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hunting season

by Home Is Where

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  • Streaming + Download

    Includes unlimited streaming via the free Bandcamp app, plus high-quality download in MP3, FLAC and more.
    Purchasable with gift card
    Download available in 16-bit/44.1kHz.

      $7 USD  or more

     

1.
the wild life eats shit & each other. it’s hunting season again and the lawns are dead. i set myself on fire in front of my boss, howlin: “hallelujah!” born again drunk drivers flip used pickup trucks decorated with sun bleached memorial decals —God is a car crusher & heaven’s just a junkyard. i set myself on fire in front of my boss, howlin: “hallelujah!” oh! the end goes on & on.
2.
the animals all crawl under my house to die. & i’ll go to follow them soon like the dog i am. immaculate head-on collisions everywhere. bugs squashed against my windshield, i will go to follow them soon. i’d never want to live forever, i’d still have to go to work.
3.
the streetlights all knotted together. fifty million elvis impersonators can’t be wrong. twenty thousand car crashes happen everyday. or at least one every six minutes & that one was me once. & sometimes it’s easy to forget i’m me & the king is dead & every king is a thief. the lights go dim and for a second, i believe —yes! i believe that this look-alike is really him. twenty thousand car crashes happen everyday. or at least one every six minutes & that one was me once.
4.
by pile-ups taller than any building ever built, only a chain link fence divides cattle from i-95. well, wasp nests & kudzu reclaim foreclosed homes so close to the happiest place on earth where champions go after the superbowl. you chew acorns & spit forests. it’s you & me swinging from boughs of oak upside down, lookin up to the ground, laughing as all our shit falls out of our pockets. i remember when we thought that it could get better. were we dumb or were we sweet? (what’s the difference, really?)
5.
bug zapper exploded again, the tree broke from its branch. yr birthday balloons mangled in the ceiling fan. tiptoe past the kitchen glue traps —you split the bag & spilt the trash all along the grass. passin horses packed in trailers lookin out through the slits, nothing changes as much as nothing stays the same. nothing changes just as much as nothing stays the same. it’s a shotgun two-weeks notice. hands kept clasped only for a moment, carefully opened to reveal a couple crushed fireflies somehow still glowing. nothing changes as much as nothing stays the same. nothing changes just as much as nothing stays the same. oh! honestly, honesty comes off like a joke. i’m trying to make you laugh, you’re only pissin your pants. i’ve been exploding my whole life.
6.
bike week 03:09
a hundred american flags waving without wind in a row around a deflated inflatable giant gorilla at the world’s largest harley-davidson dealership. bike week is coming: flesh & leather scraped from asphalt. —i am reminded of my father grilling burgers on the fourth of july. & the ambulance lights, flashing, were like fireworks.
7.
cheerleaders were diggin graves in the football field. i still can’t wash the bird shit off my windshield. everyone won the lotto. the laundry was dry on the clothesline by the time the trailer burnt down. & what i don’t know comes up a lot; there’s more roads than places to go now.
8.
shenandoah 03:58
no vigils, only birthday candles burn for you, shenandoah. the sun’s been setting earlier lately. billboards warn of a hell more real than God—oh God! i only want to sing of you, shenandoah. you tear yr insides out. grass grew through & around the building equipment abandoned with the house. now the birds only come down to the ground from the sky & the power lines for the dead dragged by the wayside.
9.
judas iscariot said to pat garrett, “you’d think since all this has been made meaningless, that itd mean less than it does.” it don’t mean much but just enough to keep breaking your heart. sheriff shrugged & spoke, “well, you know, it’s like how dust is mostly skin & you only really notice it floatin around when the dust speckles spangle swimmin in the light pooling through yr window.” & judas says, buried in breath, “draw the curtains & don’t wait up for me. don’t wait up for me. i’m getting ahead on getting left behind. so don’t wait up for me.” jesus of nazareth nailed to the cross on the dashboard of your car you got from your mema. she can’t drive anymore. she kept gettin lost now she mistakes you for your mom. it breaks yr heart. truckers’ piss froze in water bottles thrown to the side of the freeway with bags from mcdonald’s, exhausted horses & tire shred sheddings yet the truck rolls on just as long as there’s road for the wheels to ride, the truck rolls on. keep rolling on. im rollin on, keep on truckin and don’t wait up for me. don’t wait up for me. i’m getting ahead on getting left behind. so don’t wait up for me.
10.
sweet maria, there is dew on the roses cut for you and mechanical bulls in the plains railroads were spiked to. oh! when the levee broke, every chevy sunk like a stone skipped against the riverbed from the shore where the ripples end. sweet maria said, “for christ’s sake, give me a goddamn break!” then the flood came & washed travis county, texas, away. stomachs stuffed full of fishing lures; the beer got warm in the cooler. half a bathtub frames our lady of lourdes. we caught no fish, just drowned some worms. i bumped in to the devil on the street “don’t i know you?” he says. i says, “maybe.” he asked me where i’m heading, i told him and amused the devil said, “funny that’s where i’m going too.” “for christ’s sake, give me a goddamn break!” then the flood came & washed travis county, texas, away.
11.
the wolf man 03:57
and tonight, flight patterns give shape to new constellations. down in loxahatchee, in loxahatchee —thunder rolls out from jupiter clouds & goosegrass grew through the train tracks back in loxahatchee, in loxahatchee. well, the wolf-man told me ‘all the moon can do is reveal the darkness surrounding you.’ down in loxahatchee, in loxahatchee —thunder rolls out from jupiter clouds & goosegrass grew through the train tracks back in loxahatchee, in loxahatchee. we pulled our pants down & mooned lon chaney’s son. no matter where you go, you’re still on the run. shot down in loxahatchee, in loxahatchee —thunder rolls out from jupiter clouds & goosegrass grew through the train tracks back in loxahatchee, in loxahatchee.
12.
roll tide 10:00
i saw how the wind blew through the trees and the leaves & the fruit were not moved. roll tide. another unremarkable miracle: water shed the garden hose. roll tide. well, it dawns on me, it’s late enough to call it morning; all we need is the light. roll tide.
13.
there is only skin between us. you plant yr teeth, as if seeds, in flower pots left out in the sun with entrails littered in the swale. i love you, but sometimes you’re the worst person i’ve ever met. i love you, but sometimes i’m the worst person i’ve ever been. & come morning, the sun will rise as sure as i’ll watch it’s always sunny in philadelphia anytime it’s on. i love you, but sometimes you’re the worst person i’ve ever met. i love you, but sometimes i’m the worst person i’ve ever been. home is where forever

about

Bea MacDonald wanted to write The Great American Song. Hunting Season, the third LP with her band Home Is Where, has 13 of these, each one detailing the dying thoughts of an Elvis impersonator consumed by fumes and flames in a car wreck. To be clear, these songs are not all sung from the perspective of the same dying Elvis impersonator, but from 13 different Elvis impersonators, all dying in a thirteen-car pileup. An unlucky number of imitation Elvises, each grasping at their final scraps of life as they all burn—stuck in separate cars, but together in wreckage and in death. What could be more American than that?

With two back-to-back, critically acclaimed full-lengths–2021’s I Became Birds and 2023’s the whaler–Home Is Where established themselves as one of the defining bands of emo’s fifth wave. These records showcased the band of MacDonald, her songwriting partner/guitarist Tilley Komorny, bassist Connor O’Brien, and drummer Josiah Gardella channeling their Florida punk forebears and MacDonald’s longtime songwriting idol, Bob Dylan, into dread-fueled, voice-tearing emo that shows American rot splayed across highways.

In the lead up to the writing and recording sessions for Hunting Season, the band spent a lot of time on the road—both together and apart–on cross-country moves (MacDonald and Komorny fled their Florida homes due to the state’s growing hostility towards trans people) and on tours with bands like Foxing, glass beach, and Greet Death. Folk icons like Neil Young, Alan Jackson, and Gram Parsons were on heavy rotation in their tour van, as was Dylan, whose famous description of Blonde on Blonde as “Thin Wild Mercury Music” inspired MacDonald in defining the new album’s sound. Tracks like “Shenandoah” and “Milk & Diesel” best demonstrate this sonic shift: untamed, malleable, and coming and going all at once.

The looseness of Hunting Season could also be credited to their newfound country influences; the group came up with the album’s concept while listening to The Flying Burrito Brothers in the desert. Returning to work with the whaler producer Jack Shirley (Jeff Rosenstock, Joyce Manor, Deafheaven), and with instrumental contributions from auxiliary members from Death Rosenstock and awakebutstillinbed, Home Is Where recorded Hunting Season in just three days. “It’s the hardest we’ve ever jammed on a record,” Kormony notes. She and MacDonald co-wrote most of Hunting Season over Zoom while living on opposite sides of the country in early 2023. During this time, MacDonald was, by her admission, a bit of a shut-in, going months on end without leaving her house. Writing songs for the open road offered her a momentary escape.

“I was homesick and Gram Parsons and The Flying Burrito Brothers' first record specifically sounded like home,” explains MacDonald. “When we traveled as a band, the music that opened us up the most was country music like Parsons or Hank Williams. Listening to The Gilded Palace of Sin during the winter of ‘21 opened a new tour tradition: when the weather is nice, the sun is shining, hopes are high, I put on that record and without fail every time something memorable happens.”

You could call Hunting Season Home Is Where’s most accessible album to date. It’s less abrasive than their previous two, and more rooted in hook-based song structures. But don’t let the catchy choruses and sweet slide guitar sounds fool you into thinking that Home Is Where have lost their bite. Their signature hallmarks of grotesque Americana remain ever-present, if a touch more romanticized. These are road songs after all, meant to keep lonely travelers company as they brave these Great American Highways. To a woozy Elvis impersonator taking his last breaths after colliding head on with 12 of his doubles, flashing ambulance lights look like fireworks on the Fourth of July.

MacDonald has called Hunting Season Home Is Where’s most hopeful record, which might sound odd given its grim narrative concept. But when your previous record’s thesis statements were along the lines of “every day feels like 9/11” and “the end of the world is taking forever,” there’s nowhere to go but up. Hunting Season’s moments of striking, hard-earned beauty haunt its highways like flowers growing through cracks in the pavement. In the right light, the sight of dead fireflies still illuminated or a giant inflatable gorilla losing air outside a Harley-Davidson dealership could make you cry. Fond memories of more carefree times flood the minds of car crash victims to ease the pain of their final moments—birthday parties and Superbowl Sundays and youthful backyard shenanigans. In his dying words, an Elvis impersonator wonders, “Were we dumb or were we sweet? / What’s the difference, really?” Another embraces his fate, declaring, “I’d never want to live forever / I’d still have to go to work.”

Hunting Season is, in MacDonald’s words, “Real Southern rock ‘n roll.” Hailing from the Florida swamplands, Home Is Where are no strangers to the worst of the havoc that this country continues to unleash onto its inhabitants. This album is their most stunning, warts-and-all encapsulation of their love-hate relationship with the American mess, often at its most concentrated south of the Mason-Dixon line. “I love you, but sometimes you’re the worst person I’ve ever met,” MacDonald sings on “Drive-By Mooning,” the record’s closer. “I love you, but sometimes I’m the worst person I’ve ever been.” The fires burn on, smoke rising above a towering pile of smashed cars, the faces of 13 Elvises reflected in broken review windows. American absurdity at its finest.

-grace robins-somerville

credits

released May 23, 2025

all music written by home is where / all lyrics written by bea
produced, mixed, & mastered by jack shirley at atomic garden east
released by wax bodega

home is where is

josiah
tilley
bea
connor

home is where is also sometimes

evan bailey - piano
dan pot - pedal steel, dobro
shannon taylor - vocals

album art by billy heath III

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Home Is Where Palm Coast, Florida

our band could be
yr neighborhood.
home is where forever

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