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Kurt Vile - Philadelphia's been good to me (2026)

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I can appreciate what Kurt Vile is trying to do here, but I find myself admiring the atmosphere more than the songs. The record has a comfortable, lived-in quality that makes it easy to spend time with. The observations feel genuine, the performances are relaxed, and there is no sense of calculation behind the music. The problem is that comfort becomes the album's defining characteristic. Too many songs operate at the same speed, with the same emotional temperature and the same loose songwriting approach. Instead of accumulating momentum, the record often settles into a pleasant drift. I keep waiting for a moment that changes the stakes, but it rarely arrives. The personality remains intact. Kurt Vile still sounds like Kurt Vile, and that alone gives the album a certain value. However, identity can only carry a record so far. Without stronger melodies, sharper dynamics or more decisive structural movement, many of these tracks blur together. In the end, I hear a talented songwri...

Marisa Anderson - The Anthology of UnAmerican Folk Music (2026)

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I can immediately hear the care that went into this project. The concept is strong, the performances are beautifully executed, and there is a genuine curiosity running through the entire record. Marisa Anderson approaches these traditions with respect and attention, and that gives the album an authenticity that many concept records lack. The problem for me is that admiration never fully turns into emotional investment. The pieces are consistently interesting, but they rarely gather momentum. The album unfolds like a series of observations rather than a journey. I appreciate the details while I'm listening, yet I seldom feel a growing sense of tension or necessity. The guitar work is often remarkable. Small phrasing choices, tonal shifts and textural nuances reveal themselves over time. But the record tends to prioritize atmosphere and reflection over melodic or emotional impact. I find myself appreciating individual moments more than being carried away by the whole. In the end, ...

Paul McCartney - The Boys of Dungeon Lane (2026)

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I can hear the craftsmanship immediately, but I struggle to find much tension underneath it. The melodies are pleasant, the arrangements are polished without being sterile, and the album moves comfortably from song to song. The problem is that comfort becomes the dominant feeling. The childhood memories and Liverpool references create atmosphere, but they rarely evolve into something emotionally larger. I understand the affection behind the songs, yet I don't feel much urgency. The album often sounds like a man revisiting old photographs rather than confronting what those memories mean now. What keeps the record afloat is McCartney's natural musicality. Even relatively minor songs contain melodic ideas that many writers would be happy to claim. The voice carries decades of history, and that history adds weight to material that might otherwise feel lightweight. Still, I find myself admiring the album more than engaging with it. The songs are well-made, but few demand repeated...

Boards of Canada - Inferno (2026)

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  I immediately recognize the world. The faded melodies, the strange warmth, the feeling of looking at memories that were never really mine. Boards of Canada remain unmatched at creating this atmosphere, and Inferno is full of the tiny details that make me want to keep listening closely. At the same time, I find myself wanting more movement. The album is rich but rarely overwhelming. It draws me inward rather than pulling me forward. Track after track expands the mood, but the emotional stakes stay relatively stable. I admire the craft, yet I don't often feel the kind of escalation that transforms admiration into obsession. What keeps the album above average is the sheer quality of the sound design. Every texture feels intentional. Every transition contributes to the illusion of entering a complete world. Even when very little seems to happen on the surface, there is always something quietly unfolding underneath. In the end, I come away impressed rather than deeply affected. Th...

Avishai Cohen - Eternal Child (2026)

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I appreciate how approachable this album is. The melodies are attractive, the playing is tasteful, and the trio communicates with a level of ease that never feels forced. It is clearly made by musicians who trust simplicity more than display, and there is something refreshing about that. The problem is that the record settles into its strengths a little too comfortably. Track after track unfolds with similar emotional temperatures, and while the musicianship never drops, I rarely feel the tension increasing. The music flows rather than develops. For me, that's the difference between a pleasant jazz record and one that becomes essential. The groove is there, and the melodic writing is often beautiful, but I keep waiting for moments that fundamentally change the emotional landscape of the album. Those moments never fully arrive. Instead, the record stays within a narrow expressive range that is enjoyable but ultimately limiting. In the end, Eternal Child feels mature, warm and sk...

All Them Witches - House of Mirrors (2026)

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I enjoy the atmosphere immediately. The album has that familiar All Them Witches combination of dusty blues, psychedelic haze and late-night tension. The musicianship is excellent throughout, and the production gives everything enough space to breathe. Nothing feels artificial or overworked. What keeps the record from going higher is the lack of real escalation. The songs often suggest something larger on the horizon, but they rarely deliver the kind of transformative payoff that makes a heavy psych album unforgettable. The band is content to stay inside the groove rather than push it somewhere dangerous. The identity remains one of the album's greatest strengths. Even when the material isn't at its most inspired, the band's personality is unmistakable. The guitars, the atmosphere and the pacing all belong to the same world, and that world is easy to sink into. In the end, I respect House Of Mirrors more than I love it. It is a well-crafted, highly coherent record that ...