Derulo reaches out to K-pop with 'Let's Shut Up & Dance'

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Jason Derulo is simultaneously looking ahead, looking back and looking across the ocean for his new project.

In "Let's Shut Up & Dance," the pop singer collaborates with Asian K-pop acts Lay Zhang and NCT 127 in a trans-Pacific partnership he thinks ought to be increasingly common in the musical future.

At the same time, the single is the first of four in the coming months culminating in an EP boxed set of vinyl '45s in June that is a tribute to his childhood hero Michael Jackson.

Derulo, who has launched a number of Top 10 pop hits like "Whatcha Say" and "Talk Dirty" since emerging on the music scene in 2009, is looking to take inspiration from both past and future.

"I was so excited about this collaboration," Derulo said of Zhang, a member of the Chinese and South Korean boy band EXO, and NCT 127, a 10-member, Seoul-based boy group. "We come from totally different worlds, but I really, really love their talent."

Derulo has collaborated with everyone from pop hitmakers like Jennifer Lopez, Nicki Minaj and David Guetta to Colombian superstar Maluma and country music king Luke Bryan. The 29-year-old would seem to be too old to be a fan of the bubblegum musical style that has had Asian youth captivated for years and made serious inroads among American teens, especially with the success of the boy band BTS, who released two No. 1 albums in the U.S. last year and won honors at the Billboard Music Awards and American Music Awards.

For "Let's Shut Up & Dance," which has been viewed more than 18 million times on YouTube, Derulo takes the artists' styles from rainbow-hued to black, sexes up their usual youthful innocence and puts them in nighttime street scenes. But makes full use of their antic, athletic and synchronized dance moves.

"This was the norm back in the day in terms of dance," he said. "I feel like artists have become lazy."

The video has echoes of Jackson's work, and "The Greatest Dancer" EP where the song appears is set to drop on June 25, the 10th anniversary of the King of Pop's death.

The timing has also meant it comes when Jackson's legacy is being questioned on the heels of "Leaving Neverland," the HBO documentary on two men who accuse Jackson of molesting them as children, allegations the Jackson family and estate have denied and denounced.

Derulo said he is keeping the late artist he remembers separate from anything that may have happened privately.

"This has nothing to do with anyone's personal life," said Derulo, who had not seen "Leaving Neverland" when he spoke to the AP.

The Jackson influence in "Let's Shut Up & Dance" is not overtly expressed. There is no imagery of him, no sparkling glove or moonwalk.

"That was important to me," Derulo said. "This is not Vegas. I wanted to make sure in the song and the choreography that you can feel Michael's presence, and you can feel the influence, but it wasn't a copycat."

Derulo is also keeping busy with his role in "Cats," the movie version of the musical that dominated Broadway in the 1970s and '80s. Taylor Swift, Ian McKellen and Jennifer Hudson play felines alongside Derulo in the film, to be released Dec. 20.

"I was a musical theater kid, so theater and acting is always something I wanted to dive into. It was never the role that I thought could jump my acting career," he said.

Derulo said the way "Cats" uses motion-capture and other technology will be like nothing viewers have seen before.

"It's like seeing 'Avatar' for the first time or seeing 'The Matrix' for the first time," he said.