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[Herald Interview] Choi Gonne reflects on last year’s ‘Candlelight Revolution’ in ‘Highlander’

  • Published : Dec 7, 2017 - 16:30
  • Updated : Dec 7, 2017 - 16:30

Months have passed since hundreds of thousands of candle-holders declared victory of people power in monthslong protests to oust the former President Park Geun-hye at Seoul’s Gwanghwamun Square.

The air was frigid with winter breeze, but what Choi Gonne remembers from the demonstrations is neither hatred nor rage. What she saw were people united, regardless of age or gender, bundled in coats, singing and chanting tunes calling for Park’s ouster, street vendors selling mattresses and hot snacks and young students marching in their uniforms.

Choi, who was among the crowd in the plaza, called those people “Highlander.” She said the term meant those who seek to cultivate barren soil and find hope in the darkness, which is also the title of the lead track of her latest album “Nomad Syndrome.”

“The melody of ‘Highlander’ was created about three years ago, but I couldn’t settle on its lyrics. After the candlelight protest, I could finally finish the song. The event really touched my heart and inspired me,” said Choi during a recent interview with The Korea Herald in Seoul.

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Singer-songwriter Choi Gonne poses during a recent interview with The Korea Herald in Seoul. (Park Hyun-koo / Korea Herald)
Although the song doesn’t specifically flesh out the event lyrically, Choi said she tries to tell her foreign friends that the song, written in English, is about that monumental socio-political event in Korea.

“I participated in almost every rally that started in October last year. My house was adjacent to the square and I just couldn’t ignore all the sounds coming from there. I was so angry at Park at the time. Chanting with the people, what pierced me through was not their anger but their power and dedication to carve out their own destiny. And I wanted to show to foreigners what I felt through the song.”

The singer-songwriter’s fifth EP “Nomad Syndrome” also features track “Gaya,” which Choi said was also a fruition of the same event.
The lyrics came to her mind while watching Park’s trial on TV, which Choi thought was a result of continuous lying and deceiving. One’s lies will be eventually exposed through the mouths of people, leading to one’s destruction, wrote Choi in the lyrics.

While Choi’s name may be new to the K-pop generation, she is an international artist. She performed at England’s Glastonbury Festival in 2014 and 2015 and won Japan’s Fuji TV’s “Asia Versus” in 2013. Choi also toured Europe in 2012 and headlined various music festivals in Korea.

Choi‘s voice drips with soul that is rich, raw and arcane. Listening to her reminds one of the vast plateau and windy terrain of Mongolia, the most unpolished but natural place on earth. She is also known for writing poetic lyrics mostly in English, the reason why her music sounds like a mysterious blend of the East and the West.

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Singer-songwriter Choi Gonne poses during a recent interview with The Korea Herald in Seoul. (Park Hyun-koo / Korea Herald)
Choi said she visited ethnic Koreans in Russia before releasing the album.

“While touring cities around the world, I came to a question about my ‘roots’ in this diverse world. In the process of finding my roots, I visited ethnic Koreans in Russia and I realized that one’s roots are not about where people come from. It is more about if they have that feeling of spiritual affiliation to the land,” she said.

“There are many people around me who want to leave Korea, and seeing them made me realize it was because their spiritual roots haven’t settled down in Korea. Just like nomads, they continuously wonder around, trying to find their identities through social media and digital contents. And I wanted to give them a message, to find their spiritual roots through other songs from ‘Nomad Syndrome,’ such as ‘Anaspora’ and ‘Limbo and Limbo.’”

Asked if she plans to live abroad in the future for her international career, Choi replied her roots belonged here in Korea. But still, she confessed the local music industry is not favorable to indie musicians like her.

“I think there are less people who can accept the musical variety in Korea compared to Europe or Japan. Here, it’s all about the money code, the reason why songs are repeated and musicians don’t try something new,” she said.

“I don’t plan to be a superstar, but I want to show people that different kinds of music exist out there, and that they are awesome. For my next album, I will talk about things I’ve experienced and felt during my world tours.”

By Hong Dam-young (lotus@heraldcorp.com)

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