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Lancey Foux - FIRST DEGREE: 2ND CHARGE (2026)

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The energy is immediate. The distorted synths and blown-out bass hit hard, and Lancey’s delivery carries enough charisma to keep the tracks moving. But after the initial rush, the structure starts to feel thin. Many songs lock into the same loop and stay there, without real escalation or transformation. The attitude is strong, but the stakes remain low. It feels more like a collection of energetic moments than a fully shaped album. The aesthetic is confident, but the architecture underneath it is fragile. There’s presence here. Just not enough progression to sustain the record. Pros Vocal charisma Lancey’s tone and delivery carry personality. Even minimal lines land through cadence and confidence. Immediate energy The rage-style beats create instant momentum and keep the album physically engaging. Cohesive aesthetic The distorted synth palette and blown-out bass create a consistent sonic identity. Cons Loop-dependent songwriting Many tracks rely on repeating beat structures wit...

Gluecifer - Same Drug New High (2026)

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This feels like a band reconnecting with its original engine — loud riffs, fast tempos, swaggering delivery. The attitude is intact and the performances are tight. It never sounds tired. But after the initial punch, the record settles into a loop. The songs follow similar structures, the riffs hit but rarely evolve, and the energy band stays almost constant from start to finish. Instead of escalation, I get repetition. It’s competent, even fun in bursts. But structurally it never quite escapes its own template. Pros Strong rock attitude The band still sounds confident and aggressive. The swagger is authentic rather than nostalgic cosplay. Immediate riff impact The guitars hit quickly and deliver classic Scandinavian garage punch. Tight, energetic performances The band plays with discipline and conviction. Nothing feels lazy or half-hearted. Cons Structural repetition Many tracks follow the same fast riff → chorus → riff template with little escalation. Limited hook memorability ...

The Damned - Not Like Everybody Else (2026)

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This feels like a band revisiting the records that built them. The energy is genuine, and you can hear the affection in the performances. It’s clearly meant as a tribute rather than a reinvention. But that’s also the limitation. The songs largely stay within their original shapes, so the band rarely asserts a strong identity over them. The album moves from one familiar garage-rock structure to another without much escalation or reinterpretation. It’s enjoyable in the moment, especially if you love the era they’re referencing. But as an album experience, it feels more like a respectful homage than a compelling artistic statement. Energetic. Affectionate. Ultimately minor. Pros Genuine affection for the source material You can hear the band enjoying these songs. The performances feel enthusiastic rather than obligatory. Veteran chemistry Dave Vanian’s voice and the band’s playing still lock together with confidence after decades. Raw garage energy Several tracks carry a lively, s...

Michelle David & The True-tones - Soul Woman (2026)

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This album succeeds mostly because of Michelle David herself. The voice has conviction — gospel roots, real projection, and enough authority to carry even straightforward arrangements. The band plays the retro-soul language convincingly. Organ, rhythm guitar, and drums lock into that warm Northern Soul pocket, and the production keeps everything organic and tactile. But structurally, the songs rarely step outside the revival template. Many tracks rely on the strength of the vocal rather than evolving arrangements or strong melodic signatures. After a while, the momentum settles into a comfortable groove that doesn’t push the record forward. It’s sincere and well-executed. But it rarely breaks free from its influences. Pros Commanding vocal performance Michelle David’s voice carries real gospel conviction and emotional weight. Authentic retro-soul groove The rhythm section locks into classic Northern Soul and vintage R&B patterns convincingly. Warm analog production The arran...

Wings - Man on the Run (2026)

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What stands out immediately is the songwriting. McCartney’s melodic instinct is so strong that even outside their original album context, the songs still land. The hooks feel effortless, the structures clean. But as an album experience, it feels assembled rather than shaped. The sequencing follows the documentary narrative more than a musical arc, so the momentum rises and falls irregularly. It plays more like a historical playlist than a crafted record. It’s enjoyable and occasionally impressive, but it never develops the kind of sustained lift that pushes a compilation into essential territory. More portrait than statement. Pros Classic McCartney melodic instinct The choruses remain instantly recognisable. The songwriting clarity still carries decades later. Stylistic range within accessible pop Tracks move between piano ballads, orchestral pop, and rock-leaning material, giving the compilation variety. Historical perspective on the Wings era It works as a condensed portrait of...

Danny L Harle - Cerulean (2026)

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What stands out immediately is the sound design. Cerulean feels meticulously constructed — shimmering trance pads, hyper-precise percussion, and vocals floating in digital glass. Harle clearly knows how to build an electronic environment. When the album leans into melody, it works. The euphoric moments feel sincere rather than ironic, and the pop collaborations inject some necessary warmth into the otherwise synthetic palette. But the record doesn’t always sustain momentum. Several passages expand atmospherically without delivering a strong payoff. The ambition is evident, yet the arc occasionally diffuses instead of tightening. It’s a fascinating electronic object — carefully engineered and occasionally beautiful — but the journey isn’t always as gripping as the sound itself. Pros Distinct artistic identity The blend of trance melodicism, hyperpop polish, and orchestral ambition is immediately recognizable as Harle. High-level production detail Layers of arpeggios, pads, and voc...