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Steve Roach - The Surface Below - Immersion Six (2026)

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I understand what this album is aiming for, but it doesn’t hold me the way I want it to. The Surface Below is smooth, deep, and continuous, but that continuity starts to feel more like stasis than immersion. The textures are pleasant and unobtrusive, yet they rarely give me a reason to stay actively engaged with them. What pulls it down for me is how little resistance there is. The sound world is stable almost to a fault — nothing threatens to shift, fray, or surprise me. Instead of losing myself in it, I find my attention drifting around it, using it more as background than as something I want to inhabit fully. It feels less like entering a space and more like hovering near one. I don’t think it’s poorly made at all; it’s careful, controlled, and clearly the product of experience. But that refinement also drains away tension. I respect it as functional ambient, something that can support a mood without interfering, yet it doesn’t challenge my listening or recalibrate my perception....

Alter Bridge - Alter Bridge (2026)

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I find this record more solid than inspiring. Alter Bridge is clearly made by a band that knows exactly how to write and perform heavy rock at a high level — the riffs are confident, the production is big without being bloated, and everything feels locked into place. There’s a sense of control and professionalism that makes it an easy listen when I’m in the mood for something direct and muscular. Where it falls a bit short for me is in how carefully everything is resolved. The songs tend to follow familiar arcs, and even when the performances are strong, I rarely feel any real tension or risk. The emotional register stays fairly consistent, and while that consistency keeps the album cohesive, it also limits how memorable individual moments become. I don’t come away feeling underwhelmed so much as unchallenged. It’s a dependable, well-crafted album that delivers exactly what it promises, and I can respect that. Still, it feels more like refinement than revelation — something I can re...

Richard Youngs - Time Drive (2026)

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I understand what Time Drive is aiming for, but I don’t think it consistently earns the patience it asks from me. The repetition is extreme, the structures barely exist, and the songs often feel more like sketches that refuse to develop than ideas being explored deeply. At times it comes across less as hypnotic and more as static. What makes it especially difficult is how emotionally sealed it feels. The vocals are flat and distant, the lyrics don’t invite interpretation so much as deflect it, and the music rarely gives me an entry point beyond endurance. I’m aware that this neutrality is intentional, but intention alone doesn’t always translate into engagement for me. There are moments where the stubborn simplicity clicks and I start to hear it as meditative rather than inert, but those moments are fragile and easy to lose. More often, I’m left feeling like I’m waiting for something to happen that never does. I respect the commitment to minimalism and the refusal to perform, but as...

Pullman - III (2026)

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I like the restraint of III , but I don’t fully connect with it. It feels deliberately unobtrusive, almost determined to never assert itself beyond a narrow emotional bandwidth. The blend of post-rock patience and alt-country textures is tasteful and well-executed, yet it often registers more as atmosphere than as songwriting. What holds it back for me is how little resistance the record offers. The tracks are pleasant to sit with, but they rarely create tension or demand attention, and I find my focus drifting more often than not. The consistency, while admirable, ends up flattening the experience rather than deepening it — everything feels carefully leveled, with very few moments breaking through the surface. There’s nothing here that feels misguided or insincere. It’s clearly a thoughtful, disciplined album, and I understand the appeal of its quiet confidence. Still, it leaves me feeling more calmly occupied than genuinely moved. I respect it as a mood piece, but it doesn’t quite ...

Zu - Ferrum Sidereum (2026)

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I’m drawn to Ferrum Sidereum for its commitment more than its range. It’s a record that plants its feet early and refuses to move, turning repetition and density into the core of its identity. The rhythms feel industrial and physical, the horns act less like leads and more like blunt instruments, and everything is geared toward pressure rather than momentum. What holds it back for me is how unwavering that pressure is. The album rarely opens up or shifts perspective, and while that discipline is part of its strength, it also limits how much impact the music can sustain over time. Instead of building tension, some passages feel locked into a loop that’s more insistent than revelatory. Still, there’s a clarity of purpose here that I respect. Zu aren’t improvising aimlessly or chasing chaos — every part feels deliberate, controlled, and tightly interlocked. When I engage with it in the right context, it’s absorbing and heavy in a way that feels earned. I just wish it gave itself a bit ...

The Cribs - Selling a Vibe (2026)

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I appreciate the intent behind this record more than the execution. Selling a Vibe is clearly trying to reclaim a raw, no-frills version of indie rock, and there’s something admirable about how little it cares about sounding current. The guitars are dry, the songs are short, and the whole thing feels deliberately boxed-in, like a refusal to engage with anything beyond the basics. That said, the stubbornness starts working against it. A lot of the tracks blur together, not because they’re cohesive in a strong way, but because they rarely push past a single gear. The energy is there, but it’s rarely shaped into moments that really stick. I keep waiting for a hook, a left turn, or even a bit of tension that doesn’t resolve immediately — and it usually never comes. It’s not a bad record, and it’s certainly not cynical, but it feels more like maintenance than necessity. I get why it exists, I respect the attitude behind it, yet I’m left feeling like I’ve heard this version of The Cribs m...