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Pop / Rock 29 April, 2020

Darrin Bradbury Shares New Lyric Video For Kennedy-Inspired Track 'Dallas 1963'

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New York, NY (Top40 Charts) Today Nashville storyteller Darrin Bradbury has shared his new animated lyric video for "Dallas 1963", the final track on his debut album Talking Dogs & Atom Bombs.
" 'Dallas 1963' is one of the stranger songs on an already odd album," Bradbury said. "It's one of my personal favorites, though I'm not entirely sure why. I tend to stumble onto these Kennedy references in my records, I wouldn't say they're intentional, but when the opportunity reveals itself I tend to like to see where it goes. The animation is pretty spectacular (I can say that it because it wasn't me) and brings to the song to life in a way that bridges two loves of mine, silly songs about deep things and cartoons."

Bradbury writes about the way things really are in America - a singular perspective shaped by a natural gift for storytelling, a lingering battle with depression, and a sly sense of humor. A self-described folk satirist who has toured the country for more than a decade, Bradbury collects his oddball observations in Talking Dogs & Atom Bombs, his first album for ANTI- Records, which was produced by Kenneth Pattengale of The Milk Carton Kids.

"I try to write things that make me chuckle, and that chuckling is usually making peace with the existential dilemma of both the times and life in general," Bradbury says of his music. "A lot of times, it's like a challenge. It is like, 'All right, I'm starting this song off about squirrels, comparing them to Romeo and Juliet. Can I bring this sucker home? Can I make that idea work?'"

While performing he has seen the audience wondering the exact same thing - Is this guy going to pull this off? Bradbury compares the on-stage experience to standup comedy, where he carries the audience through to the relief point. In November of 2019 Bradbury released 'The Life of an Opener', a documentary short film (shot by Curtis Wayne Millard) that showcases just that - a live performance for chuckling audiences of his album's title track, "Talking Dogs & Atom Bombs", and the song "Hell's More or Less the Same". Filmed at Ponte Vedra Concert Hall while opening for The Milk Carton Kids






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