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Francis of Delirium - Run, Run Pure Beauty (2026)

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I can hear the ambition immediately, and I appreciate that the album is trying to be more than a collection of indie-rock songs. There's a genuine emotional core running through it, and it avoids a lot of the irony and distance that usually drag modern indie records down for me. The problem is that it keeps promising more than it delivers. The songs often feel like they're building toward something important, but the payoff rarely matches the setup. I get the sense of movement without the satisfaction of arrival. The production and arrangements are tasteful, but they don't create enough tension to make the climaxes feel inevitable. Instead, a lot of the record sits in a comfortable middle ground where nothing is bad, but not much feels essential either. I respect the conviction behind it, and I never feel like it's chasing trends. But when it's over, I'm left thinking about what it was aiming for more than what it actually achieved. There are flashes of a gre...

Hanry - What Came From Silence (2026)

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I can hear the craftsmanship immediately. The album is well-paced, the sound design is strong, and it clearly understands how post-rock is supposed to breathe. Nothing feels amateur or accidental. The problem is that I rarely feel genuinely challenged or overwhelmed by it. A lot of the record operates in a familiar emotional space: slow builds, carefully layered textures, restrained melancholy, gradual releases. It does these things well, but often too comfortably. I keep anticipating a moment where the tension becomes unbearable or where a climax completely redefines what came before, and that moment never really arrives. The atmosphere is beautiful, but atmosphere isn't enough for me anymore. I need stronger narrative pressure. I need the feeling that the music is being pulled toward something inevitable. Here, I mostly hear well-executed progression rather than necessity. By the end, I admire the album more than I love it. It's consistently good, occasionally impressive, ...

Devin Townsend - The Moth (2026)

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I admire this album more than I enjoy it. It's clearly the work of someone trying to build a complete world rather than a collection of songs, and I can respect the ambition behind that. The problem is that the ambition becomes the main thing I notice. The album is constantly introducing new elements: choirs, orchestral passages, recurring themes, dramatic transitions, conceptual threads. Instead of creating momentum, though, they often create density. I spend a lot of time appreciating the craftsmanship without feeling increasingly invested in where the music is heading. There are moments where everything aligns and I get a glimpse of the masterpiece it wants to be. A theme returns, the orchestra swells, the emotional intent finally comes into focus. But those moments are scattered across a project that feels too eager to show me its imagination. The album keeps adding layers when what it really needs is more focus. What ultimately limits it for me is the gap between scale and ...

Elder - Through Zero (2026)

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I can hear the craft immediately. The production is rich, the playing is excellent, and the album creates a fully formed world that is easy to sink into. On paper, it has many of the ingredients I usually like: long songs, progressive structures, recurring motifs, and plenty of movement. The problem is that the movement doesn't translate into enough consequence. The tracks keep evolving, but they rarely arrive somewhere that feels dramatically different from where they started. I spend a lot of time admiring transitions, textures and arrangements, but not enough time feeling genuine anticipation for what's around the corner. The atmosphere is impressive, yet it becomes the album's main source of momentum. Instead of tension creating the climaxes, immersion often carries the experience. That works for a while, but over the course of the record I start wanting stronger payoffs and more emotional risk. By the end, I respect the album more than I love it. It's clearly we...

Dua Lipa - Dua Lipa - Live From Mexico (2026)

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I can hear why this works for a lot of people, but it mostly confirms what I already think about Dua Lipa rather than changing it. The songs are efficient, professional, and built around reliable hooks, but they rarely become more interesting in a live environment. The crowd helps, and the band adds some extra movement, yet I keep waiting for a moment where the performance takes ownership of the material and pushes it somewhere new. That moment never really arrives. The songs come, they work, and then the next one starts. Everything feels very controlled. What hurts the score most is the lack of escalation. Despite being a live album, it doesn't feel like the energy accumulates. The set maintains roughly the same emotional and musical temperature from beginning to end. I hear competence everywhere, but very little tension, danger, or surprise. By the end, I'm left admiring the craftsmanship more than enjoying the experience. The hooks are there, the performances are solid, b...

aja monet - the color of rain (2026)

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I respect this album more than I enjoy it. The intent is obvious, the musicianship is strong, and the emotional sincerity never feels forced. It comes from a real place, which already puts it above a lot of contemporary jazz-poetry records. The problem is that I keep waiting for the music to transform that sincerity into something bigger. The album creates a compelling atmosphere almost immediately, but it spends most of its runtime maintaining that atmosphere rather than intensifying it. The performances are expressive, yet the emotional trajectory often feels flatter than the subject matter deserves. A lot of the record washes over me rather than pulling me forward. The poetry is thoughtful, the arrangements are tasteful, but I rarely feel the kind of structural momentum that makes me want to hear the next piece. Instead, it becomes a sequence of strong moments that never fully accumulate into a powerful destination. By the end, I admire the album's vision and craft, but I don...