Posts

Bonnie 'Prince' Billy - We Are Together Again (2026)

Image
This feels almost like a document rather than an album. The voice is right there — close, unguarded, fragile. There’s something honest about how little it tries to do. But it barely moves. The songs sit in the same emotional register, circling rather than building. I don’t feel accumulation — just presence. And while that presence is real, it doesn’t translate into something that grows or transforms. I respect how stripped it is. I just don’t feel it pulling me back. Pros Raw vocal intimacy The voice feels completely unfiltered. There’s no distance between performer and listener. Cohesive minimal world Everything is stripped to essentials. No excess, no distraction. Authentic emotional tone It never feels performative or embellished — the sincerity is real. Cons Escalation almost absent Songs rarely build or accumulate emotional weight over time.  Weak melodic grip Very few motifs that stay with you after the album ends. Small-scale limitation The intimacy doesn’t...

Tinariwen - Hoggar (2026)

Image
The groove locks in quickly and stays there. The guitars cycle in a way that feels grounded and authentic — you can feel the environment in the sound. But structurally, it barely shifts. The repetition becomes the main language, and without stronger variation or escalation, it starts to flatten the experience. I don’t get that moment where the album pushes beyond its own loop. There’s weight and sincerity here. But not enough movement to sustain it. Pros Authentic emotional grounding The music carries lived experience. It feels necessary, not stylistic. Hypnotic guitar interplay The interlocking patterns create a steady, immersive trance. Strong collective identity Group vocals and ensemble playing reinforce a clear cultural and sonic identity. Cons Groove uniformity across tracks Rhythmic patterns stay too similar, limiting contrast and progression. Weak dynamic escalation Songs rarely build toward a decisive emotional or musical peak. Low hook immediacy Melodic ancho...

James Blake - Trying Times (2026)

Image
Blake still operates in that fragile zone where voice and electronics blur into the same emotional surface. The production is elegant — restrained piano, distant synth halos, and layered falsetto drifting through the mix. But the songs rarely push themselves. They hover instead of climbing. I keep waiting for a moment where the tension resolves into something irreversible — a melody that anchors the atmosphere or a climax that justifies the restraint. What remains is beautifully produced introspection. I admire the craft and the sincerity. I just don’t feel the structural pull that would make me return often. Pros Distinct sonic identity Blake’s fragile falsetto layered over minimal electronics remains instantly recognizable. Few artists occupy this exact emotional/sonic space. Detailed production textures Subtle vocal processing, reverberant piano, and low-frequency electronics create a refined soundscape. Emotional sincerity The delivery feels personal and vulnerable rather tha...

Cities Aviv - EVEN COLDER SPRING (2026)

Image
This feels less like an album and more like a notebook of fragments. Dusty loops fade in and out, verses drift through the haze, and ideas appear just long enough to leave an impression before dissolving. What works is the atmosphere. The production has that warped, late-night tape quality that makes the whole thing feel intimate and handmade. Cities Aviv clearly knows the sonic world he wants to inhabit. But structurally it never quite settles into something cohesive. The collage approach keeps interrupting momentum instead of building it. I admire the texture and the introspection, yet I rarely feel the record moving toward a meaningful payoff. It’s interesting as a sketchbook. Just not fully convincing as an album. Pros Distinct artistic identity The dusty loops, warped samples, and detached delivery form a recognisable sonic world. Introspective writing tone The lyrics feel reflective and philosophical rather than performative or slogan-driven. Textural experimentation The p...

heavensouls - westside trapped (2026)

Image
The first thing that stands out is the rhythmic identity. Afrobeat patterns and jazz instrumentation give the record a strong cultural backbone. It feels rooted, not aesthetic. I like the sonic palette — sax lines, percussion, and electronic fragments interacting in a dense but lively field. There’s a sense of experimentation that feels curious rather than chaotic. But the album rarely commits to developing its ideas. Tracks appear, establish a groove or texture, and move on before anything fully transforms. Instead of long arcs, I get fragments — interesting fragments, but still fragments. The ambition and identity are clear. The structure just doesn’t quite follow through. Pros Distinct cultural identity Afrobeat rhythms and diaspora influences shape the album’s sonic language in a way that feels intentional rather than decorative. Rich instrumental palette Sax, percussion, guitar, and electronic textures create a dense and interesting sonic environment. Rhythmic vitality G...

Lamb of God - Into Oblivion (2026)

Image
This is Lamb of God doing what they’ve done well for two decades: disciplined aggression, tight groove riffs, and Blythe barking like the building is already on fire. The album moves efficiently. There’s no filler, and the songs punch through quickly. But structurally, I can feel the familiar mechanics underneath — the riff cycles, the breakdown placements, the pacing logic. They’re executed well, just rarely surprising. What keeps the record afloat is the band’s physical authority. The groove still hits hard, and Blythe’s delivery still sounds committed rather than tired. But in the end, it feels like a veteran band reinforcing a blueprint rather than rewriting it. Pros Solid. Focused. Just not a new peak. Tight, efficient runtime At under 40 minutes, the album avoids bloat and keeps momentum high. Classic Lamb of God groove mechanics The rhythmic riffs and syncopated attack still hit with authority. Their signature groove metal DNA remains intact. Blythe’s vocal presence His ...