South-East London artist Harve returns with their new single “phone,” released via Boy Big.
The opening chords carry an almost Mk.gee-like ominousness, shadowy and expectant, before the track breaks open into production that feels instantly more playful, bouncy, and bright. It’s a clever misdirect, setting the stage for a song that thrives on contrast.
While the lyrics remain vulnerable and disarmingly honest, the production is gleeful and uplifting. The track sits somewhere between R&B and electronica, yet remains distinctly its own thing that is unmistakably Harve. Lush, prodigal vocal harmonies glide over a swinging, off-kilter rhythm, and the shifting instrumentation, from warm keys to elastic bass-lines, pushes the song from something familiar into something new.
It’s unexpected, unique, and arrestingly catchy. Think R&B colliding with toy-town electronica, brushed with touches of choral-like harmonies and those airy, jazz-leaning keys. The result is a small sonic universe that feels playful yet emotionally resonant.
Harve has never shied away from exploration, and “phone” stands as a testament to how something simple can be elevated into something revelatory. It is proof that experimentation, when done with heart, can still feel joyfully effortless.
Photography: Temi Aftab (Instagram)