Illustration of CORTIS members performing in an urban street scene inspired by RedRed, showing five K-pop idols in motion

5 Things You Didn’t Know About CORTIS — BigHit’s Most Anticipated Rookies

The untold stories behind HYBE’s Young Creator Crew

K-Pop


BigHit Music — the label behind BTS and TXT — debuted CORTIS after a six-year wait. Here’s what most people still don’t know about the five members behind that decision.

From Seoul, watching the energy around the HYBE building last August, it was clear this wasn’t just another rookie debut. These five aren’t idols who follow instructions — they’re a Young Creator Crew who build their own music and identity from the ground up. Here are five things about CORTIS that the industry already knew, but most fans don’t.

If you want to understand CORTIS’s music style first, check out my full breakdown of their sound here.


1. The Genius Producer a Nation Discovered First — Martin

Martin is the leader. But that’s not the most important thing about him.

He was a member of the Rainbow Choir — a group of children from multicultural families — and performed the Korean national anthem at the opening ceremony of the 2018 PyeongChang Winter Olympics. He proved himself on a national stage before he ever became a trainee.

During his six years of training, he earned credits on major HYBE hits — ILLIT’s “Magnetic,” TXT’s “Deja Vu,” LE SSERAFIM’s “Pierrot,” and ENHYPEN’s “Outside.” He was producing chart hits for senior artists before his own debut. His father was a band bassist, and Martin grew up writing his own songs. He works in FL Studio, plays synthesizer and drums himself.

The reason CORTIS sounds different from other rookie groups is that Martin isn’t just a leader — he’s the person actually shaping the group’s musical direction.

Photo: CORTIS Official Instagram

2. The Last Survivor of Trainee A — James

James represents CORTIS’s resilience.

He was a core member of HYBE’s large-scale project “Trainee A” — but the team was disbanded before debut. When his teammates left the company, James stayed. He kept proving himself until he finally debuted as the oldest member of CORTIS.

A semi-professional ice hockey player from Hong Kong for ten years. A taekwondo black belt. Fluent in five languages — Korean, English, Thai, Chinese, and Japanese. He performed as a backup dancer on Jungkook’s “Seven” stage, building real-world experience before his own debut. He now participates directly in creating CORTIS’s choreography.

The Green/Red concept at the heart of “RedRed” started with James’s idea. This is why fans see James as the emotional core of CORTIS.

Photo: CORTIS Official Instagram

3. The Golden Line HYBE Waited Three Years For — Seonghyeon & Keonho

The three-year wait HYBE’s casting team showed for Seonghyeon and Keonho is already the stuff of industry legend.

Seonghyeon — He was discovered at Daejeon Lotte World when he was ten years old. He turned HYBE down multiple times because of his age. HYBE waited three years — until he was thirteen — before he finally joined. After joining, he taught himself and ranked first in trainee evaluations. During training, he worked on over 100 tracks. He’s known as the quietest member of the group. But the most Seonghyeon is inside the music.

Photo: CORTIS Official Instagram

Keonho — He was discovered at a bus stop in third grade. HYBE pursued him for three years before he joined. A record-holding swimmer. Known as the “prince” of his school. He now handles video production for the group. The self-filmed, self-edited content that defines CORTIS’s identity — that’s Keonho behind the camera.

Photo: CORTIS Official Instagram

4. The Elite Student Who Chose Art Over Academia — Juhoon

Juhoon’s path to CORTIS shows just how deliberate HYBE’s recruitment strategy is.

A former child model, he attended an international middle school and was preparing for entrance to Hana High School — one of Korea’s most prestigious — when HYBE made an unusual offer: a short-term trainee experience. During that period, Juhoon was drawn in by the bond with the other members and the creative environment. He chose the artist’s path over the elite academic track and became the final piece of the group.

Inside the group, he’s the one who brings the members’ opinions together. Without Juhoon, CORTIS wouldn’t look the way it does today.

Photo: CORTIS Official Instagram

5. A Million Sellers Built on Authenticity

CORTIS went million-seller from their debut album. Their second mini-album GREENGREEN surpassed 1.22 million pre-orders before release.

The members build the musical foundation themselves, shape the performances themselves, and direct the visuals themselves. Fans aren’t just consuming content — they’re investing in the creative ownership these five teenagers have shown from day one.

If you want to go deeper on what “RedRed” is actually saying, I broke down every line of the lyrics here.


Five Members. One Direction.

Every member of CORTIS fills a role that doesn’t overlap with anyone else. The one who builds the sound. The one who designs the stage. The one who holds the team together. The one who writes the lyrics. The one who captures the visuals.

BTS. TXT. And now CORTIS. Six years was a long wait. Looking at these five, it makes sense.

Which member surprised you the most? Let me know in the comments.

Illustration of CORTIS members performing in an urban street scene inspired by RedRed, showing five K-pop idols in motion
Illustration: CORTIS “RedRed” — 5 Members, 5 Stories / KwaveInsider

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CORTIS RedRed explained meaning MV breakdown Seoul night skyline

CORTIS “RedRed” Explained: Meaning & MV Breakdown

Trending in 23 countries — the moment CORTIS finally gets honest

Category: K-Pop


CORTIS’s “RedRed” has entered YouTube’s Trending Music chart in 23 countries and iTunes Top Songs in 13. Here’s what the song is actually saying — and why it sounds nothing like their debut.

Video: CORTIS (코르티스) ‘REDRED’ Official MV / Source: HYBE LABELS (YouTube)

What “RedRed” Is Really About

“RedRed” starts with a simple contrast: green and red. What the group moves toward, and what they draw a line against. That tension sits at the center of the track.

The song doesn’t go out of its way to explain everything. It leaves space for interpretation. By today’s standards, that might even feel a bit less “friendly” than expected — but that’s part of the point.

If their debut “What You Want” felt like a collision between 60s psychedelic rock and boom bap, “RedRed” moves in a sharper, more direct direction. The abrasive electronic textures and repetitive rhythm don’t feel like experimentation — they feel like a statement.

It’s clear the group isn’t trying to stay in one lane. And at this point, they’re not easy to predict.


MV Breakdown — A Different Kind of Realism

Instead of polished, high-end visuals, the MV leans into more familiar settings — a casual samgyeopsal restaurant, an arcade, and La Festa shopping complex in Goyang (yes, Goyang — the city where BTS just performed).

Rather than showing the sleek center of Seoul, it feels like the video deliberately steps slightly outside of it — choosing spaces that feel older, more lived-in, and more familiar.

More than 500 extras were involved, but the result doesn’t feel staged. If anything, it feels closer to something observed than something carefully constructed.


Why This Approach Matters Right Now

From a Korea-based perspective, this shift toward realism isn’t random. In recent years, more K-pop groups have started moving away from perfectly controlled, high-gloss concepts — not completely, but strategically.

Fans, especially international ones, are getting used to high production value. So paradoxically, “imperfection” now feels more real, and sometimes more interesting. Showing everyday spaces, unpolished textures, and less scripted moments creates a different kind of connection.

For a rookie group, choosing this direction early is unusual. Most groups establish a safe, polished identity first. CORTIS seems to be doing the opposite — testing how much authenticity they can show before they fully settle into a defined image.

That’s what makes “RedRed” more than just a comeback track. It feels like a signal of where they might be heading.


Why This Feels Different From Their Debut

A big part of that difference comes from how the song was made.

“RedRed” was developed during an LA songwriting camp, where the members created six to seven different versions before finalizing the track. Every member took part in the production process.

For a rookie group, that level of involvement is still uncommon. Which is exactly why it stands out.

CORTIS has been consistent about this since their debut. They’re not just performing songs — they’re shaping them. And in “RedRed,” that approach feels more visible than before.

If you’re curious why this group stood out from the beginning, it’s worth going back to their debut.


Why It’s Worth Watching CORTIS Right Now

Trending in 23 countries is a number. But what matters more is what’s behind it.

“RedRed” feels like the first time CORTIS is speaking more directly about themselves — what they want, what they reject, and how they define their direction.

It’s still early. And that’s exactly why this moment matters.

If you want to understand where this group is heading, now is probably the right time to start paying attention.


The meaning of “redred” lyrics is not easy to grasp—even for Korean fans. I’ve created a full English breakdown of the lyrics.
“redred lyrics meaning explained” (full guide)

CORTIS RedRed lyrics explained meaning and hidden message illustration
Illustration: CORTIS RedRed / KwaveInsider

If you’re starting to fall for CORTIS after watching ‘RedRed,’ you’ll want to know the drama-like stories of how they were scouted. Check out my deep dive: Why HYBE Waited 3 Years: 5 Surprising Facts About CORTIS.

Illustration of CORTIS members performing in an urban street scene inspired by RedRed, showing five K-pop idols in motion
Illustration: CORTIS “RedRed” — 5 Members, 5 Stories / KwaveInsider

What stood out to you the most in “RedRed”? Let me know in the comments — I might cover it in the next post.

Some links in this post may be affiliate links. If you make a purchase through them, I may earn a small commission at no extra cost to you.

CORTIS and “What You Want” — BigHit’s New Crew, and Nothing Like You’d Expect (K-Pop Rookies #1)

Second EP ‘GREENGREEN’ drops May 4 — pre-orders already at 1.22 million

K-Pop (Boy Group)


When BigHit Music announced a new boy group, reactions split in two. The label that gave the world BTS and TXT — so expectations ran high. Whether CORTIS could actually meet them was another question. Eight months into their debut, they answered it. First K-pop group to perform at an NBA All-Star halftime show.

Video: CORTIS “GREENGREEN” Album Teaser / Source: CORTIS (YouTube)

“What You Want” — The Debut Track That Said Everything

CORTIS debuted on August 18, 2025 with “What You Want.” A blend of 60s psychedelic rock and boom bap hip-hop — an unusual choice for a K-pop debut. The members were involved in production, and planned and shot the MV themselves. It went viral on TikTok, and the English version featuring American singer-songwriter Teezo Touchdown made it to the Mnet M Countdown stage.

Their debut EP Color Outside the Lines entered the Billboard 200 at No. 15 — the second-highest chart debut for a K-pop rookie album ever. Around 250,000 copies sold on release day. By November, they hit 200 million Spotify streams — the fastest by any rookie group that year.

Video: CORTIS “What You Want” Official MV / Source: HYBE LABELS (YouTube)

Who Is CORTIS

Under BigHit Music. The third boy group from the label after BTS and TXT, and their first new act in six years since TXT’s debut. Republic Records handles distribution in the US.

The name CORTIS comes from the initials of “COLOR OUTSIDE THE LINES” — a declaration to move beyond the world’s expectations. All five members participate in songwriting, choreography, and video production from the start. A self-described “creator crew.” Their fandom is called COER.


The Members

Martin — Leader. Korean-Canadian. Born 2008. 190.5cm. Spent his childhood between two countries — Canadian father, Korean mother. Carried the Icelandic flag at the 2018 PyeongChang Winter Olympics opening ceremony and performed with the Rainbow Choir. Before joining BigHit, he already had songwriting credits on tracks by ILLIT, TXT, and LE SSERAFIM. His role model is BTS’s RM — his older sister was an ARMY, which led him to audition for BigHit.

James — Taiwanese. The only non-Korean national in the group. Fluent in English, Korean, and Mandarin. Considered one of the strongest vocalists in the lineup.

Juhoon — Born 2008. Worked as a child model before debut, appearing in music videos for VIXX and Zion.T. Fluent in both Korean and English. Universally acknowledged by the members as the one who eats the most.

Seonghyeon — The group’s top-liner. Leads melody work, and despite being quiet, is said to have the most ideas. Trained at BigHit for around five years from age 13.

Keonho — Youngest member. Born February 14, 2008 — Valentine’s Day. Former competitive swimmer with multiple medals. Directly involved in MV production. Known among fans as the “generation 5 visual.”

While their musical talent is undeniable, the stories of how these five members came together are even more cinematic. Check out my latest deep dive into the 5 Surprising Facts About CORTIS Members to see why HYBE waited years to recruit them.


Discography & Recommended Tracks

“What You Want” (2025.08.18) — Debut single. Where the TikTok viral started. An English version featuring Teezo Touchdown also exists.

“GO!” — EP track. The members planned and filmed the MV themselves. The most direct statement of what CORTIS is about.

Video: CORTIS “GO!” Official MV / Source: HYBE LABELS (YouTube)

“FaSHioN” — EP track. The group’s pop sensibility at its clearest.

Video: CORTIS “FaSHiON” Official MV / Source: HYBE LABELS (YouTube)

“Mention Me” (2026.02.13) — On the soundtrack for the American animated film Goat.


Stories Worth Knowing

NBA All-Star Halftime — A K-Pop First

In February 2026, CORTIS performed at the NBA All-Star Celebrity Game halftime show — the first K-pop group to do so. The same day, they headlined the NBA Crossover concert at the LA Convention Center alongside Ludacris and Shaboozey. A group six months into their debut on the biggest stage in American professional sports. The context matters more than the numbers.

Lollapalooza Chicago 2026

They’re on the Lollapalooza Chicago lineup in August — a solo slot for a K-pop boy group at one of America’s biggest music festivals. Remarkable for a group that hasn’t yet hit their one-year mark.

Debut Album at 2 Million — Second Ever

Color Outside the Lines has crossed 2 million copies sold. Only Zerobaseone had done it before with a debut album.


Why “REDRED” on April 20

On April 20 at 6PM KST, CORTIS drops “REDRED” — the title track from their second EP GREENGREEN — with both an MV and a performance film. The full album follows on May 4. Pre-orders passed 1.22 million copies in a week. Nearly three times the first-week sales of their debut album.

Eight months in. No official comeback yet. Already here. Where “REDRED” takes them — April 20.


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