The album integrates live and virtual instrumentation. “Inland Empire,” the lead single, is named after the David Lynch film of the same name and touches on the conflicting spiritual duality of acknowledging the absence of God while also feeling God’s presence. Breakfast wrote and produced the song in less than four hours following a creative burst of energy that took place after watching the film.
“ Inland Empire isn’t about the movie, it’s about how it made me feel, she says. I really like making things that capture how art makes me feel.”
Her visceral reaction to the film motivated the artist to explore the frantic nature of entertainment, she says, aiming to capture the film s meta atmosphere and storytelling one theme being the question of where the art starts and it finishes. Breakfast likes the idea and feeling of the art being contained within itself.
Best Things to Do in Dallas April 14 Through April 22 2021 | Dallas Observer
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10 Best Songs From Boy Bands | Dallas Observer
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Daisy Avalos
Dallas as an Arts Hub: A Conversation with Dallas Arts Leaders Dallas is home to a wide variety of diverse artists from different cultures and mediums, which makes this conversation on future art support so urgent. TITAS/DANCE UNBOUND is hosting a free virtual panel with Dallas Arts District leaders that will speak on the cultural impact Dallas has made as well as the future of programming for Dallas Arts Month. The panel will feature TITAS/DANCE UNBOUND’s executive director Charles Santos, Dallas Arts District leaders such as executive director of Dallas Arts District Lilly Weiss and City of Dallas’ Office of Cultural Affairs director Jennifer Scripps.
Music knows no boundaries, and new artists, bands and collectives hybridize genres to contribute to the Latinx “new wave” sound. Here are seven emerging Latinx artists, bands and collectives on the rise in Dallas.
Luna Luna is a bilingual Latinx band that blends modern, alternative, indie pop genre elements to create their unique sound. Their latest single, “Time,” released on Oct. 23 is a catchy, alternative pop song that includes a bit more live instrumentation than the rest of their discography.
“The rise of new wave Latinx artists is one of my favorite things happening in music right now, said Kavvi, lead vocalist and producer for Luna Luna. I was born in Colombia, but I grew up in Dallas. Growing up here I discovered all types of American music while at the same time was being introduced to music in Spanish by my mom. I feel like that’s why you re getting the type of music that s coming out by this new wave of Latinx artists. It’s the blend of the American