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RM: āI spend a lot of time thinking about where I am nowā
BTS BE comeback interview
2020.11.28
The story of BTSā new album BE started on April 17, 2020 when group member RM announced its production on the BANGTANTV YouTube channel. In the seven months that followed until the albumās release, RMās mind was full, his thoughts flowing in and out of his head.
How do you feel about the unique approach you took to making your new album, BE?
RM: The other members were a ton of help to me. My lyrics made it on the album, but the music I composed didnāt, so Iām really thankful to the group for the music. How should I say this? I feel like everyone is doing a great job. There are so many parts in these songs that Iām indebted to them for. āStayā was originally going to be the title song on Jung Kookās mixtape, but everyone liked it so much, and they all agreed to put that on our album. Thatās how much influence they had. Iām really happy my room idea was chosen to be the album photos. Since weāre spending a lot of time in our rooms because of COVID-19, we laid out the idea of each of us decorating a room in our own style. I canāt remember for sure (laughs) but I think Iām the one who came up with that. I made a comfortable room, one thatās modern and warm because thatās what I like.
Thereās a painting in the middle, and symmetrically arranged figurines.
RM: The figures are from my own collection. I wanted to show one of my paintings, but that didnāt pan out. But still, those are the things I hold most dear to me right now, so I let the room embody the things I wish I had, too.
Itās well known that you like art and frequent exhibitions, but how do you feel when you look at art in your home or another space where there are no people, like in the album art?
RM: Someone said, āYou donāt have to buy this painting; itās yours so long as youāre looking at it.ā Thatās my favorite sound bite these days. What I most envied about painters was that, even after they died, their work would be hanging up somewhere, maybe even in another country, still defining that space. Musicians leave behind their songs and videos, too, but itās only through fine art that viewers in the future are able to completely meet artists from the past. Iām envious that this is only possible for painters. These days Iām trying to find spaces where I can have more relaxed viewing experiences.
Thereās a full experience involved, from the time you get ready to leave your house until the time youāre actually looking at artwork in the gallery.
RM: Thatās perfect to me. Thereās art you can keep at home, and then thereās art that should always be viewed in museums.
What effect do you think that type of experience has on your music? You didnāt compose any of the songs but instead participated in writing the lyrics to all of the tracks. Did that experience affect your lyric writing in any way?
RM: I think itās helped me develop a way of thinking using all the senses. I used to be attuned to speech and focus on language and auditory textures, but now I can look at my thoughts from many different angles. Thatās why I spend more time studying art now. Iām waiting for the day that it all comes to the surface, like when you paint the base on a canvas over and over so the colors pop. Itās hard to answer in one word if it has a direct influence on my work, but I think people who create music develop a way of seeing the world through their personal experience and their creative process. Painters naturally exhibit their art over a very long period of time. I think it gave me an eye for looking at the world in one long, continuous stroke. So now itās become a little challenging for me to write lyrics these days. Iāve become more cautious.
Why is it so challenging?
RM: I used to have so many ideas pouring out that it was hard to pluck one out. So I would stack them up like a Jenga tower and ponder over which one to remove. But now, itās hard to even add a block to the stack. Iām not sure why but, when I look at these artists whose works span their entire lives, I sense that the rhythm of my creativity is slowing down more and more. Thatās the source of my dilemma. Iām only 27 years old. I still need to wander around and get tripped up a little. But am I just trying to imitate what the fine artists are doing? Or maybe BTS experienced so much in the past seven years, that now itās time for us to take a breather? Iāve got so many questions, I feel like my hairās turning white. Thatās why none of my songs are on the album. I wrote some, but they were too personal to use there. I donāt exactly like myself like this, but I have to see through to the end in this direction and find the answer.
Maybe for that reason, your rapping has shifted focus to the lyrics more so than trend or musicality. It emphasizes the feeling of the words over a particular format or beat.
RM: Exactly. Ināwas it 2017? Pdogg was talking to Yoongi, Hobi and me about our style, and said, āNamjoon, it feels like youāre becoming a lyricist,ā and it really stuck with me. I have a lot of thoughts lately when I watch Show Me the Money or listen to hip hop songs from the Billboard chart. My music started out all about my life as a rapper, so I spend a lot of time thinking about where I am now.
So youāve started to ask yourself who you are as a musician?
RM: I listened to Lee So-raās seventh album again today. I keep changing my mind but, if I had to pick between her sixth and seventh album, I like her seventh a little more. And then I listen to the most popular songs on Billboard, and I feel kind of thrown off. Um ⦠Thereās something Whanki Kim said thatās been running around in my head lately: After moving to New York, he embraced the style of artists like Mark Rothko and Adolf Gottlieb, but then he said, āIām Korean, and I canāt do anything not Korean. I canāt do anything apart from this, because I am an outsider.ā And I keep thinking that way, too. Thatās my main concern lately.
You can feel that on BE. As the members take on more prominent roles as songwriters and producers, characteristics of old Korean musicāthe kind of music you likely listened to in middle and high schoolāgradually entered your sound. But your music isnāt from that era, and it sounds like pop, but not quite.
RM: The sound has to fit with the whole album so I couldnāt incorporate that feel into BTS songs, but the songs Iām listening to most lately have been Korean. Songs like P-Typeās āDon Quixote,ā DeadāPās āSpread My Wings,ā Soul Companyās album The Bangerz. The impressions the songs from back then have left on me, the lyrics from back then and the lyrics from now, theyāre different. So BE is both Korean and pop; itās very unique, in my view.
I think thatās especially true for āLife Goes On.ā Itās got a pop melody, but compared to āDynamite,ā it has a very different feel. It doesnāt slip deep into the sentimental, instead allowing the melody to flow naturally.
RM: Exactly. The chorus is totally pop, and one of the writers was also American. But the song doesnāt really follow American music trends, weirdly. So I donāt know how āLife Goes Onā is going to be received. Itās really calm, almost contemplative. So thereās lyrics, like, āLike an echo in the forest,ā and, āLike an arrow in the blue sky.ā The song kind of feels like that: It could just float off and disappear. It might even come off as bland next to āDynamite.ā
If nothing else, it seems the song will stick around for a long time. Maybe kids now will listen to it later on in the future.
RM: I hope so. Thatās the one thing I really hope for, people in the future, thinking back and saying, āOh, right! Remember that one song?ā Thatās what my favorite artists and other people who leave a lasting impression on me have in common. One thing common among the songs that have affected me a lot, like Lee So-raās seventh album, is that the lyrics they utter in their voice along with the overall sound stick with me. I hope when people look back, my words uttered with the sound of my voice, echoes for a long time in an auditory or visual way, or even throughout their entire lives. But thatās the dilemma: We have all these bling-bling symbols of our success, but weāre not that kind of team.
And yet, BTSās career path is even more ābling-blingā than ever. āDynamiteā was the top song on the Billboard Hot 100.
RM: I was the first one to check our position (laughs) but I didnāt want to get too excited about it. I was scared of facing disappointment so I put the brakes on out of habit, and restrained myself. But on the other hand, I feel like I should relish this moment. This is a once-in-a-lifetime thing; shouldnāt I enjoy myself a bit? But I disliked that sensation of only feeling elated so I tried to be as objective as possible. I was just one small part of everything that made this happen.
It reminds me of that part, āRunning faster than that cloud of rain / Ā Thought that would be enough / Guess Iām only human after all,ā from āLife Goes On.ā
RM: āOnly humanā sounds so appropriate for me right now. One time, I saw a dark cloud over the N Seoul Tower while I was walking along the Han River. I was with a friend and we talked about where the border between where itās raining and where itās not might be, and suddenly, we came up with the idea to run and find that spot. But after running for 10 minutes, the cloud was even further away than it had been. At that moment, the puzzle pieces snapped into place. You think you can go faster than that dark cloud? No. Thatās what I realized then. And I just like what Whanki Kim said, that maybe I canāt do anything not Korean, because thatās what I am. I used to work late and then stay up all night when things werenāt working out, sometimes walking from Samseong to Sinsa station, thinking everything through. But now, like the saying, I realize that maybe I canāt do more than what I am.
On Weverse, you said that you gained some muscle from working out. Could the change to your body improve your creativity in the long term?
RM: I started to think I better change myself a little, physically or mentally. Iām talking about being steady. I used to bombard myself with challenges and worries and just get over them, but now I think itās time to find that one sturdy thing and plant myself there. The best choice was working out, and I think itās changing my behavior a lot. Iām hoping that, if I keep working out for a year or two, Iāll become a different person.
Music is your job, but also your life. Like you expressed in āDis-ease,ā how would you say you feel about your work?
RM: This is my job and my calling and I feel a great sense of responsibility. I think Iām lucky and happy that I can solely worry about my creative process. And I feel very responsible to those people who put their trust in me, so I try not to cross any lines, judge myself honestly, and always be professional. Those are the responsibilities that come with the jobāthe things I have to do and the promises I wonāt betray. But if Iām going to do it, Iām going to be happy while I do it. Thatās not always going to be possible, but thatās generally how I feel.
Well then, how do you feel about BTS at the moment?
RM: BTS is ⦠Well, itās really hard to tell. (laughs) When BTS started out, I thought, āI know everything there is to know about BTS,ā but now itās, āI donāt know a single thing about BTS.ā In the past, I felt like I knew everything, and that anything was possible. Call it childish or ambitious. But if I were to ask myself, āWhat is BTS to me?ā I would say, weāre just people who met each other because we were meant to. But it feels like the stars aligned and a startup company became a unicorn, with perfect timing and lots of smart people. Looking back, there were a lot of ironies and contradictions in this industry. I thought I figured them out one by one, and then finally understood the whole thing. But now I feel like I donāt know anything at all. Anyway, to sum up: My young, reckless twenties. The events of my twenties. There were a lot of contradictions, people, fame, and conflict all tangled together, but it was my choice and I got a lot out of it, so my twenties were an intense but also happy time.
And what about you, as one individual person?
RM: Iām a real Korean person. (laughs) A person who wants to do something in Korea. I think millennials are charging into society stuck between the analog and digital generations, and what I chose is BTS. So I try to integrate myself into our generation, try to understand what people like me are thinking, and try to work hard to capture that feeling without being a burden on them. This might be another kind of irony itself, but this is who I am. Iām a 27-year-old Korean. Thatās what I think.
Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
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201128 do0_nct instagram story update: Thank you so much for today, we received a great award.
There is something I didn't want to forget to tell you when we'd receive a big award like this.
I wrote down a few words, hoping that mine and our sincerity would fully reach you.
Next year it'll be six years since the NCT team was introduced to the world.
Since it was a new team unlike any other, I believe we needed time for our fans and the public to accept us.
We debuted with a really big dream, but as time went by, we watched as our dream grew smaller and we adapted to reality, and there were times when it was sad, and tiring.
It is thanks to all the company family members who trusted and supported us during those times, and to the fans who cheered us on and walked with us despite the complicated system and many other difficulties, that we were able to win this big award.
During NCT's time, the members' hard work and the fans' support was all we had. Thank you for making this time beautiful.
And what I'm most grateful for are the members.
There are members who have been with me since the beginning, and although each of us has had different durations with NCT, it is thanks to all of us that we were able to win this great award.
I believe I'll remember this current moment as a beautiful one amongst the many historic moments of NCT. I think it's a very proud day to be an NCT member.
Seriously, thank you. I really miss you. Czennies.!
Translation: Myeon @ FY! NCT (NCTINFO) | Source: Doyoung's IG
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