BTS did a Tiny Desk concert that may surprise you
NPR Tiny Desk is where performers go to show they actually can sing, and BTS has done just that.
The beloved K-Pop boy band on Monday became the latest artists to participate in the at-home series of the stripped-down, more intimate performances featured on NPR.
Naturally, they kicked it off with their first all-English language single and No. 1 hit, “Dynamite.”
It marked the first time they’d performed the track with a live band, according to the seven-member group.
NPR had been “trying to make a BTS Tiny Desk concert happen for years now — even gaming out ways we might move Bob Boilen’s desk far enough forward to accommodate the superstar Korean boy band’s dance moves,” NPR producer and editor Stephen Thompson said in a YouTube caption on the show video.
“In the end, it took a global pandemic — and the launch of Tiny Desk (home) concerts back in March — to make something happen,” Thompson wrote. “With BTS cooped up in Seoul, the group held true to the series’s spirit by convening a live band for its Tiny Desk debut, and even arranged to perform in a workspace with a music-friendly backdrop: the record store VINYL & PLASTIC by Hyundai Card in BTS’s hometown.”
BTS is already the biggest K-Pop group around, and they have been continuing their success.
The “Dynamite” video in August broke a YouTube record for the most views in 24 hours, and BTS last week performed on “America’s Got Talent.”