London, 15 October 2023. Le Sserafim, the K-pop quintet under Source Music, has navigated a period of reported internal friction, prompting advice from British music producers on sustaining group cohesion. The group, formed in 2022, faced speculation of strained relations following member Sakura’s candid remarks about creative differences during a live broadcast in September. A subsequent hiatus of three weeks from public engagements fuelled rumours of a rift. However, the group’s return to stage on 12 October with a polished performance at Seoul’s Olympic Hall suggests a resolution.
UK producers, including Max Martin’s protégé Shellback and Grammy-winning engineer Tom Elmhirst, have offered strategic counsel. In statements to the BBC, they emphasised the importance of transparent communication and structured delegation of artistic input. Elmhirst noted: “In any collective creative endeavour, friction is inevitable. Institutional resilience depends on clear hierarchies and mutual respect for individual skillsets.” Shellback added: “The K-pop machine is demanding. Resilience is built through rehearsal of conflict resolution, not just choreography.”
Le Sserafim’s trajectory mirrors broader challenges in the K-pop industry, where high-intensity training and public scrutiny exacerbate tensions. The group’s management has not commented on the specifics of the discord, but a source close to the label confirmed that “open forums and mediation sessions have been introduced.” The group’s latest single, “Unforgiven,” has topped charts in South Korea and Japan, indicating that professional discipline has prevailed.
The episode underscores the geopolitical soft power of K-pop and the institutional mechanisms required to sustain it. For Le Sserafim, the immediate crisis appears contained. The long-term test will be whether these fledgling resilience protocols become embedded in the group’s corporate culture.








