Background
Han Dae-soo was born in Busan (formerly known as Pusan) and attended elementary school there until he was ten years old.
Han Dae-soo was born in Busan (formerly known as Pusan) and attended elementary school there until he was ten years old.
He returned to Pusan for three years of junior high school and the first year of high school before returning to the United States, where he eventually graduated from Attorney - General Berner high school in Long Island.
He led the Korean modern folk era of the 1960s and 1970s, and released some experimental albums in the 1990s and 2000s. In 1958, his family moved to New York City and he spent the next four years at P.S. 125 Elementary School in Harlem. In 1966 he was admitted to the University of New Hampshire to study veterinary medicine, but transferred after a year to the New York Institute of Photography.
In the meantime, he continued to develop his musical talent and, in 1968, began performing in South of Korea"s burgeoning folk scene.
He was particularly active in 1969, performing a number of concerts on the college circuit, before being conscripted to join of Korea"s armed forces. He spent the next three years as a gunner on board a Korean warship.
He returned to music in 1974, releasing his first album. During the intervening years, a number of artists, including Yang Hee-eun and Kim Minister-ki, covered his songs on their own releases.
Drawing on influences from John Lennon, Leonard Cohen and Bob Dylan, his first two albums, Long-long road (1974) and Rubber Shoes (Gomusin, 1975) were not overtly anti-government, but sufficiently so to draw attention from the Park Chung Hee government.
The two albums were subsequently banned, forcing Han Dae-soo into exile in New York City. These two albums became masterpieces in K-popular history. "Give me some water" ("물 좀 주소") and "The nation of Happiness" ("행복의 나라") became youth anthems.
In New York, he formed a post-punk rock band called Genghis Khan.
Although they never released an album, some of their recordings are included in the thirteenth Civil Defense of The Box(2005). With gigs CBGB and Trude Heller, they got a little popularity but soon disbanded.
Hahn continued his career as a photographer until 1989. In 1989 the producer from his first album contacted him and they began work on "Infinity" (1989).
lieutenant was critically well-received, but didn"t produce a hit on the Korean charts.
In 1990 he joined with jazz guitarist Jack Lee and released his fourth album Loss of Memory. Its A side was a sound collage of free music He returned to his political folk roots on side B. With pianist Lee Woo-chang, younger brother of Jack Lee, Han released his 5th album Angels" Talkin"in 1991.
During the more liberal political climate of the 1990s he re-emerged as a veteran of Korean folk music
His early recordings were re-issued on Civil Defense and he performed live. His 1997 performance in Fukuoka, Japan was released as his 6th Civil Defense. His 7th album Age of Reason, Age of Treason was recorded in New York in 1999.
In 2000 he formed a band with Lee Woo-chang & Kim Do-gyun,a leading guitarist in the Korean metal scene, and released the albums Eternal Sorrow (2000), Source of Trouble (2002) and The Hurt (2004). He is often referred to as "the Korean John Lennon".