THORNAPPLE's song layers personal history with images of flowers, moons, and someone else's seasons.
THORNAPPLEvisibility25 visitsEditor's note liveVideo on page
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Curated by Ethan Walker
LyroVerse team
Quick meaning
A fast read before the full lyric
THORNAPPLE's song layers personal history with images of flowers, moons, and someone else's seasons.
The lyric works by accumulation rather than argument.
Images of flowers blooming in the fifth season and a moon that won't appear stack up quietly, creating a kind of inventory of absence.
Editor's note
Red Peter's Korean lyrics of seasons and memory
THORNAPPLE's song layers personal history with images of flowers, moons, and someone else's seasons.
naega anin nugungaga doeeotdeon gyejeol
The lyric works by accumulation rather than argument. Images of flowers blooming in the fifth season and a moon that won't appear stack up quietly, creating a kind of inventory of absence. It's a patient, almost stubborn catalog of what persists and what's been outgrown.
That phrase 'a season where I became someone else' does the heavy lifting. It's not about transformation so much as displacement, carrying a stretch of time that belongs to another version of you. The lyrics keep returning to what's counted and what's missed, the unseen moon, the tenth song written by someone else, as if trying to map where the old self went.
It's the season 'where I became someone else' that anchors everything. The lyric doesn't explain how or why, just holds that fact like a stone in the pocket.
The way the Korean phrases wrap around those repeated counts, 'nan han naje tteun boiji anneun dal' (a moon I can't see even once), 'nan daseot beonjjae gyejeore pieonan kkot' (a flower that bloomed in the fifth season), gives the song its particular weight.
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Listen for
What to keep in your ear
the pull of "a season where I became someone else"how "nan han naje tteun boiji anneun dal" turns into a mantrathe pull of "where I became someone else"
Lyrics
Red Peter
The lyric stays readable and compact here; the note and related paths sit nearby so you do not lose the song while looking for context.
bulgeun sagwareul han ip beeo mulgo
naega anin nugungaga doeeotdeon gyejeol
amu uimido eomneun hwajangeul hago
nado mollae heungeolgeorin tainui norae
nan han naje tteun boiji anneun dal
nan daseot beonjjae gyejeore pieonan kkot
nan tteonan iui memareun immatchum
neomchyeoheureuneun nareul heullyeobonaego
naega anin nugungaga doeeotdeon gyejeol
sarangseureon dangsinui hyungnaereul naego
geoul apeseo neukkin jeoljeongui sungan
nan han naje tteun boiji anneun dal
nan daseot beonjjae gyejeore pieonan kkot
nan tteonan iui memareun immatchum
nan yeol se beonjjae dare sseuyeojin norae
ojik nareul bichuneun nugungaui
nun kkeuteseoman sumeul swil su inneun
nan
amudo moreuneun paran gillo
gal su eopji
Quick answers
What this page can answer fast
What is "Red Peter" by THORNAPPLE about?
THORNAPPLE's song layers personal history with images of flowers, moons, and someone else's seasons. The lyric works by accumulation rather than argument. Images of flowers blooming in the fifth season and a moon that won't appear stack up quietly, creating a kind of inventory of absence.
Who performs "Red Peter"?
THORNAPPLE performs "Red Peter", and this lyric page sits inside the THORNAPPLE catalog on LyroVerse.
Does LyroVerse have an editor's note for "Red Peter"?
Yes. The page carries the LyroVerse editor's note "Red Peter's Korean lyrics of seasons and memory", followed by the full lyric and related songs.
Are there related songs to explore after "Red Peter"?
Yes. The related section below points to Nightwalk (넓은 밤) and Romanesque (로마네스크) with a short reason for opening each page next.
Where can I find more songs by THORNAPPLE?
Use the artist link near the top of the page or the related paths section below to keep moving through THORNAPPLE's lyric pages.
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