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Trooper Salute - 友達がいました [Tomodachigaimashita] (2026)

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I like the lightness of this more than I admire it. The jangly guitars, soft melodies and slightly wistful tone give it a clear charm, and it feels like it belongs to a very specific Japanese indie-pop lineage rather than to some anonymous modern “bedroom pop” blur. There’s personality in that softness, and the album seems to understand how to make intimacy feel graceful rather than inert. What keeps me at a distance is that the record doesn’t seem to push very hard beyond that initial sweetness. I hear pleasant textures, a few elegant melodic turns, and a coherent mood, but not much that really deepens the emotional field or changes the stakes as it goes. It’s the kind of album I can imagine enjoying track by track without feeling that the whole thing accumulates into something larger. So I come away respecting its warmth, taste and melodic delicacy more than feeling fully moved by it. It sounds like a good, likable indie-pop record with its own identity, but also one that may stay ...

Warning - Rituals of Shame (2026)

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 I’m no longer hearing Rituals of Shame as a devastating late-career triumph. I’m hearing a good Warning album that still carries the band’s emotional weight, but not one that fully converts that weight into a truly great record. What I’d still respond to is the sincerity. Warning are one of the few doom bands where sadness doesn’t feel decorative, and Patrick Walker’s voice almost automatically gives the material a bruised, human quality. Even if the album is “only” a 67 for me, I’d still expect it to sound committed, patient and emotionally serious in a way that separates it from a lot of modern epic doom. The problem is that seriousness alone isn’t enough on your scale. For a record this slow and this emotionally concentrated, I need the songs to earn their runtime with bigger structural payoffs, stronger climactic release, or at least more variation in how the grief is expressed. At a 67, the issue becomes that the album probably inhabits one emotional and musical zone too c...

Tonhalle-Orchester Zürich - Mahler: Symphony No. 7 (2026)

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I can see this being a respectable Mahler 7 without becoming one I’d feel strongly about. Everything points to a well-played, well-prepared recording with real structural intelligence behind it. Järvi seems to favor clarity, momentum and orchestral balance, and that approach probably serves the score well at a technical level. I’d expect the textures to be easy to read, the pacing coherent, and the orchestra fully inside the music. But Mahler 7 is not a symphony I mainly want to hear as “coherent” or “well judged.” It needs a certain instability, a sense of nocturnal strangeness and cumulative pressure that pushes beyond competence. From what I’ve seen, this version seems to understand the piece without fully surrendering to its weirdness. The central movements may be vivid and well characterized, but I’m not convinced the performance builds enough psychological tension across the whole work. That matters because with this symphony, structural command on its own doesn’t carry the sco...

Makthaverskan - Glass and Bones (2026)

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I still hear enough of Makthaverskan’s core strengths here to understand why the album works for a lot of people. The guitars have that familiar bright ache, the vocals still cut through with conviction, and the record never completely collapses into passive dream-pop drift. There’s a built-in urgency to this band that remains appealing even when the songwriting itself doesn’t fully rise to the occasion. But I’m hearing Glass and Bones less as a strong comeback and more as a decent record that doesn’t quite justify its own momentum. The songs move, but they don’t build enough. I get a steady stream of competent emotional post-punk energy, yet not enough peaks that feel truly earned or transformative. The album is pleasant to sit with, but it rarely creates that sense of mounting pressure or release that would make the material feel necessary rather than simply well-executed. Part of the issue is that the cleaner, brighter side of the record also makes it feel a little safer. Ear...

sueter7 - Todo Salió bien en la Sencilla Villa Quién (2026)

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I can hear why this album would make a strong first impression. It has a very clear emotional and aesthetic world: soft glitch-pop, bedroom indie, a bit of noise, a bit of melancholy, all filtered through something intimate and handmade rather than polished. It feels personal in a real way, and I like that it doesn’t sound as though it was built from interchangeable indie-pop presets. Still, the main issue is that I hear more sensibility than force. The album has atmosphere, detail and tenderness, but not enough movement. Too often the songs seem content to stay inside the same emotional temperature instead of building toward something sharper, bigger or more transformative. The textures are appealing, the writing is sincere, but the record doesn’t generate enough tension and release to really deepen its impact. That also affects the runtime. On paper, the long-form ambition is appealing, but in practice I suspect the album would start to feel diffuse rather than cumulative. Inst...

Khemmis - Khemmis (2026)

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I enjoy this record, but mostly because it reminds me of what Khemmis already does well rather than showing me something new. The combination of epic heavy metal melodies and doom weight remains effective, and the band still has a knack for writing riffs that stay in my head after the album ends. The vocal performances are committed and help give the material a sense of scale that many modern doom bands lack. What keeps the album below the low-70s for me is the lack of truly exceptional moments. The songs are well constructed, but they rarely build enough pressure to create the kind of payoff I look for in epic doom metal. I hear plenty of quality, but not enough surprise, danger or emotional escalation. The record often feels like it is moving toward something monumental, only to settle for something merely solid. The atmosphere is convincing and the performances are reliable, yet I never feel completely consumed by the album's world. Compared with the genre's strongest rele...