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By October 12, Seventeenth Heaven had amassed 4.67 million stock pre-orders, surpassing the record of 4.64 million pre-orders with their previous album FML. [28] It became the most pre-ordered release in history, with 5.20 million pre-orders, breaking the record of 5.13 million set in May 2023 by Stray Kids' 5-Star. [29] [30]
"God of Music" (Korean: 음악의 신; RR: Eumag-ui Sin) is a song by South Korean boy band Seventeen. It was released as the lead single of their eleventh extended play (EP) Seventeenth Heaven on October 23, 2023, and is the group's first song to chart at number one on the Circle Digital Chart.
17 Is Right Here is the second Korean-language compilation album by the South Korean group Seventeen, released on April 29, 2024.Touted as a greatest hits album, it features all of the band's Korean-language singles from their debut until 2024, alongside Korean versions of all the band's Japanese-language singles, four new unreleased songs including the lead single "Maestro", and the ...
On the group's 11th mini album six months later — titled “SEVENTEENTH HEAVEN,” a play on the English maxim “seventh heaven,” referring to a state of extreme elation — the group build ...
Always Yours is the first Japanese compilation album by the South Korean boy band Seventeen, released on August 23, 2023.The album features all the group's Japanese songs from 2018–2023, alongside two new tracks, which include the lead single "Ima (Even If the World Ends Tomorrow)".
FML is the eleventh Korean extended play (EP) and fourteenth overall by South Korean boy band Seventeen.It was released on April 24, 2023, by Pledis Entertainment through YG Plus, with "F*ck My Life" and "Super" serving as the EP's double lead singles.
South Korean boy group Seventeen has released four studio albums, three reissues, three compilation albums, 13 extended plays, and 21 singles.Since debut, Seventeen has sold more than 26 million copies with all of their albums, becoming the second act in South Korea to surpass that milestone.
In a review for NME, Angela Suacillo scored Attacca four out of five stars, commenting that although the mini-album is "largely defined by the group's venture into a pop-punk sound as a representation of their growth as artists", it "feels less like a release designed to redefine Seventeen's sound and more like a promise of what the group could be in the future". [6]