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...