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Miryo
Miryo
South Korean singer
1
Lunafly
Lunafly
South Korean boyband
2
Sistar
Sistar
South Korean girl group
3
Skarf
Skarf
South Korean girl group
4
Sunny Hill
Sunny Hill
South Korean girl group
5
Fiestar
Fiestar
South Korean girl group
6
Tahiti
Tahiti
South Korean girl group
7
Secret
Secret
South Korean girl group
8
Miss A
Miss A
South Korean girl group
9
Jewelry
Jewelry
South Korean girl group
10
4Minute
4Minute
South Korean girl group
11
Phantom
Phantom
South Korean hip-hop group
12
Global Icon
Global Icon
South Korean girl group
13
Black Swan
Black Swan
South Korean girl group
14
Brave Girls
Brave Girls
South Korean girl group
15
Boyfriend
Boyfriend
South Korean boy group
16
MBLAQ
MBLAQ
South Korean boyband
17
CNBLUE
CNBLUE
South Korean rock band
18
EXID
EXID
South Korean girl group
19
EvoL
EvoL
South Korean girl group
20
Kara
Kara
South Korean girl group
21
D-Unit
D-Unit
South Korean girl group
22
After School
After School
South Korean girl group
23
Mr.Mr
Mr.Mr
South Korean boyband
24
N.Flying
N.Flying
South Korean boyband
25
Urban Zakapa
Urban Zakapa
South Korean R&B group
26
B.A.P
B.A.P
South Korean boy band
27
ROMEO
ROMEO
South Korean boy band
Brown Eyed Girls
South Korean girl group

Brown Eyed Girls

Intro
South Korean girl group
Genres
Record Labels
News

The Brown Eyed Girls (Hangul: 브라운 아이드 걸스, Japanese: ブラウン・アイド・ガールズ), often abbreviated as B.E.G., BG, or 브아걸 (beu-ah-geol), is a South Korean girl group with four members: JeA, Miryo, Narsha, and Gain. They debuted as an R&B/Ballad vocal group with "Come Closer (다가와서)" in 2006 and have since performed in a variety of music genres.

They rose to popularity in 2008 with "L.O.V.E" and their retro-dance number "How Come," and cemented their position in the K-pop world in 2009 with "Abracadabra", with its electronica-based genre, pioneering (albeit controversial) concept, along with its iconic and now globally recognized dance entitled 'The Arrogant Dance (시건방춤)'—successfully ingraining themselves into modern popular culture.

The group started their venture into the Japanese music market with the release of a Japanese version of their massively successful 3rd Korean album, Sound-G, in late 2010, with full promotions being held throughout early 2011 under Sony Music Japan, where they gained moderate success. They returned to Korea in late 2011, to garner further success and critical acclaim with their 4th album and its title track "Sixth Sense". Other than promoting as a group, all of the members have released solo albums.