Harry Kappen Finds the Middle Ground in “Balance”
- Miles Coleman

- 2 days ago
- 2 min read

A man stands at a crossroads with two loud crowds calling his name. One shouts that the future lies in burning everything down and starting again. The other insists the past must be guarded like a fortress. In the middle of the noise sits a quiet question. What if the truth is not found in the shouting, but in the space between it?
That question quietly fuels Balance, the latest single from Harry Kappen and the first glimpse into his upcoming album After the Crossing. Rather than choosing sides, the song turns its attention toward the tension that defines modern public life. The world has become a place of rigid positions and rapid judgments, where every issue is flattened into opposing corners. Kappen’s response is neither lecture nor protest chant. Instead, he crafts a reflective piece that searches for calm in the middle ground.
Musically, the track carries the kind of thoughtful construction that listeners have come to associate with Kappen’s work. The arrangement grows organically, moving from restraint into fuller emotional expression without ever losing its sense of purpose. His multi instrumental instincts are evident in the careful layering of sounds. Each element supports the central idea without crowding it. The result feels deliberate and lived in, like a conversation that has been considered long before it was spoken aloud.



Lyrically, Balance invites listeners to pause. It acknowledges the pull of extremes but refuses to glorify them. What emerges is a quietly persuasive message about nuance, empathy, and the importance of standing somewhere between black and white. In a time where many songs aim to provoke, Kappen instead offers reflection. That choice gives the track an unusual weight.
The single also signals a new chapter in the artist’s life. Having recently moved from the Netherlands to Mexico, Kappen appears energized by transition and perspective. The themes of crossing borders, both literal and emotional, echo through the music and hint at the broader narrative of the album to come. Balance does not shout to be heard. It listens first. And in doing so, it becomes a rare kind of song for a divided moment.





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