Audrey Nuna on Singing as KPop Demon Hunters' Mira, Humanity in Music, and Living in a Simulation: Podcast
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Audrey Nuna on Singing as KPop Demon Hunters' Mira, Humanity in Music, and Living in a Simulation: Podcast
"Just this idea that, I think sometimes when you're involved in so many different things and your hands are in so many different parts of the process, you kind of can lose sight of the fact that recording is an art in itself. And I think also in the age of hype-nonchalance and also a lot of AutoTune and a lot of aesthetic-based music, you forget that at the end of the day, your job is to bring humanness to songs."
""It was serendipitous," she says. "Apparently there were people who recommended me for this project - people I'd met when I was 15 or 20. I just said, 'Sure, sounds fun'.""
""I think we're all craving something human," Nuna explains. "I want to hear my actual voice more. I want to be off-tempo, no click track - things that feel right but wrong.""
Audrey Nuna experienced a breakout year that combined her debut record Trench gaining attention and a singing role as Mira in KPop Demon Hunters becoming a global phenomenon. Her entry into the animated project started through serendipitous recommendations and coincided with the single "Golden" reaching number one on the Global 200 during the final day of the Trench international tour. Recording under the Mira persona reignited a dedication to recording as an art and to bringing humanness to songs amid trends of AutoTune and aesthetic-driven music. The next album will emphasize raw vocal presence, off-tempo takes, and intentional imperfections.
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