Baby DONT Cry (BDC) today marks the release of their first EP, ‘After Cry’. This EP serves as the beginning of a ‘Tears’ trilogy that they have planned for upcoming releases. Two weeks ago, they released the pre-release single ‘Shapeshifter’, and today they follow up with the title track, ‘Bittersweet’.
As the name suggests, the lyrics of ‘Bittersweet’ blend sweetness with a sense of quiet longing. This contrast between the lyrics expressing both sweetness and quiet aching and the bright, driving music creates a peculiar feeling of melancholy. While the song is about the heartache experienced after a breakup, it also holds personal significance for the members of BDC. It serves as a reminder of their trainee days, when excitement and determination were juxtaposed with exhaustion and insecurity.
Let’s take a closer look at these lines:
내게 있다가 사라진 모든 것
다신 그만큼 아프고 싶진 않거든
“Everything that was with me and then disappeared,
I don’t want to hurt that much again.”
Vocabulary & grammar breakdown
1. 내게 있다가 사라진 모든 것
- 내게 = “to me / with me”
- 있다 → 있다가 = “to be (somewhere), then…” (–다가 = change/transition)
- 사라지다 → 사라진 = past attributive form
- 모든 것 = “everything”
→ Pattern: verb + –다가 + verb
= “was there, then disappeared.”
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2. –다가 (transition marker)
- Indicates a change from one state/action to another
→ Example:
비 오다가 그쳤어
“It was raining, then it stopped.”
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3. 다신 그만큼 아프고 싶진 않거든
- 다시 → 다신 = “again (never again)”
- 그만큼 = “that much / to that extent”
- 아프다 → 아프고 싶다 = “want to hurt”
- –진 않다 = partial negation (“don’t really want to…”)
- –거든 = explanatory tone (“you see / because”)
→ Means: “I don’t want to hurt that much again.”
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4. –진 않다 (soft negation)
- From –지는 않다
- Softens the negation compared to direct 안
→ Example:
좋아하진 않아
“I don’t exactly like it.”
The songs that BDC has released so far have all been about strength and defiance, but I believe that this new theme is also particularly well-suited to them. They have given it a fresh and unique interpretation.