Seefeel Sol.Hz
Consensus is still forming across 4 professional reviews. Seefeel's Sol.Hz arrives as a slow, magnetic statement from a band long invested in the tension between texture and pulse, and critics largely agree it succeeds on those terms. Earning an 80/100 consensus score across 4 professional reviews, the record trades rock propulsion for dubwise electronica, favoring minimalist
The best song, "Behind the Seen," stands out for its trance-like, reverb-heavy synths and dizzying polyrhythms.
While some reviewers find the withholding of catharsis challenging, the consensus suggests Sol.Hz rewards repeated listens: it is not a collection of conventional songs but a cohes
Best for listeners looking for dubwise electronica and ambient textures, starting with Behind the Seen and Ever No Way.
Explore the full Chorus artist page, discography, and related genre paths.
See where this record sits inside the full critic-ranked discography.
Jump from this record into the broader critic-consensus lists for 2026.
Full consensus notes
Seefeel's Sol.Hz arrives as a slow, magnetic statement from a band long invested in the tension between texture and pulse, and critics largely agree it succeeds on those terms. Earning an 80/100 consensus score across 4 professional reviews, the record trades rock propulsion for dubwise electronica, favoring minimalist, otherworldly atmospheres and hypnotic repetition that resist tidy resolution. Reviewers consistently point to the album's patience and ambient focus as its primary strengths.
Across professional reviews, standout tracks emerge where the band's approach crystallizes: “Behind the Seen” and “Until Now” are singled out for turning reverb-saturated motifs into lucid, dubby grooves, while “Brazen Haze” is praised as a study in restraint and imbalance. Critics note a deliberate dissolution of rock elements in favor of sustained suspension, with texture over form shaping the record's emotional arc. Several reviews highlight how quieter pieces like “Humidity Switch” underscore the album's ambient minimalism and nostalgia-versus-timelessness tension.
While some reviewers find the withholding of catharsis challenging, the consensus suggests Sol.Hz rewards repeated listens: it is not a collection of conventional songs but a cohesive set of atmospheres where subtle shifts matter. For those wondering if Sol.Hz is good, the critical consensus and the 80/100 score across four reviews argue that Seefeel's latest is a focused, richly textured return that will satisfy listeners attuned to ambient, dub-inflected experimentation. Read on for detailed reviews and track-by-track notes.
Critics' Top Tracks
The standout songs that made critics take notice
Behind the Seen
1 mention
"The trance-like "Behind the Seen" coats a simple rhythm in a wash of reverb-heavy synth sounds"— AllMusic
Ever No Way
1 mention
"Ever No Way" finds a more defined shape with a glitchy beat and twisting synth melodies"— AllMusic
Humidity Switch
1 mention
"Moments like "Brazen Haze" and "Humidity Switch" are more ambient, with either no rhythmic sounds at all or aquatic samples filling in for drums"— AllMusic
The trance-like "Behind the Seen" coats a simple rhythm in a wash of reverb-heavy synth sounds
Track Ratings
How critics rated each track, relative to this album (0-100). Only tracks that made critics feel something are rated.
Brazen Haze
Everydays
Ever No Way
Humidity Switch
Behind the Seen
Am Flares
Falling First
Until Now
Scrambler
Get the next albums worth your time.
Critic-backed picks in one clean digest. No clutter.
What Critics Are Saying
Deep insights from 4 critics who reviewed this album
Critic's Take
Seefeel's Sol.Hz feels like a continuation of a long conversation, and the best songs on Sol.Hz - notably “Behind the Seen” and “Until Now” - show the band refining their dubby, space-rock ambience into something more lucid. Fred Thomas writes with the same observational calm as his AllMusic work, noting how “Behind the Seen” coats a simple rhythm in reverb-heavy synths while “Until Now” trades that for a slow, foreboding groove. The quieter pieces such as “Brazen Haze” and “Humidity Switch” demonstrate the album's ambient patience, and the small shifts across tracks make the record feel timeless rather than merely retrospective.
Key Points
-
The best song, "Behind the Seen," stands out for its trance-like, reverb-heavy synths and dizzying polyrhythms.
-
The album's core strengths are its dubwise electronica, ambient patience, and timeless continuity with Seefeel's earlier work.
Themes
Critic's Take
Seefeel return with Sol.Hz, a record that privileges texture and sustained suspension over conventional songcraft, and the best tracks reveal that intent plainly. The opener “Brazen Haze” is a study in patient imbalance, where melody plateaus and noise intensifies, making it one of the best tracks on Sol.Hz for its austere focus. “Everydays” and “Until Now” stand out as well: the former for its faint guitar overtones feeding subtle harmonics, the latter for folding pulses into a synaesthetic haze that rewards repeated listens. This is music that withholds catharsis, so the best songs are those that sustain atmosphere rather than resolve it.
Key Points
-
“Brazen Haze” is best for exemplifying the album’s austere, textural focus and patient imbalance.
-
The album’s core strength is sustaining a shifting field of texture that prioritizes atmosphere over resolution.