DMEANOR

DMEANOR - Sorry (cover art)

Sorry: DMEANOR offers a late apology in new single

Singer DMEANOR has pre-released the song “Sorry” off his upcoming album today. He produced the song together with Ecobridge.

“A word that is easy but just as difficult to say.
Having felt too comfortable, I took you for granted and neglected you.
Now I have realized how important you are to me
and offer you a sincere late apology.”

Release Date: July 19, 2020
Type: Single
Presented by NUPLAY
Published by Dreamus

Tracklist:
  1. Sorry (미안해) TITLE
Credits:

Lyrics written by DMEANOR
Composed by DMEANOR
Arranged by Ecobridge
Piano performed by Ecobridge
Strings arranged and conducted by Ecobridge
Strings performed by Yung String
MIDI Programming: Ecobridge
Recorded by David Noh at NUPLAY Studio
Mixed by Hyung Choi at NUPLAY Studio
Mastered by Namwoo Kwon at 821 Sound Mastering

Executive Producer: NUPLAY
Chief Producer: Ecobridge
A&R, Management: Hyunjin Kim, Euncheol Noh, Yerin Choi
Media Marketing: Nayoung Heo
Art & Design: Yooseung Park
Public Relations: Major7 Company

Streaming:
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Source: Bugs!

DMEANOR - Fool For Loving (cover art)

DMEANOR releases ‘Fool For Loving’ (Feat. Kwamie Liv)

DMEANOR returns with his new mini EP titled ‘Fool For Loving’ featuring Kwamie Liv.

Korean R&B artist DMEANOR, who debuted with ‘Don’t Hold Me (feat. Swings)‘ and shortly after released his second single ‘Right Here, is back with an impressive collaboration with Denmark-based R&B artist Kwamie Liv. The track is produced by Donut (who most recently produced Jeremih’s ‘oui’ and PnB Rock’s ‘Selfish’).

Song Review (written by Cy):

Let’s suspend with any sort of formalities. ‘Fool For Loving’ is sexy in every possible way a song can be sex. If that’s too crude, let’s break it down to the base elements. The song is sparse, a bare beat made hollow with heartbreak, the feeling of emptiness that follows a lover’s dramatic exit out of your life. DMEANOR matches that thick void of regret with an intensity in his voice indicative of someone pleading, knees bruised from falling to the ground and begging for someone to come back, to give his heart some ease. And in that pain, he yearns for a reason, a reason to stay, a reason to keep putting his heart in the way of a speeding train. For that’s all love is — a manic freight train run off the tracks, wheels sparking with the aggressive need to stop but incapable of doing so, pity goes to the fool in the way of its charge.

The lyrics speak of a man who knows he pushes too hard when he should simply let his lover be: “Sometimes I push you to the edge. Don’t jump. Please don’t jump.” Yet we also get the resignation of said lover, a woman who’s had enough of fighting, whose exhaustion traces the edges of her voice. She’s given up arguing over who’s right and who’s wrong: “Don’t act like you’re the victim. We both lose control

In that moment, even when you know you shouldn’t, even when you know you’re absolutely better off getting out of this crazy relationship, there’s an itch. You don’t want just anyone to scratch it. You need the jagged nails of your former lover, the one who left you in shambles in the first place but who knows just how to put you back together. The one who knows every crevice, every sensitive dip of skin, ever mewl of need. Donut’s composition is that exact push and pull, the repulsion of someone who drives you insane, then the absolute hot, sticky need for that person to hold you, rock you and into you in a way that will take all doubts and fears right out of you.

Listen to DMEANOR’s ‘Fool For Loving (Feat. Kwamie Liv)’ on Apple Music

Donut’s brilliant ability to tell this sordid tale with this rustic slow jam — reminiscent of Chris Loco’s work on Emeli Sandé’s ‘Garden’ —  sets up the battle between DMEANOR and Kwamie Liv. While our male lead is all crushed high notes and heady teardrops, our female lead has almost surrendered to the inevitable. One would expect the range in DMEANOR’s delivery — harkening back to the ache in Maxwell’s voice in songs like his version of ‘This Woman’s Work’ or ‘Pretty Wings’. However, Kwamie is a new voice to me, and it’s refreshing to find a female vocalist who opts to sit steady and unbothered in that alto register, that huskiness and world-weariness adding rugged texture to the song.

This dichotomy of voices combined with the almost audible heartache in the song’s composition creates a tension that sits heavy in the abdomen. ‘Fool For Loving’ is a song of friction, of opposite energies rubbing against one another and creating sparks at their meeting points. An explosion is imminent, but in the end, the fire these two bodies make is enough to keep them coming back over and over again until the flames consume them.

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About the Writer: Cy is a digital journalist and blog writer specializing in reviews of music and film across a broad range of genres. Wherever there’s electricity, food and a good Wi-fi connection is where she makes her home. Find her on Twitter (@mindlesscy) and Instagram (@mindless_cy).