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Exploring Birdsong - Every House We Built (2026)

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I enjoy how confidently this album commits to its own identity. The absence of guitars never feels like a gimmick; instead, the piano becomes the emotional and structural center of the music. That choice gives the band a refreshing voice within modern progressive rock, and the melodies are strong enough to keep the songs memorable without relying on technical showmanship. The songwriting is thoughtful and well paced. Rather than chasing complexity for its own sake, the band focuses on atmosphere, harmony and gradual development. The result is an album that flows naturally and remains consistently enjoyable from beginning to end. There's a maturity in the arrangements that makes even the quieter moments feel purposeful. Where it loses me slightly is in its emotional intensity. The music often feels composed and graceful, but rarely reaches the point where it becomes overwhelming or truly gripping. The climaxes are satisfying without being transformative, and the polished presentat...

Amberian Dawn - Temptation’s Gates (2026)

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Temptation's Gates feels like the strongest Amberian Dawn album in quite some time. Moving away from the band's poppier direction gives the music a renewed sense of purpose, and Nicole Willerton fits naturally into the band's melodic yet theatrical sound. Her performance brings both elegance and power, making the choruses more convincing than they have been in years. The album succeeds because it doesn't forget the importance of melody. The songs are immediately engaging, the keyboard arrangements remain lush without becoming overwhelming, and the guitars carry enough weight to keep the music grounded. It captures the uplifting side of symphonic metal without becoming excessively sugary, and that balance works in its favor. At the same time, I rarely feel surprised. Once a song establishes its direction, it generally follows it to a predictable conclusion. The orchestral layers enrich the atmosphere, but they don't always create the dramatic escalation I'm lo...

matt proxy - trojan horse (2026)

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I appreciate how uncompromising this album is, but I rarely feel like its ambition translates into a rewarding listen. Matt Proxy throws an impressive number of ideas into every track, blending industrial textures, abrasive electronics and emotional confessionals without worrying about accessibility. The creativity is obvious from the start, yet it often feels more concerned with keeping me surprised than taking me somewhere meaningful. The biggest issue is that the songs struggle to develop. New ideas arrive before previous ones have had time to breathe, so the album becomes a sequence of interesting fragments rather than fully realized compositions. I keep waiting for recurring motifs, memorable hooks or emotional peaks that tie everything together, but the record constantly resets instead of accumulating momentum. Even when the subject matter becomes deeply personal, the emotional impact remains at arm's length because the experimentation dominates the experience. I admire the...

Saidan - Fangdriller: Scars Beneath Memory's Wrist (2026)

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I enjoy this because it puts songwriting ahead of sheer aggression. The riffs stick, the lead guitars carry real personality, and the visual kei influence gives the album a flavor that separates it from many contemporary melodic black metal releases. It has energy, confidence and enough melodic instinct to stay engaging from beginning to end. At the same time, I never feel completely absorbed by it. The album is consistently entertaining, but it rarely pushes beyond its own strengths. Once the initial excitement settles, I start noticing familiar structural patterns and recurring melodic ideas that make the later songs feel less rewarding than the first ones. The production is also so clean that some of the raw tension and unpredictability naturally associated with black metal gets softened. I come away appreciating the craftsmanship more than feeling emotionally overwhelmed. The record has a clear identity, plenty of memorable guitar work and a solid sense of momentum, but it doesn...

Sun-El Musician - Under the Sun (2026)

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This is the kind of electronic album I’m naturally inclined to rate well because it understands that groove and warmth matter more than novelty for novelty’s sake. Sun-El Musician builds a very inviting world here: the percussion rolls rather than pounds, the melodies glow instead of forcing themselves forward, and the vocal features keep the album human at all times. It has that South African house quality where movement and emotion aren’t separated from each other, and that already gives it a real advantage over a lot of colder dance records. What I like most is that the album doesn’t feel schematic. Even when it stays within a familiar Afro-house palette, it does so with enough generosity and detail that the music breathes. The vocalists help a lot: they stop the record from becoming purely functional and give it a sense of tenderness that suits Sun-El’s production style. There’s a softness to the album, but not a weak one. It feels expansive, summery and carefully shaped. What ke...

Trooper Salute - 友達がいました [Tomodachigaimashita] (2026)

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I like the lightness of this more than I admire it. The jangly guitars, soft melodies and slightly wistful tone give it a clear charm, and it feels like it belongs to a very specific Japanese indie-pop lineage rather than to some anonymous modern “bedroom pop” blur. There’s personality in that softness, and the album seems to understand how to make intimacy feel graceful rather than inert. What keeps me at a distance is that the record doesn’t seem to push very hard beyond that initial sweetness. I hear pleasant textures, a few elegant melodic turns, and a coherent mood, but not much that really deepens the emotional field or changes the stakes as it goes. It’s the kind of album I can imagine enjoying track by track without feeling that the whole thing accumulates into something larger. So I come away respecting its warmth, taste and melodic delicacy more than feeling fully moved by it. It sounds like a good, likable indie-pop record with its own identity, but also one that may stay ...