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A.A. Williams - Solstice (2026)

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Solstice feels less like an album than a slow-moving emotional eclipse. From the opening moments, everything seems drawn toward a destination that remains hidden but unavoidable. The quiet passages are never merely beautiful; they are gathering weight, accumulating pressure, preparing the ground for the moments when the music finally opens and reveals its full emotional scale. What moves me most is the seriousness of the record. There is no irony here, no attempt to soften its emotions with distance or cleverness. Every note feels committed. The sadness is not presented as atmosphere but as reality. Because of that, even the smallest melodic gestures carry enormous emotional force. The climaxes are extraordinary. They arrive gradually enough to feel earned, yet when they finally bloom they seem much larger than the individual components that created them. Distortion, strings, voice and silence all work together as part of the same emotional architecture. Nothing feels ornamental. W...

August Burns Red - Season Of Surrender (2026)

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Season Of Surrender feels like a band relying on experience rather than urgency. Everything is executed at a very high level. The riffs are tight, the drumming is exceptional and the performances leave little room for criticism from a technical perspective. The problem is that I rarely feel a sense of risk. The album knows exactly what it wants to be and delivers it efficiently, but that certainty comes at the expense of tension. Many songs hit hard immediately and then remain in roughly the same emotional and dynamic space. I hear momentum, but not much transformation. There are plenty of strong individual moments, yet they tend to blur together over the course of the album. The breakdowns land, the riffs are effective, but the record struggles to create the kind of long-form narrative or climactic payoff that usually separates a good metal album from a great one. What remains is a solid, professional metalcore record from a band that has mastered its formula. I enjoy the craftsma...

Oh Hiroshima - And The Dead Tree Gives No Shelter (2026)

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  I immediately connect with the atmosphere. Oh Hiroshima have always been good at creating that mixture of melancholy, distance and warmth, and this album continues that tradition. The guitars shimmer, the production feels expansive, and the emotional tone remains coherent throughout. What works best for me is the melodic side of the band. There are enough memorable motifs to prevent the album from dissolving into pure texture. Even during the quieter moments, I can feel an emotional intention behind the arrangements. The record never feels lazy or assembled from post-rock clichés alone. The issue is that I keep waiting for a stronger release of tension. The songs often build patiently, adding layers and emotional weight, but they rarely arrive at a truly transformative moment. The climaxes are beautiful rather than devastating. I admire them more than I feel overwhelmed by them. A second limitation is predictability. Once the album establishes its language, it largely stays wi...

The Who - Live at Eden Project 2023 (2026)

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I admire this more than I actively enjoy it. The quality of the songwriting is undeniable, and that alone keeps the concert engaging from beginning to end. Even decades later, songs like Baba O'Riley , Love, Reign O'er Me and Won't Get Fooled Again retain a structural power that many bands never achieve. At the same time, I rarely feel a real sense of discovery. The performances are polished and respectful, but they seldom generate the tension or unpredictability that makes a live album feel essential. The orchestra gives the music additional weight, yet most of the arrangements unfold exactly as I expect them to. The concert flows well and never becomes tedious, but it also spends much of its runtime confirming the greatness of material I already know rather than revealing something new about it. That's where the score settles for me. I hear craftsmanship, experience and professionalism, but not much risk. In the end, this feels like a strong document of a legenda...

Kurt Vile - Philadelphia's been good to me (2026)

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I can appreciate what Kurt Vile is trying to do here, but I find myself admiring the atmosphere more than the songs. The record has a comfortable, lived-in quality that makes it easy to spend time with. The observations feel genuine, the performances are relaxed, and there is no sense of calculation behind the music. The problem is that comfort becomes the album's defining characteristic. Too many songs operate at the same speed, with the same emotional temperature and the same loose songwriting approach. Instead of accumulating momentum, the record often settles into a pleasant drift. I keep waiting for a moment that changes the stakes, but it rarely arrives. The personality remains intact. Kurt Vile still sounds like Kurt Vile, and that alone gives the album a certain value. However, identity can only carry a record so far. Without stronger melodies, sharper dynamics or more decisive structural movement, many of these tracks blur together. In the end, I hear a talented songwri...

Marisa Anderson - The Anthology of UnAmerican Folk Music (2026)

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I can immediately hear the care that went into this project. The concept is strong, the performances are beautifully executed, and there is a genuine curiosity running through the entire record. Marisa Anderson approaches these traditions with respect and attention, and that gives the album an authenticity that many concept records lack. The problem for me is that admiration never fully turns into emotional investment. The pieces are consistently interesting, but they rarely gather momentum. The album unfolds like a series of observations rather than a journey. I appreciate the details while I'm listening, yet I seldom feel a growing sense of tension or necessity. The guitar work is often remarkable. Small phrasing choices, tonal shifts and textural nuances reveal themselves over time. But the record tends to prioritize atmosphere and reflection over melodic or emotional impact. I find myself appreciating individual moments more than being carried away by the whole. In the end, ...