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Agust D on the set of the "Daechwita" music video. The official video was released on May 22, 2020. [2] The music video draws inspiration from the 2012 film Masquerade, [3] in which a lowly acrobat takes the role of a double for King Gwanghae, and eventually takes the throne while the ruler recovers from being poisoned; in the music video, Agust D acts as both the king and his double.
While D-2 contained Suga's trademark "raw sensibility and brutal honesty" also found on Agust D, the record was more "unapologetic yet humble". [ 7 ] [ 8 ] The lead single " Daechwita ", co-written with El Capitxn, was an "anthem of victory and pride" about Suga's growth and "global success as an artist", and featured various South Korean ...
His debut solo album D-Day, was released on April 21 under his Agust D alias. Featuring the singles " People Pt. 2 " and " Haegeum ", [ 56 ] the album debuted at number two on the Billboard 200, Suga's first top-10 entry on the ranking, tying him with bandmate Jimin as the highest-charting South Korean solo artists in the history of the chart ...
D-2 is the second mixtape released by South Korean rapper Agust D, better known as Suga of BTS, following his eponymous debut mixtape released in 2016. The mixtape was released on May 22, 2020, through Big Hit Entertainment, along with the lead single "Daechwita" (Korean: 대취타). [4]
On July 29, 2016, Agust D ' s release date was confirmed to be in August. [13] On August 15, it was released on SoundCloud and for free download via links on Twitter [8] [14] in conjunction with a music video for "Agust D". [15] On August 18, Agust D released a follow-up music video for "Give It to Me". [16]
A "climactic" teaser preceded the music video on April 20. Set as a modern day follow-up to "Daechwita", Agust D plays a character referred to as the Exister (a gangster) who is "out for blood". [12] [13] Accompanied by a group of men, he enters a rundown building and appears to stab an unseen person.
Daechwita musicians playing yonggo (dragon drums) in a Seoul street parade. Daechwita (Korean: 대취타; lit. Great Blowing and Hitting) is a genre of Korean traditional music consisting of military music played by wind and percussion instruments, generally performed while marching or as a static performance.
The titular opening track "D-Day" features "distorted guitar instrumentals" that "build up for a few seconds before launching straight into an intense trap flow." [2] In English, Agust D raps the lyrics "Future's gonna be OK / OK, OK, look at the mirror and I see no pain" followed by "D-Day is coming, it's a fucking good day" in an "almost joyous" manner, "as if this feeling of contentedness ...