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Not a morning bear. Hopefully you all are having better luck than me. #morningbear #sleepy #gaypoc https://www.instagram.com/p/ByptAjBhNF7/?igshid=6tz536wvzzcg
Ero così felice di aver portato mia nipote a @leolandia_m che mi sono persino innamorato di lui! 🤣😍❤️🐻 --- I was very happy to take my Grandson to Leolandia who I felt in love to him! 🤣😍❤️🐻 . . . . #il_pimpante #leolandia #mashaeorso #menbears #gaybears #bearsp #myhappymoments #gaybearsex #morningbear #gaybeardmen #morningbeard #loveitliveit #parcogiochi #lovebears (presso Leolandia) https://www.instagram.com/p/BxRZqE_F24H/?utm_source=ig_tumblr_share&igshid=1dzhndhgz9zg1
Snowy on our way to @focomx, but that's not going to stop us from having a good time. See you at 7:30 at @illegalpetes #fortcolllins! #Coloradomusic #Colorado #focomx #snow #morningbearmusic #morningbear
Music Video shoot at Zuma's Rescue Ranch with Morning Bear and band members photos with Zuma's Board of Directors #morningbear #musicvideo #secondsaturdaysrocktheranch (at Zuma's Rescue Ranch)
Our Violet Room Details the Heartbreaking End of a Relationship on “Loss (and I)”
Releasing music under the moniker Our Violet Room, indie singer-songwriter Matthew Birch is gearing up to release a 7-track debut album which chronicles a relationship found and lost. The fifth single, “Loss (and I),” Sets a candid tone for the record. Detailing the “beginning of the end of a relationship,” Birch skillfully tugs at the listeners heartstrings by expressing the simple sentiment that although there’s still love, it isn’t right to continue to be together. Paired with evocative guitar picking, Birch’s hushed vocals are tinged in melancholy. Harmonizing with John Morningbear, the chorus hits listeners right in the gut as they sing, “And you have been here for me for many years. And you know that I will be here for many more. And I love you, dear.” There’s a palpable pain to what’s being conveyed as Birch admits his shortcomings and wrongdoings within the relationship. “I saw your anger, not your pain” he sings, yielding to the hurt caused. Nevertheless, it’s that chorus, which echoes the love still felt, that makes the track all the more tragic. There’s a sense in the lyrics that “Loss (and I)” is a moment of reflection, a period for Birch to look back with tender fondness at what once was. He explains that the song explores “trying to convince you and your partner that we can do this even though the writing is on the wall.” Influenced by Bob Dylan’s emotive guitar picking, Birch is able to create a subtle yet effective way of drawing out emotion organically.
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