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Scott Hirsch // Lost Time Behind the Moon LP

Scott Hirsch // Lost Time Behind the Moon LP

¥3,230
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The 2nd album of Scott Hirsch, a country folk writer living in Ojai, a hippie village in California.Contains all 10 Americana songs. DL code included.

Scissor Tail Other works Click here for more information. ///Click here to see more Scissor Tail releases available at Tobira. 

-----------------------------

Edition of 1000.

"Songwriter and multi-instrumentalist / producer Scott Hirsch has recorded a follow up to his critically acclaimed 2016 record, Blue Rider Songs. On Lost Time Behind the Moon, Scott chronicles confronting ghosts of the past, acknowledging that darkness rides alongside the light, and avoiding the pitfalls of regret. The record was recorded and produced by Hirsch with the help of Mike Coykendall (M Ward), and features musical guests William Tyler, Mikael Jorgensen (Wilco), Orpheo McCord (Edward Sharpe), Jimmy Calire (America) and Jesse Siebenberg (Lukas Nelson, Supertramp).

Maybe it's the season of the Earth, but it's hard not to feel lately like we're standing on some high precipice looking down on what we've made of the world and trying to make sense of the viewGazing back down the narrow roads leading out of our old towns, are we strangers or friends with the rear-view mirror? These are hard questions—of taking stock and taking leave—that my friend Scott Hirsch sings about so powerfully on his new album Lost Time Behind the Moon, ten songs that deal squarely with chasing ghosts and shaking curses; looking for peace; falling in love and hiding away; having babies and raising them; and chasing storms and finding shelter, though not necessarily in that order, And mostly all mixed up with each other. It's some of the most finely articulated music I know for asking: Can we go home? And, where is home? Or, as Scott sings, “If I come back, won't you let me stay? ”

When we were both 21, Scott and I lived in a small apartment together in Santa Barbara on Hope Avenue, directly across from the cemetery in the lap of the Santa Ynez mountains. We passed some time in the red bar at Jimmy's Oriental Gardens, or We were wondering—though it wasn't a particularly pressing concern before marriage and children, long moments under the soft blue neon of the Four Winds, an old man bar on State Street, but mostly we sat on the floor playing acoustic guitar together. When the steady unwinding of time seemed to have missed us—what came next, and how to convey that wonder in rhythm and harmony. We took our freedom for granted and lived like brothers.

Like me, like everyone, Scott has crossed a lot of rivers since those days: A move to San Francisco, followed by a years-long sojourn on the East Coast. Marriage. A daughter. Work. Miles and miles of music. And finally Listening to Lost Time Behind, for him, a return to Ojai, California, 50 miles from where he and I sat staring out over the cemetery in the rain, wondering whether we could teach our hands to play the way our minds wanted them to. the Moon—and there is such bittersweetness to this—I can't help but hear what time has made of the questions that we pressed on each other when we were just kids on Hope Avenue: What is life without a little regret? Is there a way to look in that old cracked mirror and feel as hopeful as we do haunted? Lost Time Behind the Moon doesn't answer any of these; in fact, it poses more—and harder—questions. But they're softened and wizened by the years that Scott has spent playing music for himself alone, trying to discover some kind of truth that wor ks for him. And in this solitude, he's created something that feels wide and inclusive and loving and forgiving. I think of Lost Time Behind the Moon as Scott's masterpiece, because everything I know about him is in these songs, the groove and the wonder ..

Scott always knew better than I the ways that a particularly voiced chord might make you feel like laughing and weeping at the same time. What we didn't know when we were young—and what makes this album so heavy, frankly—is the way That time makes work, however simple, deeper, indelible, like a scar or a wrinkle. The ways that the hourglass transforms a common beginner's chord into something far more elegiac, and touched, and auto-biographical. What Scott knows now—and I know he knows this because it's the whole beautiful thesis of Lost Time Behind the Moon—is that time will touch you and change you in every way it can, and it will make you live with your pain and regret and radiant, transcendent joy in ways that you cannot anticipate and have no reason to expect. "
-
MC Taylor (Hiss Golden Messenger)

Artist: Scott Hirsch

Label: Scissor Tail

The 2nd album of Scott Hirsch, a country folk writer living in Ojai, a hippie village in California.Contains all 10 Americana songs. DL code included.

Scissor Tail Other works Click here for more information. ///Click here to see more Scissor Tail releases available at Tobira. 

-----------------------------

Edition of 1000.

"Songwriter and multi-instrumentalist / producer Scott Hirsch has recorded a follow up to his critically acclaimed 2016 record, Blue Rider Songs. On Lost Time Behind the Moon, Scott chronicles confronting ghosts of the past, acknowledging that darkness rides alongside the light, and avoiding the pitfalls of regret. The record was recorded and produced by Hirsch with the help of Mike Coykendall (M Ward), and features musical guests William Tyler, Mikael Jorgensen (Wilco), Orpheo McCord (Edward Sharpe), Jimmy Calire (America) and Jesse Siebenberg (Lukas Nelson, Supertramp).

Maybe it's the season of the Earth, but it's hard not to feel lately like we're standing on some high precipice looking down on what we've made of the world and trying to make sense of the viewGazing back down the narrow roads leading out of our old towns, are we strangers or friends with the rear-view mirror? These are hard questions—of taking stock and taking leave—that my friend Scott Hirsch sings about so powerfully on his new album Lost Time Behind the Moon, ten songs that deal squarely with chasing ghosts and shaking curses; looking for peace; falling in love and hiding away; having babies and raising them; and chasing storms and finding shelter, though not necessarily in that order, And mostly all mixed up with each other. It's some of the most finely articulated music I know for asking: Can we go home? And, where is home? Or, as Scott sings, “If I come back, won't you let me stay? ”

When we were both 21, Scott and I lived in a small apartment together in Santa Barbara on Hope Avenue, directly across from the cemetery in the lap of the Santa Ynez mountains. We passed some time in the red bar at Jimmy's Oriental Gardens, or We were wondering—though it wasn't a particularly pressing concern before marriage and children, long moments under the soft blue neon of the Four Winds, an old man bar on State Street, but mostly we sat on the floor playing acoustic guitar together. When the steady unwinding of time seemed to have missed us—what came next, and how to convey that wonder in rhythm and harmony. We took our freedom for granted and lived like brothers.

Like me, like everyone, Scott has crossed a lot of rivers since those days: A move to San Francisco, followed by a years-long sojourn on the East Coast. Marriage. A daughter. Work. Miles and miles of music. And finally Listening to Lost Time Behind, for him, a return to Ojai, California, 50 miles from where he and I sat staring out over the cemetery in the rain, wondering whether we could teach our hands to play the way our minds wanted them to. the Moon—and there is such bittersweetness to this—I can't help but hear what time has made of the questions that we pressed on each other when we were just kids on Hope Avenue: What is life without a little regret? Is there a way to look in that old cracked mirror and feel as hopeful as we do haunted? Lost Time Behind the Moon doesn't answer any of these; in fact, it poses more—and harder—questions. But they're softened and wizened by the years that Scott has spent playing music for himself alone, trying to discover some kind of truth that wor ks for him. And in this solitude, he's created something that feels wide and inclusive and loving and forgiving. I think of Lost Time Behind the Moon as Scott's masterpiece, because everything I know about him is in these songs, the groove and the wonder ..

Scott always knew better than I the ways that a particularly voiced chord might make you feel like laughing and weeping at the same time. What we didn't know when we were young—and what makes this album so heavy, frankly—is the way That time makes work, however simple, deeper, indelible, like a scar or a wrinkle. The ways that the hourglass transforms a common beginner's chord into something far more elegiac, and touched, and auto-biographical. What Scott knows now—and I know he knows this because it's the whole beautiful thesis of Lost Time Behind the Moon—is that time will touch you and change you in every way it can, and it will make you live with your pain and regret and radiant, transcendent joy in ways that you cannot anticipate and have no reason to expect. "
-
MC Taylor (Hiss Golden Messenger)

Artist: Scott Hirsch

Label: Scissor Tail