A personal log of music, books, and live moments. Post-rock edges. Epic fantasy depths. Honest takes, no algorithms.
There are records that reward patience — and then there's The Architect, which demands it. Eidola's most compositionally dense release to date layers polyrhythmic guitar work over vocal performances that oscillate between fragile and ferocious. It shouldn't cohere. Somehow it does. The title track alone shifts time signatures four times before the two-minute mark, and yet feels utterly inevitable by the end. This is the kind of album that makes you re-listen to everything else they've made with new ears.
The Sacramento post-hardcore institution somehow keeps reinventing their brand of controlled chaos. Tilian Pearson and Jon Mess trade blows across a runtime that refuses to sit still.
A look at the production choices behind the clean/dirty dynamic that defines the genre — from Hum to DGD to Eidola, and what makes the contrast hit so hard.
Darrow's first descent into the Mines of Lykos sets up one of the most propulsive trilogies in modern sci-fi. Brown writes action like a war correspondent and emotion like someone who has been betrayed. The Gold/Red caste system is brutal in the best way.
Sanderson's magic systems are so mechanically elegant they feel like they were playtested. Allomancy is a masterclass in constraint-based world design. The heist framework around a god-emperor's empire gives the whole thing momentum you don't expect from a 600-page fantasy.
On why moral ambiguity in fantasy isn't nihilism — and why the genre's darker turn over the last two decades actually has more to say about hope than most Noblebright fiction.
The sequel that refuses to coast. Brown raises the stakes in every direction — politically, emotionally, violently. Red Rising set the table; Golden Son flips it.
A man telling the story of his own legend. The prose is unhurried and beautiful. Kvothe is one of the most compelling narrators in modern fantasy.
A wizard. A phone book listing. A murder scene. The Dresden Files starts exactly how it means to go on — fast, funny, and meaner than it looks.
Book two doubles down on everything that worked in Storm Front and adds werewolves. Multiple kinds. Butcher is having fun and it shows.
Darker than the first, structurally tighter, and the moment where the series starts to show what it's really capable of.
Review coming soon.
The Mod Club was the perfect room for this — intimate enough to feel the kick drum in your ribs, big enough to let the reverb bloom. They opened with "The Architect" and the crowd never really recovered from there.
Twenty years of material condensed into a setlist that made choices nobody was expecting. Three songs from Happiness? Bold. Worth it? Absolutely.