A Korean singer and dancer who moved from club-ready hits to more reflective solo work.
For the full picture, listen to 'Crazy' back-to-back with 'No Sympathy.' They're only a few years apart, but they feel like different sides of the same artist.
Her early singles like 'Crazy' defined a certain late-2000s dance-pop sound in Korea, built for clubs and music shows. Later tracks such as 'No Sympathy' and 'Invisible Person' dialed back the tempo for something more personal. She also collaborated with groups like After School on 'Amoled,' showing a willingness to step into different spaces.
She debuted with the high-energy 'Crazy' in 2008, followed by other dance tracks like 'Db Rider.' By the 2010s, her solo material began to include slower, more subdued songs. The shift isn't dramatic, but you can hear it between 'Queen' and something like 'Invisible Person.'
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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