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...