Introducing Tray Eberle, a Beginning Teenage Artist
Written on July 26, 2010 by moe2love
Filed Under: Media & Entertainment, Music & Mix
Introducing Tray Eberle, a 16 year old up-and-coming Acoustic and Pop artist from Georgia. The first thing that sets Tray apart from most artists is the fact that he doesn’t just write music for people to relate to, but he writes music for himself. Tray writes about everything that he has been through in his teenage years, whether it be Love, Death, Loss, Friendship, or Depession. But no matter what he writes, Tray is determined to let everyone into his life… One word at a time.
Not only does Tray have substantial vocal talent himself, but he also has a family background of notable singers. His grandfather, Ray Eberle was a lead singer on the Glenn Miller orchestra, the “most sought after big band in the world today”. Their music comes from the notorious Big Band Era, when large jazz orchestras were more popular (you may or may not know this, but our contemporary music is only a large derivative of jazz music).
If you’d like to enjoy Tray’s new acoustic song, enter his MySpace music profile and click on the play button. The song is called “Destiny (Our Anthem)”
Tray’s grandfather singing in the Glenn Miller Orchestra

The past decade has marked a period of change for many Americans, and for many around the world as well. According to Time, these changes have resulted in probably the worst decade since World War II; in fact, the magazine pessimistically calls it “The Decade From Hell”, and says it points the way to an even worse decade in the future. In the past 10 years, we have had wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, natural disasters such as Hurricane Katrina, the disintegration of the American auto industry, and a rejection of human rights in Guantanamo Bay. TIME seems to have it right when it calls the past decade “The Decade from Hell”, but what do you really think? Has the past decade really been that bad, especially considering some of the worst times we’ve had since World War II?