Nothing Special   »   [go: up one dir, main page]

Jisoo – ‘Amortage’ review: playful, polished pop on her own terms

On her first solo project, BLACKPINK’s most enigmatic member leans into pop’s timeless pleasures without overcomplicating the formula

Jisoo has never been in a rush. As the final member of BLACKPINK to go solo, she arrives on her own terms with ‘Amortage’, a mini-album that doesn’t scream reinvention but instead refines what the K-pop idol does best. Where Lisa, Jennie and Rosé have leaned into bold transformations and high-profile Western collaborations in their post-YG Entertainment eras, Jisoo takes a more understated approach that highlights her ear for melody.

The project’s title, which blends “amor” and “montage”, hints at a love story told in snapshots, a classic K-pop play on words. The mini-album mirrors this, moving through the highs and lows of a relationship, from the moment love strikes like an earthquake to the slow unravelling when the fantasy fades.

Advertisement

It’s refreshing to see Jisoo make music as playful as her personality. On ‘Amortage’, she toys with rhythm and texture, as heard in the lead single ‘Earthquake’, which builds on the magnetic syncopation of ‘Flower’ – finger-snaps and all – but with a fuller, more dynamic production courtesy of her company Blissoo and producer duo The Wavys (who are credited on all four songs of the mini-album). Where ‘Flower’ kept things airy and contained, ‘Earthquake’ gives Jisoo’s voice room to bloom. The richer production enhances her vocals, making up for raw power with warmth and texture, allowing her delivery to feel more assured and expressive.

At the same time, she stretches her range and vulnerability on ‘Your Love’, a propulsive pop ballad sung entirely in English. ‘Hugs & Kisses’ brings bouncy energy to the mix, pairing agile wordplay with sticky synths as Jisoo winks at the classic tale of falling for a heartbreaker, brushing him off with a sharp “miss me with that XO”. Then there’s ‘Tears’, a chill, bass-heavy bop where she flips the script entirely – she’s not crying over a guy, and she makes sure he knows it, even calling him a loser in one of the song’s most satisfying moments.

There’s an irreverent charm to Jisoo’s approach, a breezy confidence that recalls the effortless, sun-soaked pop of Katy Perry’s ‘Teenage Dream’ era – catchy, unforced and fun without trying too hard. As a co-writer on every song, she shapes ‘Amortage’ with a sense of pure, unpretentious pop. At the same time, she doesn’t set out to redefine herself as a Main Pop Girl on the project – but it does refine her.

There’s always been an enigmatic quality to Jisoo, a sense that she keeps something just out of reach. On ‘Amortage’, she steps forward, but never too close, embracing pop’s timeless pleasures – melody, emotion and a touch of mischief – with quiet self-assurance. It’s not a reinvention, nor does it need to be. Instead, ‘Amortage’ plays to Jisoo’s strengths, proving that evolution doesn’t always have to be explosive to shake things up.

Details

Recommended

jisoo blackpink amortage review

  • Record label: Blissoo / Warner Records
  • Release date: February 14, 2025
More Stories
You May Also Like