RM
SeTi I-I-
Demographics
Gender Male
Birth Name Kim Nam-joon [김남준]
Birthplace Dongjak District, Seoul, South Korea
Birth Date September 12, 1994
Ethnicity East Asian
Nationality South Korean
Career Rapper, songwriter, record producer
Color Season True Winter
Notes and Motifs
Se-Lead rapper
Also known as Rap Monster, and Real Me
Apart of the K-pop boyband BTS
RM: "I had a sense of urgency and desperation about going after my dreams."
RM: "So especially for people like us, in the margins of the world, so to speak, we think about how can we transform this and how can we make this our own. So these are the things that I think about when I try to balance the inspiration of Korean and American rappers. And, I think, now though, there’s a convergence of all genres of music."
RM: "It can be called hesitation or cautiousness, but, I think, there is a form of hesitation that prevents you from taking risks and prevents you from challenging yourself."
[On combining pop and rap]
RM: "So we try to kind of combine those two things into one, and I feel that we created a new genre. Some may call it K-pop; some may call it BTS, or some Eastern-Western combined music, but I think that’s what we’re doing. If you think about the Silk Road in the past, there’s this idea of Eastern people and Western people meeting on some kind of, like, big road and maybe doing selling and buying of stuff. I think this story repeats itself, and some kind of new, interesting phenomenon is happening. We feel very honored to be existing in the very eye of this big hurricane."
RM: "And I think things today are very different from what they were like in 2013, because even though there’s still a lot of discussion about what is pure, what is authentic, what is sincere, what’s an artist, what’s a pop musician, those boundaries have become less and less meaningful. As long as I can show what I’ve written, it’s valid as the continuation of my dream and what I always wanted to do."
RM: "There’s always a process of when something new comes into another culture, where the identity gets transformed and it changes and adapts to this new place. Obviously, there are differences between Korea and the United States that affect the music. For example, Korea is not a multiethnic country like the United States. So there are different sensitivities that are underlying the music. Korean rappers of course have their own unique and different lyricism, their own situations and hardships that they fit into the process. As a Korean, obviously, these are the things that resonate with me."
RM: "And then we sort of slowed down a little bit and tried to express the emotions of young people who have really nothing more than dreams. It was a more honest sort of expression, and we witnessed how it was resonating with a lot of people."
RM: "When I was young, I wanted to be a writer of prose and poetry, and then I found rap. And a lot of what I wanted to do went into the music. And, yes, there was this idea of being a pure artist or a pure rapper. So in the beginning, it is true that when we were debuting as a pop act, there were times when I had to sort of reorganize my identity and then reflect on what my identity is."
RM: "There was some confusion because this was something new, and we were showing ourselves to be more vulnerable, more delicate, which was very different."
RM: "Life is short. Art is forever."
*NOTE: Some of the quotes listed on this page are translated*