Review by Shadowdoom9 (Andi) for Plini - An Unnameable Desire (2026)
OK, confession time: I really prefer a lot of the metal music I like to have vocals. Although I enjoy the music, the vocals help guide me through. It's probably why my interest in Animals as Leaders and Liquid Tension Experiment didn't last long, and why I haven't even touched the material from legends like Joe Satriani and Steve Vai. But there are a couple instrumental djenty prog-metal/rock artists whose material I absolutely love, those being Scale the Summit and, of course, Australian guitar maestro Plini!
His perfect streak of albums continues in his new album An Unnameable Desire. As always, Plini has his great progressive style that gives an interesting and captivating zest to this instrumental sound. If I were to give this desire a name, it would be pleasure.
"Dorenavant" is the one-minute intro with sonic ambience rising until it stops and makes way for the first full track. We get to an intimate start with the beautiful title track. Then it sweeps into "Ciel". I love this one, especially the production work by Skyharbor's Devesh Dayal and the guitar soloing by Polish guitarist Jakub Zytecki. Plini can still show off his frantic guitaring playing in "Canyon".
He actually goes further down the heavy djent rabbithole than before as evident in the groovy highlight "Now & Then". And even more in the blistering "Manala". With heaviness in the drums and guitars, this is Plini as his most metal! "Vespertine" is more tranquil, but the softness doesn't last long as there's more of the progressive chaos.
There are more apocalyptic vibes in "Ruin". Getting close to the end is "After Everything" which already sounds like the album's epic climax. However, we have one more track deserving all its glory... The metallic 7-minute finale epic "The Time Will Pass Anyway" is absolutely crushing and uplifting at the same time. I should also note the bass work by Simon Grove who has also done the mixing well alongside the mastering courtesy of Periphery's Adam "Nolly" Getgood. They helped make the epic sound so wonderful.
Yeah, as much as we can't deny the undeniable talents of Plini, you also gotta thank drummer Chris Allison, keyboardist Dave Mckay, and the mini-orchestra of John Waugh, Misha Vayman, and Yoshi Masuda, plus the production by A.J. Minette. Strong backing lineup, diverse tracks... The Australian master of modern djent still holds his title!
Favorites: "Ciel", "Now & Then", "Manala", "After Everything", "The Time Will Pass Anyway"
