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Karmanjakah - Diamond Morning (2026)

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What strikes me first is how complete the album feels. A lot of modern progressive metal records are collections of ideas. Diamond Morning feels more like a continuous environment. The transitions matter, recurring themes appear in different forms, and the sequencing gives the impression that the album was conceived as a whole rather than assembled track by track. I like the way Karmanjakah uses heaviness. The heavier passages aren't there to dominate the music but to create contrast and depth. The real strength of the record is its ability to move between states: airy and dense, luminous and dark, intimate and expansive. The atmosphere never feels static because there is always some subtle shift happening underneath. The shoegaze and post-rock influences are particularly effective. They soften the edges of the djent vocabulary and give the album a more human quality than many modern progressive metal releases. Instead of impressing me with complexity, it draws me in through tex...

Kaatayra - Caminhos de Água (2026)

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What strikes me immediately is how natural everything feels. A lot of experimental folk-black metal records sound like combinations of ideas. Caminhos de Água sounds like a single organism. The acoustic guitars, percussion, woodwinds, voices and environmental textures all seem to emerge from the same source rather than being layered on top of each other. The album's greatest strength is its sense of movement. Nothing feels fixed. Themes drift in and out of focus, rhythms subtly mutate and the arrangements continuously reshape themselves. The water concept is not just lyrical inspiration; it becomes the album's structural logic. The music flows rather than advances. At the same time, that approach slightly limits the score for me. I admire the journey more than I remember specific destinations. The record excels at immersion, atmosphere and gradual transformation, but it rarely delivers the kind of huge emotional or structural payoff that would push it into the upper tier of ...

Ed O'Brien - Blue Morpho (2026)

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I like the intention behind this more than I expected. Blue Morpho has a real atmosphere: soft psychedelic folk, ambient passages, orchestral air, some Brazilian warmth, and that slightly spiritual post-crisis tone. It feels like someone trying to build a peaceful inner space rather than chase a big rock statement. The best parts are when the record stops being just pretty and starts moving with purpose. “Teachers” brings more rhythm and colour, and “Obrigado” seems like the moment where the whole idea finally opens up. That kind of long-form, warm, progressive ending helps the album a lot. But I still find it a bit too gentle to fully convince me. The record has texture, sincerity and craft, but not enough pressure. The ambient pieces are tasteful, but they also make the album feel more meditative than necessary. I respect the world he creates, but I don’t feel pulled through a major emotional transformation. So for me this sits in the solid-good zone: personal, elegant, well-made...

Death Cab for Cutie - I Built You A Tower (2026)

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I can appreciate the craftsmanship here, but I struggle to find many moments that truly pull me in. The album is thoughtful, well played and emotionally sincere, yet it often feels content to remain in a comfortable emotional register. The songs unfold with professionalism rather than necessity. The lyrics deal with loss, aging and reflection, but the music rarely matches that weight. I keep waiting for a chorus to open up, for a track to become overwhelming, or for some structural turn that changes the emotional temperature. Instead, most of the record stays in the same restrained zone. What makes the album frustrating is that the ingredients are there. The melodies are decent, the performances are strong, and the production is tasteful. But everything feels slightly too controlled. The record communicates sadness without fully inhabiting it. In the end, I hear an album that is easy to admire but difficult to become passionate about. It is mature, coherent and carefully made, yet i...

Iceage - For Love of Grace & The Hereafter (2026)

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I admire the commitment more than I love the album itself. Iceage still sound like a real band with a real identity, which immediately separates them from much of the contemporary post-punk scene. There is conviction in every performance, and the record never feels calculated or trend-driven. At the same time, I keep waiting for the songs to accumulate more weight. The atmosphere is present from the beginning, but it doesn't deepen enough over the course of the album. The tension remains relatively stable, and many tracks occupy a similar emotional space. Instead of building toward a devastating conclusion, the record often circles around ideas it has already established. The songwriting is solid, and there are moments where the combination of romance, desperation and ragged rock energy works exactly as intended. But too often I feel like I'm hearing variations on an Iceage language that is already familiar rather than discovering new dimensions of it. In the end, I respect ...

Manchester Orchestra - Union Chapel (London, England) (2026)

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I appreciate what this album is trying to do, but I don't think it plays to Manchester Orchestra's greatest strengths. The songs are still well written, and the chapel setting gives everything a warm, intimate atmosphere. Andy Hull remains a compelling vocalist, and there are moments where the stripped-back arrangements reveal details that get buried in the full-band versions. The problem is that Manchester Orchestra have always been a band of release. Their best songs build pressure and eventually erupt. Here, that pressure often never arrives. The emotional intent is still present, but the physical impact is reduced. Instead of transforming the songs, many arrangements simply soften them. After a while, the record settles into a single emotional temperature. The room sounds beautiful, the performances are sincere, but the lack of contrast starts to flatten the experience. I admire the vulnerability, yet I rarely feel the tension accumulating toward something larger. As a d...