UK-born, Prague-based singer-songwriter James Harries dares to do the opposite. But his new album, "Love & Desire," is a sweeping reminder that truth still counts for something, and sometimes an unpolished take can be the prettiest.
The idea came serendipitously to Harries when his young son discovered an old film camera and blew a roll, capturing overexposed, flawed photos. The imperfect images triggered a beauty that resided in the imperfections. Harries threw out the polished, overproduced album he’d been working on and re-launched, deciding instead to make a recording of something real, something alive.
Recorded in a snug studio space over just three days with friends, Love & Desire hums with warmth and truth-telling. There are no click tracks, no heavy production layers, just live takes, instinct, and emotion. The album’s nine tracks (running 29 minutes and 29 seconds) are intimate, the kind of record that feels like a late-night one-on-one chat among old friends.
Two particularly standout tracks, “Sabotage” and “Paris,” highlight the depth of Harries’ abilities as a storyteller and performer. “Sabotage” is about unraveled emotional chaos; “Paris” sounds like a cinematic love letter, fragile and achingly human. Every number on Love & Desire sounds just like that, spontaneous and not so much a performance as a moment in time.
From beginning to end, Love & Desire shimmers with truth. It is a record for listeners thirsting for connection, honesty, and the soulful allure of imperfection. More than five years in the making, with its homegrown production and soul-searching songwriting, Harries has built something that stands the test of time. It is evidence that when you remove all the glossy veneer from art, raw emotion remains.
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