Every Single Day: Nothing Of It & An Interview
The Korean indie band Every Single Day has released their 6th full length album titled Nothing Of It.
Nothing Of It features new songs and also some old favorites that have been re-done or collaborated on. “Tick Tock”, originally from the drama Pasta, the first drama the band wrote and produced music for back in 2010, was reworked with the female vocal styling’s of Lee Sang Yu (์ด์์ ) of Rocket Tree (๋ก์ผํธ๋ฆฌ). When discussing how they chose the songs to pull from their past, Sung Nam explained that “on the original Pasta OST we thought “Tick Tock” didn’t sound as good as it could so that’s why we chose to give it a make-over on this album and it came out great.”
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Over the past four years the South Korean band Every Single Day has been working tirelessly making music for the popular Korean dramas Golden Time (๊ณจ๋ ํ์), Cheongdam-dong Alice (์ฒญ๋ด๋์จ๋ฆฌ์ค), I Can Hear Your Voice (๋์๋ชฉ์๋ฆฌ๊ฐ๋ค๋ ค), Miss Korea (๋ฏธ์ค์ฝ๋ฆฌ์), Gap Dong (๊ฐ๋์ด), Pinocchio (ํผ๋ ธํค์ค) and The Time We Were Not In Love (๋๋ฅผ์ฌ๋ํ์๊ฐ). Between dramas though, they were working on creating and re-producing favorites for their newest album Nothing of it.
“Going Down”, originally an instrumental background song from from the drama Miss Korea, was showcased on this album in it’s entirety with the vocals included. “”Lucky Day”, “Sonagi” and “Echo” are three of our most popular songs and people consistently request to hear them so, we thought it’d be fun to collaborate with some other artists or in the case of “Echo” to re-do it in a harder rougher way,” guitarist Je Woo Jeong (์ ์ฌ์ฐ) disclosed.
“Lucky Day” was given a reggae redux with the beats and brass sounds of Ska Wakers (์ค์นด์จ์ด์ปค์ค) and the bands made a collaborative music video to go along with the song. The sounds of the two bands meshed extremely well and they even made a fun video to go along with the release of the song. Je Woo had this to say about the new version:
Lucky Day was originally a fun up tempo song so we thought if there was a brass section, it would add an element that wasnโt there before. Weโve played at concerts with Ska Wakers a few times before so we contacted them and it worked out really well. They are also from Busan and they still live there so at first we did everything through email. We sent them the song, they played a brass section, then sent it back and we listened and added more and then sent it back and forth a few times before we actually met.
Originally we hadnโt planned on making a video for the song, but Ska Wakers were headed up to Seoul for a weekend to attend a wedding, so we met up with them for one day and shot a really fun video with them in our studio and around Hongdae.
“Sonagi” was given a No Brain (๋ ธ๋ธ๋ ์ธ) punk mix with the singer Lee Sung Woo’s (์ด์ฑ์ฐ) unique voice. Fans of No Brain may recognize some of the guitar chords played in the new version of “Sonagi” as Je Woo strums bars from No Brain’s popular “๋ ๋ด๊ฒ ๋ฐํ์ด” at the beginning and during the guitar solo as a tribute to the singer and their collaboration on the song. Drummer Hyo Young Kim (๊นํจ์) described how the band and Sung Woo only met up for a few hours on the collaboration. Because he’s an old friend of Sungnam and Je Woo, it was an easy “yes” to collaborate and within just a few hours, the vocals were recorded and done.
“Hourglass”, originally off the Golden Time OST, was amped up with the voice of Jeong Cha Sik and was rearranged electronically by Je Woo. He had wanted to use the unique voice of friend and fellow musician Jeong Cha Sik because “he has the ability to sing both very low octaves and very high.” His voice gives the song both an eerie and calming presence which suits the song well.
When asked about their favorite song on the album, the guys had this to say:
Je Woo: “”Going Down” because I have liked this song since the very first time we jammed and came up with it. I came up with the guitar riff for this song first and then Sung Nam added the melody. Itโs a bit different from our other upbeat songs and has a deeper calm sound which I like.”
Sung Nam: “”Sweet Illusion” because itโs just us. The other songs on our album have keyboards and synthesizers and some other additions but this song is just our main three piece band. Itโs straight from us to you and I like that. I also like the lyrics.”
Hyo Young: “”๋ฐ๋์ ๋ฐ๋ ค” because when I heard the demo version of this song the first time, I already liked it. Je Woo and Sung Nam had made a drum demo for me to hear. Itโs not Sung Namโs normal melody style. Itโs a bit different for us and I liked that out of the box style.”
ESD’s sixth album showcases both new and old songs that all of their fans are sure to adore.
Nothing Of It
- Reminisce
- Ready To Love
- Sweet Illusion
- ํฑํก (Tick Tock) (with ์ด์์ (Lee Sang Yu))
- Going Down (Album Version)
- Lucky Day (with Ska Wakers)
- It Could Be Love
- ์์ฝ (Echo) (Album Version)
- ์๋๊ธฐ (with ์ด์ฑ์ฐ (Lee Sung Woo))
- ๋ฐ๋์ ๋ฐ๋ ค
- Tonight
- ๋ชจ๋์๊ณ (Hourglass) (with ์ ์ฐจ์ (Jeong Cha Sik))
*All photos in this post provided by the band Every Single Day.
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2 Comments
mtanter
Is the album on iTunes?
The Soul of Seoul
Yes it is. I linked to it at the end of the article there but if you go to ITunes and search Every Single Day, it will come up. ^^