@rvsiwan
It felt weird being in Spotlight's recording studio, especially given the situation. He did collaborations and OSTs and the like, so he wasn't unused to being in a a recording studio that wasn't New Age's, but this was the one he made the (incredibly difficult) decision to walk away from using, when he dropped out from Spotlight’s ranks.
And now, years later they were inviting him into it. Not as a singer, though. But as a featured rapper. On the mini album for Oh Siwan.
He wasn’t sure who decided that it was a job for him--whether it was Spotlight reaching out to New Age, or New Age’s marketing team putting his name out there with several other rappers in the industry -- but he was intrigued enough with the idea to follow through with it. He wasn’t a Prophet or Hyosang by any means, but over the years he’d managed to cultivate rapping as part of his skillset, if only out of necessity when he was performing some of his older songs and initial rappers weren’t anywhere to be found.
The air of the studio was awkward as he looked over the lyrics for the song again, and he was making his final corrections to the rap he wrote -- thankfully Spotlight let him write one rather than forcing one on him that wasn’t really him. “Sorry, something wasn’t flowing right going out into the rest of the lyrics, just give me a minute to fix,” he said.










