Chorim and Wang WooYoung's 'Have a Good Sunday!' Is the Spring Song You've Been Waiting For

Stone Music's indie singer drops a warm, wistful MV about the one day a week that feels like everything

|6 min read0
Chorim in the 'Have a Good Sunday!' MV, released April 6, 2026 via Stone Music Entertainment
Chorim in the 'Have a Good Sunday!' MV, released April 6, 2026 via Stone Music Entertainment

Spring in Korea has a sound, and right now that sound has a strong candidate for its unofficial anthem. Singer-songwriter Chorim (초림) released her new single 'Have a Good Sunday!' on April 6, 2026, featuring vocalist Wang WooYoung in a collaboration that packages the delicate ache of a limited relationship into three minutes and fifty-six seconds of warm, unhurried music.

The single arrived via Stone Music Entertainment on YouTube and major streaming platforms, accompanied by a music video that translates its emotional premise into imagery with the same economy and restraint that defines the song itself.

A Song Built Around One Day

The concept behind 'Have a Good Sunday!' is both simple and quietly devastating: two people who can only see each other once a week, on Sundays. The song doesn't dramatize the circumstances that limit them to that single day — it doesn't need to. The focus is entirely on the texture of the experience: the anticipation that builds through the other six days, the heightened quality of attention that comes from knowing time is finite, and the particular kind of longing that arrives on Sunday evening when the day is ending and the distance begins again.

The official description frames the song as capturing "the excitement of being together and the bittersweet feeling of parting, wrapped in the atmosphere of spring." That's an accurate summary, but it undersells the specificity of what Chorim and Wang WooYoung achieve. The best songs about limited time together don't make the limitation feel tragic — they make the moments feel unbearably present, and 'Have a Good Sunday!' does exactly that.

The song's production reflects the season it's designed for: the arrangement is open and warm, built around textures that suggest afternoon light rather than dramatic flourishes. There's a deliberate gentleness to how the instrumentation moves, which creates space for the vocals to do the emotional work without competition.

The Collaboration: Chorim and Wang WooYoung

Chorim has carved out a space in Korean indie music with a sound that prioritizes emotional directness over production spectacle — a quality that becomes clear within seconds of each song she releases. Her voice has a natural intimacy that suits material about ordinary emotional life, and 'Have a Good Sunday!' is built precisely around that quality.

Wang WooYoung's featured role adds a counterpoint that shifts the song's perspective. Where a solo performance would present a single point of view, the duet format allows the song to hold both sides of the experience simultaneously — the same Sunday, the same parting, experienced by two different people with complementary but distinct emotional registers. The interplay between the two voices captures something that solo performances inherently can't: the conversation that happens between people who care about each other but are working within constraints they can't fully name.

The Music Video: Spring Light and Quiet Details

Directed by Seo Jungha and produced by Lee Aerim, the 'Have a Good Sunday!' music video takes an approach that matches the song's emotional register: low-key, present-tense, and attentive to small things. Chorim stars alongside actor Jisung, with the video following the couple through a single Sunday — the arrival, the afternoon spent together, the departure.

The cinematography prioritizes natural light and textural detail over dramatic staging, which suits material about the heightened awareness that comes with limited time. When you know a day is going to end, you notice things differently: the quality of light through a window, the specific way someone holds a cup, the way a particular street looks in the late afternoon. The video captures that register of attention without over-explaining it.

Seo Jungha's direction keeps the editing unhurried — a deliberate choice that mirrors the song's request that its listeners slow down and pay attention to what's actually in front of them.

Why 'Have a Good Sunday!' Hits Different in Spring

Spring occupies a particular place in Korean music culture: it is the season most reliably associated with romantic feeling, new beginnings, and a specific kind of melancholy that arrives with warmth after a long winter. 'Have a Good Sunday!' arrives precisely calibrated for that emotional context.

The song's premise — a relationship conducted in weekly installments, valued precisely because of its limits — speaks to something broader about how people experience connection in contemporary life, where time and physical distance create their own kinds of limited Sundays. The resonance goes beyond the specifics of the scenario, landing somewhere more universal: the idea that the moments we know are temporary are often the ones we feel most fully.

For Chorim, the release continues a body of work that consistently prioritizes emotional honesty over trend-chasing — a choice that, in a music landscape crowded with production-forward releases, makes her voice genuinely distinct. 'Have a Good Sunday!' arrives at the right time of year and with exactly the right emotional frequency.

Whether you have your own limited Sunday waiting at the end of the week or just need a song that understands what it feels like to wish you had more time with someone, Chorim and Wang WooYoung have made the soundtrack for it.

Korean Indie Music's Spring Tradition

The timing of 'Have a Good Sunday!' is not incidental. Spring releases occupy a privileged position in the Korean music calendar, and indie artists in particular have developed a tradition of calibrating their releases to the emotional register of the season: the warmth after winter, the specific quality of April light, the awareness that something is blooming that will eventually end. Songs that arrive in this window carry a built-in receptivity from listeners who are already attuned to the themes of temporary beauty and renewed feeling that define the season.

Chorim's release lands squarely in that tradition. The song's premise — a relationship measured in Sundays — borrows from the same emotional vocabulary that has made spring releases a reliable vehicle for reaching listeners who are already primed for exactly this kind of material. The question is always whether the song earns its place in that tradition or merely borrows from it, and 'Have a Good Sunday!' earns it.

Stone Music Entertainment's positioning of the release reflects an understanding of how indie Korean music travels: not through the chart mechanics of major label releases, but through listener-to-listener circulation driven by emotional resonance. A song this precisely calibrated to a universal but specific feeling has the ingredients for exactly that kind of organic spread. Whether it finds the audience it deserves will depend on the serendipity of discovery — but the music itself has done everything it can to be worth discovering.

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저작권자 © KEnterHub 무단전재 및 재배포 금지

Park Chulwon
Park Chulwon

Entertainment Journalist · KEnterHub

Entertainment journalist focused on Korean music, film, and the global K-Wave. Reports on industry trends, celebrity profiles, and the intersection of Korean pop culture and international audiences.

K-PopK-DramaK-MovieKorean CelebritiesGlobal K-Wave

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