I can hear the ambition immediately. Forest of Forgetting wants to be immersive, cinematic, mythic — and in terms of arrangement, it often succeeds. The orchestration is lush, the vocals are poised, and everything is placed with care. But for me, it never quite crosses into urgency. It feels composed, not compelled. The atmosphere is consistent — almost too consistent. Track after track leans into the same mid-tempo grandeur, the same slow-burn string swells, the same careful emotional register. I don’t dislike it; I just don’t feel pushed. In your strongest symphonic metal records, the drama escalates, fractures, surprises. Here, the forest stays beautiful, but the weather barely changes. It works as a mood piece. As a metal record, it lacks bite and structural tension. I respect it more than I replay it. Pros High-level orchestration The arrangements are polished and cinematic, with real attention to instrumental layering. Controlled vocal performance Johanna Kurkela del...