I'll admit that those turns certainly do look less intensely banked than the ones on the likes of Shambhala and Mako do, but I'm sure this will be a fun, enjoyable ride with loads of floaty moments! Besides, this ride could have surprises up its sleeves yet; we've still got lots more track to come! B&M's 2 newest traditional hypers so to speak (aka non-gigas) are Shambhala and Mako, and they seem to be two of the most highly praised B&M hypers built so far on the whole, so I'm quite optimistic that this will be an absolutely incredible ride! I haven't ridden Shambhala, but Mako is absolutely outstanding, and Happy Valley Beijing are onto a winner if Music Roller Coaster is anything even half as good as Mako, if you ask me!
Admittedly, this looks quite a bit smaller than Mako and the drop doesn't look as steep or as tall (Mako's is 200ft tall and I believe it's around 75-80 degrees, whereas this coaster's drop looks to be about 45-50 degrees and no more than about 150ft judging by other people's estimated heights and statistics etc.), so I'm not sure whether you'll get that pull of sustained airtime going over it like you do on Mako, but I'm certainly open to surprises! The seemingly similarly sized Hollywood Dream looks like a really fun ride, so I don't see why this wouldn't be, personally!
Also, RCDB seems to imply that this ride will feature the water brakes that rides like Diamondback and many of B&M's dive coasters have, as it lists Music Roller Coaster as containing a "Splash Effect":
https://rcdb.com/15115.htm
Very interesting to see them go for this instead of the water jets activating beside the train like you have on Shambhala; does anyone know why they may have gone back to this system?