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The Narrator - Phosphor (2026)

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I end up liking this more than I expected because the album actually commits to its intensity instead of just imitating it. The emotional delivery feels convincing enough that the bigger moments land, and the production gives everything a real physical force. When the choruses open up, they work. What keeps it from going higher is that I can still feel the genre framework underneath almost every track. The album knows exactly when to hit the emotional lift, when to drop into the heavier section, when to widen the atmosphere. It’s effective, but rarely surprising. Still, compared to a lot of modern metalcore, this has more urgency and less empty spectacle. The performances carry enough tension to stop the album from feeling disposable, even if the songwriting doesn’t fully escape the template. I don’t hear a future classic, but I do hear a version of this sound that’s focused, emotionally committed, and consistently engaging. Pros The album has real momentum → the choruses and break...

Draconian - In Somnolent Ruin (2026)

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At first, this feels like exactly the kind of doom record I should love. It’s serious, immersive, emotionally committed, and aesthetically coherent from beginning to end. The atmosphere is strong immediately, and Lisa Johansson’s return gives the album a colder, more melancholic center that fits the band much better. But after the initial impact, I start noticing how little the album actually evolves. The songs stretch outward instead of upward. They sustain mood very well, but they rarely intensify it. I keep waiting for a passage that completely opens up or devastates emotionally, and most of the time the album chooses preservation over transformation. That becomes the main limitation. The emotional world is convincing, but too stable. Once the atmosphere is established, the record mostly stays there. The climaxes feel controlled instead of overwhelming, which lowers the long-term impact for me. I still think it’s a solid Draconian album because the sincerity and tonal consistency...

Glassio - The Imposter (2026)

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I like the aesthetic immediately, but after a while it starts feeling too comfortable inside itself. The album is good at maintaining a mood, maybe too good. It never really breaks out of its own softness long enough to create tension or consequence. The production carries most of the experience. The textures are warm, detailed, and pleasant to sit inside, but they also flatten the emotional dynamics. Track after track operates in a similar emotional temperature, so the album slowly loses momentum instead of accumulating weight. What frustrates me is that the emotional core is actually there. I can hear sincerity in it. But the songwriting rarely transforms that sincerity into real payoff. The hooks are understated, the climaxes stay restrained, and the sequencing doesn’t create enough contrast to sustain a full-length runtime. By the end, I mostly remember the atmosphere rather than specific moments. It feels tasteful and cohesive, but structurally too passive to leave a lasting im...

Edward Skeletrix - Body of Work (2026)

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This feels less like an album than a prolonged psychological state. The atmosphere is genuinely disturbing at times — not aggressive, not dramatic, just emotionally hollowed-out in a way that becomes uncomfortable after a while. I can see why people are calling it “revolutionary,” but I also think a lot of that comes from the presentation around it as much as the music itself. The strongest thing here is the identity. The album completely commits to its sickly, fragmented world. Nothing sounds accidental. But structurally, it barely holds together. Tracks constantly start dissolving before they become meaningful, and the album mistakes fragmentation for progression far too often. The emotional exhaustion becomes real, but not cumulative. Instead of building pressure, it just stays numb for almost an hour. That’s the difference between something devastating and something draining. I respect the vision much more than I actually enjoy listening to it. Pros Extremely strong atmosphere ...

Marie-Nicole Lemieux - Gustav Mahler: Das Lied von der Erde (2026)

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I appreciate the refinement of it more than I truly feel consumed by it. The recording is undeniably beautiful — very controlled, transparent, carefully shaped — but that same elegance also keeps it at a distance emotionally. The orchestral detail is impressive. I can hear everything clearly, and the lighter textures give the music a fragile quality that fits the subject matter well. Lemieux also brings real gravity to the performance, especially in the quieter moments where the emotional exhaustion feels genuine instead of theatrical. But for Mahler, I need more pressure than this. I need the climaxes to feel unavoidable, almost catastrophic, and here they stay too civilized. The emotional architecture is there, but the tension never fully tightens around it. By the end, I admire the intelligence and sensitivity of the interpretation, but I’m not left devastated by it — and for Das Lied von der Erde , that matters a lot in my scoring. Pros Strong emotional atmosphere → the record...

Bear McCreary - God of War Sons of Sparta (Original Soundtrack) (2026)

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I enjoy this more than most modern game soundtracks because it actually understands momentum. Themes come back, tracks evolve, and there’s a real attempt to shape the music into an album instead of a collection of cinematic background cues. The retro angle helps more than I expected. The electronic textures give the soundtrack energy and movement, while the orchestral side keeps it from feeling gimmicky. It creates a world that’s easy to stay inside for a while. At the same time, I don’t think it reaches the emotional or structural intensity needed to go much higher for me. The big moments are effective, but they don’t completely take over the album emotionally. I hear strong craftsmanship more than overwhelming necessity. The runtime also hurts it a bit. After a while, the soundtrack starts relying on the same heroic energy field without escalating enough beyond it. Still, compared to most contemporary AAA scores, this feels much more replayable and much more intentional.  Pros...