By the Zonagirante.com team @spinning zone

LuzcyanI touch your mouth

Thirty-five years after the death of the Argentine master Julio Cortázar, Ernesto Martín Domínguez, from Patagonia, under the name of Luzcyan, pays homage to him by recording the text of his story I touch your mouth and giving it an instrumental accompaniment close to the experimental intentions of synthpop. To listen to it, we recommend using your best headphones, turning off the light in the room you are in, and for five minutes immersing yourself in the depths of this piece, with the respect that the author deserves. Hopscotch and so many other masterpieces of Latin American literature and the good attempt of the artist from Neuquén who remembered this literary hero at a good time.

To bury someoneIn your house

A curious album, to tell the truth. It's striking that three post-adolescents from the Mexican city of Monterrey express such a deeply rooted melancholic mood in their songs, and that Their musical intentions are closer to some of the darker British pop-rock albums of the eighties. than any contemporary proposal related to its age. Likewise, this is an interesting work that breaks the mold in a striking way and vindicates what the shoegaze and other similar musical expressions still have a chance of returning to our stereos.

Melodica VibezzInstrumental street music

We never imagined we'd be reviewing a reggae and dub album made primarily with two melodicas, that instrument many of us had as children among our kindergarten treasures and then discarded, forgetting it in some attic trunk. Well, Lutxi Luh and Rodrigo Dread, he Brazilian, she Uruguayan, They turned to the original sounds of Jamaica, placed their fingers on the keyboard and blew into the mouthpiece to create an entire album that sounds novel, cheerful and, especially, well made. We really like surprises, especially if they have this spirit of debunking myths in the most unexpected places.

 

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