It sounds like the latest trendy music, but the expressions and the vocal style are similar to the youthful sound that people are used to hearing from SEVENTEEN. I thought it was hard to sing while we were making it, but it seems to match the music well. The vocals move in and out of falsetto to make the melody sound stylish and colorful. It’s rare, but the working title ended up being the final title, too. The song’s working title was also “Heaven’s Cloud,” so I just figured the whole thing would sound like a cloud in heaven and eventually we stuck with the title. WOOZI: We made the song after we planned out the album but long before “Ready to love.” I started by shaping the excitement that jumps outs when you talk about love no matter what age or how mature you are, and worked on lyrics that make you picture something fluffy. “Heaven’s Cloud,” the first track, while sharing a similar theme, has a different feel. So, like I said, now that we’re older, we’re reaching our hand out as we confess our love. WOOZI: When we started out, we were kids who filled people with love, but as time’s gone on, we’ve experienced inner growth and now we can bring comfort to young people and take them along with us. What do you picture when you think of SEVENTEEN in the present? This is a song about love, so I wanted it to be about the present, not try to make it sound young and innocent or grown up and mature. “Ready to love” sounds heavy, but it’ll get your heart pounding like a drum in excitement. WOOZI: In the early days of our debut, we used a lot of splashy and honest expressions that were suitable for our age, but now, even if I try to speak honestly, I’m likely to say something refined. The theme of confession is reminiscent of SEVENTEEN’s early albums, but “Ready to love” looks at the theme from a new perspective. I was trying to convey how I felt at the time, and my desire to give people strength turned into the wider theme of confession, which I think was a natural fit for Your Choice. WOOZI: A lot of people have love in their hearts, but that seemed like something that wouldn’t come across well while we’re unable to meet in person. It’s less of a drive to make it through and more of a hope-hope that we’ll get to see each other again, no matter what.ĭid you end up working that feeling into your new album? But I’m seeing more and more good news, so I feel like it won’t be long until we can break the silence. WOOZI: There’s no one source for my strength, but it does seem to be slowly running out. How do you put up with the disappointment of not being able to see CARAT? Like we were waiting for these times because we were holding onto something that connects us, something we can’t see. After seeing all of CARAT’s congratulatory messages on Weverse, I wrote about all the ways I am thankful for them, and it ended up unexpectedly deep. WOOZI: We had a hard time, and CARAT must have, too, leading up to the sixth anniversary, and especially in 2020 and into 2021. Your post on Weverse celebrating SEVENTEEN’s sixth anniversary since their debut was like a poem in some ways, especially the part about clutching the “thread of human connection” in your hand.
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