
Dane joins Grammys 'ReImagined' series
Emerging Korean artist reinterprets Giveon's 'Heartbreak Anniversary'
Rising Korean R&B artist Dane, who is signed with Nostalgiaa Records, was featured in the Grammys' official YouTube content series "ReImagined" on Wednesday.
"ReImagined" invites a new generation of artists to reinterpret Grammy-winning or nominated tracks through their own musical lens.
For the project, Dane reimagined Giveon's 'Heartbreak Anniversary,' a track nominated for best R&B song at the 2022 Grammy Awards. With his signature emotive vocals and minimalist arrangement, Dane offers a fresh take while preserving the original track's tenderness and melancholy.
'Accompanied only by guitar, Dane softens the original's layered production into a stripped-down arrangement filled with raw vulnerability,' the official Grammy website noted.
Dane debuted in 2024 with 'Selfie,' portraying heartbreak with his gentle voice and simple guitar sound. He followed up this year with 'She Said,' again showcasing his strength in blending honest storytelling with music.
Nostalgiaa Records focuses on authenticity-driven artists unconstrained by genre or convention. The label has quickly gained attention for cultivating musicians who are seen to represent the voice and spirit of Generation Z.
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Korea Herald
12 hours ago
- Korea Herald
Korean cinema's political dramas
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Based loosely on the real-life relationship between future president Kim Dae-jung and his strategist Eom Chang-rok, "Kingmaker" asks whether winning at all costs in the name of democracy can ultimately betray the very ideals it claims to uphold. The answer it offers feels uncomfortably relevant to today's politics worldwide. Available on Google Play and Amazon Prime with English subtitles. "The Man Standing Next" (2020) Days before President Park Chung-hee's assassination in 1979, Korean CIA director Kim Gyu-pyeong finds himself caught between loyalty to an increasingly paranoid dictator and his own moral compass. The regime's inner circle becomes a nest of competing ambitions, with Kim facing off against the president's warmongering security chief (Lee Hee-jun) as he grapples with growing popular unrest and pressure from Washington. Director Woo Min-ho ("Inside Men," "Harbin") transforms this historical thriller into a masterclass in political paranoia where every conversation carries the weight of life and death. His direction maintains a carefully calibrated pace that allows tension to build organically, which explodes in a brutal finale that strips away any romanticism about political violence. As Korean cinema's most dependable leading man, Lee Byung-hun anchors the film with a performance of remarkable restraint and ambiguity, portraying Kim as a man whose stoic exterior barely contains his growing horror at the regime's excesses. "The Man Standing Next" succeeds as both compelling period drama and a timeless warning about the corrupting nature of unchecked power. Its exploration of how conflicts and pressure build up under authoritarian systems resonates far beyond the era it portrays. Available on Disney Plus, Amazon Prime, Google Play, and Apple TV with English subtitles. 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Hwang's direction emphasizes the physical and psychological toll of the siege alongside the intricate ideological debates unfolding within the fortress walls, with stunning cinematography that captures both the fortress's imposing beauty and its gradual transformation into a frozen prison. The film's deliberate pacing mirrors the dizzying complexity of the moral arguments themselves, though this methodical approach may occasionally tests the viewer's patience. What elevates "The Fortress" beyond spectacle is the profound sincerity with which these arguments are delivered — each side rooted in genuine devotion to the country and its people. Both ministers present their cases with riveting conviction, and the film suggests that in extreme circumstances, there may be no purely moral choices — only different forms of compromise with an unforgiving reality.


Korea Herald
14 hours ago
- Korea Herald
Starship Entertainment wins lawsuit against cyberbully 'Taldeok Prison Camp'
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Korea Herald
15 hours ago
- Korea Herald
Seoul Releases Global Tourism Campaign Featuring Star Chef Edward Lee
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