Los Angeles-based singer-songwriter Annie Omalley's new album, rekovering overthinker, spans 14 songs that dive deep into overthinking, limerence, fantasy, faith, boredom, heartbreak, shame, trauma, and the complicated relationships that shape us. It is her most sonically honest and emotionally unfiltered project to date.
Among its standout moments, "just friends do" shines like a firefly in the dark; honest, vulnerable, and refreshingly sincere. If there's one song to hear from the album, it's this one.
From the moment the track begins, Omalley wastes no time getting to the heart of the matter. Before a full guitar strum can settle, she delivers the opening lines up close and personal: "I shouldn't say this, should keep it in, but ever since that night, I questioned everything." The immediacy of her delivery pulls listeners directly into the emotional tension of the song.
Omalley's serene vocal performance, descriptive lyricism, and acoustic-driven arrangement allow listeners to fully immerse themselves in the story. It's a story many know all too well: wanting someone who doesn't want you back, or who only sees you as a friend.
The track serves as a gentle reminder that sometimes you don't need layers of instrumentation to make an impact.
In this case, acoustic guitar and vocals placed front and center in the mix are enough to carry the listener straight to the song's emotional core. The intimate sonic setting gives every lyric room to linger, creating the feeling that Omalley is reaching out a hand and guiding listeners through the complexities of unrequited feelings, reminding them they aren't alone in the experience.
Overall, "friends just do" is an emotionally transparent testament to the album Omalley has crafted, leaving listeners eager to explore the rest of the LP.
On what Omalley hopes listeners take away from the album as a whole, she says, "I hope people find this album to be a hiding place for every feeling they’ve been trying to outrun. I hope it gives them permission to sit inside the discomfort instead of rushing to fix it, to wander through their grief, confusion, hope, longing, anger, curiosity, and tenderness without shame. I hope these songs feel like a quiet corner of the world they can return to when their thoughts get too loud, somewhere they can unravel honestly and slowly stitch themselves back together again."