A Korean ballad where goodbye isn't an ending, just a word spoken under the same sky.
Most breakup songs build a monument to the pain.
This one just keeps pointing at the same sky, saying the goodbye doesn't mean you're gone.
A Korean ballad where goodbye isn't an ending, just a word spoken under the same sky.
A Korean ballad where goodbye isn't an ending, just a word spoken under the same sky.
Most breakup songs build a monument to the pain.
This one just keeps pointing at the same sky, saying the goodbye doesn't mean you're gone.
A Korean ballad where goodbye isn't an ending, just a word spoken under the same sky.
jageun neoui ipsuri cheoeum naege haessdeon mal annyeongiran geu mari cham deutgi johdeora
Most breakup songs build a monument to the pain. This one just keeps pointing at the same sky, saying the goodbye doesn't mean you're gone. It's stubborn, almost childish in its refusal to let the word have its final power.
The song fixates on 'jageun neoui ipsuri', your small mouth, that first said goodbye. It's a tiny, physical detail that holds the whole memory of how things began, and now the singer has to live with the echo of that word in a mouth he once knew. The repetition of 'neoman neoman kkok neoman', only you, only you, definitely only you, feels less like a choice and more like a fact the heart can't shake.
Remembering the goodbye by the size of the mouth that said it, that's how specific the memory is. The singer isn't just hearing the word; he's seeing the shape it came from.
The way 'nal ijji ma', don't forget me, repeats five times near the end, like a plea turning into a chant.
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jageun neoui ipsuri
cheoeum naege haessdeon mal
annyeongiran geu mari
cham deutgi johdeora
uriga sijagi doen geot gata
uriga uriga doen geot gata
neoreul jibe deryeoda jugo
doraoneun geu gire
seollege han geu mari
ijen good bye good bye
annyeong annyeong annyeongiraneun mal
kkeutiran geon aniya
gateun haneul arae isseunikka
annyeong annyeong annyeong mareul hajiman
naui gaseum sogen
neoman neoman kkok neoman isseul tenikka
jjalpeun siganieossjiman
chueogeun manhdeora
hangyeolgateun sarangeun neul gamdongideora
oneuri majimageun aniya
algessni geureonikka ulji ma
neoneun sesang eodi isseodo
chajagal su isseuni
amu geokjeonghaji ma
jamsi good bye good bye
annyeong annyeong annyeongiraneun mal
kkeutiran geon aniya
gateun haneul arae isseunikka
annyeong annyeong annyeong mareul hajiman
naui gaseum sogen
neoman neoman kkok neoman isseul tenikka
nal ijji ma nal ijji ma nal ijji ma
nal ijji ma nal ijji ma
naega eopsneun bomi jinado
annyeong annyeong annyeong malhajiman
i maeumeun eonjena
neoreul talmeun kkocceul piul geoya
sarang sarang saranghandaneun geu mal
dareun saram anin
neoman neoman kkok neoman deutge doel geoya
A Korean ballad where goodbye isn't an ending, just a word spoken under the same sky. Most breakup songs build a monument to the pain. This one just keeps pointing at the same sky, saying the goodbye doesn't mean you're gone.
Lee Seung Gi performs "And Goodbye", and this lyric page sits inside the Lee Seung Gi catalog on LyroVerse.
Yes. The page carries the LyroVerse editor's note "Lee Seung Gi's 'And Goodbye' and the small mouth", followed by the full lyric and related songs.
Yes. The related section below points to Will you marry me? (결혼해 줄래) (Feat. BIZNIZ) and I Am A Bad Guy with a short reason for opening each page next.
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