: The song blends Greek themes with traditional Korean folk music, specifically using the phrase "onghaeya" (a traditional harvest song chant) and the kwaengwari (brass gong). Performance & Choreography
: The track features multi-part hooks, a trap-style breakdown, and a hard-hitting finale with double-time drums.
: The lyrics mention a thyrsus (Dionysus’s ivy-wrapped staff), which the members liken to their microphones—their tool for spreading art and achieving "prosperity".
"Dionysus" is the high-energy finale of BTS's 2019 EP, Map of the Soul: Persona . Mixing rap-rock, synth-pop, and hip-hop, the track uses Greek mythology to explore the "joy and pain of creating something".
: Just as Dionysus was "twice-born" in myth, BTS reflects on their own evolution: first as idols, then reborn as serious artists. Production & Sound
: While the lyrics repeatedly shout "Drink, drink, drink!", they are not about alcohol. BTS uses a Korean pun: "sul" (alcohol) and "yesul" (art). RM raps that "art is alcohol too," suggesting they are drunk on the creative process.
The song centers on the Greek god Dionysus—the god of wine, theater, and ritual madness—using him as a metaphor for the artistic process.
: The song blends Greek themes with traditional Korean folk music, specifically using the phrase "onghaeya" (a traditional harvest song chant) and the kwaengwari (brass gong). Performance & Choreography
: The track features multi-part hooks, a trap-style breakdown, and a hard-hitting finale with double-time drums. : The song blends Greek themes with traditional
: The lyrics mention a thyrsus (Dionysus’s ivy-wrapped staff), which the members liken to their microphones—their tool for spreading art and achieving "prosperity". "Dionysus" is the high-energy finale of BTS's 2019
"Dionysus" is the high-energy finale of BTS's 2019 EP, Map of the Soul: Persona . Mixing rap-rock, synth-pop, and hip-hop, the track uses Greek mythology to explore the "joy and pain of creating something". Production & Sound : While the lyrics repeatedly
: Just as Dionysus was "twice-born" in myth, BTS reflects on their own evolution: first as idols, then reborn as serious artists. Production & Sound
: While the lyrics repeatedly shout "Drink, drink, drink!", they are not about alcohol. BTS uses a Korean pun: "sul" (alcohol) and "yesul" (art). RM raps that "art is alcohol too," suggesting they are drunk on the creative process.
The song centers on the Greek god Dionysus—the god of wine, theater, and ritual madness—using him as a metaphor for the artistic process.