Having performed at the Grammy Awards in Los
Angeles last month, BTS stands at the forefront of South Korean
pop music and has helped gather an international audience for
the genre.
On Friday, the band released "Map of the Soul: 7", its fourth
album. The 20 tracks include collaborations with Sia and Troye
Sivan.
Plans for a large media event in Seoul for the album were
ditched due to the coronavirus health scare in South Korea, but
the band instead livestreamed a news conference based on
preregistered questions.
"Sometimes we were uncertain, sometimes we were lost. Every time
that happened, the shadows and fear inside us grew," rapper Suga
told the news conference aired via YouTube.
"But it's been seven years. I think we have grounded ourselves
now, and we learned how to do that, the difficulties and wounds
we face and fight them."
Though several young K-Pop stars have struggled with cyber
bullying and depression, Suga did not elaborate on what
difficulties BTS faced.
But the group, whose seven members are in their Twenties, took
an unexpectedly long vacation last year to "recharge".
When asked about the comment by Bong Joon-ho, director of the
Oscar-winning "Parasite", who recently said BTS was 3,000 times
more influential than him, Suga said he was an avid fan of
Bong's work and hoped more South Korean artists would be
introduced to the world.
Leader and rapper RM likened K-pop to a "giftbox" integrating
music, dance, video and interaction with fans, saying the
personal elements the band infuses in its music might have
boosted its global popularity.
"We try to instil personal stories in our music and dance and I
think the concerns and feelings that we have resonate with
people around the world," he said.
But making music is a "constant battle to show your weakness and
fight the fear of expressing your fear," he added.
BTS broke into the U.S. market in 2017 and was the first Korean
group to win a Billboard music award. It is set to launch a new
world tour in April, kicking off in Seoul.
(Reporting by Hyonhee Shin; Editing by Simon Cameron-Moore)
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