Every Day, Every Moment (Something in the Rain OST)
샘김
A quiet acoustic guitar opens the space before Sam Kim's voice arrives — low, slightly worn at the edges, carrying the kind of warmth that feels like someone speaking close to your ear in an empty room. The production stays deliberately sparse: fingerpicked strings, a soft rhythm that never insists on itself, and occasional swells of piano that appear and dissolve like breath in cold air. The song belongs to the tender register of love that has already proven itself — not the burning uncertainty of new feeling, but the calmer, more profound certainty of someone who has chosen you again and again. Sam Kim's delivery never strains; the restraint is the point. He holds notes just long enough to let them ache before releasing them, and the effect is of someone saying something they've meant for a long time but only found words for now. The Korean drama it scored was built around a romance between two adults navigating the gap between longing and action, and this song captures exactly that emotional geography — the feeling of standing still inside a moment you don't want to end. It belongs to late evenings when the apartment is quiet and you're aware of how much you have to lose.
slow
2010s
sparse, intimate, still
Korean drama OST
Folk, Ballad. acoustic singer-songwriter. romantic, serene. Sustains a consistent tenderness throughout, with piano swells that rise and dissolve like breath, never arriving at drama, only deepening in quiet certainty.. energy 2. slow. danceability 1. valence 7. vocals: low male, warm and slightly worn, intimate, unstraining. production: fingerpicked guitar, soft dissolving piano, minimal rhythm, deliberately sparse. texture: sparse, intimate, still. acousticness 9. era: 2010s. Korean drama OST. Late evenings when the apartment is quiet and you are aware, with unusual clarity, of how much you have to lose.