Korea Girl
Korea Girl | |
|---|---|
| Origin | San Jose, California |
| Genres | |
| Years active | 1996–1999 |
| Label | Asian Man |
| Spinoffs | Ee |
| Past members |
|
Korea Girl was an American indie rock band from San Jose, California. The band's best known lineup was composed of Elizabeth Yi (vocals, guitars), Tobin Mori (guitars, keyboards, vocals), Summer Farnese (bass guitar), and Marc Duarte (drums). Drummer Scott Landucci and bassist Jennifer Yee replaced Duarte and Farnese after both members left the band in 1997. Xiu Xiu frontperson Jamie Stewart was also briefly a member of the band. The band's name was suggested by a female friend of Mori's after he told her he was "jamming with this Korean girl".[1]
They released a demo cassette shortly after forming in March 1996.[2] They released one CD (Korea Girl in 1997; re-released in 1999 with additional bonus tracks) and one 7" (Reunion in 1997) on Asian Man Records, and they appear on various Asian Man compilations. Korea Girl was declared Album of the Year in 1997 by Santa Clara University radio station KSCU.[3] The album was re-released again in 2023 by Los Angeles indie label 7th Heaven.[4] The group received a Bammie (Bay Area Music Award) nomination in 1997 for Outstanding Independent Album.[5]. In 1999, Korea Girl disbanded following increasing tension between Mori and Yi, culminating in Mori's departure shortly before the group's disbandment. Mori would later form Ee.
In 2025, the band achieved significant mainstream recognition after their song "Reunion", released in 1997, became popular on the short-form video platform TikTok.
Artistry
Korea Girl's music was described as a indie rock, indie pop, slacker rock, and twee pop band, featuring both male and female vocals and using clean and undistorted guitars in the manner of such earlier indie rock groups as Blake Babies. Mori describes being inspired by Pavement's "Slanted and Enchanted" during the recording process.[4] A 1999 review for In Music We Trust called it "sweet indie-pop that also contains enough energy to wrestle with the rockers, while never losing any sincerity or emotions contained in the soft moments [...] It is sweet, innocent, and very gentle, without being too soft".[6]
Band members
- Principal lineup
- Elizabeth Yi – vocals, guitars (1996–1999)
- Tobin Mori – vocals, guitars, keyboards (1996–1999)
- Summer Farnese – bass guitar (1996–1997)
- Marc Duarte – drums, percussion (1996–1997)
- Other members
- Jennifer Yee – bass guitar (1997–1999)
- Scott Landucci – drums, percussion (1997–1999)
- Jamie Stewart – unknown
- Touring members
- Che Chou – bass guitar
Discography
- Korea Girl [EP] (1996, Korean Muzaac)
- Korea Girl (1997, Not Happy Records)
- Reunion [Single] (1997, Asian Man Records)
- Korea Girl (1999, Asian Man Records)
References
- ^ "reviews of korea girl". sj.znet.com. Archived from the original on 2001-01-13. Retrieved 2025-11-18.
- ^ weiv (2017-07-01). "Korea Girl | Korea Girl (1999) | [weiv]" (in Korean). Retrieved 2025-11-18.
- ^ Kamps, Garrett (November 6, 2002). "Refactored Rock: Tobin Mori's divergently minded bandmates help him retool Ee's indie rock", SF Weekly. Retrieved December 31, 2012.
- ^ a b "Charting Asian Man Records and the South Bay Indie Rock Scene". Metro Silicon Valley | Silicon Valley’s Leading Weekly. 2025-11-12. Retrieved 2025-11-18.
- ^ Chun, Kimberly (January 2, 1998). "Pop's Korea Girl Growing Up Fast", San Francisco Chronicle, p. 4.
- ^ "In Music We Trust - Korea Girl: Korea Girl". www.inmusicwetrust.com. Retrieved 2025-11-18.