Kill This Love (song)
"Kill This Love" is a song recorded by South Korean girl group Blackpink. It was released on April 4, 2019, through YG Entertainment and Interscope Records, as the lead single for the group's second Korean extended play of the same name. The Japanese version of the single was released through Universal Music Japan on October 16, 2019. It was written by Teddy and Bekuh Boom and produced by them alongside R. Tee and 24. The single has been described as an electropop song, whose lyrics talk about the girls' decision to end a toxic relationship.
"Kill This Love"
Commercially, "Kill This Love" peaked at number two on the Gaon Digital Chart and the Billboard K-pop Hot 100 in South Korea. The song became the group's first top-50 hit on the US Billboard Hot 100 and the UK Singles Chart, thus also becoming the highest-charting song by a female K-pop act on both charts. It reached number one in Malaysia as well as on Billboard World Digital Songs, and entered the national charts in 27 countries. The song has been certified diamond in Brazil, platinum in South Korea, Japan, and Australia, gold in France, and silver in the United Kingdom.
An accompanying music video for the song was directed by Seo Hyun-seung and uploaded onto Blackpink's YouTube channel simultaneously with the single's release. Upon release, the music video broke the record for the most views within 24 hours, accumulating 56.7 million views in that time. As of December 2023, it has achieved more than 1.9 billion views and is the second-most viewed music video by a K-pop group, after their own song "Ddu-Du Ddu-Du" (2018). It also became one of the most-liked videos on YouTube with over 25 million likes on the platform, and won the Music Video of 2019 award at the 45th People's Choice Awards.
Background and release[edit]
Yang Hyun-suk, then-CEO of YG announced on February 8, 2019, that Blackpink was set for a comeback with an EP in March.[1] The single and EP were announced on March 25.[2] Between March 31 and April 1, multiple individual teaser pictures were posted onto their social media accounts.[3] On July 26, it was announced that the group would release a Japanese version of their EP Kill This Love on September 11, 2019.[4] The album missed its initial release date and was released on October 16, 2019. No song of the version was released as a single.[5] A live recording of the Japanese version of "Kill This Love", recorded in the Tokyo Dome on December 4, 2019, was included in the group's third live album Blackpink 2019–2020 World Tour In Your Area – Tokyo Dome, released on May 6, 2020, through Universal Music Japan.[6]
Composition[edit]
The song was written by Teddy and Bekuh Boom, who previously wrote "Ddu-Du Ddu-Du", while production was handled by them alongside R. Tee and 24. Its lyrics have been described as a "breakup anthem"[7] and the song itself has been described as a stomping, brassy electropop track with trap elements.[8][9] The song contains "blaring horns and martial percussion",[10] with Rosé and Jisoo leading the "impassioned" pre-choruses about breaking up.[10] The song ends with an "imperial rallying cry to cut off the dead weight".[10]
Commercial performance[edit]
In South Korea "Kill This Love" debuted at number 25 on the Gaon Digital Chart with only one and a half days of charting, later peaking at number two the second week, giving the group their sixth top five song.[23] In the United States, the single debuted at number 41 on the Billboard Hot 100 to become the highest-charting Hot 100 hit ever by a K-pop girl group. The song debuted at number 22 on the Streaming Songs chart with 18.6 million streams and rose 48–39 on the Digital Song Sales chart with 7,000 downloads sold.[24] The song stayed in the Hot 100 for a total of four consecutive weeks, making it the longest-charting song by an all-female Korean act on the chart.[25] In the United Kingdom, "Kill This Love" charted at number 33, the highest for any female Korean act at the time.[26] In May 2021, the song was certified silver by the British Phonographic Industry (BPI) for moving 200,000 single-equivalent units, the group's first solo single to do so.[27] The track reached 43.1 million streams in the UK as of September 2022, becoming the group's second most streamed song in the country.[28] In 2021, "Kill This Love" also became Blackpink's second song to surpass 500 million streams on Spotify after "How You Like That" and the second by any female Korean group to reach this mark.[29]