Try GOLD - Free
The Melancholic Paradise of BLOO
RollingStone India
|October 2020
The South Korean rapper opens up about his newfound viral fame with ‘Downtown Baby,’ the burden of mainstream success and perfecting the art of being true to himself
There was a time when Daniel or Hyunwoong Kim considered himself “the most underrated rapper in Korea.” Known better by the mononym BLOO, the 25-year-old made a name for himself in the Korean underground hip-hop scene with music that dances around poetic self-destruction, loneliness and lovelorn woes. He makes for a dark, broody and tragic figure that’s more rockstar than rapper and you’d be hard pressed to find a music video where he hasn’t got a cigarette dangling from his lips or a bottle of alcohol clutched in his fist. However the magnetism of the entire picture is undeniable. “Obviously, I’m trying to write songs after sad incidents but I guess that’s what I tend to do… Maybe I like that feeling of feeling,” he confesses when we connect for a conversation about his artistry.
That ‘feeling of feeling’ is probably the best way to describe BLOO’s work. I’ve often felt that putting on one of his records is like floating on your back in a pool of emotion with your eyes closed, an escape without an agenda. You don’t have to relate to his experiences to immerse yourself in the music–in BLOO’s world there is no search for a lesson, no breakdown of theories; its about letting it take you on a journey without pushing a specific message. “I don’t really want them to learn about something,” he says when I ask about what he wants to impart to the world. “I just want them to enjoy and feel it whichever way they want to feel it.” I haven’t ever gotten an answer quite like this from an artist before and suddenly what he describes as ‘that feeling of feeling’ is crystal clear.
This story is from the October 2020 edition of RollingStone India.
Subscribe to Magzter GOLD to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 10,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
MORE STORIES FROM RollingStone India
RollingStone India
KRSNA'S RAP LEGACY IS CALCULATED, NOT CHANCED
THE DELHI RAPPER HAS TURNED PATIENCE AND PRECISION INTO A CAREER BLUEPRINT.
10 mins
September - October 2025
RollingStone India
KENYA'S PROTEST MOVEMENT IS CREATING SOME RADICAL NEW MUSIC
In the summer of 2024, protests in Kenya against an unpopular tax-raising proposal led to at least 60 deaths, mostly at the hands of police, according to a local watchdog group.
3 mins
September - October 2025
RollingStone India
WHY THE GLOBAL FASHION WORLD NEEDS TO TUNE INTO INDIA'S HIP-HOP WAVE
From Karan Aujla and King, to Badshah and Raja Kumari, India's hip-hop artists are shaping style, identity, and consumer trends in a way that can no longer be ignored.
5 mins
September - October 2025
RollingStone India
BADVILLAIN: “THRILLER' IS PROOF OF HOW MUCH WE'VE IMPROVED'
Badvillain shares anecdotes on their journey to self-expression, using 'Thriller' as a song to showcase their confidence, attitude, and emotional depth
2 mins
September - October 2025
RollingStone India
LONG LIVE MAC MILLER YEARS AFTER HIS DEATH, I FINALLY GET WHAT MAC MILLER WAS SAYING
A REDISCOVERY OF HIS WORK SHOWS HOW HIS CATALOG HAS GROWN INTO A LIVING ARCHIVE OF VULNERABILITY AND HOPE
3 mins
September - October 2025
RollingStone India
YOUNG ILL IS CARVING OUT HIS OWN LANE IN THE KOREAN HIP-HOP SCENE
Choosing connection over controversy, Young Ill wants his music to give hope, inspire individuality, and show there's more to Korean hip-hop than stereotypes.
5 mins
September - October 2025
RollingStone India
Olivia Dean Adds Her Own Page to the Book of Love
The second album from this gifted British singer-songwriter pushes her music into an elevated tier.
3 mins
September - October 2025
RollingStone India
HOW 'SABAR BONDA' CREATED A RURAL RAOMANCE STORY WITHOUT A SOUNDTRACK
DIRECTOR ROHAN KANAWADE OPENS UP ABOUT THE MAKINGS OF THE MARATHI ROMANCE DRAMA, WHICH IS SET FOR ITS THEATRICAL RELEASE ON SEPT. 19 ONWARDS
5 mins
September - October 2025
RollingStone India
THE RISE OF KOREAN HIP-HOP AS A COUNTERCULTURE
BREAKING OUT OF SEOUL'S UNDERGROUND CLUBS, WE TRACE A JOURNEY DRIVEN BY CREATIVITY, PASSION, AND A REBELLIOUS SPIRIT THAT PAVED THE WAY FOR K-POP'S GLOBAL RISE.
8 mins
September - October 2025
RollingStone India
WHAT DOES IT TAKE FOR AN ARTIST TO REINVENT THEMSELVES?
SINGER-SONGWRITERS LIKE ZOYA AND HANITA BHAMBRI ENTER NEW ERAS, ANYASA AND ZAEDEN CHANGED THEIR SIGNATURE SOUND, AND VINEET SINGH HUKMANI'S JAZZ ALBUM MARKS A DIFFERENT SONIC DIRECTION
6 mins
September - October 2025
Translate
Change font size
