Aquí estamos, como de costumbre, con nuevos temitas, pero queremos recordarles que tenemos un especial completo con reseñas de discos colombianos (álbumes de estudio y EP) para que conozcan y se empapen de la diversidad musical del país. También pueden echarle un ojo a los mejores temas y álbumes nacionales del 2020 en este especial . En esta oportunidad les presentamos
Hermafrodita la nueva canción de
Jei Fabiane, dedicada a las nuevas formas de género. La identidad no binaria ha permitido reconocerse sin la presión de escoger un género.
¿Quién está detrás? Música y letra por Jei fabiane, la producción musical estuvo a cargo de Trópico beats, bajo el sello Kuzumbo Récords, masterizado por The carvery studio en la ciudad de Londres. El arte de la portada es de Fabio Puentes.
I learned kids like me didn t get to exist in stories, and so for years I wrote myself out
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The Big Takeover: NEWS: Los Angeles ethereal dreamer AMMO brings melancholic escapism on Total Recall single
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Finding value in the valley : YA authors at a Festival panel on Black life and self-love Aida Ylanan © (Collage illustration by Cyrena Hillyard) Clockwise from top left: Hannah Gómez, Dean Attah, Yusef Salaam, Ibi Zoboi and Morgan Parker. (Collage illustration by Cyrena Hillyard)
Morgan Parker resisted a fairy-tale ending when writing her coming-of-age novel. We tell teens the same stories, over and over, and those stories don t happen to everyone, Parker said Saturday at the Los Angeles Times Festival of Books. She was joined by moderator Hannah Gómez and authors Dean Atta, Yusef Salaam and Ibi Zoboi in a virtual roundtable discussion on exploring the Black experience in their young-adult fiction.
Morgan Parker resisted a fairy-tale ending when writing her coming-of-age novel.
“We tell teens the same stories, over and over, and those stories don’t happen to everyone,” Parker said Saturday at the Los Angeles Times Festival of Books. She was joined by moderator Hannah Gómez and authors Dean Atta, Yusef Salaam and Ibi Zoboi in a virtual roundtable discussion on exploring the Black experience in their young-adult fiction.
Their stories, ranging from small-town schools to wrongful incarceration and dressing up in drag, feature three very different protagonists, each on journey toward love, acceptance and liberation. But the going is rarely easy, a reality all four authors sought to convey in their work.