Review map of the soul 7 năm 2024

If there’s a digital-age equivalent to camping outside a record store waiting for a new album to drop, it’s what BTS fans did overnight: hovering over Spotify or Apple Music, pouring some very strong coffee and waiting for 1 a.m. PST to arrive, so they could finally stream “Map of the Soul: 7” when it landed.

The new album from the biggest K-pop group in the world is a global record biz event like no other, a comprehensive 20-song collection that looks forward, backward and all around the K-pop landscape that RM, Suga, J-Hope, Jin, Jimin, Jungkook and V helped create. It booked more than 4 million presales, easily eclipsing the year-end tally of its predecessor, “Map of the Soul: Persona” (and that’s not even counting the streams to come).

There’s never been a more surefire Billboard chart-topper in recent pop. To quote their countryman, “Parasite” director Bong Joon Ho, it makes any other event in music seem quaintly “local.”

But fortunately, the album is also a fantastic summary of BTS’ accomplishments so far, and charts a path forward in a tumultuous but exciting new era for K-pop. It’s an album about being in a band, about the relationships that form and get tested in the crucible of insane fame, all set to some of the most genre-invigorating music of their career. If you were hitting “refresh” in the blue glow of your phone all night, BTS has richly rewarded your patience.

Dedicated BTS Army troops will immediately notice that the front quarter of this gargantuan album is previously released material from “Persona,” the 2019 EP that pivoted the band from their smash hit “Love Yourself” trilogy into this new period.

“Boy With Luv,” “Make It Right,” “Dionysus” and “Jamais Vu” will be plenty familiar at this point. Maybe there’s someone out there hearing them for the first time on this album, but they’re likely placed here as context, almost like a map of the territory or a family tree at the beginning of a sprawling novel.

Because what comes next is the darkest, strangest and yet most relevant and ambitious music BTS has made yet. It’s partly a hat tip back to their roots as a hip-hop act, Bangtan Boys, but attuned to today’s misty, hard-kicking sonics and bolstered by everything they’ve learned in the intervening years as pop stars.

“UGH!” seethes with paranoia and showcases the best technical rapping of BTS’ career — it’s closer to drill music than anything casual audiences might associate with K-pop. On “Respect,” RM and Suga try their hand at the wavy yelps of Young Thug and emerge with one of the strongest trap tracks of their lives.

“Black Swan” is foggy and arty and catchy as hell: If “7” has a statement of purpose, it’s probably this cut. It shows the biggest band in the world as attentive students of trippy modern hip-hop, but aware of the meticulousness and skill they bring to it as well.

On a first pass, the R&B and global pop moments are some of the most affecting, even more so given the breadth of the record. Jimin’s “Filter” is a sweaty, Latin guitar-driven single that’s his high point as a vocalist so far; “Louder Than Bombs,” co-written with Troye Sivan, is a glitchy electro-pop stomper with some of the most moving vocal harmonies in the BTS catalog.

The group is beloved, however, for lyrics that peel off the insulation around K-pop fame and speak with singular candor about the cost of the spotlight, and what an experience like theirs both takes and gives to BTS’ friendships. K-pop fans don’t need to speak Korean to get into it, but if it prompts you to, no act is more rewarding to dig into than BTS.

I’m one of those who needs director Bong’s “one-inch barrier” of subtitles to understand what’s going on here, but after a few hours with the album and some fevered Google Translate sessions, it’s clear the band is trying to do one of the hardest tricks in pop: the road album.

It’s a cliche for a band to mine meaning out of the daily trials of being famous and adrift, but that’s been BTS’ whole mission from the start. Their phenomenal ascent as artists mirrored the K-pop genre’s rise in America, and their fans’ path into adulthood with all its promise and vague sense of closing doors. “24, feels like I became a grown-up faster than everyone else,” Jungkook sings on “My Time.” “But is it too fast? There are traces of losses / Don’t know what to do, am I living this right?”

As the album drops its landing gear, “We Are Bulletproof: The Eternal” leaves fans feeling the arc of the journey, a piano ballad that insists the BTS Army really is in this together, that the band is figuring out this life thing right along with you. It would be a logical ending point, but then they throw on an old-school big-beat club number “Outro: Ego” and a remix, with a Sia collaboration, of “ON’”for good measure.

Bighit

  • Release Date: Feb 21, 2020
  • Summary: The seventh full-length for the Korean pop band features guest appearances from Halsey and Sia.

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Review map of the soul 7 năm 2024

  • Record Label: Bighit
  • Genre(s): Pop, Rap, Pop/Rock, Pop-Rap, Asian Pop, K-Pop
  • More Details and Credits »

Score distribution:

  1. Mixed: 0 out of 12
  2. Negative: 0 out of 12
  3. It is an impressive, exciting and moving album with slick production, accompanied by thought-provoking art (the interpretative dance performance in the “Black Swan” video, the CONNECT BTS art exhibitions), but it is so much more than a shiny pop album. It is a love letter to pain, to the shadows that live within us.
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  4. Their cultural impact is undeniable, and their work continues to push forward conversations about genre, language, and much more. There’s no telling what BTS will do next, but that’s what’s so compelling.
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  5. What’s impressive on 7 is how they show a fascination with genres that should have no business being on the same album, but without the “smash and grab” attitude of so many Western artists. When it comes to music, 7 is is cast-iron proof we all speak the same language.
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  6. The album is also a fantastic summary of BTS’ accomplishments so far, and charts a path forward in a tumultuous but exciting new era for K-pop. It’s an album about being in a band, about the relationships that form and get tested in the crucible of insane fame, all set to some of the most genre-invigorating music of their career.
    • All this publication's reviews
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  7. Persona lacked the natural fluidity and chicness of their best music. Those problems aren’t exactly mitigated here, since most of those songs appear on this album too, but within this new context, they feel like a flashback before the saga continues. Many of the new songs are better about balancing Easter eggs for day-ones with new entry points for more casual listeners.
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See all 12 Critic Reviews

  • Friendship never end. Teamwork makes the dream work.
  • Sinceramente esse álbum é perfeito, é nítida a evolução do BTS esses garotos merecem o mundo!!
  • One of the best albums ever released. The expectation is not lost on each track. The instrumental is incredible along with the lyricsOne of the best albums ever released. The expectation is not lost on each track. The instrumental is incredible along with the lyrics completely inspiring and real.… Expand
  • Fantastic artwork. I will forever love army, and BTS! They put so much into their work, and it shows.
  • This review contains spoilers, click expand to view.Es un álbum hermoso, las voces, las melodías, ritmos, las letras profundas y reflexivas, es arte puro y merece ser valorado como tal. Bangtan, ARMY está orgullosa de él trabajo magnífico que están haciendo, sigan superandose cada vez más!… Expand

This review contains spoilers, click expand to view.all the songs on this album contain as much art and deep meaning as in BTS's previous albums. You will find meaning that is far from even your expectations. the melody soothes me, the singing voice can even brighten my day again. this is what I feel. even every time, I always listen to songs on this album because the effect is very positive for myself.

Is Map of the Soul: 7 best selling album?

As of March 2021, Map of the Soul: 7 by South Korean boy band BTS is the best-selling album of all time in the country.

What records did Map of the Soul: 7 break?

North America. Map of the Soul: 7 debuted atop the US Billboard 200 with 422,000 album-equivalent units, including 347,000 pure album sales, becoming BTS's fourth number-one album in the country and the highest first-week figures of BTS's albums in the US to date.

What is Map of the Soul: 7 about?

“MAP OF THE SOUL : 7” looks back on the past seven years of BTS since their debut as seven members of one team. The journey was not always smooth sailing, and there were special travails that they had to endure in their rise as global superstars.

Is BTS actually good?

They're also extremely talented performers, have uplifting messages in their music, speak up on important issues, and have built an organic bond with their fans. It also doesn't hurt that their friendship with each other is palpable.