Going Crazy (feat. Kwon Soonil)
Suran
Suran collapses with precision here. This is a breakup song that doesn't rage or sob — it fractures quietly, unraveling in real time. The production moves through a haze of muted electric piano and late-night R&B atmospherics, building pressure through minimalism rather than bombast. Her voice takes on a slightly ragged quality, catching at the edges of phrases as if words keep failing before they're complete. The lyrics map the psychological spiral of a fresh heartbreak: the repetitive thought loops, the inability to eat or sleep, the absurdity of how central one person became to a functioning life. Kwon Soonil's contribution — warm, soulful, textured — provides a counterpoint that feels like the voice of sanity one barely hears over the noise inside. Musically, this song sits at the intersection of introspective Korean R&B and confessional neo-soul, closer in spirit to SZA than to Korean idol pop. The chorus breaks open without resolution, which is exactly right — going crazy has no clean ending. This is a 3am song, best heard while staring at a ceiling and understanding, fully and painfully, that the person you keep reaching for is genuinely gone. The restraint in Suran's performance makes it devastating rather than theatrical.
slow
2010s
hazy, nocturnal, suffocating
South Korea
R&B, K-R&B. Neo-soul. heartbroken, anguished. Opens in quiet fragmentation and spirals deeper into psychological unraveling, reaching no resolution — the collapse simply continues. energy 3. slow. danceability 3. valence 2. vocals: raw, fractured, confessional, ragged, emotionally exposed. production: muted electric piano, late-night R&B atmospherics, minimalist, moody layering. texture: hazy, nocturnal, suffocating. acousticness 4. era: 2010s. South Korea. 3am alone, staring at the ceiling in the immediate aftermath of a relationship ending.