A Korean vocalist whose five songs trace love's small, stubborn details.
If you need a place to start, put on 'Night And Day'. Then maybe 'Love Is Not a Big Thing' for contrast.
She'z recorded only a handful of tracks, but they stick. 'Night And Day' holds a particular weight, it's the kind of ballad that doesn't announce itself, it just settles in. The songs feel lived-in, like pages from a diary you weren't meant to read.
There's no grand public history here, just the songs themselves. They move from the weary persistence of 'Night And Day' to the more resolved, forward-looking tone of 'Better Tomorrow' and 'My Way'.
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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