They're poised articulation comes as no surprise, as anyone who has heard yeule’s music knows they have a way with words. In our conversation, yeule recounts how this piece has served as an audible safe space for them to connect with their inner child, giving a bit of tend and care where it was once lacking. While the creative process could involve painful confrontations to darker memories, it's all part of the healing process. softscars is a bit of a diversion from their previous cyber-pop sounds, using cathartic punk riffs and ethereal electronics as they examine the anatomy of their long held emotional wounds. The album is a melting pot of the math rock guitar riffs and punk melodies that once filled their iPod Nano.
Accompanied by lullaby vocals that sometimes turn into raging screams of deep rooted emotion, yeule lays it all out on the table in the form of emotional ballad addressed to no one but themselves. As someone who identifies as non-binary and a cyborg entity, the human body felt alien and uncomfortable for yeule growing up. Their music explores this discomfort, the scars it left and how they're working to heal them. While studying cybernetic theory through readings of Donna Haraway, they learned to observe the body from a post-human perspective. Exploring identity beyond the human form and a cisgender society allowed yeule to meet in the middle of being both non-binary and someone who is embodied in physical flesh.
The fascinating thing about yeule is that they fit the idea of “punk” so effortlessly. A raw elucidation of their most inner darkest thoughts, with no regard to whether or not it follows the “rules” of music… and there's nothing more punk than that. While many artists try too hard to be genre bending or non-conforming, yeule doesn't have to try at all. Their music is never trying to overtly reject mainstream ideas, it's simply a conglomeration of what they like and who they are, and you can't get more original than that.
Can you tell me a bit about your upcoming album softscars and the inspiration behind it?
When I was writing the record, I had this reference where the songs had to sound something like [the music] I was listening to when I was a teenager. There would be moments of going through the songs from my iPod Nano I had as a kid, and I would go through it like, "What the fuck was I listening to? Oh my God it's Liz Ferrer, its Ali and AJ, it's 5 Seconds to Mars, Smashing Pumpkins, Sonic Youth." It ranged from like, late '80s to like early 2000s alt music — I guess they were referred to as alternative music. I was into math rock, and progressive guitar stuff. That inspiration definitely came from me trying to feel like I'm safe in my teenage bubble.
As you get older, when you're in your mid 20s, you just want to recreate that feeling of an era that you lived through. A particular song that did that was “fish in the pool”. It's actually based off of a film, directed by Somai Shinji, who wrote a coming of age film, he writes a lot of scripts based off coming of age. I really liked this genre and it's very hard to execute this genre without misinterpreting it, or making it seem too cheesy. So I wanted to do something very similar but in a very sonic way.
There are many films that inspired the music, and there's a lot of music that inspires film. I think for me, Shinji, is one of the directors that not only inspires a lot of my visuals, but also his sensitivities and intentionality to this topic of, and creating nostalgia in a way that is not so exploitative. There is a lot of honesty in his work, and sometimes honesty gets misinterpreted as shocking. That’s why I chose that song “fish in the pool” because I love the piano and softscars was kind of like a graduation or like evolution from my previous walks that were very heavily piano influenced.