BTS is back with Arirang; SWIM emerges as its emotional anchor
BTS dropped their first album in years, Arirang. Led by ‘SWIM’, the record explores identity, growth and emotional resilience.

After nearly four years, BTS has returned with their fifth studio album Arirang, but it’s the lead single “Swim” that sets the tone for what this comeback really represents: an assured continuation of their journey.
“Swim”: choosing to move forward, not fight
“SWIM” serves as both anchor and thesis. Lyrically led by RM, the track draws on a familiar metaphor – life as an ocean – but resists theatrics. There is no rush to overcome the tide here. Instead, BTS relies on the idea of co-existing with it: moving at your own pace, finding meaning in endurance rather than resistance.
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Sonically, the track is restrained yet intense, allowing emotions to run high off the scale. The warmth grows with each listen, echoing the band’s message of perseverance. It feels less like a solo comeback designed for effect and more like a reflection: intimate, almost meditative. As RM describes it, the song’s charm is that it is simple yet effective.
Music videos enhance this sensitivity. Featuring Lili Reinhart, the narrative unfolds on a ship drifting through an endless sea, a visual metaphor for uncertainty, healing, and self-reckoning. BTS appear not as saviors, but as calming presences, reinforcing the song’s core idea: sometimes, survival is victory.
Even the choreography is in line with this. It’s measured, deliberate and emotionally driven rather than spectacle-heavy.
Arirang: return based on identity
If “Swim” is the emotional centre, Ariranga is the broader canvas. Inspired by the traditional Korean folk song “Arirang”, the album draws on themes of longing, resilience and distance, ideas that have long defined BTS’s story, now resurfaced with maturity.
There is a conscious return to the roots here. Across 14 tracks, BTS reflects on their journey from global superstardom to self-definition. The first half of the album, “Body to Body,” “Hooligan,” “FYA,” builds on a scale designed for stadiums and collective energy. But even within these high-impact tracks, there’s an undercurrent of reflection.
The change becomes more apparent in the middle section of the album. The interlude, marked by the toll of King Seongdeok’s divine bell, serves as a sonic interlude in an almost spiritual tone, before leading into introspective tracks such as “Number 29”, “Merry Go Round” and “Normal”.
The latter opens up emotionally. Songs like “Like Animals” and “They Don’t Know ‘Bout Us” embrace freedom and self-assurance, while “One More Night” and closing tracks “Please” and “Into the Sun” move toward intimacy and quiet commitment.
A collective voice, carefully constructed
What makes ARIRANG cohesive is its deeply involved creative process. RM’s presence runs throughout almost the entire album, while SUGA and J-Hope shape some of its most rhythmically dynamic moments. Jimin, V and Jung Kook bring tonal changes, especially in the latter half of the album.
Arirang is out now.


