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Genesis Owusu - REDSTAR WU & THE WORLDWIDE SCOURGE (2026)

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I like the energy immediately. It feels active, restless, and constantly in motion. But after a while I start noticing that movement isn't necessarily the same thing as escalation. The album changes shape a lot, but I’m not sure it actually builds. Genesis Owusu's personality still carries a huge part of the experience. He sounds committed, present, and completely invested in what he's doing. That alone keeps the album from becoming generic. But I keep feeling like the ideas are arriving faster than they're developing. The genre shifts initially feel exciting, but eventually they start acting like substitutes for structural progression. Instead of tension accumulating and paying off, the album often resets itself with a new texture or mood. It creates stimulation, but not inevitability. I come away respecting the ambition more than feeling transformed by it. I remember the movement and the concepts more than the actual emotional arrivals. For me that’s usually where ...

Bruce Soord - Ghosts In The Park (2026)

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I respect this more than I really connect with it. The themes automatically give it weight — grief, memory, family loss — and none of it feels fake or decorative. I never doubt the sincerity behind it. But sincerity alone doesn't carry an album very far for me. The problem is that the emotional state barely changes. It starts reflective, stays reflective, and ends reflective. I keep hearing atmosphere and feeling, but I don't feel enough pressure building underneath it. I’m waiting for the music to become larger than the emotions it's describing. Bruce Soord is good at creating spaces you can sit inside, but here I start noticing the shape more than the experience itself. I become aware that I’m listening to a mood sustaining itself rather than transforming. Even the stronger moments feel like extensions of the same emotional color. By the end, I admire the honesty and the craftsmanship, but I don’t feel like I’ve been carried somewhere irreversible. I leave with respect...

Yann Kornowicz & Ugly Mac Beer - Le Bus : Les Bleus en grève (Bande originale du documentaire Netflix) (2026)

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I can already see the problem before hearing much of it: this looks built to function inside a documentary rather than as an album. Thirty-one tracks in fifty minutes usually means fragments, transitions and mood pieces instead of progression. I’d probably appreciate the texture and the atmosphere at first. Ugly Mac Beer usually brings enough identity that it doesn’t become anonymous background music. The football/media-chaos context also gives the music something to react to. But outside the film, I suspect I’d keep waiting for motifs to return, for tension to accumulate, for a moment to arrive that makes the whole thing feel necessary. Instead I imagine getting a lot of small pieces that work in context and disappear once they’re over. I’d respect it more than revisit it. Pros Strong sonic identity → the French boom-bap/documentary blend gives it a recognizable character Atmosphere probably serves the subject well → tension, unease and media-chaos fit Knysna naturally Short run...

Triángulo de Amor Bizarro - Mi Catedral (2026)

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I respect this more than I actually enjoy it. I can hear the effort to expand the formula — more instruments, more movement, more ideas — and I prefer that over a band staying in its comfort zone. But I’m not convinced the changes solve the main issue. The album still feels trapped in a constant state of urgency. There’s energy all over it, but I don’t really feel the escalation. Things hit immediately and stay there. I keep waiting for a section that changes the stakes, a payoff that suddenly reframes everything before it, but most of the time the intensity just continues rather than develops. I like the texture, and I like that it feels committed. But after a while I’m left remembering the sensation more than the actual songs. It gives me impact in the moment, but not enough structure or lift to make the experience grow as it goes. I end up admiring the ambition more than feeling pulled back to replay it. Pros I like that the band still has a strong identity → even when they chan...

Crown Lands - Apocalypse (2026)

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I end up liking this more than I expected because the ambition is real. It’s not pretending to be larger than it is — the album clearly wants to build long arcs and create payoff, and there are moments where that effort actually lands. I can feel movement, progression, and enough variation to keep me involved. At the same time, I never fully disappear into it. I keep noticing the machinery underneath. The influences remain extremely visible, and instead of feeling absorbed by Crown Lands’ world, I sometimes feel like I’m moving through a collection of prog reference points stitched together with a lot of skill. The frustrating part is that I can hear the potential. There are sections where everything locks in and the scale feels earned. But I still miss that sense of inevitability — that feeling where the music stops sounding designed and starts sounding necessary. I respect it, I enjoy parts of it, and I’d return to some moments. But I’m still standing slightly outside of it rather...

Port Noir - The Dark We Keep (2026)

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I like this more than a lot of modern alternative/prog metal because it actually sounds like it wants an identity instead of just a sound. The atmosphere works, the textures are good, and there’s enough melody underneath the heaviness to stop it becoming another riff exercise. But I keep running into the same issue: I enjoy individual sections more than I enjoy the album itself. It gives me moments that feel like they should become something bigger, but they rarely transform into a real payoff. I hear tension, I hear setup, but I don’t always hear arrival. The production and mood carry a lot of weight here. They make the album easy to stay inside, but they also hide some of the structural weaknesses. Once it finishes, I remember tones and fragments more than I remember a journey. I enjoy it while it’s playing and I respect what it’s aiming for, but I never get that feeling that the album became larger than its parts. That’s where it settles into the high-60s instead of moving furthe...