OHYUNG puts you into a dream state with “Nevada.”

OHYUNG by Jessica Dunn Rovinelli

OHYUNG, the solo project of Brooklyn artist, DJ, and film composer Lia Ouyang Rusli, today shares “nevada,” the second single from her forthcoming album IOWA, arriving March 6. The track opens with a massive boom—”whether thunder or gunshots, the sound is an awakening of the spirit,” Rusli says. The field-recorded sample loops throughout the piece as a glacial melody pulses and swells beneath, intertwined with choral voices and wailing synths. 

Of “nevada,” Rusli says the track evokes “open land and a holy reverence for space and openness. And in that space there may be a painful memory, but that memory is softened by time, letting beauty in.” The track is paired with a one-take visual that picks up where the video for lead single “all dolls go to heaven” left off. Among its early praise, Paste recognized that track as one of their “5 Songs You Need to Hear This Week,” describing it as music that “sweeps through the sea-level holy, uncouples from its textures, and climbs into the mouth of a liberated afterlife.” Together, these tracks signal OHYUNG’s anticipated return to ambient music—cinematic snapshots of their year in the Midwest.

WATCH: “NEVADA”

IOWA follows last year’s You Are Always On My Mind, praised by Pitchfork as “an extraordinary burst of pop,” and marks Rusli’s first ambient album since her 2022 breakout imagine naked!, which was named one of NPR Music’s Best Albums of the Year. An evocation of Rusli’s year living in Iowa City between 2023 and 2024, the album documents a time when she became embedded in the local DIY music scene and made between composing scores for the acclaimed films Happyend (dir. Neo Sora) and Sorry, Baby (dir. Eva Victor).

Rusli describes IOWA as “an ode to the vast beauty of the Midwest, fields of corn, rolling hills, harsh winters, tornado sirens, and the trans people that survive despite the threat of right-wing christofascism. IOWA is my love letter to Iowa City and the Midwest, my experimental trans Bruce Springsteen Nebraska.” The album is a stripped-down, self-produced album that foregrounds atmosphere and restraint. The record pares back earlier maximalism to reveal ghostly textures built from field recordings, manipulated devotional samples, and restrained synth pads, with moments of rupture interrupting otherwise serene compositions.

Following upcoming DJ sets in Tokyo, Japan, and Seoul, South Korea, OHYUNG will celebrate the album’s release with a performance at Stone Circle Theatre in Ridgewood, New York, on March 6. Presented in partnership with Trans Music Archive, the event will feature an opening performance by YATTA, a DJ set from Bitepoint, and food by Jessie Yuchen, and will serve as a fundraiser for the Iowa Trans Mutual Aid Fund. A physical vinyl edition of IOWA will also be released via Trans Music Archive, with all proceeds benefiting the fund.

Check out “nevada” above, and stay tuned for more music from IOWA ahead of its March 6 release.

Keep your mind open.

[Float over to the subscription box.]

[Thanks to Cody at Terrorbird Media.]

OHYUNG’s new single is “No Good” (but it’s actually pretty good).

OHYUNG by Marion Aguas

Today, OHYUNG—the solo project of Brooklyn-based musician and composer Lia Ouyang Rusli—announces their new album, You Are Always On My Mind, set for release on March 28 via NNA Tapes & Phantom Limb. A striking work of trip-hop-laced, rave-inspired electronic pop, the album explores Rusli’s gender transition, marking another bold reinvention of their ceaselessly shapeshifting project and their most cohesive, accessible statement to date. In their own words, OHYUNG describes the record as “my trans self and my former self in conversation, from both perspectives.” 

You Are Always On My Mind captures their lengthy, complicated, but crucial journey between lives, strewn with both doubt and excitement. It is an ecstatic, pop-oriented shift in direction from an artist primarily known for electronic music, noise, hip-hop, and ambient, but carried with sleek confidence, maturity, and a silvery, hallucinogenic shimmer that reveals Rusli’s expansive sonic background. It is, writes Rusli, “sometimes written from a dark place and other times from a place of happiness.” Throughout, darkness and light rise and fall in layers of phased strings, trip-hop drum production, and earworming vocal lines.


Alongside the announcement, OHYUNG shares the lead single “no good,” which arrives with a video by the rising directorial talent day.The video features OHYUNG in varying forms—the bride, a statuesque scarlet diva, and a rave girl in biker boots performing in an empty warehouse—each echoing the others through choreographed movements. The hazy pop song is an anthem about the contradictory fear of becoming the person you’ve always wanted to be, and an ode to the transformative possibilities of raving. Images of liquid, morphing metal evoke the metamorphosis at the heart of the album, and the video closes with the poem “Do You Think I’m Disco” by Olivia Sio Tse, immersing the viewer into the interstitial and wordless space that the club offers us all“There before I was there / I wanted you to imagine.”

WATCH/STREAM “NO GOOD”

A film score composer by trade, Rusli’s songwriting craft is meticulous and nuanced. You Are Always On My Mind was, perhaps surprisingly, formed primarily from processed “generic string loops” found in online sample packs—a strange and willfully jarring reminder that what seems to be is not always what is. Recontextualized, these string loops enshadow the simplicity of their origins, revealing a grace and purposefulness perhaps not even imagined by their authors, subtly drawing out euphoria and tension in equal balance. 

Rusli also writes about the influence of rave culture central to their transition and the record’s production and themes. “It’s a declaration of love for raves and the dark hazy rooms that helped me to be free and true with myself—seeing other people who are so free and beautiful and thinking that one day that can be me— that’s me in the future.” But there is also a fear and unease present. Lead single “no good” explores “the worst version of myself as a trans person, feeding doubt to my pre-transition self” with its core lyric “anyone can see / I’m no good for you,” delivered over a relentless beat, swooning strings, and glistening synthesis. 

A vital and standout voice in the New York City music scene, OHYUNG has consistently pushed boundaries with their work. Their debut album, Untitled (Chinese Man with Flame), released by Deathbomb Arc, and its follow-up, PROTECTORreleased via Chinabot, are extraordinary cross-genre collisions featuring distorted 808s, pitch-shifted rapping, frenetic pop energy, and eclectic electronic loops. In 2022, OHYUNG sidestepped expectations with a monumental two-hour ambient opus titled imagine naked!, which was highly lauded by critics, includingThe Quietus, who described it as a “masterful selection of muscular, shuddering, trembling ambient excursions,” and NPR Music hailing the record as one of the best albums of 2022. 

You Are Always On My Mind arrives as Rusli’s prominence as a sought-after film composer continues to rise. Their recent scoring credits include A24’s Problemista and HBO’s Fantasmas by Julio Torres as well as Happyend by Neo Sora (son of the late visionary composer Ryuichi Sakamoto). Elsewhere, Rusli’s film work includes Miles Warren‘s critically acclaimed Hulu film Bruiser and Shatara Mitchell Ford’Test Pattern, which earned nominations at the Gotham Awards and Independent Spirit Awards. Additionally, Rusli has scored the short film Bambirak and Rest Stop, which won Jury Awards for International Fiction and U.S. Fiction, respectively, at Sundance. 

To celebrate the release, OHYUNG will host their New York City album release show at Market Hotel on March 28, joined by Dreamcrusher and Holland Andrews. Find details and tickets here. Listen to “no good” above, pre-order You Are Always On My Mind below, and stay tuned for more updates from OHYUNG coming very soon.

PREORDER ‘YOU ARE ALWAYS ON MY MIND’

Keep your mind open.

[You subscribing is always on my mind.]

[Thanks to Cody at Terrorbird Media.]