Elris Songs Ranked

Alice (Korean: 앨리스; formerly known as Elris), is a South Korean girl group. The group consists of seven members: EJ, Do-A , Chaejeong, Yeonje, Yukyung, Sohee, and Karin. They debuted on June 1, 2017, with their first extended play, We, First On December 1, 2021, it was announced that Elris would be transferred to IOK Company. On April 11, 2022, it was announced that the group rebranded to Alice. Members Hyeseong and Bella changed their stage names to Yeonje and Do-A, respectively. Chaejeong was also appointed as the new leader. They will make their comeback in May 3 with the digital single “Power of Love”. However, it was announced that the digital single’s release would be delayed to May 4. Here are all of Elris songs ranked.

Don’t miss out on the music of this famous Korean girl group. Enjoy and dance to the music of Elris!

4. Jackpot (Jackpot, 2020)

“I honestly do not know how the kids differentiate these kind of groups from one another. When I reflect upon February 2020, it is a blur of these girl crush concepts. I listened to this song a few days ago, and again this morning, and it isn’t terrible but just another one of this type.”

See more: Elris Albums Ranked

3. Summer Dream (Summer Dream, 2018)

“With all the bubbly lightness of an Apink track, Summer Dream utilizes a laid-back New Jack Swing groove to drive its carefree vibe. Complimented by sparkling synths, the instrumental is airy without being completely inconsequential.”

2. Pow Pow (Color Crush, 2017)

“It sounds like a mixture of rock and late 60s-early 70s soul music with a bit of funk in it. It also has bossa nova and tropical house influences. The song still conforms to the cutesy/quirky girl group act of the moment, but it does so with hooks and energy to spare.”

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1. We, First (We, First, 2017)

“There’s a tiny dose of New Jack Swing in its regimented beat, and one nice instrumental riff that pops up here and there without expanding to anything memorable. The girls have the standard, cutesy k-pop delivery down pat, and the chorus musters up enough energy to be mildly interesting.”