
Taylor approaches the latest Hiss Golden Messenger LP with understated grace and remarkable passion. With poetic self-expression in one hand and social, cultural, and political-tinted observations or critiques in the other, songwriter M.C. Out Jvia Merge Records, Quietly Blowing It follows 2019’s radiant GRAMMY-nominated Terms of Surrender as a softer, yet nonetheless invigorating and charged sign of the times. Quietly Blowing It – Hiss Golden Messenger You can call me the wheel All I wanna do is roll it From Tucson to Tulsa This long-distance love, babe- What a lonely thing to call it Don’t be afraid We’ll be fine in the morning Food on the table A body that’s able We’ll be fine in the morning Up with the mountains Down with the system That keeps us in chains Hearing our whispering Baby blue sky Building a prison Way back in the way back – “ Way Back in the Way Back,” Hiss Golden Messenger

Built off inner turbulence, external turmoil, and our shared search for balance amid loss, fracture, and change, Quietly Blowing It is an intimate and nuanced soundtrack to getting by.

It’s an introspective, resilient record of renewal and perseverance of both individual and societal upheaval of making our way through each day with our own burdens, carrying not only the ghosts of the past, but also the weight of the world on our shoulders. Golden and glistening, subtle and subdued, Hiss Golden Messenger’s eleventh studio album is a heartfelt and sincere reflection of the present moment. This is me mourning, and celebrating, and dancing, and crying, and praying, and hoping.

Making this music became a document and a reckoning, an act of contrition and a cry for change. for fans of Fruit Bats, Lucero, Gregory Alan Isakov, Iron & Wine, Leif Vollebekk Stream: ‘Quietly Blowing It’ – Hiss Golden Messenger Golden and glistening, subtle and subdued, Hiss Golden Messenger’s ‘Quietly Blowing It’ is a heartfelt and sincere reflection of the present moment: Built off inner turbulence, external turmoil, and our shared search for balance amid loss, fracture, and change, it’s an intimate and nuanced soundtrack to getting by.
