CNBLUE, I’m so sorry for not having any food on our comeback week. New song live clip release

The band CNBLUE (Jung Yong-hwa, Kang Min-hyuk, Lee Jung-shin) will release a live video amid favorable reviews of its new song “The Past, Present and Future.”



CNBLUE’s agency FNC Entertainment will release a live clip of its new song “Ten, Now and Forever” on CNBLUE’s official SNS at 6 p.m. on the 22nd.
In a photo posted before the release of the video, CNBLUE has a warm and warm charm against the backdrop of a band set.

CNBLUE released its eighth mini-album ‘RE-CODE’ on the 17th.
Through their new album, which they released after three years and eight months, they are receiving favorable reviews for their calmer band colors, putting down their splendor.

Jung Yong-hwa said, “In the past, if we had to finish everything perfectly in line with the deadline between busy schedules, this album had a lot of time to slowly look at ourselves, reset and try new songs while thinking for a long time. It’s the result,” he said, expressing his affection for the new album, saying, “That’s why I feel more attached to this album.”

In particular, this album is composed of Jung Yong-hwa’s self-composed songs, and clearly shows CNBLUE’s natural life change and deep musical sensibility, which has entered their 30s.

The title track “Ten, Now and Forever” is a song that honestly describes the complex feelings of those who live their daily lives left in the absence of the person who left them, and Kang Min-hyuk said, “I heard it for the first time before the final lyrics came out, and since then, the lyrics ‘We are in the past, present, and future’ have been clearly understood.”

Thanks to this high level of perfection, CNBLUE’s new song “Ten, Now and Forever” has also entered the Melon 24Hits chart, overshadowing a long hiatus, and its new album “RE-CODE” has drawn keen attention from music fans at home and abroad, with the release of the album topping the iTunes overall album charts in 10 regions around the world.

In addition, CNBLUE, which made its comeback after three years and eight months, has also been ranked in the top five iTunes POP album charts in 15 regions including the U.S., Australia and Japan, proving its global popularity.