Posts

Daphni - Butterfly (2026)

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I like Butterfly more in theory than in practice. As a Daphni record, it absolutely understands groove, movement, and club functionality — the beats are flexible, playful, and clearly designed by someone who actually DJs. But as an album, it never quite locks into something I want to live inside. There are good ideas everywhere, flashes of funk, flashes of weirdness, but they tend to pass by rather than accumulate. I enjoy individual moments, less the full journey. Pros Reliable dancefloor intuition – The grooves work; nothing feels clumsy or amateur. Tactile, human rhythm feel – Loose, funky, and unsterile compared to a lot of modern club records. Variety of ideas – Disco, house, techno, and left-field touches keep it from sounding boxed in. Cons Album cohesion is weak – Feels more like a collection of DJ tools than a statement. Too many sketches – Several tracks hint at something stronger but don’t fully develop it. Identity blur – Sits awkwardly between ...

Thistle Sifter - Forever The Optimist (2026)

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I like the space this album creates more than the journey it takes me on. Forever The Optimist is clearly crafted with care — the textures are tasteful, the pacing patient, and the cinematic intent is obvious from the start. But as the record unfolds, I start feeling the limits of its emotional range. It’s pleasant, reflective, and well-constructed, yet it rarely sharpens into something that demands my full attention. I don’t feel challenged or surprised; I mostly feel comfortably accompanied. That’s not nothing — but it keeps the album hovering in the “solid, restrained post-rock” zone rather than pushing into something truly absorbing. Pros Consistent atmosphere – The album maintains a coherent, calm cinematic mood without lapsing into clutter. Tasteful arrangements – Strings, guitars, and ambient layers are blended with restraint and good judgment. Conceptual seriousness – It clearly aims for emotional and thematic weight rather than background prettiness. Cons L...

Schiller - Euphoria (2026)

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Euphoria is solid, professional, and unmistakably Schiller — which is both its strength and its ceiling. The album delivers exactly what it promises: expansive synthscapes, uplifted moods, and a cinematic sense of flow that’s easy to sink into. At the same time, its sheer length and comfort-zone choices keep it from ever feeling urgent or surprising. I enjoy being inside its atmosphere, but I rarely feel challenged or pulled toward repeat, focused listens. It works best as a long-form environment rather than a record that demands attention. Pros Consistent cinematic atmosphere – Polished, wide-screen electronica with a clear emotional palette. Strong production values – Clean mixes, lush synth layers, and professional sound design throughout. Guest vocals add color – Collaborations help break up the runtime and give certain tracks a human anchor. Cons Overextended runtime – At this length, ideas start to blur rather than accumulate. Low risk factor – Very littl...

Firtan - Live at Summer Breeze (2026)

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This works best as a document rather than a destination. Live at Summer Breeze captures Firtan in a raw, high-energy setting, and I can feel the push of the crowd and the physical force of the set. That said, once the initial impact wears off, the album doesn’t really open up into something deeper than “solid festival performance.” The atmosphere is there, the melodies survive the live chaos, but the recording rarely transcends its function as proof that the band delivers live. I don’t regret hearing it — I just don’t feel pulled back to it often. Pros Authentic live energy – The performance feels committed and physical, not rehearsed or sterile. Melodic black metal translates live – Key themes still cut through despite the density. Good snapshot of the band on stage – If you’ve seen or plan to see them live, this makes sense. Cons Limited replay value – Once the live punch is absorbed, there’s little new to discover. Sound clarity fluctuates – Festival mix blu...

Ratboys - Singin’ to an Empty Chair (2026)

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I like this record more for what it’s trying to do than for how often I feel pulled back to it. Singin’ to an Empty Chair has emotional intelligence and patience, and I respect the decision to let songs stretch and wander instead of forcing tidy indie-rock payoffs. At the same time, that looseness is exactly what keeps it from fully landing for me. The writing is thoughtful and sincere, but the album rarely sharpens those feelings into moments that really stick. It’s solid, well-made, and honest — just a bit too comfortable in its own tone to demand repeat listens. Pros Sincere, emotionally literate songwriting – Nothing feels fake or overplayed; the lyrics come from a real place. Willingness to let songs breathe – Longer forms and restraint give the album a reflective, unforced feel. Consistent mood – The record holds together tonally without obvious missteps or filler disasters. Cons Limited peaks – Few tracks truly rise above the album’s baseline and demand atte...

Tigran Hamasyan - Manifeste (2026)

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I get what Manifeste is aiming for, and I respect the scale of it — the ritual framing, the political and spiritual weight, the way everything is meant to feel urgent and declarative. But as a listening experience, it often feels overdetermined. There’s a lot of intent in every bar, a lot of density in the writing, and not always enough space for the music to breathe or surprise me. I’m impressed more often than I’m moved. It’s ambitious, serious, and impeccably played, but the constant intensity flattens its long-term impact. Pros Strong compositional ambition – Big ideas, complex forms, and a clear conceptual spine throughout. Rhythmic and technical authority – The playing is airtight; odd meters and layered grooves are handled with total control. Distinct cultural identity – Armenian folk and choral elements give the album a voice that isn’t generic fusion. Cons Emotional saturation – Almost everything arrives at “maximum importance,” which reduces contrast and ...