너의 이름은
10cm
10cm occupies a particular corner of Korean indie music where warmth and wryness coexist without tension, and "너의 이름은" is one of his most fully realized expressions of that sensibility. The guitar work is acoustic and unadorned, fingerpicked with the unhurried confidence of someone who trusts the song to carry its own weight. His voice is immediately recognizable — a slightly husky, conversational tenor that sounds like it's speaking directly to one person rather than performing for many — and here it takes on a particular tenderness, as if the act of saying someone's name has become loaded with years of accumulated feeling. The arrangement stays sparse throughout, resisting the temptation to orchestrate the emotion that the performance already contains. There's a literary quality to 10cm's songwriting in general — precise, image-driven, never sentimental in the way that demands you feel something — and this track exemplifies it: the name becomes a kind of talisman, something both ordinary and sacred. It belongs to the wave of Korean indie that emerged in the early 2010s around Hongdae venues and lo-fi recording aesthetics, and it sounds like that world: small, genuine, late-night. Reach for it in quiet moments of private feeling, when someone matters to you in a way you haven't yet said aloud.
slow
2010s
warm, lo-fi, intimate
Korean indie, early 2010s Hongdae scene
Indie, Folk. Korean Indie Folk. romantic, tender. Quietly intimate throughout — a name becomes increasingly weighted with accumulated feeling, arriving at something between the sacred and the unbearably ordinary.. energy 2. slow. danceability 2. valence 6. vocals: husky male tenor, conversational, direct, intimate warmth. production: fingerpicked acoustic guitar, sparse arrangement, minimal ornamentation. texture: warm, lo-fi, intimate. acousticness 9. era: 2010s. Korean indie, early 2010s Hongdae scene. Quiet private moments when someone matters to you in a way you haven't yet said aloud.