BESTie Love Emotion Review
Girl group BESTie made their return with Love Emotion May 8. Hae Ryeong, Hye-Yeon, Dae Hye, and U Ji have a solid hit on their hands with the album if people are willing to listen. Their vocals are strong and pleasing and carry on throughout the album. Perhaps the only downfall is their version of âMamacitaâ didnât make it on to Love Emotion. If it did, the album would have been 20 percent cooler.
âExcuse Me,â the albumâs promoted track, opens the album. The speak-easy sound makes the song easy to enjoy and fun to groove to from beginning to end. The chorus is especially fun and highlights BESTieâs sparkly personalities. The spoken âexcuse meâ is often cute and doesnât detract from the actual song. The portion where they sing âleft, right, side to sideâ changes the tempo of the song in a good way to add different layers. âExcuse Meâ is a fun song to brighten up the day.
âHush Babyâ is an enjoyable mid-tempo dance track with hints of disco. Itâs a refreshing song that covers moving slow in a relationship, hinting that BESTie wants an actual romance and not a date-and-dash relationship. The vocals are pure and sweet to where itâs easy to pick out individual voices. The harmonies sound amazing as well. The only drawback is how the song ends abruptly.
The third track is âSingle Bed.â The song is about wanting an ex to come back. The song should be a sad one given the subject matter, but itâs surprisingly not. The beat feels like it belongs on the ballroom circuit and fits perfectly with the subject matter. The rises and falls with the beats make it easy to imagine someone wrestling with wanting the ex-boyfriend back while trying to move on. The girls sound great in the song, and it easily could have been selected as the promotional song.
âIâm So Fineâ livens up the mood again. While itâs catchy, itâs not exactly the best song on the album. The rap portions make the song slightly less enjoyable, as does the whistle in the instrumentals. The overall sound feels less polished than the other songs too. There are also times when the singing sounds slightly screechy, making âIâm So Fineâ the albumâs weakest link.
With the instrumental version of âExcuse Meâ excluded, Love Emotion wraps with âě´ë° ë .â BESTie does ballads well because their voices are suited for them. The song is pretty without being overwhelming, and because it doesnât feel processed, there is a raw quality to it that makes it a classic ballad. At times, it has hints of the ballad sound from early 2000s-era K-Pop which makes it even more bittersweet and enjoyable.
Love Emotion is one of Mayâs most solid comebacks or debuts. Itâs always a shame that BESTie doesnât get the recognition they should have because they are among some of the better group vocalists out presently. With that said, Love Emotion earns an A-.
Love Emotion is available on iTunes now.
 —-Joelle Halon
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