âThings change, people change, everything change,â BTS leader RM sang on âChange Pt.2â, the squelchy, needling song from his 2022 solo album âIndigoâ. That record grappled with lifeâs unpredictabilities and trying to navigate transformation, a natural and necessary part of our existences. Over the last 10 years, BTS have done much the same in their music, evolving over a breadth of sounds, each one adding to and expanding their sonic identity to create â when looked back on â a rich tapestry thatâs cut through with musical adventure and curiosity.
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It started with hip-hop. Big Hit Entertainment (now HYBE) founder Bang Si-hyukâs original idea was to form a group around RM, a teen rapper who had been lighting up Koreaâs underground scene. Before BTSâ debut, that vision morphed into a melding of hip-hop collective and idol group and, with three rappers and four singers, thatâs how the seven-piece started their journey in June 2013. Their M.O. was clear in their very first release â âNo More Dreamâ, an insistent track that tackled the pressure put on young people to yearn for the dreams society tells us we should want, from a good education to a respectable job and beyond.
Since the genreâs conception, hip-hop artists have shared observations about their lives and the worlds they live in through their music. In their own songs, BTS followed suit, using their âSchoolâ trilogy â 2013âs â2 Cool 4 Skoolâ and âO!RUL8,2?â, and 2014âs âSkool Luv Affairâ â to comment on issues affecting their generation, be they crushes on your schoolmates (âBoy In Luvâ) or trying to inspire a rising up against the brutal pressures put on them in pursuit of education (âN.O.â).

No matter what sound BTS have been dabbling in, that social commentary streak has never been too far away. You can hear it in 2017âs âGo Goâ â on the surface, a fun frivolous song, but actually an analysis of modern youthâs almost nihilist hedonism, throwing money away because they donât see a point in saving it for their future. Itâs present in 2015âs âBaepsaeâ, deceptively performed with a truckload of hip thrusts at concerts, but really a critique of socio-economic inequality and attitudes of the older generation. âUGH!â, from 2020âs âMap Of The Soul: 7â, turned its focus on keyboard warriors spreading bile online. Even in their solo releases, these assessments are part of the groupâs DNA â Sugaâs âPolar Nightâ tackles the un-nuanced way in which we often consume the world and opinions that donât chime with our own.
As BTSâ popularity grew, so did the palette of styles they dipped into. Their 2014 album âDark&Wildâ represented their last full hip-hop record, their next era finding them broadening their horizons. âThe Most Beautiful Moment In Lifeâ brought the vocal line more to the fore and introduced tinges of everything from EDM and alt-pop, indie and crisp R&B. In 2016, âWingsâ amplified that new sonic diversity further, following down that path for the âLove Yourselfâ trilogy, which in itself added yet more strings to BTSâ bow â jazzy flourishes, Latin-inspired sounds and tons more. That journey into eclecticism mirrored the trajectory of music consumption in the digital age â where once we came from a place of tribalism, dedicating ourselves to one genre, now we embrace everything and anything that strikes a chord with us.
In 2020, the world shifted on its axis and so too did BTS once again. With pandemic dread clouding the globe, they set out to do what they do best â provide comfort and support through difficult times with their music. To do so, they turned to a sound that could impact the most people possible, big glossy, euphoric pop â and a sparkle of disco. âDynamiteâ kicked off whatâs now known as their English trilogy, a rush of escapist elation packaged into a pop anthem. Unsurprisingly, it helped them finally get their first Billboard Hot 100 Number One â something theyâd been threatening to do for a few releases. âButterâ and âPermission To Danceâ followed (with the slightly more subdued âBEâ album in between), yet more bright bullets of encouragement, hope and distraction as the situation continued.

In their second chapter â one that finds them prioritising solo activities for the time being â BTS are keeping up that commitment to evolution. That was evident from the first individual release, J-hopeâs âJack In The Boxâ, which saw the rapper shake off the sunny disposition heâs more commonly associated with and experiment with darker, shadowier sounds and ideas. Experiment is the key word here â each solo release so far has felt like each member trying out something new and pushing themselves outside their comfort zones, liberated from some of the pressure of BTSâ success. On âSet Me Free Pt.2â, Jimin adopted abrasive autotune â a world away from the soft sweetness of his Soundcloud releases â while RMâs âIndigoâ included something equally unexpected in the form of folk song âForg_tfulâ.
Over the last decade, every time BTS have evolved and moved on to fresh ideas, theyâve never left what they did before behind. Instead, theyâve kept it as a part of them, binding previous endeavours into their DNA, making something inimitably them. âYesterdayâs me is still me,â RM said in his speech at the UN in 2018 and thatâs an ethos that thrives in BTSâ music. As the seven members continue to create on their own and, at some point, back together, each new project will likely feed into whatever comes next too. Perhaps, by their 20th anniversary, weâll be looking back at an even richer and varied back catalogue â and even more powerful future yet to come too.
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