logo
'The Future' Arrives: Luna Atoms' Debut Visual Album Out Now!

'The Future' Arrives: Luna Atoms' Debut Visual Album Out Now!

National Post06-06-2025

Article content
LONDON — Following her May 28 announcement, Luna Atoms, the groundbreaking animated alternative artist, unveils her debut visual album, The Future, today. This 8-track gem merges soulful, human-crafted songs with breathtaking AI-generated visuals, creating an inclusive experience that resonates with young and old alike. Designed to uplift, unite, and spark joy, The Future invites listeners into a vibrant world of connection and love.
Article content
The Future
Article content
Article content
blends emotional depth with playful creativity. The anthemic '
Article content
We Are One
Article content
' champions global unity, while '
Article content
Dreamer
Article content
' inspires with a heartfelt story of a boy who falls asleep in class, dreaming vividly of his big ambitions. '
Article content
The Future
Article content
''s mesmerizing video, featuring a cyborg rock band, amplifies the album's futuristic spirit, and '
Article content
Revolution
Article content
' delivers a powerful call to dismantle oppressive systems. This interplay of humor and depth, woven throughout the album, creates a dynamic, immersive experience.
Article content
Luna leverages AI as an extension of her creativity, crafting visuals that enhance her evocative songwriting. The album's cover—a luminous purple moon, free of the artist's name or title—reflects Luna's egoless approach, letting the art speak universally. ' The Future is my heart poured into art,' Luna shares. 'It's a call for everyone to feel free, connected, and alive.' The album's introspective storytelling encourages listeners to connect and embrace life with a playful spirit.
Article content
Beyond music, The Future is a movement for social change. Its universal themes and innovative visuals push artistic boundaries, inviting fans to join a journey of unity and celebration. Available now, this album is a bold step forward for Luna Atoms, blending human emotion with cutting-edge technology to inspire and uplift.
Article content
Experience The Future now.
Article content
Article content
Article content
Article content
Article content
Article content

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Amy Hamm: The rabbit rescue that refused to be cancelled for alleged transphobia
Amy Hamm: The rabbit rescue that refused to be cancelled for alleged transphobia

National Post

time13 hours ago

  • National Post

Amy Hamm: The rabbit rescue that refused to be cancelled for alleged transphobia

It's June: the western world's Holy Month of Pride, and, as such, we must all be on our best behaviour so as not to offend the delicate sensibilities of gender activists — you know, the ones that occupy the latter half of the expanding LGBTQ2S+ acronym. Article content Unfortunately, the United Kingdom's Carrot Cottage Rabbit Rescue somehow missed this memo. The registered charity drew the ire of Irish comedian and transgender rights activist Aidan Comerford this week, following an online attack by anonymous activists whose work caught Comerford's attention. Comerford, whose X bio notes that he 'generally tweets about what transphobia looks like,' astutely observed that the charity was committing the cardinal sin of following unapproved social media accounts on X. Article content The accounts in question, noticed Comerford on June 14, were gender critical — the horror! — and allegedly included one 'recent detransitioner in the USA.' But wait, it gets even more dire. The charity also named a rabbit after comedian Ricky Gervais — that terrible funny man who offended millions with his profane jokes, including about transwomen — and then had the audacity to interact with X founder Elon Musk. Article content Article content One can surely sympathize with Comerford, whose valuable work defending the LGBT community from, umm, a rabbit charity, has landed him the unfortunate nickname ' Watership Clown.' Article content 'There's a registered British rabbit rescue charity, of all things, that is currently marketing itself based on the criticism it is getting for following and courting the support of the anti-trans movement. You do have to wonder about humanity,' Comerford posted to X on Tuesday, once he realized that his smear campaign against the animal rescue workers had stunningly backfired. Article content Carrot Cottage Rabbit Rescue, whose X bio notes that it exists 'for the sole purpose of saving rabbits,' has more than tripled its social media following after Comerford's attempt to ignite an online furor. Donations are flowing, and even J.K. Rowling, the most famous gender-critical woman in the world, got involved. Article content 'We should all chip in to get one of the rabbits named Magdalen Berns. (Comerford's) head would burst open like a microwaved egg,' Rowling posted to X on Monday. Berns is the late, fondly remembered, British woman- and lesbian-rights advocate who died of brain cancer in 2019. Article content A day later, Carrot Cottage Rabbit Rescue named two delightfully cute bunnies 'Joanne' and 'Kathleen,' sparking rumours about their namesakes' identities (J.K. Rowling and Kathleen Stock, two more prominent 'transphobic' women's rights advocates in the U.K.). Will this charity ever stop doing evil? Article content For its actions, attempts have been made to punish the rescue. On June 13, it announced: 'We have just received official correspondence from the charity commission stating that they have received a number of complaints 'ALLEGING' that we are engaging in transphobia, following transphobic accounts and that we are posting antisemitism posts on the social media platform X. It's time to take legal advice as these allegations are false and intended to damage the charity, ultimately putting bunnies at risk. What a sad world we live in.'

‘Experience in the park'; International Food Festival showcases London's diversity
‘Experience in the park'; International Food Festival showcases London's diversity

CTV News

time14 hours ago

  • CTV News

‘Experience in the park'; International Food Festival showcases London's diversity

Vikan Patel of The Sugar Cane Project makes juice from sugar cane at the 2025 International Food and Drink Festival in London, Ont. (Brent Lale/CTV News London) You only have to walk a few steps in Victoria Park to get a mix of cuisine from around the globe. The annual London International Food and Drink Festival shows off London's diversity. 'We are making a fresh sugar cane juice,' said Vidhi Sevak, of the Sugar Cane Project. Having immigrated from India, Sevak says the juice is a natural source of sugar. 'Everyone is amazed because they are they are seeing it for the very first time that I'm making a juice out of a sugar cane juice. They think that it's bamboo, but it's not a bamboo, it's a sugar cane.' They are just one example of a hidden success story in the Forest City. 'We brought in all kinds of different kinds of food from around the Caribbean, from Africa, India, it is all represented here,' said Doug Hillier, the festival organizer. 062225 Fresh Tacos from Taco Loco on the grill at the 2025 International Food and Drink Festival in London, Ont. (Brent Lale/CTV News London) 'What you can really expect in a show like this is culture. You're going to see all kinds of culture represented and their food. What we really want to do is have a real experience in the park.' With musicians playing on stage all weekend, the drinks were flowing, and patrons were taking refuge in the shade in the summer heat. Back in the food row, it was impossible to ignore the smell of fresh barbeque from Bikongs Express. 062225 Bikongs Express, a Filipino restaurant in London, Ont. makes some BBQ at the 2025 International Food and Drink Festival in London, Ont. (Brent Lale/CTV News London) 'We're mainly Filipino food and barbecue is like a staple for us,' says Miguel Gianan who is part of the family business. 'We all feel really honoured to be here. To know that there are people from other countries who want to try our food, it warms my heart to be like seeing all these different cultures or like different backgrounds.' The business located in east London was voted Best Food in 2024 at the festival. 'Seeing my parents like built this business from the ground up,' says Gianan. 'We were just making bread from our house and to come in here being part of a festival. Everyone knows our name and we're starting to build something.' The festival runs until 9 p.m. Sunday. 062225 Go Gonzalez BBQ slaps sauce on their award-winning ribs at the 2025 International Food and Drink Festival in London, Ont. (Brent Lale/CTV News London) 'We have great culture here in London and we are so well mixed,' says Hillier of Family Shows Canada, which also runs London Ribfest. 'We've have had such a great immigration of people that have come to this country and created their own foods and then brought it to us. We didn't have to go there; they brought it to us right here in Victoria Park.'

He left the Moscow symphony in protest. Now he's helping a small B.C. town take centre stage
He left the Moscow symphony in protest. Now he's helping a small B.C. town take centre stage

CBC

timea day ago

  • CBC

He left the Moscow symphony in protest. Now he's helping a small B.C. town take centre stage

Arthur Arnold faced a big decision in February of 2022. He was the music director of the Moscow Symphony Orchestra when war broke out. "I was flabbergasted that Putin invaded, that he invaded Ukraine," he says. "I came to the conclusion I just I cannot live with myself if I don't take a stand." So he asked the orchestra if he could speak out. They said no; it would put them all in danger. "That left me with only one thing and that was to resign and with that to make a protest." Arnold stepped down, a decision he says he's never regretted. In fact, he says it's given him more time for his work in what might seem like an unlikely location: Powell River, B.C. An isolated city of 13,000 people on the west coast, it takes two ferries to get there from Vancouver. The town used to be centred around its big pulp and paper mill. But now that it's closed down, residents hope that arts and culture — and people like Arthur Arnold — could be its future. Arnold first visited Powell River in 2000 to guest conduct at the Kathaumixw International Choral Festival. He enjoyed it so much he started coming back each year. But he fell in love with more than just the city and its surroundings, the ocean and mountains. It's also where he met his future wife, Kim Stokes, solidifying his connection to Powell River. He had been travelling between Moscow, Powell River and his home country of The Netherlands for years by the time the war broke out. Arnold says leaving his job in Moscow gave him the time he needed to focus on an event he started in 2012 while living in Powell River part time — the Pacific Region International Summer Music Association (PRISMA). It's a two-week classical music festival held every year at the end of June. Students from around the world are chosen to attend, where they learn and perform alongside guest artists from major orchestras. Thousands attend the final performance held outside on the beach. That's where the Tla'amin First Nation have performed traditional songs backed up by a full orchestra. Drew Blaney, Tla'amin culture and heritage manager who also sings and composes the traditional music, says he appreciates how Arnold involves him in the planning process. "It's not some token thing that we're being there to do a land acknowledgement, or we're just there to check a box of 'we invited the natives here.'" 'It just calmed the entire room' But start asking around in Powell River and it becomes clear that Arnold's influence on the town goes far beyond the festival. "It's like having Wayne Gretzky leading your minor hockey program," quips the town's mayor, Ron Woznow. Arnold has shown up to play his cello at particularly heated town council meetings. "It just calmed the entire room," recalls councillor George Doubt. "I found it spiritually uplifting for him to do that." He also remembers finding Arnold playing his cello at the clinic when he went to get his first vaccination during the height of COVID. "I think it makes everybody think about how they fit into the society and what they can do to make life better, which is what I see Arthur trying to do." Coping with the mill closure Doubt says he hopes Arnold's work will help fill another void in Powell River — an economic one left by the closing of the town's major employer, the pulp and paper mill. It officially shut down in 2023, laying off hundreds of people. But at its height, 4,000 people worked there. Negotiations are underway for another industry to move into the site, but in the meantime, the mayor says the city is operating with $7 million less in tax revenue. "There is some hope that the more cultural events we get going, the more people know about them, the more we'll bring that industry, the cultural industry, here to take over the forest industry," said Doubt. Part of that cultural industry could centre around another project of Arnold's. He was looking for a new office for PRISMA when he stumbled across an empty space in an historic building overlooking the mill and the ocean. He secured government funding, and now construction is underway to turn it into a performance hall with office space and storage for community arts groups. Arthur is quick to acknowledge that the history of Powell River is what makes a project like this even possible. "I think we stand on the shoulders from generations before us," he said. "It's not something that you can just start." In addition to the rich cultural heritage of the Tla'amin First Nation, the region's connection to the arts go back to the early 1900s, when the Powell River Company was formed to build Western Canada's first pulp and paper mill. The company was starting the town and mill from scratch so they could plan everything, right down to the type of workers they wanted in the community. "Originally, there was a vision that culture was extremely important, so both sports and arts, mostly music, was very important right from the very beginnings of this community," says Rob Southcott, a city councillor who was born and raised in Powell River. The company was following an urban planning approach called the Garden City Concept, which prized, among other things, a sense of community. To that end, the company hired people to work at the mill who were also musical. Arthur Arnold says that's part of the reason there's so much music in Powell River today. "That seed has been planted and it spread and the music trees grew, and here we are." All musicians needed For Nancy Hollmann, Arnold's impact has been personal. When she moved to Powell River in 1966 to teach arts and music in school, she quickly got involved in the arts community, leading choirs and playing piano wherever she was needed. But at 89, Hollmann is long retired. Her foray back into the music scene happened after she attended one of the first concerts of a new amateur symphony that Arnold had been supporting. "I noticed that they didn't have a bassoon. And I just, silly me, I mentioned to somebody, 'oh, I played bassoon 40 years ago, but I haven't played it since,'" recalls Hollmann. Word reached Arnold and he asked if she'd take it up again if they found her an instrument. "And I said, 'I'm 80 years old. I probably would die if I tried to blow a bassoon. And he said 'but what a wonderful way to go.' And that's why I borrowed a bassoon from the school district because I'm relearning it." Today she's proud to say she's the oldest person in the symphony. His work in Powell River may seem humble compared to leading the Moscow Symphony Orchestra. But Arnold says, in many ways, it's the same work he's always tried to do. "Community building is something really beautiful," he says. "Music is the perfect vehicle to do that. We understand music deep inside. To connect people through music is one of the most beautiful things that I can think of, and I feel very privileged to be able to do that." The setting just makes it all the more meaningful, he says.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store