[Herald Interview] Singer
Singer-songwriter Lee Min-hwi's serene acoustic music and soft melodies disguise a cynical edge.
"Your tongue and ears were never yours" she says on her first album "Borrowed Tongue."
Lee's lyrics -- delivered in a whispering tone, sometimes like reciting poetry -- are the part of songwriting she finds most time-consuming.
"Once I sat down to work on my music, many questions pop up in my head, and usually they lead to one question," Lee told The Korea Herald after her performance Friday at Veloso Hongdae, a live music venue in Seoul’s Mapo-gu.
“Once I decide on a subject, I conduct a plethora of research. I read books, papers and old diaries. I gather every piece of notes and memos,” she noted, adding “I think the path for writing a new song is akin to exploring answers for big questions.”
Her debut album deals with “things that are known but not said, things that should be said but are not, things that cannot be said but nonetheless are,” she explains on her album.
Her second album titled “Future Hometown” (translated) catches her question derived from a sense of loss.
“While I was staying abroad for five years, it felt as if I got lost. I thought it would feel better if I come back to Korea, but it didn’t. Then, there arose a question: ‘was it because I had already lost a place to return to?’”
The 34-year-old said she wanted to share her feelings about the definition of home with the rest of her generation.
"If we don’t have a hometown, then who are we? If we don’t have such a place, where should we go and how?" she said.
Lee’s new album “Future Hometown,” which comes out in November, will have lyrics both in English and Korean to reach a broader audience.
Lee is already enjoying new-found fame in the European market with her 7-year-old album “Borrowed Tongue” and will tour Japan in the forthcoming months.
“I think the lyrics in my album hold an important meaning, so a proper translation will be necessary. … I find it exciting to go abroad and I’m very open to it,” she said.
(责任编辑:예술)
下一篇:Half of young people struggling financially: Seoul
- ·공군 수송기 급파, 한·일 220명 텔아비브 탈출
- ·Yoon's office denies hasty secretary sacking to hide truth
- ·[New on scene] Lee Jun
- ·S. Korea's rising problem: unemployed youth giving up on job searching
- ·Chinese restaurant ‘threatened’ by peers for free delivery
- ·Samsung Biologics to offer solutions for Kurma Partners' portfolio firms
- ·[Korea Beyond Korea] Berlin, Europe's Korean Studies hub, nurtures next
- ·S. Korea, US, Japan stage first
- ·[KH Explains] Banks, regulators trade blame for snowballing ELS losses
- ·Warmer winter temperatures expected this week
- ·Experts forecast US
- ·[Korean History] Deadly sinking of Navy ship in 2010 marks worst postwar military disaster
- ·[KH Explains] China ups OLED ante to take over Korean shares
- ·이낙연, 1만3000명 출당 청원에 "당에서 몰아내면 받아야지"
- ·[Herald Review] Musical 'Yujin and Yujin' captivates Taiwanese audience
- ·Over 70,000 teens homeless, urgent support needed: professor
- ·‘Korea could go extinct without proper immigration policy’: minister
- ·Korean defense firms head to Egypt defense expo to expand market presence
- ·Posco Future M to supply battery materials for LG
- ·[Contribution] Future of agriculture
- ·US rejects NK's 'double standard' claim on Seoul's satellite launch
- ·Exhibition opens to deepen ‘Olympic experience’
- ·Citibank Korea hosts digital forum for corporate clients
- ·Blackpink survives 7
- ·[Contribution] Future of agriculture
- ·이낙연, 1만3000명 출당 청원에 "당에서 몰아내면 받아야지"
- ·LTI Korea announces winners of 2023 Korea Translation Award
- ·McKinsey names 2 new partners at Seoul office