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Map of the Soul: 7 – The Journey (stylized as MAP OF THE SOUL: 7 ~THE JOURNEY~) is the fourth Japanese and eighth overall studio album by South Korean boy band BTS.The band's first full-length Japanese offering in two years since Face Yourself (2018), the album was released on July 14, 2020, through Universal Music Japan and Big Hit Entertainment.
[3] [4] [5] A ballad number, [4] "Film Out" was eventually revealed as the opening track on BTS' then upcoming Japanese-language compilation album, BTS, the Best; the album was released in June. [6] [7] The song was released for digital download and streaming in various countries on April 2, through Universal Music Japan. [8]
In March 2021, "Stay Gold" became BTS' first Japanese song—second song overall after "Dynamite"—to surpass 100 million on-demand streams in Japan. BTS is the first foreign artist in the chart's history to have two songs achieve this. [36] In the United States, "Stay Gold" debuted at number one on the World Digital Song Sales chart. [37]
[72] [73] [74] The music video is the fastest in YouTube history to cross the 200 million mark, in just four days and twelve hours after release, [75] [76] and the fastest by a music group to surpass 400 million views, doing so on September 26, 35 days after release. [77]
[39] [75] The music video was an instant success on YouTube, surpassing 6.3 million views in 24 hours. [76] Within 42 hours, it garnered over 10 million views on the platform and became the fastest music video by a K-pop group to do so. [77] The visual was the most-viewed K-pop music video of October 2016 in the US. [78]
The music video was an instant success on YouTube, garnering over 13 million views in 24 hours, becoming the fastest K-pop video to surpass 10 million views at the time. [ 40 ] [ 41 ] It was the third most viewed K-pop music video of 2017 on YouTube. [ 42 ]
The video received over 71.6 million views in its first 24 hours of release to become the fifth-most viewed YouTube video within that period at the time. [27] Just over two days later, it became BTS' 27th music video to surpass 100 million views, extending the band's record as the Korean artist with the most music videos over 100 million views ...
[70] [71] It was an instant success on YouTube, garnering over 10 million views in 24 hours, becoming the fastest K-pop video to do so at the time. [16] [72] A week later, the music video for BTS' follow up single "Not Today" overtook the record with 10 million views in a shorter period of time. [73]