Born in Seoul, South Korea, Park moved to the United States with his family as a young child.
When he was 17 years old, Park and his friend Danny flew to South Korea during summer vacation to audition for YG Entertainment.
After his performing career with 1TYM ended in January 2006, Park became an in-house producer for YG Entertainment and co-founded The Black Label in 2016.
He has co-produced and co-written songs for YG artists such as Jinusean, Seven, Big Bang, 2NE1, Lee Hi, Blackpink, and Jeon Somi, as well as Uhm Jung-hwa and Sunmi.
[1][7] After auditioning for Yang and sending in demo tapes, the two were signed to his newly established label, and moved to South Korea.
The songs 'One Love'[10] and '쾌지나 칭칭' (Let's Sing and Dance Together),[11] which he wrote and produced, won first place on TV music programs.
In 2003, 1TYM released their fourth album Once N 4 All, which yielded two singles: "Hot 뜨거",[12] an up-beat hip-hop track with reggae rhythms, and "Without You", an emotional R&B ballad.
"[4] When BigBang member Taeyang embarked on a solo career in 2008, Park produced his extended play, Hot.
[15] Park would go on to have a hand in producing a majority of 2NE1's work, including their debut extended play, 2NE1[5] (2009) and studio album, To Anyone (2010).
[1] The label currently houses Zion.T, Korea's second bestselling artist of 2015 after BigBang, Korean-Canadian singer and former I.O.I member Jeon Somi, and K-Pop Girl-Group Meovv.
Park produced for the first time for a non-YG Entertainment artist with "Just Dance," the theme song for the reality television competition Mix Nine.
In 2021, Park wrote and produced Blackpink members Rosé and Lisa's respective debut solo singles "On the Ground" and "Lalisa".
[22] His work with 2NE1's first full-length album and 2011 EP contained songs that are pop and dance, in addition to featuring house elements.
[24] In 2018, Seoul Sports published a list of "Most Influential Power People of K-pop," which was ranked by music industry executives.
[29] It later concluded with stating, "We unequivocally reveal that 'Heroine' is 100 percent an original creative work with absolutely no reference to the song that has been named in the controversy.