More
Millic
Millic's "More" operates in a compression zone between melancholy and desire, the production crystallizing around sparse, meticulous elements — a keyboard figure with slight vintage warmth, percussion that arrives more as texture than timekeeping, bass that suggests physical space without filling it. The emotional register is specific: not the acute pain of loss but the persistent ache of wanting something already present to deepen or continue. Millic's production sensibility leans toward the architectural — sounds placed with deliberate spatial awareness so the silence between them carries as much weight as the notes themselves. Vocally the track is handled with restraint that borders on understatement, which suits its emotional thesis perfectly: the feeling of wanting more is often quieter than you'd expect, a low-frequency longing rather than a declaration. The Korean R&B tradition that Millic inhabits has developed a sophisticated vocabulary for exactly this kind of emotional precision, and "More" demonstrates that fluency. It's headphone music for late nights when you're aware of both what you have and what you want, the two things refusing to fully reconcile into either contentment or dissatisfaction.
slow
2010s
sparse, airy, intimate
South Korea
R&B. Korean R&B. melancholic, longing. Begins in quiet want and sustains a low-frequency longing without resolution or escalation. energy 3. slow. danceability 2. valence 4. vocals: restrained, understated, emotionally precise, soft. production: sparse vintage keyboard, minimal percussion, spacious bass, architectural placement. texture: sparse, airy, intimate. acousticness 4. era: 2010s. South Korea. Late-night headphone listening when aware of both what you have and what you still want.