![]() It summarizes the quick pounding of your heart and the fluttering feeling you get all in just four minutes. That moment is soft and slow and you wonder why you didn’t notice it earlier. At the end, you encounter this moment of realization that you are in love. How loving someone begins slowly and your feelings are dormant, but as the song progresses, it becomes faster and more passionate, just as love does as time goes on. However, I believe that this is definitely a song of love. It could be known as a song of simple parting with a trusted individual or the depressing time after a rough period of life. Perhaps it is the way we interpret what he plays. ![]() It feels like he is pouring his soul into each and every song he makes…and it’s all for us.” Her friends nodded in agreement as they smile through their tears. It’s indescribable and leaves me wracking my brain for the right words to say.ĭuring an interview after Yiruma’s concert at Hoam Art Hall, a fan, patting at her puffy eyes with a tissue said, “There was never a concert or album release where I have not cried. I couldn't help but call it a spell that Yiruma casts on every single one of his songs. He did not tell me anything or even make a sound in his videos but I wondered how I knew exactly what he was trying to tell me. It was a magical experience that pulled out so many different memories from me. Though it was only the keys of the piano I heard and Yiruma himself did not say a word, I was rendered to a state of rubbing my eyes to stop the never-ending flow of tears. However, no matter how much I willed myself not to become emotional, once the chorus came on, my knees buckled and I could not hold my tears in. When I first heard this song, I honestly had no intention of crying at all for it is not of my nature to weep over such petty things. His style is the one that had me bursting into tears in the middle of the movie. However, what charmed me was not “Twilight” or the love scene between Bella and Edward but the unique, modern playing style that belongs only to Yiruma. After its huge outbreak when “A River Flows in You” appeared in the hit movie, “Twilight,” Yiruma’s popularity exploded overseas and into several other countries. All of the songs I hear from him, no matter what time it is, play in my life as if they were actually the background music. His words, as if they were a blessing or a mystical spell, ring true. Instead, I want it to be with you always, as if it’s the background music to your lives.” He exited the stage with a wide smile as all his fans stood in an uproar of cheers and sobs after his stunning performance. His most famous songs, “Kiss the Rain,” “May Be,” and “River Flows in You,” that are part of the “First Love” album.īefore he left the stage in his worldwide concert tour, “The Best,” he conveyed a message to all of his fans, “I hope that my music doesn't separate from your lives. Everything went uphill after that, as he released album after album such as “First Love” and “Oasis and Yiruma.” Performing at different halls such as the Young San Art Hall, his name dashed at high-speeds to the top of the piano world. Beginning with his first album, “Love Scene” in 2001, Yiruma displayed his talent to all of Korea, shattering his old image and building a new him quickly. At the tender age of five years old, he had ventured out to discover his meaning of what music was in the form of piano. Known as Yiruma to the world of classical music, Lee Ru-ma was born on Februin South Korea. Even though I did not remember ever letting him in, he somehow snaked in with his music, read my emotions flawlessly, and played me the perfect song at the perfect time. Instead of plucking on the strings of the keys, he is directly yanking at the strings of my heart. ![]() At times sweet and slow but becoming stronger as the song progresses, it represents the epitome of love and what loving someone actually means. His sad but graceful song, “A River Flows in You,” begins and ends by conjuring emotions from the inner-most depths of my heart. With delicate and beautiful notes that fit perfectly in place, Korean pianist, Yiruma, sends chills up my spine and electrocutes every part of me.
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