You Are My Everything (어쿠스틱)
거미
The acoustic version of Gummy's performance strips away the orchestral architecture that made the original Goblin OST recording so cinematically grand and leaves something almost more devastating in its place. A single guitar, or close to it, and a voice that needs nothing else. Gummy has one of the most technically formidable instruments in Korean pop music, but what this arrangement reveals is that technique was never the point — the point was always the emotional precision, the way she can make a long note feel like a held breath, like the suspension before tears. Without the swelling strings, every dynamic choice becomes visible, every moment of restraint more intentional. The lyric's devotion — total, unqualified — lands differently when there's no dramatic scaffolding to support it. It becomes a private declaration rather than a cinematic one. The song belongs to the tradition of Korean ballads that locate their power not in excess but in accumulation, in the way simple materials — a voice, a chord, a silence — can become the whole of what someone feels. You listen to this in the hours when you miss someone and can't explain to anyone why it still matters so much.
very slow
2010s
sparse, raw, intimate
Korean drama OST tradition
Ballad, K-Pop. Korean Drama OST (acoustic). romantic, melancholic. Strips away cinematic grandeur to expose a private, total devotion that accumulates quietly through restraint.. energy 1. very slow. danceability 1. valence 6. vocals: powerful female, technically precise, emotionally controlled, long sustained notes, devastating in restraint. production: solo acoustic guitar, voice-forward, near-silent arrangement, no orchestral scaffolding. texture: sparse, raw, intimate. acousticness 10. era: 2010s. Korean drama OST tradition. Late night alone, missing someone whose absence you still can't fully explain to yourself.