Jung Ho Seok aka J-Hope, Hobi, *literal* Sunshine has been holding out on us.I mean, the signs were there, if we cared to look: BTS is perhaps the most extensively documented band in modern history, and there are plenty of glimpses of Hobi irked and maybe a little sad, but only when the cameras are focused on someone else. But he, and probably Jin, carry an outsized share of the positivity weight.But this is what happens when you keep turning that little crank on the side of the box. Keep winding. Go ahead.It all comes down. All of it. And it's not all pretty. Although, let's face it: Ho Seok is one of the prettiest humans ever to walk the planet. I digress. Sorry. What I mean is - Jack In The Box has moments of delicate beauty. Equal Sign and Future are lovely, the first for humanity in general, the second for one special love. But there's a conflagration going on. MORE and Arson in particular hit you hard with sides of Jung Ho Seok that J-Hope keeps mostly hidden.It's all out now, though, and it is freaking glorious.MORE is a straightforward headbanger. Arson stays closer to hip hop. But they both FEEL great. Ho Seok's got a gift for rhythm and sound - his lyrics are percussive and convert information more by how they feel than by what they are overtly saying. The beats and embellishments are divine booty shakers. You get the message because you listen to the songs over and over - they feel that good even though the tone is dark.Well, in fairness, Arson is both dark and blindingly bright. The album's closer ponders whether, now that everything is on fire, he should put it out or let it burn. You can decide for yourself, but it seemed to me like he decided to pour gas on it.