Davichi returns with new, mature sounds
[The Korea Herald]
K-pop female pop-ballad duo Davichi has by all accounts upgraded its musical style, and revamped its image in the act’s latest EP, “Davichi Hug,” which was released on Wednesday.
K-pop female pop-ballad duo Davichi has by all accounts upgraded its musical style, and revamped its image in the act’s latest EP, “Davichi Hug,” which was released on Wednesday.
The two artists, Lee Hae-ri and Kang Min-kyung, previously
enjoyed a string of successes with hit songs like “The Letter,” “8282” and
“Turtle” under their previous management label Core Contents Media.
However this time around the idols seem keen to leave their
girly and bubbly images behind by returning to the scene with more melancholy
notes and mature themes that permeate throughout their latest EP, released
under their new managing agency CJ E&M Music.
Davichi’s medium-tempo song “Sorry If I’m Happy” strikes a
distinctively feminist approach, in contrast to some of the duo’s previous
releases, including the energetically mournful single, “I Love You Even Though
I Hate You.”
The new album’s lead single “Cry Again” is also another
lovelorn ballad. The music video for the track was shot on location in Budapest
and shows the singers enacting a heartfelt dramatic sequence with expanded
emotional and vocal range.
By Yoon Sarah
- Source: http://www.thecambodiaherald.com/entertainment/davichi-returns-with-new-mature-sounds-2817#sthash.tDEPW5P6.dpuf
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Eddy Kim reprises past love confessional in ‘My Love’
[The Korea Herald]
Former Superstar K4 contestant Eddy Kim melts young female hearts when he performs his enchantingly romantic, self-written ballads with his signature ladies’ man, charming demeanor.
Former Superstar K4 contestant Eddy Kim melts young female hearts when he performs his enchantingly romantic, self-written ballads with his signature ladies’ man, charming demeanor.
The 24-year-old singer-songwriter on Wednesday dropped his
six-track, second EP, “Sing Sing Sing,” more than a year after releasing his debut
EP “How To Use You.”
“With this new album, I really wanted to be able to create
something that my fans could listen to and say, ‘Wow, he’s more than just a
romantic ballad singer,’” he said in an interview with The Korea Herald.
Kim, who in 2012 made it through to the top six round of Mnet’s popular audition program “Superstar K,” earned a reputation as a soulful, hopeless romantic with his self-produced and self-written singles.
Kim, who in 2012 made it through to the top six round of Mnet’s popular audition program “Superstar K,” earned a reputation as a soulful, hopeless romantic with his self-produced and self-written singles.
Then, after signing with music label Mystic 89
Entertainment, he further propelled his sentimental image with his
love-inspired first EP.
“When I released my first album, as opposed to creating
music for other people’s tastes, I really focused on wanting to write and
perform the kind of music that I personally felt best shows my style and
personality,” he said.
“I’m not necessarily looking to shed my ‘romantic
singer-songwriter’ image that I’m better known for, but I just want to try new
approaches as an artist,” Kim added. “This time around with my new album ‘Sing
Sing Sing,’ I definitely feel that it’s a little more mainstream and that my
songs will be able to reach a wider range of fans.”
Kim performed his latest singles live for the first time at
a showcase on Wednesday at Seoul Olympic Park’s K-Art Hall.
He kick-started the showcase with “Apologize,” with which
the singer wanted to show that he was capable of more than just singing about
pining for the opposite sex, belting out the lyrics, “This freaking love’s
done!”
“‘Apologize’ is all about meeting the worst kind of woman,”
Kim explained. “And after meeting this woman, I am then demanding that she
apologize to me for all the wrong she has done.”
The artist also went on to perform the album’s eponymous
upbeat pop rock track “Sing Sing Sing,” as well as the EP’s starry-eyed romance
piano ballad lead single, “My Love.”
“‘My Love’ is a song that I originally wrote in English a
long time ago, but eventually decided to translate the lyrics into Korean to
include the track on my album,” he said.
“At the time when I wrote the song, I was in a relationship
and it was a song I intended to sing to her ― but things obviously didn’t work
out,” he said blushing, adding that he had written it nearly five years ago
while studying music at the Berklee College of Music in Boston.
By Julie Jackson
Source:
http://www.thecambodiaherald.com/entertainment/eddy-kim-reprises-past-love-confessional-in-%E2%80%98my-love%E2%80%99-2816#sthash.XnFG9GWP.dpuf
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