I end up liking this more than I expected because there’s enough emotional substance to hold onto. It doesn’t feel like one of those tasteful indie records that just sits there looking serious. There’s actual personality in it, and the world it creates feels believable. What keeps it from going higher is that I spend most of the album waiting for something larger to happen. The songs are carefully built and emotionally grounded, but they rarely reach a point where they transform or suddenly hit harder. I stay with it because I like being inside its atmosphere, not because I’m being pulled toward major moments. The production helps a lot. Everything feels warm and natural, and there’s a confidence in how understated it is. But by the end, I’m left with more admiration than attachment. I respect the consistency, and I enjoy parts of it, but I don’t come away with enough moments that feel irreversible. At 65, I’d call it a good album that earns its mood — I just don’t think it fully es...