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Eyeye
Eyeye
from Wikipedia

Eyeye
Studio album by
Released20 May 2022 (2022-05-20)
Recorded2020–2021
StudioLykke Li's home studio
(Los Angeles, California)
Genre
Length33:33
LabelPIAS
Producer
Lykke Li chronology
So Sad So Sexy
(2018)
Eyeye
(2022)
The Afterparty
(2026)
Singles from Eyeye
  1. "No Hotel"
    Released: 23 March 2022
  2. "Highway to Your Heart"
    Released: 20 April 2022

Eyeye (pronounced "Eye") is the fifth studio album by Swedish singer Lykke Li, and her first since So Sad So Sexy (2018). Released on 20 May 2022,[2] the album reunites Li with her longtime collaborator Björn Yttling, producer of her first three albums. It was preceded by the release of the singles "No Hotel" and "Highway to Your Heart".

Described as "an immersive audiovisual album", Theo Lindquist directed the visual component of the record, starring Li opposite Jeff Wilbusch. The seven minute-long visual loops were shot by cinematographer Eduard Grau on 16-millimeter film.[3][4]

Background and recording

[edit]

In a July 2019 interview with NME, Li stated: "I think, maybe to everyone's disappointment, I'm going to really scale it down and back and slow it down. [...] It'll be more like soul music. It'll still be sad, and still be sexy."[5] In a March 2022 interview for Vogue, Li described the making of the album as "cathartic", with it "charting the emotional fallout from the end of a relationship" and approaching "love and heartbreak on a more conceptual level".[6]

The album was entirely recorded in Li's bedroom in Los Angeles. The vocals were recorded on a handheld $70 drum mic, with the album mixed to tape by Shawn Everett.

Release and promotion

[edit]

"No Hotel" was released as the first single from the record on 23 March 2022. The album was announced a day later, alongside a trailer featuring a snippet of "Carousel".[7] On 20 April, Li released the single "Highway to Your Heart".[8]

Li embarked on an international tour in support of the album, which started on 26 September 2022 in San Diego.[9]

Critical reception

[edit]
Professional ratings
Aggregate scores
SourceRating
Metacritic76/100[10]
Review scores
SourceRating
DIYStarStarStarHalf star[11]
The Irish TimesStarStarStarStar[12]
The Line of Best Fit7/10[13]
musicOMHStarStarStarHalf star[14]
NMEStarStarStarStar[1]
Pitchfork7.4/10[15]
The TelegraphStarStarStarStar[16]
The SkinnyStarStarStar[17]
SlantStarStarStarHalf star[18]

At Metacritic, which assigns a normalised rating out of 100 to reviews from mainstream publications, the album received an average score of 76 based on 11 reviews, indicating "generally favorable reviews".[10]

Track listing

[edit]
Eyeye track listing
No.TitleWriter(s)Producer(s)Length
1."No Hotel"
2:26
2."You Don't Go Away"
  • Zachrisson
  • Yttling
  • Li
  • Yttling
3:13
3."Highway to Your Heart"
  • Zachrisson
  • Yttling
  • Li
  • Yttling
3:59
4."Happy Hurts"
  • Li
  • Yttling
  • McDonald
  • Lang
4:56
5."Carousel"
  • Zachrisson
  • Yttling
  • Li
  • Yttling
4:14
6."5D"
  • Zachrisson
  • Aarons
  • Weisfield
  • McDonald
  • Lang
  • Li
  • Yttling
  • McDonald
  • Lang
3:45
7."Over"
  • Zachrisson
  • Yttling
  • Li
  • Yttling
3:44
8."Ü&I"
  • Zachrisson
  • Yttling
  • Li
  • Yttling
7:16
Total length:33:33

Charts

[edit]
Chart performance for Eyeye
Chart (2022) Peak
position
UK Album Downloads (OCC)[19] 63
UK Independent Albums (OCC)[20] 44

References

[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Eyeye is a South Korean contemporary women's launched in the Spring/Summer 2016 season as a of the established label KYE. Directed by Kathleen Kye, it emphasizes a young and cheerful aesthetic through fancy, witty silhouettes, playful details, and simple forms designed for versatile mix-and-match styling. The brand draws from Kye's broader vision, which blends streetwear influences with high-fashion elements, building on her eponymous KYE label's success since its 2013 debut at . Eyeye distinguishes itself by prioritizing accessible, everyday wear that captures youthful energy and cultural relevance, often featuring seasonal collections with bold colors, relaxed fits, and subtle Korean-inspired motifs. Available through its official online store and select retailers, Eyeye has contributed to Kye's growing international profile, with pieces appealing to a global audience seeking effortless, expressive .

Background and development

Inspiration

drew inspiration for EYEYE from a period of intense personal heartbreak following the end of a significant relationship, which prompted her to confront recurring patterns in her emotional life. She underwent psychedelic-aided therapy, incorporating substances such as , , and to revisit and process past relationships, allowing her to trace the roots of her attachment to unattainable romantic narratives. This therapeutic approach was central to her goal of creating the album as a release, specifically tailored for her "19-year-old self," whom she sought to honor by fulfilling youthful dreams of art centered on love without external pressures. The album emerged as an eight-track narrative arc mapping the "landscape of love," encompassing stages from and attraction to attachment and rejection, reflecting Li's desire to compress a lifetime of romantic experiences into a looped, introspective story. This allowed her to explore as a simulation shaped by early fantasies, aiming to break free from cycles of self-hate and idealized expectations that had influenced her previous work. Influenced by the lo-fi intimacy of her earlier album I Never Learn (2014), Li shifted away from the more commercial, collaborative production of her intervening releases, such as So Sad So Sexy (2018), toward a raw, bedroom-recorded aesthetic that prioritized emotional over polished soundscapes. This return to sparse synths and mournful guitars evoked her formative years, enabling a sense of unfiltered honesty in capturing the album's themes of romantic disillusionment.

Writing process

The writing process for Lykke Li's album Eyeye began in late 2019 amid significant personal turmoil, including the end of a long-term relationship, which infused the material with raw emotional intensity. Li continued developing the songs into early 2020, when collaborator traveled from to to join her, just before the disrupted broader plans and shifted the work to a more isolated, intimate setting. This timeline allowed the eight tracks to evolve organically, forming a arc that traces a journey through romantic attachment and detachment. Li adopted a minimalist songwriting approach, prioritizing emotional authenticity by capturing initial ideas as unpolished voice memos, often recorded in her living room to preserve spontaneity and vulnerability. This method emphasized stripped-back elements, focusing on voice and basic instrumentation to convey the album's overarching themes of love and rejection without ornate production interference during the creative phase. The process reflected Li's intent to write directly from her lived experiences, treating the memos as foundational sketches that later expanded into full compositions. A key aspect of the writing involved close collaboration with , who co-wrote multiple tracks alongside Li, including "No Hotel," "You Don't Go Away," and "Highway to Your Heart." Their partnership, built on years of prior work, facilitated iterative sessions where ideas were refined through and shared experimentation, ensuring the songs maintained a cohesive emotional thread across the . This co-writing dynamic was instrumental in shaping the record's intimate scale, with Yttling's contributions helping to structure the raw memos into polished yet understated lyrical narratives.

Recording and production

Recording locations and techniques

The primary recording for Eyeye took place in Lykke Li's and living room in , creating an uninsulated home environment that naturally captured ambient sounds such as birdsong, lake noises, and everyday household elements like a or slamming door to enhance the album's intimate feel. This DIY setup utilized affordable, lo-fi equipment, including a handheld $70 drum for vocals—often an old model repurposed for its raw tone—and an 8-track recorder for initial bedroom experiments, prioritizing a voice-memo-like quality over professional polish. Recording techniques emphasized and immediacy, with vocals captured in the moment of composition on the floor without , click tracks, or digital instruments to preserve emotional vulnerability and spontaneity. was sparse, featuring acoustic guitars, a Yamaha mini , and subtle electronics like a Chroma synth, all layered with ambient home elements and processed through analog tools such as reverse pedals, an analog mixer, and tape transfers to evoke a sense of . Additional recordings occurred in a small basement studio in to maintain the project's cozy, unrefined aesthetic, though the core sessions remained home-based. The sessions spanned from early through early , conceived amid the pandemic's isolation and focused on raw, first-take captures that favored personal emotional immediacy over studio refinement. This lo-fi approach extended the voice-memo style from the songwriting phase, ensuring the recordings retained an unfiltered, heart-on-sleeve quality. In , the project extended with the release of ƎYƎYƎ, a reverse-engineered ambient version incorporating additional nature sounds recorded in Li's garden and .

Production contributors

served as the for Eyeye, guiding the project's artistic vision from initial demos recorded in her bedroom to the final mastering, ensuring the album's raw emotional core remained intact throughout the process. acted as co-producer and co-writer, contributing significantly to the and arrangement on tracks such as "Happy Hurts" and "5D," where he incorporated elements like MPC beats, guitar layers, and Yamaha mini synth to enhance the album's intimate, analog texture. Shawn Everett handled the mixing engineering, working over several months in Los Angeles to amplify the lo-fi qualities of the recordings—using tape transfers, reamping, and subtle effects like panning and submerged microphones—while avoiding over-polishing to maintain the music's vulnerable, unfiltered intimacy.

Composition and themes

Design style

Eyeye's design style emphasizes a young and cheerful aesthetic, blending influences with high-fashion elements through fancy, witty silhouettes, playful details, and simple forms designed for versatile mix-and-match styling. The collections prioritize accessible, everyday wear with relaxed fits, bold colors, and subtle textures, creating an effortless and expressive look that appeals to a youthful audience. This approach builds on the parent KYE's , incorporating cultural while maintaining a focus on spontaneity and comfort over elaborate polish.

Thematic elements

Eyeye's thematic elements center on youthful energy, transient joy, and subtle Korean-inspired motifs, often exploring romantic and modern moods in seasonal collections. For instance, the Spring "Prairie Girls" collection draws from cottage core , blending the peacefulness of rural landscapes with natural beauty through fabrics featuring floral patterns and hand-drawn graphics for a cozy, vibe. Earlier themes, such as "LUCKY ME!" and "Soft Charisma," highlight romantic comfort and easy daily wear, reflecting the brand's vision of emotional expressiveness without overt complexity. As of late , the brand announced a temporary reorganization period.

Release and promotion

Singles

The lead single from Eyeye, "No Hotel", was released on , 2022, serving as the album's first preview and coinciding with the project's official announcement. The track was accompanied by a directed by and Zane Kalnina, featuring intimate visual motifs such as close-up embraces and confined spaces like the back of a and a , which underscore themes of and physical closeness. A second single, "Highway to Your Heart", followed on April 20, 2022, shared as a promotional track ahead of the 's release, though it did not achieve formal charting status. Eyeye featured no major radio singles, consistent with its indie, lo-fi aesthetic and non-commercial approach, emphasizing bedroom-recorded intimacy over mainstream promotion.

Marketing strategies

The album EYEYE by was announced on March 24, 2022, through channels, accompanied by a teaser video that highlighted its immersive concept and built anticipation following the release of the "No Hotel," which had generated significant online buzz. It was released on May 20, 2022, via PIAS Recordings in both vinyl and digital formats, with limited physical editions such as 180-gram heavyweight black vinyl pressings in tip-on sleeves designed to attract collectors and enhance the album's tangible, artistic appeal. Post-release promotion focused on digital and media outreach rather than large-scale live events, including placements on editorial playlists such as New Music Friday to broaden streaming accessibility, alongside a series of interviews where Li discussed the album's deeply personal narrative exploring themes of , attachment, and rejection. No major tour accompanied the launch, aligning with the project's intimate scale, though a limited fall run of select U.S. and U.K. dates was scheduled to present the work in smaller venues.

ƎYƎYƎ

ƎYƎYƎ serves as an experimental companion release to Lykke Li's 2022 EYEYE, reimagining its intimate exploration of love's emotional terrain—encompassing , attraction, attachment, and rejection—through a reversed auditory lens. Released on November 1, 2024, via Play It Again Sam and Crush Music, the project transforms the original's eight tracks into extended ambient compositions, emphasizing a hallucinatory and psychedelic listening experience as a conceptual "reverse journey." In production, the tracks were reverse-engineered by flipping the original audio, then layered with ambient elements including sounds recorded in Li's garden and urban environments in , creating immersive, dreamlike soundscapes that evoke a sense of disorientation and . Li's vocals, originally central to EYEYE's raw, bedroom-recorded aesthetic, appear here as ethereal, backward echoes—flickering like distant memories rather than foregrounded narratives—shifting the focus from personal vulnerability to a more abstract, otherworldly immersion. This evolution marks a departure from the source material's stripped-down intimacy, inviting listeners into a sonic odyssey that mirrors the cyclical, unraveling of the album's themes. Distributed exclusively in digital formats, ƎYƎYƎ launched alongside a 40-minute visualizer film titled ƎYƎYƎ ODYSSƎY, directed by Theo Lindquist and shot on 16mm film by Grau, which complements the audio with , arthouse-inspired to enhance the release's meditative quality. The project, developed in with EarthPercent, underscores Li's intent to blend modern media with cinematic grandeur, positioning it as an auditory and visual extension of her ongoing artistic experimentation.

Other editions

The standard edition of Eyeye was released on May 20, 2022, in multiple formats including digital download, , and vinyl LP. The digital versions were available in high-resolution (24-bit/44.1 kHz) and standard AAC (256 kbps) formats, both containing the album's eight tracks without additional content. The CD edition featured a digisleeve with the core tracks, while the vinyl pressing was a 180-gram LP housed in a tip-on outer sleeve and printed inner sleeve, pressed by The Exchange Vinyl. No deluxe edition with bonus tracks was produced for Eyeye, maintaining a consistent tracklist across all formats. Digital pre-orders included standard access to the album upon release, but no verified exclusives such as wallpapers or early track access were offered. Some retailers noted limited stock for the vinyl LP, described in select listings as a limited edition pressing, though no colored variants were officially documented by the label Play It Again Sam. In 2025, Li released a covers EP titled Covers on June 13, featuring renditions of songs by Nick Cave, Ben E. King, and The Everly Brothers. As of November 20, 2025, no additional editions, remixes, or expansions of Eyeye beyond ƎYƎYƎ and Covers have been announced.

Reception

Critical reception

Eyeye has received positive attention within the Korean fashion scene for its youthful and playful aesthetic, blending streetwear with accessible high-fashion elements. Fashion media has praised the brand's witty silhouettes and versatile designs, positioning it as a key player in the diffusion line category under KYE. For instance, CRASH Magazine highlighted Eyeye's focus on "fancy clothes and witty designs with simple silhouettes" in its coverage of emerging Korean labels. Similarly, it has been noted in guides to affordable K-fashion for appealing to young consumers with cheerful, mix-and-match pieces. The brand's emphasis on cultural relevance and bold, relaxed styles has contributed to its recognition among global enthusiasts, though it remains more niche compared to KYE's main line. As of 2025, Eyeye is described as "quite well known throughout ," reflecting steady critical acclaim for its contribution to the K-fashion movement.

Commercial performance

Since its launch in 2016, Eyeye has built a solid international presence, available through its official online store, select retailers like 60% and W Concept, and platforms such as Amazon. The brand has garnered a dedicated following, with over 84,000 followers as of late 2025, indicating strong engagement among young women seeking expressive, everyday fashion. While specific sales figures are not publicly detailed, Eyeye's popularity is evident in its inclusion in K-pop idol wardrobes and editorial features, driving demand in and beyond. It has experienced sustained growth, with seasonal collections often selling out , underscoring its commercial viability in the competitive contemporary womenswear market.

Track listing and credits

Track listing

The standard edition of Eyeye by Lykke Li features eight tracks, with a total runtime of 33 minutes and 33 seconds. The album was primarily written by Lykke Li in collaboration with , who co-wrote six of the tracks, while the remaining two involve additional contributors.
No.TitleWriter(s)Duration
1"No Hotel"Lykke Li, 2:26
2"You Don't Go Away"Lykke Li, 3:13
3"Highway to Your Heart"Lykke Li, 3:59
4"Happy Hurts"Lykke Li, , Ely Rise, , 4:56
5"Carousel"Lykke Li, 4:14
6"5D"Lykke Li, , Ely Rise, , 3:45
7"Over"Lykke Li, 3:44
8"ü & i"Lykke Li, 7:16

Personnel

served as the lead artist on Eyeye, providing vocals and primary instrumentation across all tracks. Her longtime collaborator contributed additional songwriting, production, and guitar on the majority of the album's songs. The project features minimal additional contributors, with no prominent guest vocalists or extensive featured artists. Shawn Everett handled mixing for the entire album. Mastering was performed by Patricia Sullivan at The Blue Room in . Select tracks, such as "Happy Hurts" and "5D," include additional production and composition credits for and , alongside songwriters Ely Rise and . Engineering support was provided by Hans Stenlund. also acted as .

Key Personnel

  • Lykke Li: Vocals, primary instrumentation, , ,
  • Björn Yttling: Additional writing, production, guitar, ,
  • Shawn Everett: Mixing engineer
  • Patricia Sullivan: Mastering engineer
  • Hans Stenlund: Engineer
  • Carter Lang: , (tracks 4, 6)
  • Rodaidh McDonald: , (tracks 4, 6)
  • Ely Rise: Composer (tracks 4, 6)
  • Sarah Aarons: Composer (tracks 4, 6)

References

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