K-Pop debuts can be tricky things. At times, they’re the best song a group delivers. Sometimes, they’re the only song a group delivers!
But, debuts can also be huge wtf moments in an artist’s career. In this feature, I’ll be looking back at debut songs through the prism of time, re-evaluating how well they hold up and how representative they are of an artist’s eventual singles run.
Debut Date: June 28, 2016
Review:
This re-evaluation has been a long time coming, and I must move between several different states of mind to write it. First, we head back to the early summer of 2016. Given my intense desire for a sweet, hyper-melodic girl group sound to return in 2026, it’s hard to believe there was ever a time I was sick of hearing it. However, early 2016 had been flush with the style… so much that my initial review of Gugudan’s Wonderland was unfairly harsh on the song. I guess I simply hungered to hear something else, never anticipating what that “something else” might be and the hold it would go on to have on K-pop over the next decade.
Of all the reviews I’ve written, Wonderland sticks in my craw in the same way that the review for WJSN’s excellent Secret does. Going back to listen to this, I can’t understand what I had such a problem with! If Wonderland was released this year, I’d be raving about its refreshing energy and sung (sung!!) melodies. Sure, it’s sugary sweet to a fault, but the overall sound is buoyant and exciting in a way we rarely hear anymore. The chorus is layered with harmony and represents an actual climax in the song rather than a dull beat drop.
Even so, I’m not going to go crazy with my updated rating. Within the realm of these sweet, melodic girl group tracks, I still think Wonderland is second tier. However, being second tier within a genre I happen to love still warrants a high score. Its production misses the chance to become truly iconic by bending to too many tropes, but the song as a whole has such satisfying heft and payoff. It truly brings a smile to my face.
Does the song hold up?
Yes! Far more than I would have thought at the time.
Is the song stronger or weaker than most of the artist’s title tracks?
They had one or two stronger title tracks (I was too harsh on their discography at the time), but this is definitely in the upper half.
Does the song represent the artist’s music going forward?
It feels a bit sweeter than most of their music.
Hooks
9
Production
8
Longevity
9
Bias
9
RATING
8.75
