Psalm 32 was written bringing to mind a previously unacknowledged offense against the Lord God. It expressed anguish and remorse. But after that there was happiness, relief, and praise. It isn't an expression of relief of not knowing whether something bad may or may not happen when asking forgiveness, but rather thankfulness of receiving that anticipated forgiveness. But this psalm, Psalm 33 with no writer attributed to it is a complete very joyful honor and praise to the Lord of all He is.
There are many times of personal, family, sports, local, regional, national, and world events, and then various holiday celebrations that bring out physical and emotional, even fanatic ecstatic responses. For some thats the highest level of celebration they ever experience. But it is a very different, well, not level, not fashion, but comprehension and experience, no those words are inadequate to describe what the writer is expressing in Psalm 33. The acknowledgement of who God is and the glory rightly ascribed to Him stands apart from all the awards world champions might receive and accolades from other men.
For the word of the Lord is righteous, and all his works are faithful. He loveth righteousness and judgment: the earth is full of the goodness of the Lord. By the word of the Lord were the heavens made, and all the hosts of them by the breath of his mouth.
Psalms 33:4 - 6 GNV
As to the question I have been asking of the psalms there should be little doubt that this is a psalm Jesus could pray, in fact pray it knowing its truth more fully than the original writer could have imagined when he penned it.