That That (Prod. & Feat. SUGA of BTS)
슈가
A celebration dressed in dusty boots and neon swagger, "That That" crashes through the gates with a brazen country-inflected hip-hop stomp that has no business working as well as it does. Twanging guitars sit beneath a production architecture that SUGA builds like a funhouse — tight snares, a bass that thuds with deliberate weight, and a melodic hook engineered to lodge itself somewhere behind the eyes. The energy is unrelenting but never chaotic; every element earns its placement. The vocal interplay between the two artists creates a push-pull dynamic, one voice laconic and cool, the other committed to theatrical excess, together generating a tension that feels like a dare. The song doesn't ask for your enthusiasm — it assumes it. Lyrically it circles around self-assurance and momentum, the feeling of being exactly where you're supposed to be with nothing left to prove. Culturally it represents a curious moment: a legacy artist and a producer-rapper from the biggest group on the planet finding common ground in genre play, neither diminishing the other. You reach for this at the start of something — a drive with nowhere specific to go, a pregame ritual, the morning you decide the day belongs to you.
fast
2020s
bright, punchy, funky
Korean hip-hop with American country influences
Hip-Hop, Country. country-inflected hip-hop. euphoric, defiant. Bursts with swaggering self-assurance from the first bar and sustains it without deflation through to the end.. energy 8. fast. danceability 8. valence 9. vocals: laconic cool rapper contrasted with theatrically committed male vocals, push-pull dynamic. production: twanging guitars, tight snares, deliberate heavy bass, country-hip-hop genre fusion. texture: bright, punchy, funky. acousticness 3. era: 2020s. Korean hip-hop with American country influences. Morning pregame ritual or a drive with nowhere specific to go, the day feeling like it belongs to you.