Reset (feat. 윤미래)
타이거JK
This is a song that breathes — slowly, carefully, with the kind of space that only comes from artists who trust silence as much as sound. Tiger JK's rap has always carried weight beyond its technical execution, and here the delivery is softer than usual, more reflective, as though the words are being chosen in real time rather than performed. Yoon Mi-rae's vocal presence transforms the track entirely when she enters: her voice carries decades of soul and R&B influence filtered through a distinctly Korean emotional register, warm and commanding simultaneously. Together the two voices create something that feels like a conversation between grief and possibility, between the person you were and the one you're trying to become. Musically the production is restrained and atmospheric — gentle Rhodes piano, muted percussion, the kind of arrangement that frames rather than competes. The central idea is the possibility of starting over, of returning to a baseline before accumulation of hurt, of something like grace. Culturally this sits at the intersection of Korean hip-hop's most personal tradition and the R&B-influenced sound that Yoon Mi-rae has long represented. It's music for healing in progress rather than healing completed — the moment not after recovery but during it, when recovery feels possible but isn't yet certain.
slow
2010s
warm, sparse, atmospheric
South Korean hip-hop and R&B
Hip-Hop, R&B. Korean hip-hop soul crossover. melancholic, hopeful. Begins deep in grief and reflection, gradually opens through the warmth of the featured vocal into cautious, unfinished possibility of renewal.. energy 3. slow. danceability 3. valence 5. vocals: soft reflective male rap paired with warm commanding female soul vocals. production: Rhodes piano, muted percussion, atmospheric and sparse. texture: warm, sparse, atmospheric. acousticness 5. era: 2010s. South Korean hip-hop and R&B. Quiet evenings during personal recovery when healing feels possible but not yet certain.