From left: Lisa, Jisoo, Jennie and Rosé of Blackpink photographed on Feb. 8, 2019 at Smashbox Studios in Los Angeles.

Alexandra Gavillet

Since debuting in 2016, BLACKPINK has been busy not only making music, but collecting accolades. Besides climbing up the charts with their catchy tunes, the quartet of Lisa, Jennie, Rosé, and Jisoo has been raking in numerous firsts as an all-female K-pop group.

With many milestones achieved even before their debut studio album The Album arrived in October 2020, see what BLACKPINK has managed to accomplish in North America.

Nov. 26, 2016: First K-Pop Girl Group on Canadian Hot 100

Blackpink's "Playing With Fire" opened at No. 92 on the Canadian Hot 100 chart dated Nov. 26. The feat made them the first K-pop girl group to chart on the Canadian Hot 100.

June 30, 2018: 3 Billboard Charts Records

BLACKPINK managed several firsts on three Billboard charts dated June 30:

July 5, 2018: Most Viewed Korean Music Video on YouTube

The video for "Ddu-Du Ddu-Du" snagged 36.2 million views in its first 24 hours to become the most viewed Korean music video of 2018 at that point, a rep for the video platform told Billboard at the time. The service also said that the video was the fastest one by a K-pop girl group to earn 100 million views, accomplishing the feat in only 10 days.

Jan. 21, 2019: Most Viewed Video by a K-Pop Group

"Ddu-Du Ddu-Du" snagged the YouTube record when the video pulled in a huge number of eyeballs. "With 620.9 million views, BLACKPINK's 'Ddu-Du Ddu-Du' is now the most viewed music video by a K-pop group," a spokesperson for YouTube told Billboard at the time.

March 2, 2019: First Female K-Pop Artists on a Billboard Cover

The March 2 issue was the first time a female K-pop group appeared on the cover of Billboard magazine. The issue featured five different covers: one with the women together, and an individual cover each for Jennie, Lisa, Jisoo and Rosé.

March 21, 2019: First K-Pop Group to Reach 20 Million YouTube Subscribers

The girl group amassed 20 million subscribers on their official YouTube channel, making them the first female K-pop group to manage the feat.

April 8, 2019: Biggest Music Video Debut on YouTube

The music video for "Kill This Love" was the biggest music video debut in YouTube's history at the time, the video streaming platform confirmed to Billboard. The video, which dropped April 5, pulled in 56.7 million views in its first 24 hours, and also earned 100 million views in less than three days. The video also had an astounding 979,000 peak concurrents, which set a record at the time.

April 12, 2019: First K-Pop Girl Group to Perform at Coachella

Jennie, Rosé, Lisa and Jisoo not only became the first K-pop girl group to play the annual music festival, but they were also one of the main acts on opening day. (You can watch the history-making performance here.)

April 20, 2019: 2 More Billboard Charts Records Set

  • Hot 100: The group's "Kill This Love" debuted at No. 41 on the chart dated April 20. That feat made BLACKPINK's tune the highest charting Hot 100 song by a K-pop girl group. The previous record was held by none other than themselves, when "Ddu-Ddu Ddu-Du" debuted and peaked at No. 55 in June 2018.
  • Billboard 200: Their Kill This Love EP debuted at No. 24 also on April 20, making it the highest-charting title by an all-female K-pop group.

Aug. 15, 2019: First K-Pop Girl Group Recognized by RIAA

Give it up for the gold! When BLACKPINK's "Ddu-Du Ddu-Du" was certified gold by the Recording Industry Association of America, the quartet became the first female K-pop group to be certified by the RIAA.

Nov. 11, 2019: First K-Pop Group Video With 1 Billion YouTube Views

Blinks can't get enough of the girl group! BLACKPINK became the first K-pop group to have a music video reach the 1 billion views mark on YouTube. "Ddu-Du Ddu-Du," which was released on June 15, 2018, reached the milestone in a little more than a year. Fellow Korean artist Psy was the first act to hit that mark with his viral hit "Gangnam Style" in 2012.

June 29, 2020: Biggest Music Video Premiere on YouTube -- Again

If there was any question that "How You Like That" would be a massive hit, the video smashed all doubts when it premiered June 26 with 1.66 million peak concurrents on YouTube. It was also the biggest 24-hour music video debut ever, pulling in an astounding 86.4 million views, beating the record they set the year before with "Kill This Love."

June 30, 2020: 3 Guinness World Records

The girl group snagged three entries in the Guinness World Records thanks to the video for their single "How You Like That." With more than 86 million views in just the first day of release, the video earned Guinness' most viewed YouTube video in 24 hours, most viewed music video on YouTube in 24 hours, and most viewed YouTube music video in 24 Hours by a K-pop group. All three records were previously held by fellow K-pop group BTS.

July 8, 2020: A View From YouTube's Top

BLACKPINK in early July became the sixth act to surpass 40 million subscribers, making them one of the musical acts with the most followers. They trail only Justin Bieber (55.6 million), Marshmello (47.2 million), Ed Sheeran (45.1 million), and Eminem (43.6 million). When they first joined the elite list, BLACKPINK was behind Ariana Grande, who had 42.3 million subscribers at the time. But by the end of the month, the quartet had earned more subscribers than the "7 Rings" singer, coming in with 42.7 million followers.

July 11, 2020: Highest Charting Single by a Girl Group on Digital Song Sales

BLACKPINK's "How You Like That" debuted at No. 2 on Billboard's Digital Song Sales chart dated July 11. The feat tied them with The Pussycat Dolls and The Chicks for highest charting single by an all-female group on this particular list.

Sept. 10, 2021: Most Subscribed Artist on YouTube

Move over, Justin Bieber! BLACKPINK became the artist with the most subscribers on YouTube when the K-pop quartet officially surpassed 65.5 million followers. "Our BLINKS contributed a lot to this achievement. Therefore we hope they also enjoy this honor," BLACKPINK said in a statement. "We will continue to bring positivity and great energy through our music and videos."

Massive Attack have been using their latest live show to challenge American data analytics and software company Palantir, with the band describing the firm's ambitions as "terrifying".

The pioneering trip hop group have woven criticism of the controversial surveillance technology company into their new stage production. During their upcoming performance at Primavera Sound, they plan to deploy "custom-made facial recognition software" capable of "scanning a 75,000-person crowd" and projecting audience members onto giant screens with tongue in cheek labels such as "11 weeks no time off, burnout" and "unfinished books", according to Novara Media.

Speaking with the publication, the visual concept takes direct aim at Palantir, the company established two decades ago by billionaire Peter Thiel. Backed financially by the CIA, the firm counts the US and Israeli militaries, ICE, the FBI and the NHS among its clients.

After unveiling the production in Helsinki, Robert Del Naja told Novara Media that he wanted audiences to better understand how Palantir's reach has expanded from supplying "kill chain tech" reportedly used in Gaza to now having access to the medical records of people across Britain.

"We really need a much wider debate on the suitability of a company like this having such capture of our societal infrastructure," he said. He explained that the criticism is embedded throughout Massive Attack's two hour performance and was developed alongside long time collaborator Adam Curtis and London art collective United Visual Artists.

 

 

"One visual element represents how a Palantir Gotham monitoring and ‘decision chain’ interface might look," Del Naja explained. "Using facial recognition technology, it lands on groups and individuals – implying a consequential outcome for a given target."

Novara Media also detailed how Palantir's software can connect information from multiple databases. The outlet reported that ICE allegedly combines the platform with body camera footage, social media data and information gathered through Israeli developed hacking software Paragon to identify protesters involved in resistance to immigration raids.

The publication further claimed that Palantir contributes to Maven, a software platform used by the US military, which has recently faced criticism after being linked to the bombing of a girls' school in Iran.

"I find their declarations, objectives and moral framing pretty terrifying," Del Naja said. "To enable AI systems to map police records, satellite tracked locations, health records and personal financial transactions and place all of that information – for the first time – into the hands of a company with an overt political agenda and social objectives of its own is a huge, potentially irreversible and dangerous overreach."

Another moment in Massive Attack's current live production appears during the closing section of "Girl I Love You", when a quote from Peter Thiel is projected on screen reading: "I no longer believe that freedom and democracy are compatible".

Last year, Massive Attack introduced the satirical "facial recognition" sequence during their concerts and quickly rejected suggestions that genuine data recognition systems were being used on audiences.

"No Massive Attack live show has ever recorded or stored personal data," the group stated. "Only government departments, relevant authorities & approved contractors can access public databases in the UK, & doing so in multiple cities/countries would be impossible."

The band also pointed to the growing use of facial recognition technology across Britain, arguing that authorities are "overreaching almost all other western democracies with their use of public facial recognition … while there is no specific legislation regulating police use of these systems."

The statement arrived shortly after Massive Attack welcomed Kneecap onto the stage during their major show at the OVO Wembley Arena, introducing them as a group "who refused to be silenced for their solidarity with the Palestinian people."

Massive Attack have consistently spoken out in support of Palestine and a range of other progressive causes. More recently, they pledged to boycott Spotify following reports that CEO Daniel Ek had invested heavily "in a company producing military munition drones and AI technology integrated into fighter aircraft."

During their headline appearance at London's LIDO Festival last summer, the band were joined by actor and activist Khalid Abdalla along with Yasiin Bey, formerly known as Mos Def. Earlier this year, Del Naja also criticised what he described as a "draconian government" after being arrested while protesting the ban on Palestine Action.

The musician was one of hundreds of demonstrators who gathered in Trafalgar Square on April 11 to oppose the Palestine Action ban. He carried a placard stating "I Oppose Genocide, I Support Palestine Action".

 

Police removed him from the protest and arrested him on suspicion of expressing support for a proscribed organisation. He later responded with an extensive statement posted to Instagram.

Back in February, the band revealed a small run of European dates for the summer. The tour began on May 27 at Veikkaus Arena in Helsinki before continuing to Dalhalla in Rättvik on May 30.

The Bristol trip hop pioneers have not released new material since the 2020 EP "Eutopia". Their most recent studio album remains 2010's "Heligoland".

Speaking with NME in 2024, Robert Del Naja revealed that the band had "some new music which we've been sitting on for four years". He later shared in November that he hoped to finally release some of that material in 2026.

CONTINUE READING