Some songs arrive without ever raising their voice. ‘足る’ (taru)—a word that means having just enough—is the first joint single from Prod.Dex, the Seoul-based J-Pop producer behind more than 11.4 million Spotify streams on ‘Where The Stars Fall (Up All Night),’ and kimmore, the Korean vocalist Kim Jiwon, who drew notice on SBS’s audition series ‘Our Ballad’ as the soft-spoken art-school student. Together they trade spectacle for stillness and build an entire mood out of restraint.

The arrangement is deliberately spare, a quiet J-Pop frame that leaves wide margins of space around kimmore’s voice. Where Prod.Dex made his name scoring Japanese game soundtracks like Elcronicle and Avenger Saga—gathering over a million downloads along the way—here he pares everything back, letting a handful of sustained chords and an emotive, unforced vocal carry the weight. The result lands closer to ambient pop than to a big chorus: alternative-leaning, intimate, and unhurried.

A minimalist J-Pop meditation on the quiet luxury of having just enough.

The title borrows from a small philosophy—‘足る,’ the contentment of enough, the opposite of forever reaching for more. The cover art captures it exactly: pressed violet flowers floating in a bowl of black water, seen from directly above, like a still life of stillness itself. There are no grand declarations here, only the warmth of a moment that asks for nothing else.

Prod.Dex (Eunil Kim) writes, composes, arranges, and produces the track in full, releasing it through Hidden Mint Records, while kimmore supplies its human center—a voice that turned heads on national television and now finds a quieter home. For Prod.Dex it reads as a turn inward after the streaming scale of his earlier work; for kimmore, a graceful step beyond the audition stage. Pour something warm, dim the lights, and let ‘足る’ remind you how much room there is in just enough.

#JPop #MinimalPop #ProdDex