20 Year Short Break released a new single ” Heavy on my soul “
When Rob Miller and Dan Wright first connected in a middle school band at the age of 15, they immediately felt like brothers. The bands’ music and performances improved gradually, but it wasn’t enough to propel them to success; their goal vanished, and they both took different paths. Rob persisted in recording, and now that he is the proprietor of a sound studio, he puts other people first. Dan trained as an IT expert and spent several years working for the largest corporations in Germany. They both began families and have since given everything up for them, but they never again recorded music together.
They resolved to create a lasting musical legacy that reflects their lives and leaves their children with more than just images and videos after rediscovering their dream together during a concert in 2018. The creative intergenerational endeavor Rob and Dan have in mind maintains their early life memories and later life stories in real, truthful music.
The songs portray two lives that are both commonplace and extremely extraordinary. very much how real people are inclined to be. Dan and Rob are actual people. Although they collaborate on composition, arrangements, and singing, their jobs are distinct nonetheless: Dan plays the guitar, and Rob is in charge of production, recording, and mixing. Rob and Dan handled everything on their own, with the exception of outstanding drummer Tony from Nashville, Henrik and Gandy on bass, and a backup choir.
The combination of Shinedown Rock, Bonamassa Blues, Blake Shelton Country, and a shot of metal with a finish like Deep Purple isn’t just as clean as dirty can be; it also serves as the foundation for lyrics that reflect Rob and Dan’s lives. These lyrics are hardly more private or intimate than they already are. They share their rich experiences, triumphs, setbacks, and lives as brothers and fathers. They share their music with the Short Breaker Family and everyone else who appreciates frankness and genuineness. Because the truth isn’t in the disco ball; it’s in the dust.