Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Billboard explained that "Let's Not Fall in Love showcases the boy band at their most sentimental", and is a classic BigBang song with a unique sound because of a "lack of a definitive chorus and T.O.P and G-Dragon showing off new vocal colors instead of their usual personality-driven raps", while Zutter is a "hip-hop cut peppered with trappy snares, knocking percussion and woozy synths to ...
"Zutter" (Korean: 쩔어; RR: Jjeoreo, lit. " Dope ") is a song by South Korean band Big Bang , sung by the duo of members GD & TOP ( G-Dragon and T.O.P. ). It was released as a digital single alongside " Let's Not Fall in Love " on August 5, 2015 through YG Entertainment , in conjunction with the single album E .
"Zutter" † GD & TOP G-Dragon, Teddy, T.O.P MADE [33] Korean 2015 See also. Big Bang discography; List of awards and nominations received by Big Bang; Notes
GD & TOP was a South Korean hip-hop/pop duo formed by G-Dragon and T.O.P, the rappers of the K-pop boy band Big Bang in 2010. [1] The release of their first album, GD & TOP (2010) was a commercial success becoming one of the best selling albums of the year in South Korea, and spawning the top-five hits "High High", "Oh Yeah", and "Knock Out" on the Gaon Digital Chart.
It was released through YG Entertainment on August 5, 2015, alongside the single "Zutter"; both tracks make up the single album E as part of the group's Made series. The recording was written and produced by long-time group collaborator Teddy Park and band member G-Dragon.
Zutter is a German family name. It is possibly, like the Flemish name DeSutter, derived from the Latin word sutor (shoemaker). It may refer to the following people: Louis Zutter (1865–1946), Swiss gymnast; Adolf Zutter (1889–1947), German SS concentration camp officer executed for war crimes; Albrecht Zutter (1940-), German publisher
Made comprises an eclectic mix of songs, [16] with Billboard stating that the album is "testament to the versatility K-pop acts can show in the music and just how truly hard it is to call K-pop a 'genre.'" [17] AllMusic wrote that, in this album, BigBang's "trademark mix of dance-pop and R&B was blended with contemporary tropical and trap influences."
The song "Knock Out" was the final single from GD & TOP's self-entitled album, and have been described as a "club" song due to its production. [2]It was censored from major television corporations (MBC, SBS, and KBS) for its lyrics, which was deemed to be too "vulgar and explicit" for youth. [3]