I like Butterfly more in theory than in practice. As a Daphni record, it absolutely understands groove, movement, and club functionality — the beats are flexible, playful, and clearly designed by someone who actually DJs. But as an album, it never quite locks into something I want to live inside. There are good ideas everywhere, flashes of funk, flashes of weirdness, but they tend to pass by rather than accumulate. I enjoy individual moments, less the full journey. Pros Reliable dancefloor intuition – The grooves work; nothing feels clumsy or amateur. Tactile, human rhythm feel – Loose, funky, and unsterile compared to a lot of modern club records. Variety of ideas – Disco, house, techno, and left-field touches keep it from sounding boxed in. Cons Album cohesion is weak – Feels more like a collection of DJ tools than a statement. Too many sketches – Several tracks hint at something stronger but don’t fully develop it. Identity blur – Sits awkwardly between ...