Temporary Disabled. :) please Go back ATE - Album by Stray Kids - Apple Music www.fgks.org » Address: [go: up one dir, main page] Include Form Remove Scripts Accept Cookies Show Images Show Referer Rotate13 Base64 Strip Meta Strip Title Session Cookies Home Browse Radio Search Open in Music Try Beta ATE Stray Kids K-POP · 2024 Preview In between world tours and festival-headlining performances, fourth-generation K-pop superstars Stray Kids released their ninth mini album. Titled ATE, a reference to the TikTok-maximised slang that comes from “dominate” and refers to an action done with unqualified style, the eight-track effort takes the theme to heart. Lead single “Chk Chk Boom”, a thumping Latin-pop-inspired hip-hop track, goes characteristically K-pop-hard with its confidence: “I'ma pop, pop, pop, take a shot, yeah/Shoot down my goals one by one, I snipe them.” The eight members are metaphoric giants in anthem “MOUNTAINS” (“Tower over crowds, don’t pause ’cause I’m lovin’ it”), but approach the central theme sonically softer in “Stray Kids”, a sentimental drum-and-bass number reflecting on the group’s ascension since their 2018 debut: “Know that this is who we are/There ain't no last step out, oh, we'll never stop.” Stray Kids’ members—mostly Bang Chan, Changbin and Han, aka producing subunit 3RACHA— have production credits on every track. Australian rapper Felix helped write the English-language “Runners”, which begins with his husky vocals declaring the group’s energy: “I'm just getting started, yeah, I know/I’m on my way ’cause this is all about me, ’bout me.” As with most pop albums, there’s still room for love songs. The upbeat pop track “I Like It” explores the heady beginnings of love (“I think I’m addicted to the title ‘You & Me’/Don’t ask, ‘What are we?’/Ooh, ooh, I like it, baby”), while the moody Korean-language ballad “twilight” takes on the chilly aftermath (“It cooled down, did the temperature of you and me burn so hot that it turned to ashes?”). It’s not all serious, though. Trap-pop track “JJAM” gets deliciously silly with its cross-cultural wordplay, making plenty of English-language jelly jokes (“We stick together day and night, yeah”) while also bringing in the Korean-language slang phrase “노잼,” pronounced similarly to “no jam” and meaning “no fun”: “I got no 잼/You got no 잼/We gotta jam.” At the top of their game as K-pop superstars, Stray Kids refuse to sacrifice their fun: “It’s our playground, it's getting crowded.” More By Stray Kids GO LIVE GO LIVE 2020 ODDINARY ODDINARY 2022 5-STAR 5-STAR 2023 Mixtape : Time Out - Single Mixtape : Time Out - Single 2022 ROCK-STAR ROCK-STAR 2023 MAXIDENT MAXIDENT 2022 NOEASY NOEASY 2021 Featured On KPOPWRLD KPOPWRLD Apple Music K-Pop Stray Kids Essentials Stray Kids Essentials Apple Music K-Pop Weekend K-Pop Weekend K-Pop Apple Music K-Pop K-Pop in Spatial Audio K-Pop in Spatial Audio Apple Music New in K-Pop New in K-Pop Apple Music K-Pop New in Pop New in Pop Apple Music Pop K-Pop Risers K-Pop Risers Shazam Select a country or region Africa, Middle East, and India See All Algeria Angola Armenia Azerbaijan Bahrain Benin Botswana Cameroun Cape Verde Chad Côte d’Ivoire Congo, The Democratic Republic Of The Egypt Eswatini Gabon Gambia Ghana Guinea-Bissau India Iraq Israel Jordan Kenya Kuwait Lebanon Liberia Libya Madagascar Malawi Mali Mauritania Mauritius Morocco Mozambique Namibia Niger (English) Nigeria Oman Qatar Congo, Republic of Rwanda Saudi Arabia Senegal Seychelles Sierra Leone South Africa Sri Lanka Tajikistan Tanzania, United Republic Of Tunisia Turkmenistan United Arab Emirates Uganda Yemen Zambia Zimbabwe Asia Pacific See All Australia Bhutan Cambodia 中国大陆 Fiji 香港 Indonesia (English) 日本 Kazakhstan 대한민국 Kyrgyzstan Lao People's Democratic Republic 澳門 Malaysia (English) Maldives Micronesia, Federated States of Mongolia Myanmar Nepal New Zealand Papua New Guinea Philippines Singapore Solomon Islands 台灣 Thailand Tonga Turkmenistan Uzbekistan Vanuatu Vietnam Europe See All Armenia Österreich Belarus Belgium Bosnia and Herzegovina Bulgaria Croatia Cyprus Czechia Denmark Estonia Finland France (Français) Georgia Deutschland Greece Hungary Iceland Ireland Italia Kosovo Latvia Lithuania Luxembourg (English) Malta Moldova, Republic Of Montenegro Nederland North Macedonia Norway Poland Portugal (Português) Romania Россия Serbia Slovakia Slovenia España Sverige Schweiz Türkiye (English) Ukraine United Kingdom Latin America and the Caribbean See All Anguilla Antigua and Barbuda Argentina (Español) Bahamas Barbados Belize Bermuda Bolivia (Español) Brasil Virgin Islands, British Cayman Islands Chile (Español) Colombia (Español) Costa Rica (Español) Dominica República Dominicana Ecuador (Español) El Salvador (Español) Grenada Guatemala (Español) Guyana Honduras (Español) Jamaica México Montserrat Nicaragua (Español) Panamá Paraguay (Español) Perú St. Kitts and Nevis Saint Lucia St. Vincent and The Grenadines Suriname Trinidad and Tobago Turks and Caicos Uruguay (English) Venezuela (Español) The United States and Canada See All Canada (English) Canada (Français) United States Estados Unidos (Español México) الولايات المتحدة США 美国 (简体中文) États-Unis (Français France) 미국 Estados Unidos (Português Brasil) Hoa Kỳ 美國 (繁體中文台灣)
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In between world tours and festival-headlining performances, fourth-generation K-pop superstars Stray Kids released their ninth mini album. Titled ATE, a reference to the TikTok-maximised slang that comes from “dominate” and refers to an action done with unqualified style, the eight-track effort takes the theme to heart. Lead single “Chk Chk Boom”, a thumping Latin-pop-inspired hip-hop track, goes characteristically K-pop-hard with its confidence: “I'ma pop, pop, pop, take a shot, yeah/Shoot down my goals one by one, I snipe them.” The eight members are metaphoric giants in anthem “MOUNTAINS” (“Tower over crowds, don’t pause ’cause I’m lovin’ it”), but approach the central theme sonically softer in “Stray Kids”, a sentimental drum-and-bass number reflecting on the group’s ascension since their 2018 debut: “Know that this is who we are/There ain't no last step out, oh, we'll never stop.” Stray Kids’ members—mostly Bang Chan, Changbin and Han, aka producing subunit 3RACHA— have production credits on every track. Australian rapper Felix helped write the English-language “Runners”, which begins with his husky vocals declaring the group’s energy: “I'm just getting started, yeah, I know/I’m on my way ’cause this is all about me, ’bout me.” As with most pop albums, there’s still room for love songs. The upbeat pop track “I Like It” explores the heady beginnings of love (“I think I’m addicted to the title ‘You & Me’/Don’t ask, ‘What are we?’/Ooh, ooh, I like it, baby”), while the moody Korean-language ballad “twilight” takes on the chilly aftermath (“It cooled down, did the temperature of you and me burn so hot that it turned to ashes?”). It’s not all serious, though. Trap-pop track “JJAM” gets deliciously silly with its cross-cultural wordplay, making plenty of English-language jelly jokes (“We stick together day and night, yeah”) while also bringing in the Korean-language slang phrase “노잼,” pronounced similarly to “no jam” and meaning “no fun”: “I got no 잼/You got no 잼/We gotta jam.” At the top of their game as K-pop superstars, Stray Kids refuse to sacrifice their fun: “It’s our playground, it's getting crowded.”