![]() ![]() MICHELLE ZAUNER: I have naturally always been a grossly oversharing type of person. It almost feels naked to me, how much of yourself you reveal. You tear the fucking veil off what so many of us hide behind, when it comes to sickness, pain, death, the complexities of familial love, and loss. KAREN O: I wanted to talk about fearlessness. It was on the occasion of album and the memoir’s release -it’s been a very busy summer for Zauner- that they connected for the first time, to talk about all that binds them, whether they realized it or not. ![]() And, they both love the ’80s pop star Tiffany, whose sound Karen O detects a whiff of in Japanese Breakfast’s third, and latest, studio album, Jubilee. They understand what it’s like to grow up biracial in America. ![]() Both experienced traumatic loss at a young age. But thanks to Zauner’s heartrending new memoir, Crying in H Mart, which centers on the devastating loss of her mother, they recently discovered that there’s even more that unifies them. Growing up in households with one Korean parent, the Japanese Breakfast singer and the Yeah Yeah Yeahs frontwoman came of age eating dishes like kalbi and japjae while pouring their emotions into music. Photo by Tonje Thilesen.Īs Karen O puts it: “Music and food are the great universal, unifying forces.” And Michelle Zauner agrees. ![]()
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