Chapter 4 : My Real Music
Chapter 4 of "The Double Life of a Genius Musician" kicks off revealing secrets: Chapter 4: My Real MusicWhen I listened to a song, I could see the person.Some... Keep reading!
Chapter 4: My Real Music
When I listened to a song, I could see the person.
Some people expressed themselves through their music, while others hid their true feelings behind it.
Han Yujin, as I saw her, belonged to the latter.
The opposite of me.
If I was an S, she was an N.
Through music, I expressed the desires I had tucked away.
My remixes were always flamboyant and confident.
âSo weâre complete oppositesâŚâŚ.â
Music wasnât just a series of melodies.
It was about discovering the intentions hidden behind the track.
It was about understanding the inner world concealed within the music.
That was the real reason I listened to and dissected music.
And nowâŚ
âThis sounds fun.â
I wanted to create music that truly belonged to me.
I put on my worn-out headphones.
As I plugged them into the PC, a sharp high-pitched sound scraped my ears.
I took out my 88-key keyboard for the first time in a while.
I carefully captured the accompaniment and melody that came to mind while watching Han Yujin.
The intro began calmly.
A gentle piano line marked the start of the piece.
Starting with F - Bb - Am7 - Dm7, flowing smoothly into Gm7 - C7 - F - C.
I structured it as restrained as possible to highlight the melody.
The key was harmony.
âThis key seems good enoughâŚâŚ.â
Han Yujin was a complicated person.
She acted cheerful as if it were ingrained in her, but her inner self was composed.
At least thatâs how I saw it.
So I composed it.
A song that gave courage, comfort⌠strong enough to make even a groaning patient spring up.
It was the first time inspiration had come to me like this.
I wanted to capture every detail without missing a single thing.
But thenâ
âWhy?â
Something felt off.
Even though I had honestly transcribed the melody that came to mind when I saw Han Yujin.
My head said it was right, but my heart said no.
I leaned back in my chair.
Was this not it? Why not?
Maybe I still wasnât ready to create? Had I underestimated composing?
I felt dizzy. I closed my eyes for a moment.
Thenâ
âHuh?â
A rabbit suddenly popped out in front of me.
It looked familiar. It was the one from Han Yujinâs drawing.
It bounced around excitedly, just smiling.
I simply watched it.
It danced alone. Eagerly.
It wobbled for a brief second after a flashy jump and landing, but soon steadied.
It looked at me with an innocent expression.
Our eyes met.
Its big, round eyes blinked rapidly.
âAhâŚâŚ?â
A lightbulb went off in my head.
I sat up straight.
I opened my eyes wide and grabbed the mouse.
I searched through every video of Han Yujinâvariety shows, music programs, award show performances, behind-the-scenes footage of her directingâuntil I finally understood.
Her true self.
Iâd been so focused on expressing that keyword, I missed the most important part.
She was someone who tore off the layers and screamed out the innermost feelings that others wanted to keep hidden.
âThis person is depressed! Sheâs faking her cheerfulness! I can tell! Look, this is the real her!ââshe shouted.
She even handed me a megaphone. Adding cruel words like, âNow itâs your turn to shout. Reveal your worries and concerns to the whole world.â
No, this wasnât it. Definitely not.
I quickly opened a new track.
Hoping the offhand comment from Han Yujin on YouTube had been sincere.
âActually, Iâm more confident with this. Youâre all doomed.â
I began laying the track again, step by step.
From the confident melody, I could see Han Yujin.
Then suddenly, I felt sorry.
âI shouldnât have called it an âart disease.ââ
It had just passed 3 a.m.
Inside the CEOâs office at ToMe Entertainment, lined with flashy trophies like a backdrop.
Han Yujin walked in briskly and said out of nowhere,
âHe said Iâve got an art disease.â
âPffft.â
A fountain of Americano sprayed across the expensive table made by some famous artist.
CEO and main producer of this place, Kwak Youngho, casually took out a pocket square and wiped his mouth as he asked,
âWhich bastard?â
Even in that moment, he maintained his elegant smile.
âA friend.â
âYou donât have any friends.â
CEO Kwak flared his nostrils and looked at Han Yujin, then awkwardly asked again.
âSomeone actually said that to you?â
âIs it true?â
âWhat do you want me to say?â
Sheâd come to talk about the next album, and suddenly this out-of-the-blue topic?
And on top of thatâ
âItâs not exactly wrong.â
Hearing the thought heâd only ever kept to himself come out of her mouth made things complicated.
If he agreed, sheâd sulk. If he denied it, sheâd continue being a severe case. What now?
After pondering deeply, he came up with a clever move.
The classic tactic: throw the question back.
âWhat do you think?â
I bought some time.
Han Yujin, who had been sitting slouched, straightened up.
She pulled a tissue from the box on the side and wiped the table as she replied.
âItâs kind of bitter.â
âBecause youâre upset?â
âNo. Because I think itâs not wrong?â
âAhemâŚâŚâ
No one in their right mind would criticize a singer who just tanked an album.
What about the CEO? Shouldnât he be able to?
No way. Even if the CEOâs grandfather came, what canât be done just canât be done.
Thereâs no need to provoke someone already sensitive.
If she suddenly turned around and said, âI canât do this,â and disappeared into a cave, that would be a disaster.
The best thing was to pamper her and cheer her on for the next album.
Thatâs how it had been, and how it would continue.
But who the hell had the nerve to talk crap like âart diseaseâ or whatever?
If I catch that punk, Iâll justâ
âWait, hold on. Yujin.â
âYes?â
âNot many people know youâre Jeden. Who was it? Assistant Manager Chanmin? Seungho?â
âNot someone from the company.â
âYou said it yourself?â
âNo.â
âThen?â
âThey just knew?â
âNo way, you mustâve mentioned it while drinking.â
âWhy would I go around spreading something thatâs not even flattering?â
Kwak Youngho waved his hand.
Nonsense.
If it were a famous professional composer? Then maybe.
Everyone leaves their fingerprint in their work.
The instruments they frequently use. The melodic flow. Thereâs a reason people say theyâre self-replicating.
But not Han Yujin.
She didnât even have a career to be recognized by.
She only got the opportunity because it was her first solo album.
Heâd been anxious from the start.
He wasnât new to this business. He had a hunch it might not go well.
Even so, he agreed.
That was how ToMe Entertainment dealt with stubborn artists.
Composing wasnât childâs play.
Sometimes a singer would insist on becoming some kind of singer-songwriter.
That, right there, was the true art disease.
Piling on nonsense philosophies and pushing out half-baked creations pretending to be an expertâthat was art disease.
âSurely sheâs not going down that road again.â
If things couldnât be coordinated, the company pretended to support the artist.
If it worked? Jackpot.
If it failed? That singer wouldnât be able to voice even the smallest opinion anymore.
Theyâd completely conform to the companyâs systemâjust like in their idol days.
âFor the second album, changing styles would be good, right?â
âThatâs what Iâm planning.â
One hurdle cleared.
âYou play a bit of guitar, right?â
âI do, a bit.â
Just when it seemed like the second hurdle was cleared tooâ
âBut isnât that a bit too predictable?â
Kwak Youngho became uneasy!
This, this.
Heâd heard this script before.
âThen whatâs unpredictable? Uh⌠whatâs going on with you? Youâre making my skin crawl.â
Before he could finish, Han Yujin swiftly opened her laptop.
âDonât tell me Yujinâs at it again?â
âThis isnât a song I wrote. Isnât that a relief?â
Only then did he let out a sigh of relief.
âWhat is it?â
âA friend gave it to me.â
âWhat? A friend?â
Still not in your right mind, huh?
Do you want me to drop dead?
Forget friends and whatnot, itâs time you listened to the company!
Kwak Youngho barely held back his true thoughts bubbling up from deep inside and asked again.
âSo our Yujin has a composer friend? Thatâs quite something. But look. Weâre professionals, right? Loyalty, friendshipâthose things matter when youâre young. I get it. But this is a critical time. You know that too. This timeâŚâ
âJust a moment, sir. Sorry to cut you off. Iâm not saying I want to do this song. Iâm not even asking you to consider it.â
âThen?â
âJust once. Just listen to it once.â
âYou⌠somethingâs up, isnât it?â
Heâd known Han Yujin since she was twelve.
If she wanted something, she always begged, breaking people down with her eyes.
But today was different. There was a spark in her eyes.
Just what kind of song had made her this determined?
He was curious. But he answered firmly.
âIâll listen.â
There would be no second time.
That was Kwak Younghoâs rule.
âYou wonât regret listening to this song.â
Regret? The real regret was not stopping you from learning to compose in the first place.
When Kwak Youngho gave a nod like he was ready, Han Yujin immediately played the track.
The moment the first bar of the intro playedâ
ââŚâŚHuh?â
Kwak Youngho, who had been sitting in a grand pose, suddenly straightened up.
He focused all his attention on the song.
Before he knew it, 3 minutes and 20 seconds had passed.
Was this⌠real?
Han Yujin had a friend like this?
This wasnât the kind of skill someone at a âfriendâ level should have.
Who the heck was it?
âWhat do you think?â
There were no lyrics, but I felt it.
The dreamy riff that skillfully carried the songâdefinitely not the work of an amateur.
No need for long words.
Kwak Youngho answered.
âThereâs a hook.â
That was high praise.
Three days had passed since Iâd blindly sent the song.
The email showed it was received, but Han Yujin hadnât replied.
Maybe she was busy? Maybe she forgot? I tried to brush it off casually.
But thoughts crept inâWas it bad? Did it reek of an amateur?
Click, clickâ
I fiddled aimlessly with the track.
âCanât be helped. Another chance will come.â
It had felt too lucky anyway.
This wasnât a comicâmeeting a singer who turned out to be my fan and then having them sing my song was too dreamy to be real.
Even so, I wanted to wish for a miracle.
I really wanted to see Han Yujin singing this song.
As I was ruffling my hair thinking about all that, I heard the door lock beep. It was hyung.
I hurried to clean up and stand, butâ
âAh, geez. Say something, will you?â
Hyung was already in my room, staring intently at my monitor.
âYou writing a song?â
I quickly hit Alt-Tab and switched screens, then said casually,
âI paid a lot for this gear. Gotta at least pretend to use it.â
âThat track looked complicated. Whose is it?â
Hmm⌠what would be a good excuse?
I didnât want to tell him yet.
If, just maybe, somehowâ
If Han Yujin ended up singing my song, I wanted to go, ta-da! and brag.
Not yet.
âJust something I got off the internet. Youâre home early?â
âYouâve been coming home early too. Quit your part-time job?â
âTheyâre doing interior work, so Iâm taking a break.â
Hyung ruffled my hair, then tossed something onto my desk.
âHuh?â
It was a pair of headphones.
Studio monitoring headphones that cost over a million won.
âFound them on the way home.â
âYou bought them? Come on, Iâve got money too.â
âMust be nice, being rich.â
âIâm serious.â
âDidnât buy them. The company gave them out.â
âThis expensive?â
âYou know Kar, right?â
âWho doesnât know Kar?â
Kar. The top name in the hip-hop scene. Heâs with hyungâs company now.
âKar became the model for that brand. They handed them out to commemorate.â
âWow⌠I get to try these thanks to you?â
âThrow that old one away already. Look at the black powder coming off. Yikes.â
As I excitedly unboxed the headphones, I asked,
âYou didnât see the bank account by chance?â
âNo. Why?â
âTake a look.â
Hyung checked his balance while casually holding his phoneâthen shouted.
âHey! Seo Taeyoon!â
âWhat.â
âOne million won? What is this?â
âI got partial severance from the part-time job. New owner.â
âPart-time jobs do that?â
âI was kind of a star employee?â
âTaeyoon, youâre not doing anything shady, right?â
Understandable worry.
His reckless little brother suddenly transferred him a million won. My hyung still thought I was a kid.
I calmed him down and spoke gently.
âI swear itâs nothing shady. Donât worry. Hyung, I need to talk to you.â
âWhat is it?â
âI want to try doing musicâŚâŚâ
I left out the parts about Han Yujin and DJing and kept it vague.
Iâd need to buy gear anyway, and if I was going to do it properly, Iâd need hyungâs help too.
âSure. Doing something is always good. Go for it. Ah, but no pitching requests, alright? Iâm sick of that. Donât know why people act like Iâve got any power. I get hundreds of demos a dayâŚâ
I had nothing to say, so I just listened quietly.
Bzztâ
While hyung was ranting, my phone buzzed. It was Han Yujin.
âAnyway, remember this. No favors even for family!â
Hmm⌠he was going to regret those words.
I put down my phone and grinned.
âWell, who knows. Maybe youâll be begging me for a song soon.â