Posts

Pink Floyd - Live from the Los Angeles Sports Arena, April 26th, 1975 (2026)

Image
I get what this is trying to do, but it never fully justifies itself. It sits in that Floyd space where everything is stretched out and immersive, but here it feels more like drift than direction. The ideas are strong — especially the early Shine On material — but they’re not locked in yet, and you can feel that. The atmosphere carries a lot of it. It’s easy to sink into, and the band sounds completely in control of the mood. But that control also flattens things. There’s not enough tension building underneath, not enough sense that something has to happen. It just keeps unfolding at the same emotional level. Some passages hint at something bigger, like they’re about to tip into a real payoff, but they don’t quite get there. Instead of escalation, you get extension. Instead of arrival, you get continuation. It’s good to sit inside, but I don’t feel pushed through it. That’s what keeps it from going higher. Pros Immersive atmosphere → strong spatial world, very “in the room” Floyd ...

La Jungle - An Order Of Things (2026)

Image
It locks in fast and doesn’t really let go. The pulse is constant, almost hypnotic, and for a while that works — it’s physical, immediate, easy to sink into. I feel the intention clearly: repetition as intensity, not as laziness. But after a few tracks, I start waiting for something that never fully arrives. The builds are there, the pressure increases, but it doesn’t cross into a different state. It just reinforces the same one. The energy stays high, but it flattens rather than escalates. There’s also not much to hold onto. No real motifs, no moments that stick after it ends. It’s more about being inside the motion than remembering anything from it. I respect the control and the identity, but it feels contained. It pushes, but it doesn’t break through . Pros Physical, trance-inducing groove → extremely body-driven, almost hypnotic Strong hybrid identity → noise + techno + krautrock feels coherent and intentional Improved layering and structure → more controlled and developed t...

Nine Inch Nails & Boys Noize - Nine Inch Noize (2026)

Image
It hits with intent, but it doesn’t go far enough. The sound is right — dense, aggressive, very controlled. The fusion works naturally, almost too naturally. It locks into a lane quickly and stays there. That’s the issue. I don’t feel progression, just sustained pressure. There are moments where it feels like it could break into something bigger, but it never really commits. The energy plateaus instead of escalating. It’s functional, effective in the moment, but structurally it doesn’t build toward anything that feels necessary. What holds it back the most is the lack of anchors. No real hooks, no motifs that stick. Once it ends, there’s not much that stays with me. It’s all surface impact. I get what it’s trying to do, and it does it cleanly. But it never becomes essential. Pros Strong physical impact → hits hard, immediate body response Clear identity fusion → genuinely sounds like NIN × Boys Noize, not a generic collab Textural density → distortion, layering, and sonic aggre...

Tomora - Come Closer (2026)

Image
It grabs me at first because the sound is there. It feels textured, intentional, like it knows what kind of world it wants to build. But it doesn’t push that world forward. The tracks stretch out without really evolving, and after a while I realise I’m not waiting for anything to happen. It just sits in its own atmosphere. Even when it gets louder or denser, it doesn’t feel like a real step up. There are good moments, but they don’t accumulate. Each track feels like a separate attempt instead of part of a bigger movement. I end up appreciating the craft more than actually feeling pulled through it. Pros Distinct identity → the fusion is real, not generic High production/detail → consistently rich and well-crafted Groove foundation holds → enough propulsion to avoid collapse Cons Weak structural escalation → tracks plateau instead of delivering climaxes Hook insufficiency → ideas don’t stick or return strongly Album flow fragmentation → feels like parallel experiments, ...

Czech Philharmonic - Gustav Mahler: Symphonies 1-9 (2026)

Image
I feel this more as a world than a set of symphonies. It’s constantly moving forward, always pointing somewhere, even when it detours. The Czech Philharmonic keeps everything human, almost grounded, which makes the long arcs easier to follow but sometimes takes away that feeling of danger I look for in Mahler. The climaxes still land — especially in the big symphonies — but they don’t always crush. They arrive, they open, they resolve. I miss a bit of instability, that sense that things could collapse instead of resolve. What holds it together is the continuity of intent. Nothing feels decorative. Even the quieter passages carry weight. It’s long, but it earns most of it. I come out of it respecting it more than being overwhelmed by it — which, for Mahler, says a lot. Pros Massive long-range structure → the symphonies consistently go somewhere , with real teleological weight  Emotional seriousness throughout → nothing feels decorative; even quieter passages carry conseque...

Skindred - You Got This (2026)

Image
This works because it moves. The groove is immediate, the bounce is there, and Benji carries it with enough presence to keep everything alive. When the choruses hit, they land — simple but effective. But structurally, it stays locked in place. Most tracks reach their peak quickly and just ride it out. There’s very little sense of something building beyond the initial impact. Across the album, the formula becomes visible. Same energy, similar pacing, similar payoff. It’s enjoyable in bursts, but harder to stay fully engaged over the full runtime. It’s solid and energetic. It just doesn’t evolve enough to go further. Pros Infectious groove The reggae-metal fusion still works. Rhythms bounce and keep the album physically engaging. Strong vocal personality Benji Webbe gives the album identity and energy. Without him, this drops fast. Functional, memorable hooks Choruses land consistently. They’re simple but effective. Cons Predictable song structures Most tracks follow the same bui...