You were hiding But I sought you out…
The sound of Brave Boy glimmers with crystalline clarity, carrying both radiance and unease, as if prairie winds had caught fireflies in their currents. Wichita might seem an unlikely birthplace for such luminous music, but that contrast sharpens their edge. Married duo Mary and Eric Harrison shape their project as a study in collision, where light and shadow, power and tenderness, all press against one another. Their new single, Hide & Seek, is their most vivid reflection yet.
Crystalline synthpop pulses against dreamy post-punk foundations, laced with the warm tactile glow of dream pop. The song bubbles, pops, and glimmers, evoking fireflies and lantern light as if a game of hide and seek were unfolding in a twilight garden. A bright guitar line drifts like glass catching dusk, while vintage synths sparkle with radiant clarity, softened at the edges but never dulled. Beneath it all, a steady rhythm drives forward with restless urgency, shimmering like a cascade of shooting stars across a cosmic backdrop. Through it, Mary Harrison’s voice glows with resolve — tender, commanding, and unflinching — as each sound bursts into brilliance, radiant and gone before it can be held.
Hide and Seek is, in the band’s own words, “a fast-paced post punk gut punch about the frustration of saving someone who won’t reciprocate.”
Listen to “Hide and Seek” below:
Hailing from Wichita, Kansas, Brave Boy melds elements of synthpop, shoegaze, dreampop, glam, and darkwave into their distinctive sound. The band consists of the married couple Mary Harrison (vocals) and Eric Harrison (guitar, bass, and synthesizer). Drawing inspiration from both classic and contemporary musicians as well as existentialist philosophical writings and literature, their music and lyrics explore topics like the many facets of love, surviving trauma, and the intricate power structures within society.
Brave Boy has been praised for emotionally raw live performances that emote the drama woven into their music and lyrics. Eric’s dreamy and powerful guitars and Mary’s soaring, glammy vocals team up in ways that might call to mind bands ranging from Siouxsie and the Banshees to Cocteau Twins and Slowdive, with added synthpop elements. Sixteen singles in, the Harrisons know their palette — and sharpen it with intent.
That persistence has carried them from small rooms to larger stages, including a coveted slot opening for Gang of Four. It is no accident: persistence, labor, and songs unafraid of their own clarity have earned Brave Boy that ground. Hide & Seek shows them at their most radiant — two musicians who understand that truth in sound gleams brightest when illusion is pared away, leaving only light and motion flickering like lanterns in the dark.
Follow Brave Boy: