Current:Home > MarketsEthermac Exchange-Eric Nam’s global pop defies expectations. On his latest album, ‘House on a Hill,’ he relishes in it -Elevate Profit Vision
Ethermac Exchange-Eric Nam’s global pop defies expectations. On his latest album, ‘House on a Hill,’ he relishes in it
Oliver James Montgomery View
Date:2025-04-11 05:11:58
LOS ANGELES (AP) — In an entertainment industry bent on Ethermac Exchangecategorization, Eric Nam finds an audience in fluidity. A decade into his career, he’s still a challenge to describe: Do you label him a pop star? Or a K-pop idol? Is there a difference? Is he an actor? A singer-songwriter? An interviewer? A television personality? A mental health activist? Korean American, or Korean and American?
Nam was born and raised in Georgia, studied at Boston College, and got a job in New York City before heading to Seoul, South Korea, where he started his music career in his early 20s. He eventually found fame in the Korean major label system, was named GQ Korea’s “Man of the Year” and was featured on Forbes’ 30 Under 30 Asia list.
But making it in the U.S. was always part of his goal. It’s not an uncommon journey for Korean Americans who see few opportunities to break into the entertainment business stateside — but after finding success in South Korea, he returned home years later to establish his name in the country where he was raised.
“I had a very confused upbringing when it comes to my identity,” Nam, now 34, says. “And so, so much of my life has been trying to figure (it) out.” But life is a journey for everyone, he theorizes, and that’s why he’s been welcomed by his loyal fans. Now he sees his multicultural identity as “a superpower,” and “not a hindrance.”
His latest full-length release, “House on a Hill,” what can be viewed as Nam’s third-English language album (that, too, is a challenge to define — “LPs, EPs, mini-albums, whatever we call them, do they have much of a significance the way they used to?” he ponders aloud), centers on what he has labeled “an existential crisis.”
Following a relentless tour schedule and COVID-19 lockdowns, Nam headed into the studio last year to realize he didn’t have anything to write about. But he did become enamored with a particular house on a hill and obsessed with the idea of homeownership. His friends were buying homes, after all. In a songwriting session, he began to unpack his motives.
“Why do we want a house?” he asks. “Is it a sense of identity, or self or status or wealth?” Those materialistic questions evolved into, “What makes us happy?” Did he really want the house on the hill, or was he pursuing empty emblem to feel accomplished, or whole?
The title track unlocked the album for Nam.
“Almost every line in that song, if you just read it out loud as a statement, it makes you think about things that sometimes we don’t want to think about because we’re scared what the answer might be,” he explains. That’s evidenced in the refrain, where he sings, “When is more and more / And more and more enough?”
“We’re scared that we may never find happiness,” he continues. “We’re scared that we may never be satiated with what we have. What if we’re never satisfied? How terrifying is that?”
Beyond the terror of everyday life, or, perhaps, the only thing that makes it tenable, is gratitude. Nam wants the song to illuminate that fact — to allow listeners to find what drives them and hold onto it.
“I hope that (the song) makes people kind of reframe, reset what happiness means to them,” he says. “That’s at least my intention for it.”
Those big questions — what motivates us to get out of bed every day, or what truly makes us happy — became profound and sometimes deeply distressing source material for an expansive pop album: an emotional range from The Weeknd -channeling love anthem “Sink or Swim,” to the somber synth ballad “I Wish I Wasn’t Me.”
Of the latter, he says, “As great as things are, sometimes I wish I wasn’t me. I wish I was somebody else. I wish I was living a different life.”
Admitting that was cathartic — and one of the ways Nam views the record as a celebration of his career and life to date — particularly because his first EP, “Cloud 9,” came out 10 years ago.
“The number 10 is a significant number,” he says. “It’s hard to stay relevant, or make it, or get to a place where you are consistently releasing music.”
It’s also his second independently released album, following 2022’s “There and Back Again,” and the first in which he wrote on every single song on the record.
“I’ll be honest, as an independent artist, every day is unstable,” he says.
It’s a negotiation between being able to do whatever you want — as long as you can finance it — and considering the major label system, which possesses its own rigid guidelines of what you can and cannot do: “I love what I do. I love my fans. I love everybody that shows up in streams. But it’s, it’s scary. And that’s the reality, sometimes, of being an independent artist.”
The other reality, of course, is the ability to make fulfilling music that feels true to who he is, now.
“It’s fulfilling, and gratifying, in that I feel that there is growth,” he says of this album. “This is the culmination of 10 years of experience.”
“House on a Hill” releases Friday via The Eric Nam Company.
veryGood! (644)
Related
- What do we know about the mysterious drones reported flying over New Jersey?
- UPS and Teamsters union running out of time to negotiate: How we got here
- Mississippi residents are preparing for possible river flooding
- The U.K. breaks its record for highest temperature as the heat builds
- Man can't find second winning lottery ticket, sues over $394 million jackpot, lawsuit says
- Opinion: Blistering summers are the future
- Officials and volunteers struggle to respond to catastrophic flooding in Pakistan
- Millie Bobby Brown Shares Close-Up of Her Engagement Ring From Jake Bongiovi
- New data highlights 'achievement gap' for students in the US
- 13 Products To Help Manage Your Pet's Anxiety While Traveling
Ranking
- Jamie Foxx gets stitches after a glass is thrown at him during dinner in Beverly Hills
- Everything Happening With the Stephen Smith Homicide Investigation Since the Murdaugh Murders
- North West Makes Surprise Appearance Onstage at Katy Perry Concert in Las Vegas
- Climate change is forcing Zimbabwe to move thousands of animals in the wild
- Megan Fox's ex Brian Austin Green tells Machine Gun Kelly to 'grow up'
- Factual climate change reporting can influence Americans positively, but not for long
- Reese Witherspoon Makes First Red Carpet Appearance Since Announcing Jim Toth Divorce
- Keanu Reeves Shares Sweet Kiss With Girlfriend Alexandra Grant on MOCA Gala Red Carpet
Recommendation
What to know about Tuesday’s US House primaries to replace Matt Gaetz and Mike Waltz
Simone Biles and Jonathan Owens Obtain Marriage License Ahead of Wedding
Climate Change Is Tough On Personal Finances
With Manchin deal, talk of Biden's climate emergency declaration may be dead
South Korea's acting president moves to reassure allies, calm markets after Yoon impeachment
Scientists say landfills release more planet-warming methane than previously thought
Mary Peltola, the first Alaska Native heading to Congress, journeys home to the river
How climate change drives inland floods