Harriette Strikes the Perfect Mix of Bitter and Sweet in Debut EP 'i heart the internet'
Photo: Muriel Margaret
Serving whimsical pop earworms on a hefty lyrical platter, 23-year-old artist Harriette is a candid refreshment for the indie scene. With her debut EP i heart the internet, she navigates big concepts through breezy arrangements, leading listeners through tales of the chronically online, hometown politics, and some imaginative looks at love.
âI Heart the Internetâ is a lighthearted take on a hard-hitting topicâthe dissonance of who we are versus who we pretend to be. She juxtaposes playfulness alongside vulnerability, weaving deeply personal lyrics in a carefree tone, much like many pose online. A sung pseudo-ringtone acts as Harrietteâs hook, immediately paired with the aching lines, âThe things I call my own / I never found em from my own home. But if I knew how to make my bed / I wouldnât sleep so close to the edge...â
Next, weâre twirled down a path of bluegrass-folk-pop-fusion in âJohnny Got It Right,â another mischievous angle on love as Harriette nods to Johnny Cashâs âFolsom Prison Blues.â Fan-favored single, âFucking Married,â follows as the perfect Harriette-style sampler of bitter and sweet. The lilting background vocals smile and sway over the arrangementânearly, almost convincing me of its innocenceâwhile the brazen bass line winks at the biting lyrical tone. This is the Harriette effect: a syrupy sonic palette that packs a profound aftertaste, deliciously contrasting one another.
The title says it all in âLying Is Cute,â a stream-of-consciousness confessional that wavers between delusion and reality. Itâs a little Ethel Cain-core in its cinematic arrangement, following an emotional timeline rather than a pop structure. Harriette loses her cool on âIâll wait for you... Iâll deny it just for you,â then narrows back into a false sense of calm, spiraling through repetitions of âIâll deny it till its true, Iâll deny it till itâs you...â
âBlack and Blueâ sounds just like its lyrical pondering, thinking its way through curious synth lines and absent-minded percussion. Itâs easy listening by an over-thinker, both light in sound and hefty in content. Meanwhile, âbc i love youâ dares you to âown it,â to lay it all out on the line. The intensifying melody begs and pleads over the sunny yet driving strum of the guitars. As the lyrics reveal more and more of this story, a desperation creeps into the momentum, shifting the weight of the liveliness. Harriette mourns, âWhat happened to us / We were just having fun / Was it because I love you?â
I canât say Iâve ever heard a hometown dedication like âGoodbye Texas.â Itâs equally loving and critical, spinning a coy Southern charm on its sincere jabs. Harrietteâs brutality is endearing, pushing the boundaries of what a love song can look like. Finally, âSundayâ closes out i heart the internet with a lullaby of sorts, waltzing through light guitar picking and casual discussions of personal faith.
Ever genuine, with a smirking edge of playfulness, Harriette provides a fresh sound to indie pop, fusing Texan influences with her hooky melodies and delightfully biting lyrics.
Listen to i heart the internet below: