
There are songs that entertain. There are songs that seduce. And then, there are songs like “Two Wrongs”—explosions of unfiltered emotion, lightning captured in a bottle, soundtracks to the chaos of passion and the euphoria of doing the wrong thing… and loving it.
Jamie Alimorad’s latest release is not just a return to form—it’s a rebirth. “Two Wrongs,” released May 9, 2025, arrives like a rock and roll confession whispered in the dark and shouted from the rooftops all at once. Co-produced with Jordan Sherman in a whirlwind four-hour session in Los Angeles, this track pulses with the kind of spontaneous fire that can’t be planned. It had a different life once—originally intended for another artist, born in the mold of dark pop—but Alimorad ripped it out of that skin and rebuilt it from the inside out. What emerged is something raw, loud, and ferociously alive.
From the opening guitar riff, it’s clear: this isn’t background music. It’s the kind of song that kicks the door open and dares you to feel something. The guitars growl and flirt at the same time—cocky, sharp-edged, and relentlessly catchy. Then comes Jamie’s voice: smoky, sensual, and unafraid. He doesn’t just sing—he tells, he teases, he torches. As the verses climb, the tension builds until the chorus detonates in a blast of harmony and grit, including a jaw-dropping six-part vocal arrangement that nods to the complexity of The Beatles’ “Because” without ever feeling nostalgic. This is not a throwback. This is a takeover.
But what truly sets “Two Wrongs” ablaze is its emotional architecture. At its core, it’s a tale of forbidden love—two people caught in a dangerous magnetic pull, where guilt and desire collide in a slow-burning crash. The lyrics don’t ask for forgiveness. They don’t explain or excuse. They claim. There’s betrayal here, yes—but also chemistry so volatile it scorches everything in its path. It’s passion that knows better… and does it anyway.
Alimorad doesn’t shy away from this complexity. In fact, he dives into it. And that’s the magic of “Two Wrongs”. It doesn’t just sound like a rock anthem—it feels like one. It grabs your throat and your heart. It sounds like late-night mistakes. Like locked eyes across a room you weren’t supposed to be in. Like wanting something so badly you stop caring about consequences. And somewhere in that beautiful mess, it becomes something even bigger than a song—it becomes truth, sung at full volume.
Live instrumentation gives the track a sense of breath and muscle. It’s a reminder that Alimorad is an artist unafraid of the stage, the spotlight, or the silence between beats. His voice—stretching, aching, commanding—has rarely sounded more powerful. The bridge, in particular, is a thing of beauty: melodic, cinematic, and soaring with just enough restraint to make the final chorus hit like a wave.
“Two Wrongs” is easily one of the most blistering tracks in Jamie Alimorad’s arsenal to date. It’s an eruption—a cathartic, full-throttle release of everything he’s kept bottled up. For longtime fans, it’s a thrilling evolution. For new listeners, it’s a gateway drug into one of modern rock’s most compelling voices.
So turn the lights low, turn the volume up, and let “Two Wrongs” run riot through your speakers. Some mistakes are worth making. Some songs are worth breaking the rules for.
This is one of them.
▶️ Available now on Spotify and all streaming platforms.
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