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Bring the Soul Album Cover

"Bring the Soul" Soundtrack Lyrics

Movie • 2019

Track Listing



"Bring the Soul" Soundtrack Description

BRING THE SOUL: THE MOVIE official trailer still of BTS on stage during the Love Yourself tour
BRING THE SOUL: THE MOVIE — official trailer imagery, 2019

Questions and Answers

Is there an official soundtrack album for Bring the Soul: The Movie?
No standalone OST album was issued. The film features live performances from BTS’s Love Yourself world tour and intercut documentary scenes. (as noted by Variety and the film’s credits)
What songs does the movie include?
A selection drawn from the Love Yourself tour setlists — commonly including “IDOL,” “MIC Drop (Steve Aoki Remix),” “Anpanman,” “Euphoria,” “Serendipity,” “Fake Love,” and others performed on that run. (according to the tour’s documented setlists)
Who is credited with the music?
BTS are credited; there isn’t a separate score composer — performances and stems from BTS tracks carry the movie. (per the film’s basic credits)
When did the film release?
It opened worldwide in limited theatrical engagement on August 7, 2019, distributed by Trafalgar Releasing. (as reported by Variety)
Is the music available to stream anywhere?
Yes — the individual BTS songs are available on their studio/live releases and playlists, but not as a single “movie OST.”
Where were the performances filmed?
Across the 2018–2019 Love Yourself tour stops, with a rooftop conversation filmed in Paris after the European leg. (according to Wikipedia and press notes)

Notes & Trivia

  • No compiled OST: Unlike some concert films, this release didn’t ship with a dedicated soundtrack album — fans rely on BTS’s studio/live catalog and curated playlists. (according to trade coverage)
  • Trailer campaign: Multiple official trailers (including HYBE’s) teased concert audio and crowd singalongs rather than a new original theme.
  • Setlist backbone: The movie’s song choices mirror the Love Yourself and Speak Yourself setlists documented across the tour. (according to setlist documentation)
  • Record-setting roll-out: The film became one of the widest event-cinema releases globally at the time. (as reported by Variety)
  • Paris rooftop: The reflective “after-show” talk was filmed in Paris, a fan-favorite structural device carried over in later BTS docs. (as summarized on Wikipedia)
Trailer still: BTS performing under stadium lights, confetti falling during Love Yourself era
Live audio first: the film lets the tour mixes lead. (as stated in press coverage)

Overview

How do you score a movie about the biggest pop group on earth without “scoring” it at all? Bring the Soul answers by trusting the stage. The soundtrack is the show: BTS’s Love Yourself–era set — from the thunder of “IDOL” and “MIC Drop (Steve Aoki Remix)” to the breath-catcher solos like “Euphoria” and “Serendipity.” Between those peaks, the documentary slips to quiet — hotel rooms, buses, that Paris rooftop — and lets ambience, not underscore, carry the emotion. (according to Variety’s trailer report and the film’s credits)

The effect is simple and smart: songs do the heavy lifting for character and theme, while edits stitch a tour into a story. That’s why the film works without a separate OST — the “album” already exists across BTS’s releases, and the movie recontextualizes it. (as noted in coverage and setlist records)

Genres & Themes

  • K-pop arena pop — fireworks, chant hooks, and high-BPM choreography cues (“IDOL,” “Anpanman”).
  • Hip-hop/EDM crossovers — hard-edged bangers for big-room energy (“MIC Drop – Steve Aoki Remix”).
  • Ballad & R&B solos — intimate breathers that humanize the scale (“Euphoria,” “Serendipity”).
  • Fan-chorus as instrument — the stadium itself adds harmony and rhythm; that’s part of the soundtrack’s DNA. (according to NME magazine–style tour analyses)
Trailer montage: crowd ocean of light sticks as BTS launch into a chorus
Light sticks = lighting design = chorus track: the audience is on the record too.

Key Tracks & Scenes

“IDOL” — BTS
Where it plays: Stadium open/near-open sequences; maximal choreo and pyro (diegetic live performance).
Why it matters: A mission statement for the tour — swagger, tradition flips, and call-and-response built for 50,000 voices. (as reflected in tour setlists)

“MIC Drop (Steve Aoki Remix)” — BTS
Where it plays: Late-show heat; cut with heavy crowd vocals (diegetic).
Why it matters: The hip-hop/EDM hybrid that turns the film’s action beats into a rave. (as documented in setlists and single notes)

“Anpanman” — BTS
Where it plays: Encore/celebration stretch (diegetic).
Why it matters: Pure fan joy; the chorus lands like confetti and becomes the documentary’s grin.

“Euphoria” — Jung Kook
Where it plays: Solo sequence, elevated stage reveal (diegetic).
Why it matters: A breath of lightness between high-impact numbers; frames the film’s “we’re still fans of the dream” theme.

“Serendipity” — Jimin
Where it plays: Solo vignette with softer lighting and close-ups (diegetic).
Why it matters: Intimacy scales up — the camera listens; the stadium hush becomes part of the track.

“Fake Love” — BTS
Where it plays: Mid-late tension; darker palette (diegetic).
Why it matters: The dramatic spine of the set; choreography as narrative. (as listed in the tour run)

Track–Moment Index (selected)
SongScene / City contextDiegetic?Approx. TimingNotes
IDOLStadium opener energy in European leg montageYes (live)EarlyTour main-set anchor
MIC Drop (Steve Aoki Remix)Late-show blowout across multiple citiesYes (live)LateEDM/rap hybrid; fan chants prominent
AnpanmanEncore celebration with confetti & fan camYes (live)Final stretchSignature encore on the tour
EuphoriaSolo platform reveal, wideshot glide camsYes (live)MidVocal spotlight; emotional breather
SerendipitySolo stage, warm gels, tight lensingYes (live)MidR&B-lite intimacy
Fake LoveDark palette, synchronized formationYes (live)Mid-lateSet’s dramatic centerpiece

Music–Story Links (characters & plot beats as connected to songs)

  • Scale ↔ vulnerability: Bombastic cuts (“IDOL,” “MIC Drop”) bookend quieter solos (“Euphoria,” “Serendipity”), mapping how the group toggles between public myth and private self.
  • Encore as epilogue: “Anpanman” reframes the grind as play — the movie leaves you with breathlessness, not burnout.
  • Montage grammar: Fast cuts ride drops and dance breaks; reflective interludes let room tone and footsteps replace music — documentary honesty by subtraction.
Trailer image: BTS members gathered on a Paris rooftop at dusk
When the amps fade, the rooftop whispers: the “score” becomes conversation.

How It Was Made (supervision, score, behind-the-scenes)

There’s no traditional composer credit; the film leans on BTS’s own catalog and tour mixes. Editing drives musical flow — performances from multiple cities are interwoven with intimate offstage moments captured after the European leg wrapped in Paris. (as summarized by Wikipedia and Variety)

Distribution turned the music into an event: cinemas worldwide for a limited run, with trailers emphasizing live audio over narration. (as stated in Variety’s reporting)

Reception & Quotes

The documentary scored an event-cinema milestone and healthy global box office, powered by demand to experience the tour in theaters. (according to Variety and Forbes)

“The trailer for the boyband’s upcoming concert film is officially here.” Variety
“Broke records after grossing $24.3 million.” Forbes

Availability: No official OST; fans stream the songs via BTS’s studio/live releases and curated playlists. (as reflected in platform roundups)

Technical Info

  • Title: Bring the Soul: The Movie (music in film; no standalone OST)
  • Year: 2019
  • Type: Movie (concert documentary)
  • Music credit: BTS
  • Representative songs featured: “IDOL,” “MIC Drop (Steve Aoki Remix),” “Anpanman,” “Euphoria,” “Serendipity,” “Fake Love,” and other Love Yourself tour staples
  • Release: August 7, 2019 (event cinema, global)
  • Album status: No official soundtrack album; tracks available on BTS releases/streaming

Canonical Entities & Relations

SubjectRelationObject
BTSperformedLive songs featured in Bring the Soul: The Movie
Park Jun-soodirectedBring the Soul: The Movie (2019)
Trafalgar ReleasingdistributedBring the Soul: The Movie worldwide event cinema
VarietyreportedTrailer & global release details
ForbesreportedBox office milestone (~$24.3M)

Sources: Variety; Forbes; Wikipedia (film page; Love Yourself World Tour); IMDb; HYBE/Big Hit official trailers; setlist documentation.

October, 25th 2025


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