Moonstone - Stavesacre

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Moonstone Lyrics

There's a stone
Along a winding road
Looking over a valley below
Green and growing
Beyond all my control
It's how I know
I know I'm close
I'm almost home

I hold tightly to the time before I stepped outside
Off to see the world leaving the one I knew behind
And now I find I pray the home behind waits up ahead
To wrap its arms around me once again

What I've seen
And what I still believe
Meet in between
What was and could be
And I know
The present is alone within my reach
But in the rush to be free
We lose everything
Then learn how to grieve
I only know where I want to be
The moment I leave

I hold tightly to the time before I stepped outside
Off to see the world leaving the one I knew behind
And now I find I pray the home behind waits up ahead
To wrap its arms around me once again
Once again

On the side of a winding road
Over a valley below
It's still the same
Still remains

There's a stone
Along a winding road
It lets me know
I'm almost home

I hold tightly to the time before I stepped outside
Off to see the world leaving the one I knew behind
And now I find I pray the home behind waits up ahead
To wrap its arms around me once again
Once again
Once again
To wrap its arms around me once again
Once again
Once again
Once again
Once again
Once again

Lyrics provided by LyricsEver.com
Stavesacre is a Southern California-based rock band that, despite some key lineup changes and the vagaries of the music business, has endured for more than a decade. The band's first three albums sold a combined 90,000 copies, and has often been referred to by industry insiders as "the best band you've never heard of."

Stavesacre debuted in 1996 with the album Friction. The band's tough, hard rock sound and the very strong, distinctive voice and lyrical work of vocalist Mark Salomon immediately gained Stavesacre a very strong and devoted following. The band continued on with two more exceptionally well-received studio albums, Absolutes and Speakeasy, on Seattle-based Tooth & Nail Records. During this period of time the group was associated with the edgier side of the contemporary Christian music scene. But dissatisfaction with what the band saw as hypocrisy in that industry led to a well-publicized break from the scene in 2000. Stavesacre released a split EP with Denison Marrs in 2001 on Velvet Blue Music which featured three new songs and then released Collective, a retrospective best-of/outtakes collection, to complete their contract with Tooth & Nail.

In 2002 Stavesacre signed with the independent Nitro Records and released (stāvz'ā'kər), with producer David Bianco at the helm. The band's first three albums were produced by Bryan Carlstrom. Many fans were adverse to the change in production values, and opinion was split regarding the band's shift to a more melodic, less aggressive sound, marking (stāvz'ā'kər) as a somewhat polarized release. Regardless, the change did little to bring Stavesacre into the mainstream limelight. The band then sought release from their contract, and went fully independent. 2002 saw the release of a live DVD of a show recorded in Dallas, Texas as well as the limited-edition four-song Bull Takes Fighter EP, which many dedicated fans hailed as a slight return to form but which was not widely known about.

In 2005 the band signed with Abacus Recordings, an imprint of Century Media Records, and recorded its fifth full-length studio album in Los Angeles with producer Matt Hyde. Titled How To Live With A Curse, it was released on April 18th, 2006. While, again, the album was seen by many of the remaining fans as a strong and triumphant return to the scene, it seemed that Stavesacre's luck had run out; the album failed to gain back much of the limelight in which the band had played during the 90s, and in early 2007 they announced on their Myspace blog that the band was finished.

However, Stavesacre would return to the studio with original guitarist Jeff Bellew (praised for the harder sound of Stavesacre's first two albums) to record the EP Against the Silence (released in 2013) and the independent album MCMXCV (released in 2017).

The name "Stavesacre" is derived from the stavesacre plant, which is poisonous and used as a parasiticide. Its seeds are known to induce vomiting.

Official Site: http://www.stavesacre.com Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.

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