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      Chicano Batman: Notebook Fantasy review – a freewheeling ode to joy

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Sunday, 31 March - 14:00 · 1 minute

    (ATO)
    Swerving genre for mood, the LA band glide by on an irresistible swell of chillwave synth and psychedelic funk

    Los Angeles trio Chicano Batman are singularly focused on creating music that evokes mood rather than a specific genre. On their self-titled 2010 debut they paired doo-wop grooves with Spanish vocals to create a wistful reimagining of Latino soul, while 2017’s Freedom Is Free leant into social consciousness lyrics and psychedelia, and 2020’s Invisible People riffed on sultry synth-funk. Their fifth album is typically adventurous, channelling reverb-laden electric guitars, euphoric swells of melody and infectious vocal hooks to produce some of the group’s most freewheeling music to date.

    Across 12 songs, Notebook Fantasy veers from the chillwave synths of the title track to the sumptuous string orchestrations of Spanish-language ballad Era Primavera, the horn fanfares of The Way You Say It and highlight Lei Lá’s squelchy psychedelic funk. Throughout, the rhythm section is locked in, a propulsive foundation, while vocalist Eduardo Arenas’s keening falsetto brings home the group’s singalong melodies. There is the odd misfire, such as the clumsy Strokes pastiche Losing My Mind, but largely the album manages to effortlessly embrace its wide-ranging songwriting in the service of one musical mood: joy.

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      Life is Strange: True Colors hands-on preview: Not afraid to make you sad

      Steve Haske · news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica · Monday, 6 September, 2021 - 12:00

    This preview is based on limited impressions tested on PS5 and made available by Square Enix ahead of the game's September 10 launch.

    With four games released over the past six years (including one mini-spinoff, The Awesome Adventures of Captain Spirit ), the Life is Strange series has established a reputation as an unlikely type of narrative adventure. Its YA protagonists, hipster-slanted coming-of-age stories, and proximity to trauma make it part of a specific genre, and the series has proven unexpectedly adept at mostly reinventing itself from entry to entry.

    In theory, these underpinnings might suggest a (hear us out) Silent Hill -style problem that the series has so far managed to avoid. But where Konami's survival horror series punished its protagonists through unique, hellish manifestations reflecting their specific inner demons, Life is Strange 's supernatural abilities empower its characters. Our protagonists aren't defined by their tragedies. They could be anything, which allows series developers much more freedom to try new ideas.

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