  3. 아픈사랑
  4. 한걸음
  5. For You
  6. 좋은 사람
  7. 귀여워요
  8. Fancy Lounge
  9. 천번이라도
  10. Wa (Instrumental)
  11. Epilogue
2nd

Fascination

  • Released: May 7, 2009
  • Released Under: Open World Entertainment
  • Format: Mini album
  1. 바보처럼 (feat. PJ Jun & Lee Si Young)
  2. Hey Ya! (feat. Big Tone & Son Dam Bi)
  3. Happy Ending
  4. 날 사랑해라..
  5. 사랑하지 않아요

Singles

Single # Single Information Track listing
1st

Love Doesn't Come

  • Released: November 16, 2006
  • Released Under: Open World Entertainment
  1. 사랑이 오지 않아요 (Love Doesn't Come)
  2. 천번이라도 (A Thousand Times)
  3. 돌아와줘 (Come Back)
  4. 사랑이 오지 않아요 (Love Doesn't Come - Instrumental)
1st

Love Doesn't Come ("Forever" Special Edition)

  • Released: February 21, 2007
  • Released Under: Open World Entertainment
  1. Forever (Korean ver.) (Duet with Linda Liao)
  2. Forever (Chinese ver.) (Duet with Linda Liao)
  3. 사랑이 오지 않아요 (Love Doesn't Come)
  4. 천번이라도 (A Thousand Times)
  5. 돌아와줘 (Come Back)
  6. Forever (Instrumental)

Filmography

TV series

TV shows

References

  1. ^ "2007 Year-end Chart" (in Korean). Recording Industry Association of Korea. Archived from the original on 2008-05-08. http://web.archive.org/web/20080508152311/http://www.miak.or.kr/stat/kpop_2007_2.htm. Retrieved 2008-02-24. 
  2. ^ "20070819" (in Korean). JF Story Entertainment. http://www.jfstoryent.com/. Retrieved 2007-08-19. 
  3. ^ 전진 뮤비, 선정적 이유로 ‘19금’ 판정. DongA.com. Retrieved June 8, 2008.
  4. ^ Park So-yoen "Fans from Asia see off Jun Jin to army" 10 Asia. 22 October 2009. Retrieved 2011-11-11
  5. ^ Kim, Jessica "Jun Jin to be discharged from military next week" 10 Asia. 11 November 2011. Retrieved 2011-11-11

External links