At 64 , this sits right in a zone I know well with Kevin Drumm: I respect it, I stay with it, but I don’t feel compelled by it. When I listen to Wind Melted Away the Past , I’m aware almost immediately that the conflict has been removed. The guitar isn’t misbehaving, and nothing here tests my endurance or patience in the way I sometimes want from him. Instead, the record settles into a careful, controlled erosion — tones thinning out, gestures dissolving before they assert themselves. I don’t dislike this approach. In fact, I appreciate how little it tries to convince me of anything. There’s no emotional framing, no nostalgia, no attempt at transcendence. It just exists, and it fades. But over time, that restraint starts to feel less like tension and more like atmosphere, and that’s where my attention begins to drift. I keep listening not because I’m being pulled forward, but because nothing pushes me away. The music never collapses, but it also never really accumulates. It feels fi...