![]() ![]() ![]() This article appears in print with the headline “Sooner and Later. Tickets are $8-$10, the show starts at 8 p.m. That’s perfect, really, since it’s historically taken Harris a while to get around to the next one.īrett Harris appears Friday, March 4 at Cat’s Cradle Back Room in Carrboro. This is a dreamily good record that you want to play all the way through, perhaps even again immediately. These are minor quibbles on an album with manifold standouts. Occasionally the rhyme schemes are predictable, and by the penultimate “Shade Tree,” despite its charms, you may detect one Beatle-esque descending progression too many. Still, tunes that feature his voice up frontlike the languid Muscle Shoals gospel-soul of “High Times” or the charming title trackoffer the greatest evidence of his distinctiveness. Alex and Brett Harris are the coauthors of the best-selling book Do Hard Things, which they wrote when they were eighteen. ![]() His nearest siblings, rowdy twin boys named Alex and Brett, were six or seven years younger, so Josh was in some ways an only child, and perhaps something of a homeschooling Guinea pig. At that time their oldest son Joshua was 10. In covering such vast stylistic ground, Harris shows a willingness to submerge the grain of his voice in service of the song. Across the river, in Gresham, Oregon, was author and speaker Gregg Harris. The best of INDY Week’s fiercely independent journalism about the Triangle delivered straight to your inbox. ![]()
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