Yaeji
Yaeji


4.5
superb

Review

by cavalrycaptain USER (15 Reviews)
April 2nd, 2017 | 16 replies


Release Date: 2017 | Tracklist

Review Summary: I see you in myself, as a body sees its reflection within a mirror

Yesterday, I bought a ticket to see the new Ghost in the Shell film based on the 1995 anime classic. Though it was visually impressive, I couldn’t get past the fact that screenwriters abandoned so much of the philosophical discourse that made the first film so engaging. Watching Scarlett Johansson kick ass in a skintight bodysuit (while still enjoyable) just didn’t fill me with the same emotions and questions that the anime did. It looked the same, but it didn’t feel the same.

I mention this because there was something else released on the same day as the Ghost remake that does a much better job of conveying the anime’s tone, though not intentionally. That something is Yaeji, the debut EP from New York-based producer Kathy Yaeji Lee. Her music (produced with help from labelmate Nick Sylvester) is a deft fusion of house beats and downtempo soul, evoking images of a neon-lit urban sprawl quite similar to that of Mamoru Oshii’s 1995 film.

“New York 93” is the EP’s main single and its most transporting cut. Over an elliptical pattern of cycling synths, Lee whisper-sings in a mix of English and Korean that oozes with subtle emotion. The track’s lyrics, though obtuse, seem to paint an image of Lee woozily walking the streets of a past New York that survives in her memory despite being lost to time. There’s a strange sense of loneliness that pervades the song- even though she stumbles around in a city of millions, Lee’s unique perspective ends up isolating her from any human contact.

The cover art provides a bit of insight into the thematic nature of Lee’s music. In the photo, she stands in front of a bathroom mirror with her eyes shut, suggesting that the self is all one can truly know whether they gaze inside or outside. Yet instead of searching for answers to her solipsistic questions, Lee seemingly embraces her day-to-day monotony with tracks that blur the line between human and machine. The dry, repetitive vocals of the house cut “Feel It Out” reflect the mechanical nature of city life and further solidify the Ghost similarities. The lyrics- “I need coffee… open up on a Monday”- detail Lee’s absurdly robotic lifestyle as she re-charges and re-fuels over and over again. “Noonside” creates a similar atmosphere as an exhausted Lee confesses that she “can’t see why she will continue on.” Though she is literally referring to a tiring night at the club, she figuratively implies the negative effect of urban life on her psyche.

Lee’s hushed croon perfectly suits the emotional ambiguity of her music. On “Noonside” she is both comforting and sinister, and her monotone adds an eerily indifferent tone to her version of Mall Grab’s “Guap”- a surprisingly dark club banger. Both “Guap” and the post-punky “Full of It” show Lee’s versatility across genre, and close out the EP on a high note.

The music on Yaeji is quiet, elemental, and raw. Lee’s spectral vocals and the hypnotic production help kindle a fire of odd memories and unanswered questions in the mind. These tracks have a disorienting way of burrowing into the unconscious and filling the soul with nostalgia and anxiety. Though the effect is often more uncanny than enjoyable, Lee’s presence is so alluring that Yaeji transcends the norms of music to become a fully-realized psychological experience. Like the original Ghost in the Shell film, it is a piece of art that demands to be felt rather than observed.

So please, listen to Yaeji instead of shelling out your hard-earned money to watch the bloated CGI-fest that was released on the same day. If music really is a universal language, than listening to this EP is the equivalent of gazing at the world through another set of eyes. It’s fairly short and will end up being insignificant in the grand scheme of things, but a journey like this is far more engrossing and personal than anything you’ll see on an IMAX screen.



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user ratings (33)
3.3
great


Comments:Add a Comment 
cavalrycaptain
April 2nd 2017


65 Comments

Album Rating: 4.5

Wasn't planning on rating this so high but I can't really find anything wrong with it. Definitely the best EP of the year so far.

Ryus
April 2nd 2017


36544 Comments

Album Rating: 3.0

sounds good

Ryus
April 2nd 2017


36544 Comments

Album Rating: 3.0

listened to new york 93, nice synth tone...the sound itself reminds me a lot of the album 94 diskont

VaxXi
April 2nd 2017


4418 Comments


Sounds like some top quality stuff

Dewinged
Staff Reviewer
April 2nd 2017


32013 Comments


Interesting. And nice review Capt.

Ryus
April 3rd 2017


36544 Comments

Album Rating: 3.0

very pleasing stuff



vocals are a little much sometimes though for me

literallyzach
April 3rd 2017


520 Comments

Album Rating: 3.0

I don't really feel the ghost in the shell comparison at all but I like this EP quite a bit.

cavalrycaptain
April 3rd 2017


65 Comments

Album Rating: 4.5

There's only a few subtle similarities in the music/lyrics... it's more that they both made me feel the same emotions, so it's a pretty subjective comparison.

literallyzach
April 4th 2017


520 Comments

Album Rating: 3.0

The vocals on this EP are actually getting a little tiresome for me personally, I have to skip Guap when it comes on now

Wildhoney
October 4th 2017


469 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0

shit is crazy / shit is Yaeji



In other news her new song is a fucking banger

brandontaylor
October 27th 2017


1228 Comments

Album Rating: 3.5

wanted to like this more than i did. sometimes her vocals/samples/melodies make feel feel uneasy or uncomfortable and not in a really great way.

Zeneren
December 17th 2017


1088 Comments

Album Rating: 3.0

just got round to this from all the attention she's getting. Lot of promise here but I find Feel It Out and Guap are tacky as hell

foxblood
February 10th 2018


11159 Comments

Album Rating: 1.0

lol shit is crazy / shit is Yaeji [2]. but in a bad way for me. wow sounds like clueless bedroom music by someone that's never played music. every aspect of this is completely poor in my opinion. it would prob be better with the vocal tracks removed. guap is quite a chore to sit through. wasted my time with this one, on to the next album. The review is not bad at all but a 4.5 for this is ludicrous I think.

PotsyTater
September 13th 2022


10101 Comments


MOTHER RUSSIA IN MY CUP

kevbogz
September 13th 2022


6086 Comments


makeitraingirlmakeitrainmakeitraingirlmakeitrainmakeitraingirlmakeitrainmakeitraingirlmakeitrainmakeitraingirlmakeitrainmakeitraingirlmakeitrainmakeitraingirlmakeitrainmakeitraingirlmakeitrainmakeitraingirlmakeitrainmakeitraingirlmakeitrainmakeitraingirlmakeitrainmakeitraingirlmakeitrainmakeitraingirlmakeitrainmakeitraingirlmakeitrainmakeitraingirlmakeitrainmakeitraingirlmakeitrainmakeitraingirlmakeitrain

PotsyTater
September 13th 2022


10101 Comments


Yaeji is under appreciated here



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