The leader of BTS has built a solo catalog that feels like late-night conversations in a half-lit room.
Put on "forever rain" first. Then try "seoul" for the view from his hometown.
His solo work moves differently than the group's stadium anthems. Songs like "forever rain" and "seoul" document a quieter, more reflective space. The collaboration with Erykah Badu on "Yun" shows a reach that extends far beyond K-pop's usual borders.
He started as Rap Monster, the teenage leader of a then-unknown group. The solo tracks that followed, from "Monster" to "everythingoes," trace a path from brash confidence toward something more interior and weathered.
Keep it compact: a lyric you come back to, a live memory, or the part of the catalog you would point someone toward first.
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