버뮤다 삼각지대 (Bermuda Triangle)
Zico x Dean
"Bermuda Triangle" pulls you under slowly, and by the time you notice, you're already somewhere you can't quite locate on a map. The production between Zico and Dean feels submerged and atmospheric — minimal percussion, glassy synths, bass frequencies that you feel more than hear. The effect is deliberately disorienting: something beautiful and slightly consuming, which turns out to be exactly the point. Zico's sections are smoother and more restrained than his usual output, adapting to the song's mood with unusual patience, while Dean's vocals bring a hushed, almost spectral quality — his voice half-spoken, half-sung, pitched to feel like something whispered in very close proximity. Together they explore the pull of a relationship that draws you in despite knowing it might be consuming you — love as a kind of willing disappearance. Both artists were central to a wave of Korean musicians in the mid-2010s who were expanding what the genre could sound like internationally, and this collaboration captures that ambition without announcing it. It's midnight music — headphones, walking alone through city streets that feel both familiar and slightly foreign, feeling beautifully and willingly lost.
slow
2010s
submerged, atmospheric, dark
Korean alternative R&B, mid-2010s international expansion era
R&B, Hip-Hop. Dark alternative R&B. dreamy, melancholic. Pulls the listener slowly into a hypnotic, disorienting submission, arriving at the unsettling pleasure of willing emotional disappearance.. energy 3. slow. danceability 4. valence 4. vocals: hushed, spectral, half-spoken, whispered intimacy. production: minimal percussion, glassy synths, deep atmospheric bass frequencies. texture: submerged, atmospheric, dark. acousticness 2. era: 2010s. Korean alternative R&B, mid-2010s international expansion era. Midnight walk through city streets with headphones, feeling both familiar and slightly foreign, beautifully and willingly lost.