Unlocking the Harp’s Potential: A Complete Guide to Shim So-jung’s Upcoming Performance
Daniel Kim Views

By Lee Sang-wan, News Culture — The harp often carries a reputation as a hushed, refined instrument. Harpist Sim So‑jeong is dismantling that stereotype, stretching the instrument across genres — from its clear, luminous tone to jazz, bossa nova, crossover works and electronic-harp textures. The concert title, “UNLIMITED,” signals that the harp’s timbre and repertoire refuse to be boxed in.
Sim coaxes out the harp’s most intimate sounds with meticulous care. Microscopic tremors at her fingertips, the decay of each string and the breathing of her body shape the arc of the performance. Audiences feel the sound bloom into the space and then dissolve.
The first half, “Harp Origin: The Meditative Instrument,” leans into the harp’s archetypal charm. The stage is filled with the instrument’s long-standing lyricism and a prayerlike stillness. Here, emphasis falls less on flashy virtuosity than on the direction of a single string or the length of a lingering resonance. The harp draws focus without raised volume; listeners encounter its depth in those small vibrations.
The second half, “HARP UNLIMITED: The Expanding Harp,” pivots sharply. The program moves through Libertango, bossa nova, pop and film scores, showing the harp’s surprising elasticity. The acoustic harp’s clear lines meet rhythmic drive and widen the stage’s palette.
Often pigeonholed as a classical, static instrument, the harp is reinvented by Sim. She reimagines jazz’s looseness, bossa nova’s gentle pulse, tango’s sharp bite and the narrative sweep of film music in the harp’s idiom. She preserves the instrument’s elegance while altering the temperature and texture of her expression.
An electric harp also features in the program, adding dimensionality to the traditional tone. Resonance spreads wider and the sound pushes into unexpected directions. The harp expands from a contemplative instrument into one that embraces rhythm and raw energy.

The program includes Libertango, The Girl from Ipanema, Fly Me to the Moon, the Interstellar main theme and Merry Christmas Mr. Lawrence.
In Libertango, tango’s driving momentum and rhythmic bite come alive on the harp’s strings. The Girl from Ipanema brings bossa nova’s relaxed flow into the harp’s soft timbre. Fly Me to the Moon turns a jazz standard’s romance into crystalline harp resonance.
Film music reveals new facets of the instrument. The Interstellar main theme translates the score’s cosmic sweep and repeating tensions into harp sonorities. Merry Christmas Mr. Lawrence foregrounds plaintive melody and restrained feeling, leaving a lingering aftertaste.
Tri-bowl Series — Sim So‑jeong X Harp: UNLIMITED runs at 4 p.m. on June 14 at the Tri-bowl in Songdo, Incheon.
News Culture — Lee Sang-wan prizewan2@nc.press











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