RIIZE Sohee Turns Live Covers Into a Moment
Leemujin Service episode 220 gives Sohee room to show vocal range

RIIZE member Sohee stepped into a vocalist-focused spotlight through Leemujin Service episode 220, released on the KBS Kpop YouTube channel with a performance list that immediately signals range. The official upload presents Sohee across RIIZE's SOAR, Charlie Puth's Attention, ONE OK ROCK's Renegades, and Take's Butterfly Grave, giving viewers a compact but revealing map of how his tone handles idol-pop momentum, western pop polish, rock pressure, and Korean ballad emotion.
Featured through KBS Kpop's official YouTube channel, the episode runs for more than 30 minutes, which is important for a singer whose appeal can be flattened in short music-show cuts. The format gives Sohee space to establish phrasing, recover between songs, talk through performance context, and show how he listens inside a live arrangement. For RIIZE fans, that makes the episode more than a promotional stop. It is a vocal document at a moment when the group continues to build its identity as one of K-pop's most watched fifth-generation acts.
The timing also helps clarify Sohee's individual profile. RIIZE's group performances often emphasize movement, visual formation, and a bright emotional-pop atmosphere. A studio live program reverses that hierarchy. The camera and arrangement ask the singer to carry transitions alone. Every entrance, breath, and dynamic shift becomes easier to hear. That environment can raise expectations, but it also gives a vocalist the clearest chance to define what makes his color distinct within the team.
A Song List Designed to Show Several Versions of Sohee
The official chapter list begins with SOAR, anchoring the episode in RIIZE's own sound before moving outward. That opening choice is practical. It reminds casual viewers that Sohee is not appearing as a general cover singer, but as a member of a group with its own musical world. From there, the selection of Attention shifts the focus toward rhythmic control and clean pop phrasing. Charlie Puth's style leaves little room for heavy vocal masking, so a performance of that song tends to reveal timing, lightness, and control over small melodic turns.
Renegades introduces a different test. ONE OK ROCK's music asks for more force, especially in the way lines rise toward an emotional release. For an idol vocalist, that kind of cover can be useful because it shows whether the voice can project beyond a polished studio texture. The final listed cover, Butterfly Grave, then moves the mood back toward Korean sentiment. It is the kind of song choice that invites restraint, not only volume. In a live service format, that combination of tracks creates a narrative: Sohee can begin with his group, move through international pop, touch rock energy, and return to a Korean ballad vocabulary.
That variety is the central news value of the upload. It suggests that KBS Kpop and the program team wanted to frame Sohee as a vocalist with more than one usable tone. For RIIZE, which has grown through performance charisma and a strong group brand, individual vocal moments are useful because they deepen the audience's understanding of the members. Fans already know the group dynamic. Episodes like this help them articulate why one member's voice matters inside that dynamic.
Why Live Programs Matter for Fifth-Generation Idols
In the current K-pop market, live-content credibility is one of the strongest ways for idols to extend a comeback cycle or strengthen a personal image. Music videos and choreography clips generate the widest first wave of attention, but live sessions build a different kind of trust. They tell fans that a performance can survive outside the final mix and outside the full production environment. For a young idol group, that trust can compound over time.
Sohee benefits from a format that is already familiar to K-pop viewers. Leemujin Service is built around conversation and live singing rather than spectacle. The guest is asked to meet a smaller room and a more attentive camera. That setup can make imperfections visible, but it can also make musical personality feel more immediate. In Sohee's case, the range of songs gives viewers reasons to listen for tone instead of only waiting for high notes. The episode's value lies in the transitions: how he changes from RIIZE material to western pop, how he approaches a rock-influenced chorus, and how he settles into a Korean emotional line.
For international fans, the official YouTube upload also removes a barrier. They can encounter the full episode directly through KBS Kpop rather than through fragmented clips or reposted edits. That matters because context changes interpretation. A single viral line might show one impressive moment, but the full program shows pacing, preparation, and how Sohee fits the identity of the show. It allows the performance to be evaluated as a complete appearance, not only as scattered highlights.
Fan Reaction Is Likely to Center on Vocal Color
The most active fan response will probably focus on vocal color, song suitability, and the contrast between Sohee's RIIZE image and his cover choices. That is where this episode has replay value. Fans can compare how he sounds inside SOAR with how he handles songs associated with very different artists. They can also use the performances to make a broader case for his role in RIIZE's future music, especially if the group continues to explore tracks that require both clean pop delivery and emotional lift.
The episode may also help casual viewers attach a clearer identity to Sohee. In large groups, individual recognition often grows through moments that are easy to explain. A strong live appearance is one of those moments. It can become a reference point in fan discussions, recommendation threads, and future coverage. For KBS Kpop, the upload fits a broader strategy of turning performance programs into searchable archives for idol vocals.
Looking ahead, the main impact will depend on how clips from the episode circulate. If the Attention or Renegades performances spread beyond the core fandom, Sohee could gain attention from listeners who are less familiar with RIIZE's full catalog. If Butterfly Grave becomes the conversation point, the episode may strengthen his image as an emotional vocalist. Either route is valuable because both direct attention back to RIIZE while giving Sohee a personal performance marker.
Episode 220 ultimately works because it does not ask Sohee to prove only one thing. It lets him show control, warmth, adaptability, and confidence across a sequence of familiar but contrasting songs. For an idol still building a public vocal narrative, that is exactly the kind of official content that can last beyond the day of release.
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저작권자 © KEnterHub 무단전재 및 재배포 금지

Entertainment Journalist · KEnterHub
Entertainment journalist specializing in K-Pop, K-Drama, and Korean celebrity news. Covers artist comebacks, drama premieres, award shows, and fan culture with in-depth reporting and analysis.
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