EDIT: I'm not sure what happened but the first half of my post was missing and I've updated my reviews for A-L.
Add:
Classic Add. Love this sound overall. The soft cadence with the filler guitar with those warmer tones is noice. Using the word again, classic is the sound of your songfight! voice. At least to me. It has that indie feel, naturally. The harder parts in the middle and nearer to the end feel like your singing-character is losing just a little control... just a little too drunk for a moment there so I dig THAT on an 'artistic level'.
The tremelo on the vocal track is just icing, delicious icing.
The stars are thinning out so I gotta' get to the next song before black out.
Balls To Monte:
Nice kick-start of a song. It might seem a little 80's movie-sound-track but it's well put together and not quite that parody. I particularly like the singing and harmonies. It has a standard-rock feel but executed so well that it's not the trope it could be. Good guitar dueling and fun lyrics all tied together in a nice rock-n-roll bed of music and vocal performance.
Berkeley Social Scene:
I wasn't crazy about the intro into the clumbsy verse until I began to understand that it was supposed to be a little drunk. The song is about drinking after all. So I appreciate the arrangement and performance points even where they may suffer a bit. (We only get a week and boy do I get that, myself.) The clean chord-pick-through parts are nice and I do like the shaky lead in the middle too.
I want to say that I like the vocal delivery where I could see others being a bit more picky about that.
Frankie Big Face:
This is really good and should win. Where I've forgotten how to record, you've only gotten better. I love this production but it's not just the mix & mastering that assentuate the performance. I like the way your voice sounds in this piece and really like the night-air atmosphere that you've managed to create. It is pretty dramatic and again, you only seem to improve. You are the professional here after all. This song is strong in all aspects, including lyrical content. Everything else has been said and I can only say that this is the strongest entry this week.
Both of us thought to drink in the park, and that too I can appreciate.
Hoblit:
I didn't get around to putting in the percussion I wanted. I wanted some floor tom stuff here and there or maybe even a kettle drum during those choruses. As much compliment as I have gotten on the guitar, I wish I had more time to polish those solos. I could have done better.
Los Vigilantes Oscuros:
I will say that this is interesting and put together well. I am not necessarily in into it. In fact, to me it reminds me of a more modern beatnic type thing. It's got the poetry and drama but of course it's bigger than bongos and finger snaps. I appreciate the level of effort in making a listenable piece even if it really isn't my thing.
LunkMoChump:
I love how this music starts with the airy but small roomed drums. It breaks into something of a folk song that falls in that strange area that I'm not crazy about. I love Crosby Stills & Nash but hate John Denver and Gordon Lightfoot while this song leans to the latter. Just a not-my-thing type thing. But it's executed well and the vocals are very nice. The performance is very nice and has a really good feel. Toooo-good... but I can appreciate the instrumentation, and not find enough flaw to harp on.
Good work.
The Mellfire Trifecta:
Another fun intro right into a nice airy piece. I love your voice and delivery here and the instrumentation, clear but still filled in nice, is really pretty. Where this could fall into boring 70's hippy music, something saves it from falling into that. It reminds me of that kind of music a lot though, which isn't bad as I like a lot of it. The backing vocals are very nice and I like the story. I feel like I lived your song. (Well, I've lived a lot of songs in this fight.) Another solid entry in this fight, and thank you for such a nice song.
Pigfarmer Jr:
I love this. It reminds me of a lot of that modern folk music that I can dig. The lyrics are great and the instrumentation (specifically the banjo) are authentic choices for this style. I appreciate the right amount of reverb which is even better than some of the modern folk can be, especially the kind in the 2010s (and back through the decade before.)
Good vocals, good performance, another great tune for this fight.
Robyn Mackenzie:
This leans into the indie-rock sound of the last 25 years. I think the vocals may be setting too loud in this song but they're good enough to do that. I love the guitar half-stop transition sliding into each other through the soft crunch overdrive. The hook "keep on drinking in the Da A aark" is a nice touch and is in danger of getting stuck in my head as the chorus is repeated, leaving it stuck in my head.
Soft Rick:
This sounds late 70's, early 80's and seems to embrace that cheesy sound. Don't get me wrong, the performance is mostly solid and the lyrics aren't bad. It's just the instrumentation and effect choices that box it into that category. Which isn't my favorite but I do have a soft spot for that guitar solo sound over it as my mind perceives it as 'smooth' somehow. (maybe it feels R&B to me)
On a personal level, the lyrics are my life. As a famous country singer once sang, " hangovers hurt more than they used to ".
Starfinger:
Wow this song is weird but you've been known to be so. Another song that feels drunk and I love how wobbly the first section is despite it having a 'normal sound'. The second part kicks in as almost a relief because it seems to embrace the weirdness instead of my brain trying to sort that out for itself.
I particularly love your vocal delivery here and the instrumentation choices are excellent. The lyrics are solid even if a bit meta but this song makes me want to drink in the dark. (And yes, we can hear you wearing TMBG on your sleeve here!)
i
Love it, one of my favorites this week.
Sunspire:
This is pretty good and I can hear the idea, most everything you're going for even if you don't fully achieve it. As said earlier, and I will most certainly say again in the future, I understand how the time limitation and crunch can make our songs suffer a little. I won't get into particulars except to say that I think you might probably agree. I do like it and it is interesting and listenable among a solid set of songs this time around.
I like the 'feel' and atmosphere you create with the percussion & effect choices along with the vocal delivery tying it all together.