Emotional Ballad Breakthrough: Lee Ji-hoon’s ‘괜찮은 사람’ Offers Comfort for All Generations
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▲ Lee Ji-hoon officially debuted with ‘괜찮은 사람’ (A Decent Person), produced by Yoon Jong-shin. Photo courtesy of SM C&C
[SPOTV News=Kim Won-gyeom] In a music market dominated by idol groups, a balladeer in his 20s, Lee Ji-hoon is carving out a distinct presence.
Lee gained attention on SBS’s Our Ballad — Korea’s first ballad audition program, which concluded last December — where he stood out as a contestant who adored the late Kim Kwang-seok so deeply he followed him to school. With a warm, nostalgic timbre and solid vocal technique, he won the audience’s sympathy at every stage and finished as the runner-up.
Beginning with his respect for Kim Kwang-seok, Lee has been steadily shaping his own musical world. He favors vocal emotion over flashy staging, and his new single “괜찮은 사람,” released on the 20th, is the clearest expression of that approach.
The song is an intimate ballad that offers quiet consolation to weary listeners. Whether it’s office workers heading home after a long day, middle-aged people shouldering life’s burdens, or exhausted young adults, the track slips gently into different generations’ lives and delivers the reassuring message that they are, indeed, “a decent person.”
Expectations were high because Yoon Jong-shin wrote, composed, and produced the track. Yoon’s long-standing lyrical sensibility blends with Lee’s restrained voice to create a deep synergy; Yoon even described the song as a second “Ormakgil,” signaling his affection for the piece.
The music video drew notice as well. Actor Yoo Seung-mok — who played Executive Director Baek Jung-tae in last year’s JTBC drama The Story of Manager Kim, Who Works at a Big Company and Owns a Home in Seoul — appears and portrays a weary office worker with delicate, understated acting. The video alternates between those everyday scenes and images of Lee playing guitar and singing against a vast, cosmic backdrop, amplifying the song’s emotional pull. The interplay of reality and fantasy links characters across different spaces through the song, completing a structure of consolation.
Lee’s image, which has prompted comparisons to a 21st-century Little Prince, has resonated across age and gender lines and drawn strong reactions. Listeners have praised his distinctive musical identity — music meant to be heard and felt, and a message that invites empathy rather than spectacle — as a refreshing counterpoint to high-energy performance culture.
Amid an idol-saturated pop landscape, Lee is proving himself on his own terms. By choosing sincerity over gloss, he’s taking a deliberate path; the industry and listeners alike will be watching to see where it leads.











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