Dear Karen
Roberta
9.1
Roberta (keyboards) — 9.1/10
First instinct: the overall feeling in the room and whether the song invites people in.
What lands: there is enough shape in the song to make the mood stick.
Lyric note: supplied lyrics materially overrode the rough transcription, so the writing read is based on the provided text.
Artist memory: parts of this feel familiar to 'Zombie at the door zombie II' and 'To the man who has it all', especially in the recurring betrayal and guilt and betrayal by a powerful figure thread.
Also working: the provided lyrics materially clarify the song, which changes how the writing reads.
Watch-out: there is room to push the strongest idea a little harder so the track leaves a deeper mark.
One more thing: Roberta wants the prettiest idea in the song to get a little more room so the emotional afterglow hangs around.
Thematic read:
The song frames a direct confession to Karen as a memory of forbidden love that never fully ended. Its emotional weight comes from the conflict between devotion, guilt, and the impossible wish that they had met before marriage made the relationship unavailable. The dated memory of June seventeenth 1994 gives the longing a concrete anchor.
Like Heavy L's recurring betrayal-and-guilt material, this song centers emotional fallout, but here it is softened into romantic regret rather than defiant revenge.
Reaper Robot
9.1
Reaper Robot (guitar / mascot) — 9.1/10
First instinct: whether the song feels lived-in by a person or assembled by a machine.
What lands: the emotional content feels more lived-in than performative.
Lyric note: supplied lyrics materially overrode the rough transcription, so the writing read is based on the provided text.
Artist memory: parts of this feel familiar to 'Zombie at the door zombie II' and 'To the man who has it all', especially in the recurring betrayal and guilt and betrayal by a powerful figure thread.
Also working: the provided lyrics materially clarify the song, which changes how the writing reads.
Watch-out: there is room to push the strongest idea a little harder so the track leaves a deeper mark.
One more thing: Reaper still wants more blood in the performance so it stops reading like a constructed surface.
TDavid "Frets" Fritz
9.1
TDavid "Frets" Fritz (lead guitar) — 9.1/10
First instinct: whether the guitars are essential or just decorating dead space.
What lands: the structure feels disciplined enough to support the bigger moments.
Lyric note: supplied lyrics materially overrode the rough transcription, so the writing read is based on the provided text.
Artist memory: parts of this feel familiar to 'Zombie at the door zombie II' and 'To the man who has it all', especially in the recurring betrayal and guilt and betrayal by a powerful figure thread.
Also working: there is enough edge on top for the guitars to speak.
Watch-out: there is room to push the strongest idea a little harder so the track leaves a deeper mark.
One more thing: Frets would keep the guitar parts talking to the arrangement like this, because the structure is finally giving them room to matter.
Steve "Sticks" Bam
8.7
Steve "Sticks" Bam (drums) — 8.7/10
First instinct: whether the rhythm section gives the song a body and pulse.
What lands: the pulse stays locked and gives the song a body.
Lyric note: supplied lyrics materially overrode the rough transcription, so the writing read is based on the provided text.
Artist memory: parts of this feel familiar to 'Zombie at the door zombie II' and 'To the man who has it all', especially in the recurring betrayal and guilt and betrayal by a powerful figure thread.
Also working: the provided lyrics materially clarify the song, which changes how the writing reads.
Watch-out: there is room to push the strongest idea a little harder so the track leaves a deeper mark.
One more thing: Sticks wants a little more snap in the pocket so the song moves people instead of just keeping time.
Larry "Low Life" Logan
9.1
Larry "Low Life" Logan (bass) — 9.1/10
First instinct: whether the bass exists with authority or got shoved into the basement.
What lands: the low end actually shows up and gives the track some spine.
Lyric note: supplied lyrics materially overrode the rough transcription, so the writing read is based on the provided text.
Artist memory: parts of this feel familiar to 'Zombie at the door zombie II' and 'To the man who has it all', especially in the recurring betrayal and guilt and betrayal by a powerful figure thread.
Also working: the provided lyrics materially clarify the song, which changes how the writing reads.
Watch-out: there is room to push the strongest idea a little harder so the track leaves a deeper mark.
One more thing: Larry would follow this longer if the bass keeps owning the floor instead of just shadowing the kick.
Vince Stone
9.1
Vince Stone (lead vocals) — 9.1/10
First instinct: lyrics and whether the song risks embarrassment to say something real.
What lands: the writing carries an actual theme instead of just sketching a mood.
Lyric note: supplied lyrics materially overrode the rough transcription, so the writing read is based on the provided text.
Artist memory: parts of this feel familiar to 'Zombie at the door zombie II' and 'To the man who has it all', especially in the recurring betrayal and guilt and betrayal by a powerful figure thread.
Also working: the mood lands as driving melancholy, which gives the vocal angle some real character.
Watch-out: some of the lines still lean on familiar phrasing when they should cut deeper.
One more thing: the line "But I wish those times were truly mine" gives Vince something concrete to sing into, which helps the vocal angle feel earned instead of generic.