Soundtrack — Members Only

This album is available exclusively to members of The Cascadia Collective.

This first full length album: Harper & Company is a collection of songs written by James Harper (aka Jameson, aka TKH). A studio album featuring much local talent.

If you’re listening here, you’re exactly where this music was meant to land.

What to Expect Going Forward

Music will continue to be released here in a slower, more intentional way.

Rather than chasing constant drops, this page will grow organically throughout the year in one of two ways:

  • Occasional single-song releases — new songs added as they’re finished, sometimes rough-edged, sometimes fully produced

  • An annual digital album — a once-a-year collection that captures a chapter of life and travel.

Some tracks may be shared publicly later. Others may only ever live here.

Members will always have early or exclusive access, along with context—notes about where a song came from, what trail or place it was written near, or what was happening off-camera at the time.

Why Keep This Here

This isn’t a commercial music project.
It’s part of the broader TKH archive—alongside trip reports, recipes, photography, and shared experience.

By keeping the Soundtrack page member-only the music stays ad-free

It stays unrushed

And it stays connected to the people who value it.

Thanks for being here—and for listening.

Album review by Thaddeus Hink: "The overriding tone of Harper & Company's debute album, l'obscurite, is about space held. The specific space for things that affect everyone in some way, shape, or form. It is about universal struggle, whether in the social sense of justice or in the personal sense of addiction. There is no hiding from the responsibility of oneself or the world at large as the album spins on the player. The dampness of the PNW permeates the work, specifically of Fidalgo Island. While the themes are without borders it certainly does have a "smells like and tastes like" quality that is unique to Fidalgo Island. Not so much how the Island is, but how the Island has been experienced. The album is not about the path trodden, but about the journey made.

The soft subtle ballads run counter-current to the emotive bite that is just below the surface. Like after facing the storm courageously head-on, then only to falter in the relative safety of home port. If you listen to this album, and really listen in a way that permeates without any kind of prejudice, you will find an honesty that is contemplative, if not downright uncomfortable.

L'obscurite is the darkness known by all. Not the darkness from the absence of light, but the darkness of the cast shadow. A darkness that can only be experienced when you have the courage to stand in the light."

More music is forthcoming, shaped by place, experience, and the quiet work of holding space. ~TKH

If you'd prefer to listen to the album via Youtube, here's an unlisted link.