Posts

Textures - Genotype (2025)

Image
I don’t hear Genotype as a full comeback so much as a careful re-entry. The craft is there, the playing is tight, and the production is undeniably professional — but the album rarely surprises me. It feels very aware of the modern prog-metal landscape and rarely steps outside its comfort zone. I enjoy stretches of it while it’s on, especially when the melodies open up, but once it’s over I don’t feel a strong pull to immediately return. It’s solid, respectable, and controlled — maybe a little too controlled for what I usually want from this genre. Pros High-level musicianship – Rhythms are locked in, performances are clean, and nothing sounds undercooked. Polished, modern production – Clear mix, good low-end control, and enough atmosphere to avoid flatness. Melodic accessibility – Vocals and harmonies give the album an easy entry point without going full pop-prog. Cons Low risk factor – Very little here feels dangerous, urgent, or emotionally unavoidable. Familia...

Cergio Prudencio - Cergio Prudencio – Antología 2: Obras para la Orquesta Experimental de Instrumentos Nativos (2026)

Image
I admire the conviction here more than the result. Antología 2 has undeniable weight: massed breath, blunt rhythm, and a collective force that refuses decoration. It feels serious, grounded, and intentionally resistant to Western orchestral comfort. But as a listening experience, it often settles into a single mode of intensity without enough internal reshaping to keep me fully engaged. Once the ritual logic is established, much of the album feels like sustained assertion rather than progression. There’s power in that refusal to bend, and I respect the political and aesthetic clarity behind it. Still, the repetition doesn’t always accumulate meaning for me; sometimes it simply persists. I don’t hear enough transformation across the pieces to justify the full runtime, and without sharper contrasts or arrival points, my attention drifts even while I recognize the importance of what’s being done. At its best, this music occupies space with authority. At its weakest, it documents a stan...

Sir Charles Mackerras - Charles Mackerras Conducts Dvořák, Smetana, Brahms, Bartók & Enesco (Remastered) (2026)

Image
I hear the intelligence immediately, but I don’t fully feel it. Mackerras’ command of Central European repertoire is undeniable — rhythms are clean, phrasing is disciplined, and nothing is left to chance. Still, as a listening experience, this feels more like a reference document than a record I’m drawn back to. The interpretations are correct, sometimes exemplary, but rarely gripping. I admire the absence of sentimentality, yet that same restraint keeps the music at a respectful distance rather than pulling me inside. Pros High interpretive credibility – Mackerras understands the idiom deeply; nothing sounds misjudged or sloppy. Rhythmic clarity and structure – Dance elements and folk roots are articulated cleanly, without romantic fog. Useful remaster – Improved separation and presence make these archival recordings easier to engage with. Cons Low emotional yield – Precision outweighs expressiveness; the music convinces more than it moves. Compilation fatigue ...

Craig Taborn - Dream Archives (2026)

Image
I can hear the intelligence immediately, but I struggle to stay engaged all the way through. Dream Archives is carefully played, beautifully recorded, and clearly the product of a very disciplined musical mind — yet it feels more like an exercise in control than a space I want to inhabit. The improvisations drift and resolve quietly, often stopping just before they risk something emotionally. I respect the restraint, but I miss friction, danger, or even a stronger sense of arrival. It’s thoughtful music, but it rarely becomes involving. Pros Impeccable pianistic touch – Tone, dynamics, and voicing are handled with absolute mastery. Clear intent and coherence – Even at its most abstract, the improvisation feels directed, not random. Excellent use of space and silence – Decay and resonance are treated as compositional tools. Cons Low emotional exposure – The music stays cool and cerebral, rarely opening up. Minimal tension–release – Pieces hover rather than build...

Charlemagne Palestine - The Organ is the worlds Greatest Syntesizer (2026)

Image
Listening to The Organ is the World’s Greatest Synthesizer feels like entering a vast sonic meditation — a continuous, drone-laden odyssey that prioritises resonance and space over melody or rhythmic drive. The idea is compelling: ancient instrument, monumental architecture, and sound as pure physical phenomenon. But in practice, the experience rarely moves beyond dense, static texture. Over its ~40-minute span, tones swell and intertwine with little structural contrast, so the piece tends to feel monolithic and immersive rather than dynamic or narratively engaging . It is powerful in a ritualistic, almost sonic installation sense, but as an active listening experience, it requires patience and willingness to surrender expectations of development or form. Pros Immersive sonic space – The combination of organ, acoustics, and sustained tones creates a unique spatial listening environment. Expressive maximalism – Charlemagne Palestine’s “anti-composition” ethos invites deep fo...

Uuhai - Human Herds (2026)

Image
I get what Human Herds is aiming for, but it doesn’t fully hold me. The throat singing is impressive on a physical level, and the ritual framing is serious rather than decorative, which I respect. Still, as a listening experience, it feels more static than immersive. The cycles repeat without enough internal tension, and after a while the impact shifts from hypnotic to flat. I don’t doubt the authenticity or intent — I just don’t feel pulled into a journey, more into a sustained state that doesn’t quite evolve. Pros Authentic vocal tradition – The throat singing is grounded, physical, and never feels like a gimmick. Clear ritual identity – The album knows exactly what it is and doesn’t dilute its cultural core. Textural coherence – Sound palette and pacing are consistent and controlled. Cons Minimal development – Repetition outweighs transformation, limiting long-form payoff. Low dramatic tension – Few moments of escalation, contrast, or release. Limited rep...