In an industry long dominated by discrimination, BTS remains one of the only artists who continue to persevere and make art that remains untouchable. Min Yoongi also known as his stage name Suga and by his alter ego or rapper pseudonym Agust D, is no different. The mastermind behind many of the best selling artist’s music, Suga, dropped his second mixtape after four long years where fans earnestly waited for his next release.

The ten tracked mixtape includes several collaborations with fellow band member RM, NIIHWA, Kim Jong Wan from the electronic rock band “Nell” and Max Schneider. Suga was heavily involved in the creative process from the countdown that led to its release, the production of the music video for the track Daechwita and the entirety of the lyricism and production for D-2. 

It is clear that compared to Suga’s previous mixtape, “Agust D” and now “D-2”, there is more Suga has learnt and understood than he already had. With his passionate rapping over heavy set beats and singing, Suga flawlessly delivers an album to his listeners where they feel empowered, understood and undeniably touched.

The album starts off with, Moonlight, a low, slow paced track that’s perfect for its beginning. There’s heavy beat boxing at the beginning and Suga starts rapping, low and attractive while he introduces himself as “Agust D”. The pseudonym stands for his name SUGA backwards while the D-T is an ode to the group he rapped with back home in Daegu. In Moonlight, Suga speaks of his struggle to climb up to the top from “a basement in Namsandong to a penthouse in Hannam Hill”. 

Suga affectionately calls himself a “Peterpan who can’t wake up from his dream”, a reference to his own words where he said he didn’t want to grow up or lose his dreams. Suga raps earnestly about his reflections and position in life where he compares himself to who he was before. “A lot has changed in my life,” He says, “But the moonlight is still the same.” He talks of the struggles of making music, of existing, of wondering whether he’s doing is even enough. He talks of the pressure that comes with being who he is. Suga ends his track by admitting that change happens to everyone and he is not alone but he wonders if it could be different for each person. 

The next track that follows is Daechwita, the only track from the album that has an incredible music video for it so far with incredible imagery and references to Korean folklore in its cinematography. Agust D acts not only as a noble king but as the commoner that assassinates him. Many on Twitter have speculated that the two personas refer to his own struggles with who he is and who he should be. Daechwita refers to a whole genre of traditional Korean military music played by wind and percussion instruments. 

A lot of Suga’s music refers to his struggles of the life he led before BTS and after, and Daechwita is no different. Suga goes, “Born as a slave, risen to a king.” Daechwita is a heavy paced, diss track where Suga speaks about his past and present. He tells the people looking so earnestly for their downfall, “Remember my names. These bastards who are all talk.” Suga talks of how he has what he wants, from clothes to money to everything he wanted to do with music. 

It almost feels like Suga has reached a plane of existence where he has achieved everything he wants to and feels sorry for everyone praying on his downfall.

Daechwita

Daechwita is followed by What Do You Think?, another track with fast paced music, Suga will leave you breathless. Suga raps about how he doesn’t care about what people say about him, that he doesn’t care about the lives they lead and scorns at everyone who thinks his success has anything to do with their failure. 

Suga then talks about “The ten zeroes in my bank account, it’s the money that I loaned with my youth as collateral damage”. It is a reference to his previous solo track called The Last where Suga talks of how all the money he has now is a payment for his lost youth. 

The next song that starts playing is Strange featuring fellow BTS member, RM also known as Kim Namjoon who Suga boasts a ten year friendship with. The duo starts off the track by going, “If there is God, please tell me life is happiness.” The track is almost soothing enough to lull you to sleep. 

Suga and RM talk of how inescapable capitalism is, about how money makes up for dreams as one grows up and replaces hope and aspiration with it too. RM and Suga ask us: “The one who isn’t sick in the world is treated as the sick, isn’t it strange?” They ask, “The one who has his eyes open in a world that has their eyes closed is treated as blind, isn’t it strange? They say ‘have a dream’ when no one has a dream. There’s no correct answer, isn’t it strange?” 

RM raps about how “People are boasting about their dog collars and dog houses, fighting all day about who shines. At this point we wouldn’t even know.” The track is a critique on capitalism, on consumerism and materialism, on how none of us truly have any control over our own lives either. It is a critique on how we as humans continue to live and drift aimlessly without stopping for a moment and thinking there is more to the lives they lead. It is also a critique on how those who think differently are casted aside. 

RM and Suga then end the track poetically with, “In the world, where dream has become an option, there’s no correct answer, that’s the answer.” 

The next track that follows is 28 featuring artist NIIHWA. The direct Korean translation of the title is “Perhaps, I am slowly becoming an adult.” Suga sings about how he’s finally getting to know the world as he grows older but wishes he didn’t know it at all. 

Suga raps about how he can’t remember the things he grew up hoping for and he’s terrified about losing his dreams. He talks about how he thought he changed when he turned twenty or when he graduated. He wonders what changed. Suga then realizes he’s suddenly filled with emotion, enough to cry. He wonders about what kind of life he wanted and then he realizes with a start, it doesn’t matter anymore.

28 is followed by Burn It featuring Max Schneider. With a beautiful balance between Suga’s raspy voice, Max’s high vocals and electric guitar, Suga reflects back on his past self and realizes he’s changed. “Let’s go back to the times that almost destroyed me,” He says. “To the life that was possessed by jealousy, loathing, inferiority and han”. Han refers to a special Korean concept of a concoction of feelings; sorrow, nostalgia, pain, anger and hope.

Suga talks about how nothing much has changed from who he was back then and who he is now. He wonders though what would remain of him if he were to be burned completely. “Maybe the ashes would remain,” he muses, “Or maybe it would remain the same.” 

Suga wonders if the anger and the pain he feels is nothing but a façade, something used to drive passion. He reminds himself gently in the mirror that even giving up is a form of courage, a reference to his own words in a live stream where he comforts a fan who said they gave up on their dreams.

Suga’s next song, People, starts playing. Even from the first few chimes, the listener feels something different. Something lighter. Suga wonders if he’s a good person or not and then he realizes he just is. Suga talks of how people will continue to exist and to live and love and then eventually fade into oblivion. The lyrics might be heavy but it comforts the listener. Suga says it happens to every one of us. He tells us “So what if we get hurt? So what if it brushes past us? It’ll happen.”, it’ll pass. He tells us to flow in the same way water does and find out if there’s something at the end.

People is light. It is a gentle reminder that things will work out and hurt is inescapable. He tells us a life full of drama and passion can be tiring and sometimes it’s great to just merely exist. Suga raps, “Who said humans are the animals of wisdom? To me, it looks like they’re the animals of regret.” In People, Suga urges the listener to let go, to understand themselves and assure them they’ll be okay. He tells us what’s special to us is ordinary  to someone else and  vice versa and we need to understand that. It is a gentle reminder that we are not alone in what we feel but so is everyone else. 

The next track that starts playing is Honsool, the title referring to the culture of one drinking or eating alone at bars. Honsool refers to a rising individualistic trait in the Korean society where one decides to let steam off alone. In Honsool, Suga narrates a long day at work and what happens when he comes home. He takes out some alcohol and reflects back on what he did all day and what he should. “I thought I’d party everyday as a superstar.” he muses. I imagine him lying in his bed and then shaking his head to himself, “Tomorrow will come and go again. It doesn’t matter anyway. We’ll just endure through the day, I guess.” 

Interlude: Set me Free is what plays after. An interesting note is seeing how an interlude is almost to the end of the album and not in the middle. Set Me Free is gentle with Suga crooning softly and almost begging to be let free even when there’s a part of him knowing he doesn’t want that. He talks of how confusing it is to feel like crawling on the floor one day and flying high the other. He begs to be let free knowing he doesn’t want it either. Set Me Free is short but heart wrenching, listening to Suga ask for something we do not understand and never will.

The next and final track that cements the album is Dear My Friend featuring JW of Nell. In this particular song, Suga dedicates it to an old friend from his hometown in Daegu who’s imprisoned. Suga speaks in it like he’s talking to him directly. To him, the audience does not exist. The song starts off gently with Suga telling his friend that he misses him and how “the memories of us together circle around me.” Suga laments about whether or not things would have been different if he had stood up or spoken out. 

Suga asks his friend how he’s doing and then talks of how he hates him. He says, “With the two of us, even the world was nothing to be afraid of.” The rest of the song is Suga narrating their memories fondly. It almost feels like we’re invading a private moment of his, something we should not hear or even deserve to. Suga continues to wonder how things would have been if it were different and then ends the song with, “There’s no me that you used to know, there’s no you who I used to know either.”

Min Yoongi – Suga – Agust D

There can only be attempts in which one tries to describe what D-2 by Suga makes them feel. But at the end, they all feel futile. It is clear from every single track that Suga has put a part of him into every one of them, carefully folded and tucked with love and honesty, with the hope that he is seen and understood. Every single track is unapologetically and undeniably his from the very first track to the last. Every single track answers a question  we wonder about. Every single track answers something we’ve been looking  for.

It is brutally honest, it is brutally his. It carries his love, his anger, his hurt, his sadness, his pain and his belief that things will get better, even when one thinks it won’t. It is unapologetically his from the first breath to the last. 

This article was written by our guest writer Fawzul Himaya Hareed. Another article Fawzul wrote for 9 Magazine is “A Deeper Look Into RM’s mono.” Click here to read it.

Edited by Nil Üzer

1 Comment
  1. Thank you for this! I’ve been with BTS for almost two years now, but I still struggle to find a way to absorb their songs and not forgert what they’re saying after a while has passed.

    With this, where you not only explains your view on each track, but uses snippets of it to help us understand a bit more what Yoongi must’ve meaning to say, it feels like I can connect with D-2 differently.

    Earlier today I was listening to it, and as I appreciated the melody and the sounds, I could only vaguely remember what they were about. But I’ll keep a close look on this incredible article, because it gives me direction.

    The way you wrote about Suga’s artistry, and how he decided to talk about his changes, his growth, after Agust D’s release in 2016, makes us empathize even more with how strong he was to not stop talking about his struggles.

    I believe that “Dear My Friend”, as you said, holds a lot of emotion. To know Suga, Min Yoongi, felt like he could share his pain and disappointment with us through such a beautiful track, shows me, an ARMY, that the relationship we were able to build with them allowed this to happen.

    To anyone who’s not from the fandom who dives into Suga’s heart and mind through D-2, I feel happy for you. Because it’s a great way to get to know one of the most inspiring artists to walk this earth.

    May Yoongi, Suga and Agust D prosper. I look forward to a life with a third piece of his heart out there.

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