Posts

Fatoumata Diawara - Massa (2026)

Image
I respect Massa more than I actively enjoy it. The album is clearly crafted with care, and Fatoumata Diawara brings a level of authenticity that many contemporary folk and world artists can only imitate. Her voice carries history, conviction and humanity, making even the quieter moments feel grounded in lived experience. However, I find myself wanting more movement. The record establishes its world quickly and convincingly, but once that world is in place, it doesn't evolve enough. The songs often settle into graceful, contemplative grooves and remain there. While the atmosphere is consistently appealing, it rarely develops into something emotionally overwhelming or structurally surprising. The cultural richness is undeniable, yet I don't hear enough melodic moments that stay with me after the album ends. Many tracks feel pleasant and well-executed without creating the kind of emotional accumulation that turns admiration into attachment. The craftsmanship is evident, but the...

Placebo - re-created (2026)

Image
I understand the appeal of RE:CREATED , but I struggle to find a compelling reason for its existence beyond revisiting familiar material. The songs are still good because the songwriting was already good thirty years ago, yet I rarely feel that these new versions reveal something hidden or transform the emotional meaning of the originals. The production is bigger and cleaner, and the performances are technically stronger in places, but some of the danger disappears in the process. Early Placebo thrived on awkwardness, tension and a sense of instability. Here, the material often feels more controlled and more comfortable. What was once provocative now feels carefully curated. The album also suffers from a structural problem that many re-recordings face: I already know the destination. Even when a track is improved sonically, there is little sense of surprise or escalation. The experience becomes one of comparison rather than immersion, and comparison is rarely favorable to the excitem...

Converge - Hum of Hurt (2026)

Image
I respect Hum of Hurt more than I love it. Converge remain one of the few heavy bands capable of making chaos feel meaningful, and the album carries a level of conviction that immediately separates it from most modern hardcore and metalcore records. Nothing here feels complacent or manufactured. The performances are intense, focused and completely committed. At the same time, I find myself missing a stronger sense of destination. The album excels at sustaining tension, but that tension doesn't always transform into memorable climaxes. The noise-rock textures add character and abrasion, yet they sometimes blur the melodic and structural anchors that help songs stay with me after the record ends. The emotional weight is undeniable, but the album often feels locked into a similar emotional register. Track after track delivers pressure, anger and exhaustion, but with less variation than I would ideally want. As a result, the experience can become more admirable than absorbing. I hea...

Wild Up - Julius Eastman Vol. 5: Gay Guerrilla (2026)

Image
I understand why Gay Guerrilla has become such an important work, but I ultimately find myself admiring its context and ambition more than the listening experience itself. The conviction is real. Nothing here feels decorative or detached. Eastman clearly had something urgent to communicate, and Wild Up delivers the music with enough force to make that urgency impossible to ignore. The issue is that the piece relies heavily on accumulation. It grows louder, denser and more insistent, but I rarely feel it becoming fundamentally different from where it began. The repetition creates pressure, yet the pressure does not consistently lead to revelation. After a while, I find myself appreciating the idea of the work more than being absorbed by its unfolding. There is certainly emotional gravity here, and far more than in much contemporary classical music. But emotional gravity alone is not enough in your scoring system. I still need stronger structural turns, greater contrast and a more dec...

The War And Treaty - The Story of Michael and Tanya (2026)

Image
What stays with me most about The Story of Michael and Tanya is the conviction behind it. Michael and Tanya sing as if every line matters, and that level of commitment immediately separates the album from many contemporary Americana releases. The chemistry is undeniable, and there are moments where the emotional sincerity alone carries a song. The problem is that I don't think the material consistently supports those performances. The voices often feel larger than the songs themselves. While the album is rich in feeling, it is less rich in memorable melodies, dramatic turns or moments of genuine escalation. I hear a lot of emotional expression, but not enough progression. As the record unfolds, the songs begin to blur together somewhat. The warmth remains, the performances remain strong, but the intensity doesn't evolve enough. I keep waiting for a track that fundamentally changes the emotional temperature of the album or delivers a truly unforgettable payoff, and those mome...

Lost in Kyiv - We're All Going To Be Fine (2026)

Image
This is the kind of post-rock album that succeeds because it understands that atmosphere alone is not enough. The band puts considerable effort into movement, tension and release, and the result feels more purposeful than many records operating in the same cinematic space. The heavier passages provide genuine momentum, while the electronic textures add energy without distracting from the core compositions. What I appreciate most is the sense of emotional seriousness running through the album. Even without vocals, the music carries a feeling of consequence that prevents it from becoming background listening. The climaxes generally feel earned, and the transitions between quieter and heavier sections are handled with confidence. There is a clear architectural vision behind the record rather than a collection of crescendos stitched together. The main limitation is that I rarely feel surprised. The band executes the post-rock/post-metal language extremely well, but they are not fundament...