Lee Soo Man resisted the title at first. “King of K-pop” sounded too brash, too nightclub-esque — like something you’d see on a neon sign in Itaewon, a nightlife neighborhood in the South Korean capital Seoul once popular with U.S. soldiers and foreign visitors. “I asked them, ‘Couldn’t it be Father of K-pop?’” the 73-year-old recalled during a recent interview with The Associated Press.
Meet the 'King of K-pop': This U.S.-educated computer engineer pioneered music industry practices that fueled the genre's global expansion | Fortune
Lee Son Man's technical background would later inform his approach to everything from visualization and cutting-edge production technologies.






