Posts

Vanden Plas - AcCult II (2026)

Image
I can appreciate the craftsmanship here, but I rarely feel compelled by it. The acoustic approach exposes the quality of Vanden Plas' songwriting, and Andy Kuntz remains an expressive vocalist capable of carrying even sparse arrangements. There is an obvious level of professionalism throughout the album, and nothing feels careless or poorly executed. The problem is that much of what I enjoy about Vanden Plas is absent. Their best material thrives on gradual escalation, dramatic tension and moments of hard-earned release. AcCult II deliberately strips away many of those elements, replacing them with intimacy and reflection. While that makes for a pleasant listening experience, it also reduces the sense of purpose and destination. After a few songs, the emotional palette starts to feel limited. The arrangements are tasteful but rarely transformative, and the album settles into a comfortable mood that it seldom challenges. Instead of discovering new dimensions within these composit...

Tarja - Frisson Noir (2026)

Image
I enjoy Frisson Noir most when it stops trying to impress and simply lets the emotion emerge. The album sounds enormous. The orchestras, choirs and guitars are arranged with obvious care, and Tarja's voice still carries a sense of authority that very few singers in this genre can match. There is never a moment where I doubt the craftsmanship. What keeps me at a distance is that the album rarely feels dangerous. The atmosphere is consistently dark and elegant, but the emotional trajectory stays relatively predictable. I hear beauty, professionalism and scale, yet I don't often feel the tension accumulating toward something transformative. Even the heavier moments tend to reinforce the existing mood rather than break it open. The best tracks remind me why Tarja became such an influential figure in symphonic metal in the first place. The weaker moments feel like extensions of a language she mastered years ago. As a statement of identity, the album succeeds. As a source of genui...

Mon Laferte - Femme Fatale vol. 2 (2026)

Image
I never struggle to understand why people love Mon Laferte. She commits completely to her material, and that sincerity gives even her weaker songs a certain weight. On Femme Fatale Vol. 2 , the performances are passionate, vulnerable and unmistakably hers. There is no shortage of emotion, and the album has far more personality than most contemporary pop releases. What I miss is a stronger sense of progression. The record often presents heartbreak, longing and theatrical intensity at a similar emotional temperature from track to track. Instead of building toward larger moments, it tends to circle around the same emotional space. I admire the conviction, but after a while I start wanting sharper contrasts, bigger arrivals and more memorable structural peaks. The songwriting is solid without consistently reaching the level of the performances. A few songs linger, but many rely on atmosphere and interpretation rather than undeniable melodic lift. Because of that, the album feels more imp...

Sleeping with Sirens - An Ending In Itself (2026)

Image
I find An Ending In Itself respectable more than memorable. It succeeds at most of the things a modern Sleeping With Sirens album is supposed to do: the vocals are committed, the choruses are solid, and the heavier sections bring enough energy to keep the record moving. There is very little here that feels lazy or phoned in. The issue is that the album rarely develops beyond competence. The emotional themes are presented clearly, but they don't accumulate much additional weight as the record progresses. I keep hearing good songs rather than a compelling larger journey. The structures are familiar, the payoffs arrive where expected, and the sense of discovery remains limited throughout. The production helps create impact, but impact alone isn't enough. Many tracks hit effectively in the moment yet leave a weaker aftertaste because they don't reveal much beyond their initial appeal. I never feel the tension building toward a truly memorable climax, and the album's paci...

Mono - Snowdrop (2026)

Image
I admire Snowdrop more than I love it. The craftsmanship is undeniable: the arrangements are elegant, the performances are committed, and the emotional intent never feels artificial. MONO still know how to create a sense of scale that many post-rock bands spend entire careers chasing. The issue is that I rarely feel challenged or surprised by what I'm hearing. The album follows a language that MONO have been refining for years, and while they execute it extremely well, the sense of inevitability works against the music. I can often predict where a piece is heading long before it arrives there. The crescendos are beautiful, but beauty alone doesn't always translate into tension or revelation. The orchestral elements certainly enrich the sound, yet they don't fundamentally alter the band's approach. Rather than opening new possibilities, they mostly reinforce emotions that MONO already know how to express. As a result, the album often feels like a refinement of familia...

Stitched Up Heart - Medusa (2026)

Image
Medusa is a solid modern alternative metal record that succeeds more through execution than innovation. Stitched Up Heart know exactly what kind of album they want to make, and they deliver it with confidence. The songs are energetic, hook-driven and consistently engaging, while Mixi's vocal performance gives the material a personality that many active-rock bands lack. What works best is the album's immediacy. The choruses land, the energy rarely drops, and there is enough variation to keep the record moving. Even when individual songs aren't especially distinctive, the band's commitment helps them avoid feeling completely generic. The limitation is that the album rarely grows beyond its initial impact. Most tracks establish their idea early and then follow a predictable path toward the finish line. The production is powerful but also very controlled, leaving little room for surprise, danger or emotional vulnerability. I enjoy the record while it's playing, but I...