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Olof Dreijer - Loud Bloom (2026)

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I appreciate the craftsmanship more than I actually feel pulled into it. The rhythms are inventive and the production is full of detail, but the album keeps hovering in the same emotional space without ever turning that motion into real tension or release. A lot of tracks feel like they’re built around kinetic ideas rather than destinations. Things shift constantly on the surface, but structurally the album doesn’t evolve as much as it initially seems to. It stays interesting moment-to-moment while lacking the bigger arc that would make the experience memorable afterward. The sound design is probably the strongest part. It’s colorful, tactile, and clearly personal. But after a while, the experimentation starts feeling self-sustaining instead of necessary. I stop waiting for climaxes because the album teaches me they’re never really coming. I enjoy individual passages, but the record as a whole leaves a surprisingly light impression considering how much activity is packed into it. Pr...

Lil Shine - Get Rich Or Die Sippin' (2026)

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At first, it sounds good almost automatically. The textures are smooth, the vocals slide easily over the beats, and the whole album has that weightless pluggnb atmosphere that’s easy to sink into. But after a while, I realize nothing is really happening. The songs don’t build, they don’t shift emotionally, and they rarely create any sense of consequence. Every track feels like another variation of the same emotional blur. The production carries the experience almost entirely, because structurally the album has very little momentum. What hurts it most is how interchangeable everything becomes. A few hooks stand out for a moment, but the album keeps resetting before any idea can fully develop into a payoff. Instead of escalation, it just maintains a constant haze. I can enjoy the sound while it’s playing, but once it ends, almost nothing remains. It feels more like an endlessly looping moodboard than an album with real weight or direction. Pros The atmosphere is immediately recognizab...

Cola - Cost Of Living Adjustment (2026)

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At first, it feels sharper than a lot of modern post-punk because the band actually understands momentum. The rhythm section keeps things active, and the production has enough rawness to avoid sounding completely curated. But after a while, I realize the album mostly sustains tension rather than transforming it. The songs keep implying a release that rarely comes. Everything stays in the same emotional band: nervous, restrained, slightly angular, but never fully collapsing or exploding. The musicianship is solid, but the melodic writing doesn’t carry enough weight to compensate for the lack of real payoff. I hear movement, but not destination. By the second half, the album starts blending into a continuous texture of anxious grooves and dry vocals. It’s competent and occasionally engaging, but structurally it feels smaller than it wants to be. Pros The rhythm section keeps the album moving → the bass/drums interplay gives it enough propulsion to avoid complete stagnation There’s a ...

Fred again.. & Thomas Bangalter - Alexandra Palace, London, Feb 27, 2026 (DJ Mix) (2026)

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This is one of the rare modern electronic sets that actually understands scale. Not just loudness or emotional immediacy, but structural scale — the feeling that everything is being pushed toward larger and larger states of release. Bangalter changes the entire logic of the set. Without him, this could easily have become another emotionally overloaded Fred again.. event, full of quick catharsis and disposable peaks. Instead, the music breathes differently. Transitions take longer. Tension accumulates properly. Payoffs arrive late enough to feel deserved. What really elevates it is how physical the momentum becomes. The grooves don’t just loop; they evolve, collide, disappear, and return with greater force. Some stretches almost recover the feeling of Alive 2007 — not stylistically, but structurally. That sense that the crowd is being pulled through something larger than a playlist or a sequence of bangers. The emotional material also works better here because it’s framed inside str...

Kenny Mason - BULLDAWG (2026)

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I hear the ambition immediately, and I probably respect the intention more than the result. The album keeps reaching for intensity — louder production, bigger contrasts, heavier emotional gestures — but it never really turns that energy into structure. There are tracks that hit in isolation. The distortion works, the performances have force, and I can feel Kenny trying to push outside of standard trap patterns. But the album keeps resetting itself. It jumps from one idea to another without creating the sense that things are building toward something larger. I end up with fragments rather than momentum. I remember textures, isolated moments, maybe a few lines, but not a strong trajectory. The experimentation helps give it personality, but personality alone doesn’t carry an album very far for me. By the end, I feel like I’ve heard a lot of effort and a lot of ideas, but not enough inevitability. I respect it more than I really want to return to it. Pros Strong personality signal → Ke...

Irish Baroque Orchestra & Peter Whelan - Handel: Messiah (2026)

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I like the idea behind this more than I end up loving the result. Reconstructing the Dublin premiere gives the recording an identity immediately, and I can hear the difference: everything feels lighter, more transparent, more human. It avoids the heavy, ceremonial feeling that Messiah recordings sometimes fall into. The detail is probably the strongest part. Smaller forces make the music breathe, and individual lines come through naturally. It never feels stiff or academic. But after a while I start noticing the same thing I often run into with this kind of work: I’m enjoying sections more than I’m feeling a larger pull. There are beautiful moments throughout, but they don't accumulate enough. I keep waiting for a stronger sense of escalation, for something to become inevitable, and it never fully happens. I admire it while it’s playing, but by the end I feel more respect than attachment. At a 68, I’d call it solid and thoughtful — a version I appreciate intellectually, but not...