Song Review:: J-Hope (BTS): Killin' It Girl (feat. GloRilla)
- Release date: 2025 June 13
- Album tracklist: Killin' It Girl (feat. GloRilla), Killin' It Girl (Solo Version)
- Album runtime: 4 minutes
Another day, another J-Hope single. I for one am hoping that he'll put all of these singles into a possible upcoming album so that they can all be in one place. It'll make things a lot easier to find, and I think the fans would very much appreciate having them consolidated. Or maybe that's just me with my love of things being orderly. Either way, I've heard good things about this song, and I'm sorry that it's lateish. I do however kind of really dislike that runtime, though. I'm quite annoyed.
That is proper hip-hop. It's hoy a hood strong beat with higher city-energy beats over the top of the driving beat. While it doesn't ever really give the song a chance to rest, the relentless drive of energy does a remarkable job of keeping the song going even when no one is rapping. The shifts to the instrumentals are incredibly subtle for the most part, though there is one verse where the the lower percussion takes a smaller step back to strip extra sound out of the instrumentals. It's a very clean sound, is what I'm saying.
Here's where I'm forced to expose my lack of experience with the genre. I can tell when something is obviously bad rapping, but I don't know the difference between okay rapping, good rapping, and excellent rapping unless it's so obvious at being what it is that even I can tell. The rapping that I'm hearing is emotive and reactive, incredibly smooth, but I am not sure just on hearing it which of the upper two categories the rapping in this song is in. However, I'm inclined to put it in the excellent category, because J-Hope has been a professional rapper in an industry that is not known for allowing too much mediocrity to continue, and has been a professional rapper for twelve years now. If he wasn't excellent at his job, he wouldn't still be around.
J-Hope has just been having a grand old time with his solos, hasn't he? It's basically a vibes and visuals music video, but with the added benefit of a lot of choreography. He's an incredible dancer. What looks effortless is also obviously the result of years of tight training and body control to be able to move the way he does.
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