The singer-songwriter moves between Korean and English with a clear, direct voice.
If you want to hear her at her most straightforward, try 'Hopeless Love'. For something with a different texture, 'Look Alike' with D.ear works.
She writes about love and identity without much fuss. Songs like 'Hopeless Love' and '3D Woman' have a plainspoken quality that cuts through. Her bilingual approach feels natural, not like a gimmick.
She started releasing music in the mid-2010s. The songs show a shift from early pop-R&B to more varied production, like the electronic touch on 'For a Minute' with Justin Oh.
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Keep it compact: a lyric you come back to, a live memory, or the part of the catalog you would point someone toward first.
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