Where We Were Together
These South Korean devotees of the ’90s indie-rock canon make delicate, bruising music about indecision and loneliness (and lots of drinking).
This week, Cardi B is a musical chameleon on her debut album while Laura Veirs offers a welcome perspective on emotional turmoil on her 10th studio record
The South Korean indie pop band Say Sue Me's second album is built on tragedy but ends up being an uplifting, heartwarming record sure to make hearts soar and nostalgic feelings for bands like Ride, Velocity Girl, and the Darling Buds flood the senses of anyone old enough to remember them (or savvy enough to discover them after the fact.) First, the tragedy.
'Where We Were Together' by Say Sue Me: Say Sue Me deliver something new and old in our review of 'Where We Were Together'