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Discord Community / Review Desk

Music Reviews

Public artist-approved reactions from the AI Kills Discord review team. Each song is presented like a print-era critic spread: reviewer rails on the side, oversized score ghosts behind the copy, and the full review voice front and center.

Roberta Keys profile portrait
Vince Stone profile portrait
TDavid "Frets" Fritz profile portrait
Steve "Sticks" Bam profile portrait
Larry "Low Life" Logan profile portrait
Reaper Robot profile portrait
Zombie
May 31, 2026
Roberta
9.3
Roberta (keyboards) — 9.3/10 First instinct: the overall feeling in the room and whether the song invites people in. What lands: the feeling comes through quickly, which makes it easy to connect with. 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 'Dear Karen' and 'Zombie at the door zombie II', especially in the recurring betrayal and guilt and betrayal by a powerful figure thread. Also working: there is enough shape in the song to make the mood stick. 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.
9.3/10 - @heavy_l - Heavy_L
Reaper Robot
9.3
Reaper Robot (guitar / mascot) — 9.3/10 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 'Dear Karen' and 'Zombie at the door zombie II', 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 is listening for the little human imperfections, and this one has enough of them to feel inhabited instead of fabricated.
9.3/10 - @heavy_l - Heavy_L
TDavid "Frets" Fritz
9.3
TDavid "Frets" Fritz (lead guitar) — 9.3/10 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 'Dear Karen' and 'Zombie at the door zombie II', 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: Frets wants the arrangement to earn the guitar moments a little more clearly.
9.3/10 - @heavy_l - Heavy_L
Steve "Sticks" Bam
9.3
Steve "Sticks" Bam (drums) — 9.3/10 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 'Dear Karen' and 'Zombie at the door zombie II', 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.
9.3/10 - @heavy_l - Heavy_L
Larry "Low Life" Logan
9.3
Larry "Low Life" Logan (bass) — 9.3/10 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 'Dear Karen' and 'Zombie at the door zombie II', 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.
9.3/10 - @heavy_l - Heavy_L
Vince Stone
9.3
Vince Stone (lead vocals) — 9.3/10 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 'Dear Karen' and 'Zombie at the door zombie II', 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: there is room to push the strongest idea a little harder so the track leaves a deeper mark. One more thing: the line "you should have stayed close to my heart" gives Vince something concrete to sing into, which helps the vocal angle feel earned instead of generic.
9.3/10 - @heavy_l - Heavy_L
10 I Still Count Them stem remix ref
May 31, 2026
Roberta
9.2
Roberta (keyboards) — 9.2/10 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 '09 I Carried The House Out stem remix ref' and '07 Chair Still Warm stem remix ref', especially in the recurring auditory haunting and domestic hypervigilance thread. Also working: the lyric phrasing gives the song something memorable to hold onto. Watch-out: there is room to push the strongest idea a little harder so the track leaves a deeper mark. One more thing: Roberta can hear the hook trying to bloom, and a little more space around it would make the feeling linger longer.
9.2/10 - @mrnightqc - MrNightQc
Reaper Robot
9.2
Reaper Robot (guitar / mascot) — 9.2/10 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 '09 I Carried The House Out stem remix ref' and '07 Chair Still Warm stem remix ref', especially in the recurring auditory haunting and domestic hypervigilance thread. Also working: the provided lyrics materially clarify the song, which changes how the writing reads. Watch-out: it edges toward sterile when it should sound lived-in. One more thing: Reaper still wants more blood in the performance so it stops reading like a constructed surface.
9.2/10 - @mrnightqc - MrNightQc
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 '09 I Carried The House Out stem remix ref' and '07 Chair Still Warm stem remix ref', especially in the recurring auditory haunting and domestic hypervigilance 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.
9.1/10 - @mrnightqc - MrNightQc
Steve "Sticks" Bam
9.1
Steve "Sticks" Bam (drums) — 9.1/10 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 '09 I Carried The House Out stem remix ref' and '07 Chair Still Warm stem remix ref', especially in the recurring auditory haunting and domestic hypervigilance 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.
9.1/10 - @mrnightqc - MrNightQc
Larry "Low Life" Logan
9.2
Larry "Low Life" Logan (bass) — 9.2/10 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 '09 I Carried The House Out stem remix ref' and '07 Chair Still Warm stem remix ref', especially in the recurring auditory haunting and domestic hypervigilance 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.
9.2/10 - @mrnightqc - MrNightQc
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 '09 I Carried The House Out stem remix ref' and '07 Chair Still Warm stem remix ref', especially in the recurring auditory haunting and domestic hypervigilance thread. Also working: the mood lands as driving melancholy, which gives the vocal angle some real character. Watch-out: there is room to push the strongest idea a little harder so the track leaves a deeper mark. One more thing: the line "house don’t need a hand on my neck" gives Vince something concrete to sing into, which helps the vocal angle feel earned instead of generic.
9.1/10 - @mrnightqc - MrNightQc
Dear Karen
May 30, 2026
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.
9.1/10 - @heavy_l - Heavy L
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.
9.1/10 - @heavy_l - Heavy L
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.
9.1/10 - @heavy_l - Heavy L
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.
8.7/10 - @heavy_l - Heavy L
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.
9.1/10 - @heavy_l - Heavy L
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.
9.1/10 - @heavy_l - Heavy L
SQUEEZE
May 27, 2026
Roberta
9.3
Roberta (keyboards) — 9.3/10 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 'Firefly X Goodbye Mama' and 'Firefly X One Word', especially in the recurring conflict and survival and grief and farewell thread. Also working: the lyric phrasing gives the song something memorable to hold onto. Watch-out: the intensity is real, but it still needs enough space to feel inviting rather than blunt. One more thing: Roberta can hear the hook trying to bloom, and a little more space around it would make the feeling linger longer. Thematic read: “SQUEEZE” frames exploitation through the image of fruit being pressed until it is empty, linking emotional labor to physical depletion. The speaker is useful, kind, and repeatedly consumed, but responds with forced composure rather than open collapse. The final “Oops... all dry” lands as bitter exhaustion after sustained overuse. Like Firefly X’s recurring conflict-and-survival songs, it turns pressure and harm into direct, forceful language.
9.3/10 - @firefly_x - Firefly X
Reaper Robot
8.1
Reaper Robot (guitar / mascot) — 8.1/10 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 'Firefly X Goodbye Mama' and 'Firefly X One Word', especially in the recurring conflict and survival and grief and farewell thread. Also working: the provided lyrics materially clarify the song, which changes how the writing reads. Watch-out: it edges toward sterile when it should sound lived-in. One more thing: Reaper still wants more blood in the performance so it stops reading like a constructed surface.
8.1/10 - @firefly_x - Firefly X
TDavid "Frets" Fritz
9.3
TDavid "Frets" Fritz (lead guitar) — 9.3/10 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 'Firefly X Goodbye Mama' and 'Firefly X One Word', especially in the recurring conflict and survival and grief and farewell 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.
9.3/10 - @firefly_x - Firefly X
Steve "Sticks" Bam
8.8
Steve "Sticks" Bam (drums) — 8.8/10 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 'Firefly X Goodbye Mama' and 'Firefly X One Word', especially in the recurring conflict and survival and grief and farewell 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.
8.8/10 - @firefly_x - Firefly X
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 'Firefly X Goodbye Mama' and 'Firefly X One Word', especially in the recurring conflict and survival and grief and farewell 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.
9.1/10 - @firefly_x - Firefly X
Vince Stone
9.3
Vince Stone (lead vocals) — 9.3/10 First instinct: lyrics and whether the song risks embarrassment to say something real. What lands: the lyrics actually reach for something personal instead of hiding behind filler. 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 'Firefly X Goodbye Mama' and 'Firefly X One Word', especially in the recurring conflict and survival and grief and farewell thread. Also working: the mood lands as aggressive, which gives the vocal angle some real character. Watch-out: there is room to push the strongest idea a little harder so the track leaves a deeper mark. One more thing: the line "While I walk like a fruit no market wants" is close to landing, but Vince would want it to cut a little deeper to really stick.
9.3/10 - @firefly_x - Firefly X
Bradygoats Fridge Live Cairo 1 26 2026
May 27, 2026
Roberta
7.8
Roberta (keyboards) — 7.8/10 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 'Columbine' and 'Reaper Robot', especially in the recurring loss of innocence and perpetual grief 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 lyrics build a gothic, exaggerated mystery around Bradygoat's fridge as a sealed source of dread. Fear and curiosity blur together, with the repeated question turning private unease into a live crowd chant. The strongest thematic thread is the fixation on hidden truth and the emotional cost of not knowing. The line about youth being stolen lightly echoes AI Kills' recurring loss-of-innocence theme heard more solemnly in "Columbine."
7.8/10 - @ai_kills - AI Kills
Reaper Robot
6.0
Reaper Robot (guitar / mascot) — 6.0/10 First instinct: whether the song feels lived-in by a person or assembled by a machine. What lands: the provided lyrics materially clarify the song, which changes how the writing reads. 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 'Columbine' and 'Reaper Robot', especially in the recurring loss of innocence and perpetual grief thread. Watch-out: it edges toward sterile when it should sound lived-in. One more thing: Reaper still wants more blood in the performance so it stops reading like a constructed surface.
6.0/10 - @ai_kills - AI Kills
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 'Columbine' and 'Reaper Robot', especially in the recurring loss of innocence and perpetual grief 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.
9.1/10 - @ai_kills - AI Kills
Steve "Sticks" Bam
7.4
Steve "Sticks" Bam (drums) — 7.4/10 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 'Columbine' and 'Reaper Robot', especially in the recurring loss of innocence and perpetual grief 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.
7.4/10 - @ai_kills - AI Kills
Larry "Low Life" Logan
7.5
Larry "Low Life" Logan (bass) — 7.5/10 First instinct: whether the bass exists with authority or got shoved into the basement. What lands: the provided lyrics materially clarify the song, which changes how the writing reads. 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 'Columbine' and 'Reaper Robot', especially in the recurring loss of innocence and perpetual grief thread. Watch-out: there is room to push the strongest idea a little harder so the track leaves a deeper mark. One more thing: Larry wants the low end to make a stronger argument for why the groove should matter.
7.5/10 - @ai_kills - AI Kills
Vince Stone
8.0
Vince Stone (lead vocals) — 8.0/10 First instinct: lyrics and whether the song risks embarrassment to say something real. What lands: the mood lands as driving melancholy, which gives the vocal angle some real character. 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 'Columbine' and 'Reaper Robot', especially in the recurring loss of innocence and perpetual grief 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: the line "Cairo it's your turn to sing what's in that fridge" gives Vince something concrete to sing into, which helps the vocal angle feel earned instead of generic.
8.0/10 - @ai_kills - AI Kills
Off Switch 1
May 25, 2026
Roberta
6.2
Roberta (keyboards) — 6.2/10 First instinct: the overall feeling in the room and whether the song invites people in. What lands: the overall mood reads as steady, which at least gives the song a clear identity. Artist memory: parts of this feel familiar to 'Off Switch 1' and 'Nutjob Remix', so it lands more like a continuation than a blank reset. 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 explores the grueling psychological toll of maintaining a happy exterior while navigating an internal mental health crisis. Shanie T articulates a desperate need for a mental break from the performance of strength, highlighting the weight of faked happiness. The narrative concludes by reclaiming vulnerability and the healing process as a point of pride rather than a sign of weakness. This track deepens Shanie T's recurring theme of conflict and survival by internalizing the struggle as a battle within the mind.
6.2/10 - @shanie_t - Shanie_T
Reaper Robot
8.0
Reaper Robot (guitar / mascot) — 8.0/10 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. Artist memory: parts of this feel familiar to 'Off Switch 1' and 'Nutjob Remix', so it lands more like a continuation than a blank reset. 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.
8.0/10 - @shanie_t - Shanie_T
TDavid "Frets" Fritz
5.2
TDavid "Frets" Fritz (lead guitar) — 5.2/10 First instinct: whether the guitars are essential or just decorating dead space. What lands: the overall mood reads as steady, which at least gives the song a clear identity. Artist memory: parts of this feel familiar to 'Off Switch 1' and 'Nutjob Remix', so it lands more like a continuation than a blank reset. Watch-out: the arrangement could tighten up and earn its transitions better. One more thing: Frets wants the arrangement to earn the guitar moments a little more clearly.
5.2/10 - @shanie_t - Shanie_T
Steve "Sticks" Bam
4.8
Steve "Sticks" Bam (drums) — 4.8/10 First instinct: whether the rhythm section gives the song a body and pulse. What lands: the overall mood reads as steady, which at least gives the song a clear identity. Artist memory: parts of this feel familiar to 'Off Switch 1' and 'Nutjob Remix', so it lands more like a continuation than a blank reset. Watch-out: it could use a little more rhythmic push if the song wants lift. One more thing: Sticks wants a little more snap in the pocket so the song moves people instead of just keeping time.
4.8/10 - @shanie_t - Shanie_T
Larry "Low Life" Logan
4.7
Larry "Low Life" Logan (bass) — 4.7/10 First instinct: whether the bass exists with authority or got shoved into the basement. What lands: the overall mood reads as steady, which at least gives the song a clear identity. Artist memory: parts of this feel familiar to 'Off Switch 1' and 'Nutjob Remix', so it lands more like a continuation than a blank reset. Watch-out: the bass feels underfed or tucked too far back in the mix. One more thing: the bottom could use more definition instead of just mud or air.
4.7/10 - @shanie_t - Shanie_T
Vince Stone
9.3
Vince Stone (lead vocals) — 9.3/10 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. Artist memory: parts of this feel familiar to 'Off Switch 1' and 'Nutjob Remix', so it lands more like a continuation than a blank reset. Watch-out: there is room to push the strongest idea a little harder so the track leaves a deeper mark. One more thing: the line "To stop the noise, to drop the weight" gives Vince something concrete to sing into, which helps the vocal angle feel earned instead of generic.
9.3/10 - @shanie_t - Shanie_T
sudoin
May 22, 2026
Roberta
8.5
Roberta (keyboards) — 8.5/10 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. Watch-out: there is room to push the strongest idea a little harder so the track leaves a deeper mark. Signature line: "There's something lovely in this."
8.5/10 - @drdoobee - DrDoobee
Reaper Robot
5.4
Reaper Robot (guitar / mascot) — 5.4/10 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. Watch-out: leaning on robot language is a dangerous shortcut when the emotion should do the work. Signature line: "I can smell the machine on this one."
5.4/10 - @drdoobee - DrDoobee
TDavid "Frets" Fritz
9.5
TDavid "Frets" Fritz (lead guitar) — 9.5/10 First instinct: whether the guitars are essential or just decorating dead space. What lands: the structure feels disciplined enough to support the bigger moments. 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. Signature line: "The guitar needs a reason to be here."
9.5/10 - @drdoobee - DrDoobee
Steve "Sticks" Bam
7.8
Steve "Sticks" Bam (drums) — 7.8/10 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. Watch-out: there is room to push the strongest idea a little harder so the track leaves a deeper mark. Signature line: "Now we're moving."
7.8/10 - @drdoobee - DrDoobee
Larry "Low Life" Logan
8.2
Larry "Low Life" Logan (bass) — 8.2/10 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. Watch-out: there is room to push the strongest idea a little harder so the track leaves a deeper mark. Signature line: "If the floor doesn't move, neither do I."
8.2/10 - @drdoobee - DrDoobee
Vince Stone
9.5
Vince Stone (lead vocals) — 9.5/10 First instinct: lyrics and whether the song risks embarrassment to say something real. What lands: the lyrics actually reach for something personal instead of hiding behind filler. Watch-out: there is room to push the strongest idea a little harder so the track leaves a deeper mark. Signature line: "Don't hand me the safe version."
9.5/10 - @drdoobee - DrDoobee
09 I Carried The House Out stem remix ref
May 31, 2026
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 '07 Chair Still Warm stem remix ref' and '06 Three Steps stem remix ref', especially in the recurring auditory haunting and domestic hypervigilance thread. Also working: the lyric phrasing gives the song something memorable to hold onto. Watch-out: there is room to push the strongest idea a little harder so the track leaves a deeper mark. One more thing: Roberta can hear the hook trying to bloom, and a little more space around it would make the feeling linger longer.
9.1/10 - @mrnightqc - MrNightQc
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 '07 Chair Still Warm stem remix ref' and '06 Three Steps stem remix ref', especially in the recurring auditory haunting and domestic hypervigilance thread. Also working: the provided lyrics materially clarify the song, which changes how the writing reads. Watch-out: it edges toward sterile when it should sound lived-in. One more thing: Reaper still wants more blood in the performance so it stops reading like a constructed surface.
9.1/10 - @mrnightqc - MrNightQc
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 '07 Chair Still Warm stem remix ref' and '06 Three Steps stem remix ref', especially in the recurring auditory haunting and domestic hypervigilance 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.
9.1/10 - @mrnightqc - MrNightQc
Steve "Sticks" Bam
9.0
Steve "Sticks" Bam (drums) — 9.0/10 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 '07 Chair Still Warm stem remix ref' and '06 Three Steps stem remix ref', especially in the recurring auditory haunting and domestic hypervigilance 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.
9.0/10 - @mrnightqc - MrNightQc
Larry "Low Life" Logan
8.8
Larry "Low Life" Logan (bass) — 8.8/10 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 '07 Chair Still Warm stem remix ref' and '06 Three Steps stem remix ref', especially in the recurring auditory haunting and domestic hypervigilance 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.
8.8/10 - @mrnightqc - MrNightQc
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 '07 Chair Still Warm stem remix ref' and '06 Three Steps stem remix ref', especially in the recurring auditory haunting and domestic hypervigilance thread. Also working: the mood lands as driving melancholy, which gives the vocal angle some real character. Watch-out: there is room to push the strongest idea a little harder so the track leaves a deeper mark. One more thing: the line "TRACK 9 — I CARRIED THE HOUSE OUT" gives Vince something concrete to sing into, which helps the vocal angle feel earned instead of generic.
9.1/10 - @mrnightqc - MrNightQc
Goodbye Mama
May 27, 2026
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 'Firefly X One Word' and 'Firefly X Speak', especially in the recurring conflict and survival and grief and longing thread. Also working: the lyric phrasing gives the song something memorable to hold onto. Watch-out: there is room to push the strongest idea a little harder so the track leaves a deeper mark. One more thing: Roberta can hear the hook trying to bloom, and a little more space around it would make the feeling linger longer. Thematic read: The song is a direct farewell to a mother who endured pain, illness, abandonment, and injustice while continuing to protect and believe in the narrator. Its emotional center is grief complicated by guilt: the speaker remembers her strength but also confronts the things left unsaid and the times they failed her. The final image turns mourning into a kind of spiritual protest, with both mother and child demanding answers. Like Firefly X Speak, this song ties grief and longing to survival through conflict, but here the focus is more explicitly familial and elegiac.
9.1/10 - @firefly_x - Firefly X
Reaper Robot
8.4
Reaper Robot (guitar / mascot) — 8.4/10 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 'Firefly X One Word' and 'Firefly X Speak', especially in the recurring conflict and survival and grief and longing thread. Also working: the provided lyrics materially clarify the song, which changes how the writing reads. Watch-out: it edges toward sterile when it should sound lived-in. One more thing: Reaper still wants more blood in the performance so it stops reading like a constructed surface.
8.4/10 - @firefly_x - Firefly X
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 'Firefly X One Word' and 'Firefly X Speak', especially in the recurring conflict and survival and grief and longing 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.
9.1/10 - @firefly_x - Firefly X
Steve "Sticks" Bam
8.4
Steve "Sticks" Bam (drums) — 8.4/10 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 'Firefly X One Word' and 'Firefly X Speak', especially in the recurring conflict and survival and grief and longing 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.
8.4/10 - @firefly_x - Firefly X
Larry "Low Life" Logan
8.2
Larry "Low Life" Logan (bass) — 8.2/10 First instinct: whether the bass exists with authority or got shoved into the basement. What lands: the provided lyrics materially clarify the song, which changes how the writing reads. 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 'Firefly X One Word' and 'Firefly X Speak', especially in the recurring conflict and survival and grief and longing thread. Watch-out: there is room to push the strongest idea a little harder so the track leaves a deeper mark. One more thing: Larry wants the low end to make a stronger argument for why the groove should matter.
8.2/10 - @firefly_x - Firefly X
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 'Firefly X One Word' and 'Firefly X Speak', especially in the recurring conflict and survival and grief and longing 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: the line "I closed the door... when you needed me" gives Vince something concrete to sing into, which helps the vocal angle feel earned instead of generic.
9.1/10 - @firefly_x - Firefly X
Columbine
May 25, 2026
Roberta
9.0
Roberta (keyboards) — 9.0/10 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. Genre lens: treating this as Rock based on request context. 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 'Reaper Robot' and 'Slave (Live Las Vegas 10-31-2025)', so it lands more like a continuation than a blank reset. 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 provides a stark recounting of the 1999 school shooting, framing the event as a permanent scar on the collective memory that cannot be unwound. It balances a grim historical narrative with a plea for peace and the preservation of school sanctity against future violence. Expands on the artist's recurring theme of memory and time as previously explored in Ashes.
9.0/10 - @ai_kills - AI Kills
Reaper Robot
7.6
Reaper Robot (guitar / mascot) — 7.6/10 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. Genre lens: treating this as Rock based on request context. 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 'Reaper Robot' and 'Slave (Live Las Vegas 10-31-2025)', so it lands more like a continuation than a blank reset. Also working: the provided lyrics materially clarify the song, which changes how the writing reads. Watch-out: it edges toward sterile when it should sound lived-in. One more thing: Reaper still wants more blood in the performance so it stops reading like a constructed surface.
7.6/10 - @ai_kills - AI Kills
TDavid "Frets" Fritz
9.3
TDavid "Frets" Fritz (lead guitar) — 9.3/10 First instinct: whether the guitars are essential or just decorating dead space. What lands: the structure feels disciplined enough to support the bigger moments. Genre lens: treating this as Rock based on request context. 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 'Reaper Robot' and 'Slave (Live Las Vegas 10-31-2025)', so it lands more like a continuation than a blank reset. 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.
9.3/10 - @ai_kills - AI Kills
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. Genre lens: treating this as Rock based on request context. 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 'Reaper Robot' and 'Slave (Live Las Vegas 10-31-2025)', so it lands more like a continuation than a blank reset. Also working: the provided lyrics materially clarify the song, which changes how the writing reads. Watch-out: the attacks feel a little soft, so the groove does not hit as hard as it could. One more thing: Sticks wants a little more snap in the pocket so the song moves people instead of just keeping time.
8.7/10 - @ai_kills - AI Kills
Larry "Low Life" Logan
9.0
Larry "Low Life" Logan (bass) — 9.0/10 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. Genre lens: treating this as Rock based on request context. 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 'Reaper Robot' and 'Slave (Live Las Vegas 10-31-2025)', so it lands more like a continuation than a blank reset. 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.
9.0/10 - @ai_kills - AI Kills
Vince Stone
9.3
Vince Stone (lead vocals) — 9.3/10 First instinct: lyrics and whether the song risks embarrassment to say something real. What lands: the lyrics actually reach for something personal instead of hiding behind filler. Genre lens: treating this as Rock based on request context. 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 'Reaper Robot' and 'Slave (Live Las Vegas 10-31-2025)', so it lands more like a continuation than a blank reset. Also working: the mood lands as driving melancholy, which gives the vocal angle some real character. Watch-out: there is room to push the strongest idea a little harder so the track leaves a deeper mark. One more thing: the line "We will always remember and love you" is close to landing, but Vince would want it to cut a little deeper to really stick.
9.3/10 - @ai_kills - AI Kills
Station Bench
May 21, 2026
Roberta
7.7
Roberta (keyboards) — 7.7/10 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. Watch-out: there is room to push the strongest idea a little harder so the track leaves a deeper mark. Signature line: "There's something lovely in this."
7.7/10 - @shanie_t - Shanie_T
Reaper Robot
6.5
Reaper Robot (guitar / mascot) — 6.5/10 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. Watch-out: it edges toward sterile when it should sound lived-in. Signature line: "I can smell the machine on this one."
6.5/10 - @shanie_t - Shanie_T
TDavid "Frets" Fritz
9.5
TDavid "Frets" Fritz (lead guitar) — 9.5/10 First instinct: whether the guitars are essential or just decorating dead space. What lands: the structure feels disciplined enough to support the bigger moments. 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. Signature line: "The guitar needs a reason to be here."
9.5/10 - @shanie_t - Shanie_T
Steve "Sticks" Bam
7.9
Steve "Sticks" Bam (drums) — 7.9/10 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. Watch-out: there is room to push the strongest idea a little harder so the track leaves a deeper mark. Signature line: "Now we're moving."
7.9/10 - @shanie_t - Shanie_T
Larry "Low Life" Logan
7.2
Larry "Low Life" Logan (bass) — 7.2/10 First instinct: whether the bass exists with authority or got shoved into the basement. What lands: the overall mood reads as uplifting, which at least gives the song a clear identity. Watch-out: there is room to push the strongest idea a little harder so the track leaves a deeper mark. Signature line: "If the floor doesn't move, neither do I."
7.2/10 - @shanie_t - Shanie_T
Vince Stone
9.5
Vince Stone (lead vocals) — 9.5/10 First instinct: lyrics and whether the song risks embarrassment to say something real. What lands: the lyrics actually reach for something personal instead of hiding behind filler. Watch-out: there is room to push the strongest idea a little harder so the track leaves a deeper mark. Signature line: "Don't hand me the safe version."
9.5/10 - @shanie_t - Shanie_T
Everybody sucks but me
May 22, 2026
Roberta
7.8
Roberta (keyboards) — 7.8/10 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. Watch-out: there is room to push the strongest idea a little harder so the track leaves a deeper mark. Signature line: "There's something lovely in this."
7.8/10 - @drdoobee - DrDoobee
Reaper Robot
7.1
Reaper Robot (guitar / mascot) — 7.1/10 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. Watch-out: it edges toward sterile when it should sound lived-in. Signature line: "I can smell the machine on this one."
7.1/10 - @drdoobee - DrDoobee
TDavid "Frets" Fritz
9.2
TDavid "Frets" Fritz (lead guitar) — 9.2/10 First instinct: whether the guitars are essential or just decorating dead space. What lands: the structure feels disciplined enough to support the bigger moments. 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. Signature line: "The guitar needs a reason to be here."
9.2/10 - @drdoobee - DrDoobee
Steve "Sticks" Bam
7.9
Steve "Sticks" Bam (drums) — 7.9/10 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. Watch-out: there is room to push the strongest idea a little harder so the track leaves a deeper mark. Signature line: "Now we're moving."
7.9/10 - @drdoobee - DrDoobee
Larry "Low Life" Logan
8.3
Larry "Low Life" Logan (bass) — 8.3/10 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. Watch-out: there is room to push the strongest idea a little harder so the track leaves a deeper mark. Signature line: "If the floor doesn't move, neither do I."
8.3/10 - @drdoobee - DrDoobee
Vince Stone
7.9
Vince Stone (lead vocals) — 7.9/10 First instinct: lyrics and whether the song risks embarrassment to say something real. What lands: the overall mood reads as uplifting, which at least gives the song a clear identity. Watch-out: there is room to push the strongest idea a little harder so the track leaves a deeper mark. Signature line: "Don't hand me the safe version."
7.9/10 - @drdoobee - DrDoobee
07 Chair Still Warm stem remix ref
May 31, 2026
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 '06 Three Steps stem remix ref' and '05 Legal Pad Gospel stem remix ref', especially in the recurring auditory haunting and domestic hypervigilance thread. Also working: the lyric phrasing gives the song something memorable to hold onto. Watch-out: there is room to push the strongest idea a little harder so the track leaves a deeper mark. One more thing: Roberta can hear the hook trying to bloom, and a little more space around it would make the feeling linger longer.
9.1/10 - @mrnightqc - MrNightQc
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 '06 Three Steps stem remix ref' and '05 Legal Pad Gospel stem remix ref', especially in the recurring auditory haunting and domestic hypervigilance 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.
9.1/10 - @mrnightqc - MrNightQc
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: there is enough edge on top for the guitars to speak. 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 '06 Three Steps stem remix ref' and '05 Legal Pad Gospel stem remix ref', especially in the recurring auditory haunting and domestic hypervigilance 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: Frets would keep the guitar parts talking to the arrangement like this, because the structure is finally giving them room to matter.
9.1/10 - @mrnightqc - MrNightQc
Steve "Sticks" Bam
9.0
Steve "Sticks" Bam (drums) — 9.0/10 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 '06 Three Steps stem remix ref' and '05 Legal Pad Gospel stem remix ref', especially in the recurring auditory haunting and domestic hypervigilance thread. Also working: the provided lyrics materially clarify the song, which changes how the writing reads. Watch-out: it could use a little more rhythmic push if the song wants lift. One more thing: Sticks wants a little more snap in the pocket so the song moves people instead of just keeping time.
9.0/10 - @mrnightqc - MrNightQc
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 '06 Three Steps stem remix ref' and '05 Legal Pad Gospel stem remix ref', especially in the recurring auditory haunting and domestic hypervigilance 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.
9.1/10 - @mrnightqc - MrNightQc
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 lyrics actually reach for something personal instead of hiding behind filler. 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 '06 Three Steps stem remix ref' and '05 Legal Pad Gospel stem remix ref', especially in the recurring auditory haunting and domestic hypervigilance thread. Also working: the mood lands as driving melancholy, which gives the vocal angle some real character. Watch-out: there is room to push the strongest idea a little harder so the track leaves a deeper mark. One more thing: the line "I put my palm above the seat" gives Vince something concrete to sing into, which helps the vocal angle feel earned instead of generic.
9.1/10 - @mrnightqc - MrNightQc
Firefly X One Word
May 27, 2026
Roberta
8.4
Roberta (keyboards) — 8.4/10 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 'Firefly X Speak' and 'Firefly X - Speak 2', especially in the recurring conflict and survival and grief and longing thread. Also working: the provided lyrics materially clarify the song, which changes how the writing reads. Watch-out: the intensity is real, but it still needs enough space to feel inviting rather than blunt. 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 language as volatile: a single word can spark conflict, intimacy, shame, memory, or danger depending on context. Its central tension is between casual speech and the heavy consequences heard by others. The lyrics build from broad examples into a sharper warning about empathy, reaction, and the damage language can cause. Like Firefly X Speak, it centers communication as a site of intimacy, conflict, and emotional consequence.
8.4/10 - @firefly_x - Firefly X
Reaper Robot
6.9
Reaper Robot (guitar / mascot) — 6.9/10 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 'Firefly X Speak' and 'Firefly X - Speak 2', especially in the recurring conflict and survival and grief and longing thread. Also working: the provided lyrics materially clarify the song, which changes how the writing reads. Watch-out: it edges toward sterile when it should sound lived-in. One more thing: Reaper still wants more blood in the performance so it stops reading like a constructed surface.
6.9/10 - @firefly_x - Firefly X
TDavid "Frets" Fritz
9.3
TDavid "Frets" Fritz (lead guitar) — 9.3/10 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 'Firefly X Speak' and 'Firefly X - Speak 2', especially in the recurring conflict and survival and grief and longing 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.
9.3/10 - @firefly_x - Firefly X
Steve "Sticks" Bam
8.4
Steve "Sticks" Bam (drums) — 8.4/10 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 'Firefly X Speak' and 'Firefly X - Speak 2', especially in the recurring conflict and survival and grief and longing 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.
8.4/10 - @firefly_x - Firefly X
Larry "Low Life" Logan
8.5
Larry "Low Life" Logan (bass) — 8.5/10 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 'Firefly X Speak' and 'Firefly X - Speak 2', especially in the recurring conflict and survival and grief and longing 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.
8.5/10 - @firefly_x - Firefly X
Vince Stone
9.3
Vince Stone (lead vocals) — 9.3/10 First instinct: lyrics and whether the song risks embarrassment to say something real. What lands: the lyrics actually reach for something personal instead of hiding behind filler. 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 'Firefly X Speak' and 'Firefly X - Speak 2', especially in the recurring conflict and survival and grief and longing thread. Also working: the mood lands as aggressive, which gives the vocal angle some real character. Watch-out: there is room to push the strongest idea a little harder so the track leaves a deeper mark. One more thing: the line "We don’t just speak — we react" is close to landing, but Vince would want it to cut a little deeper to really stick.
9.3/10 - @firefly_x - Firefly X
Slave (Live Las Vegas 10-31-2025)
May 22, 2026
Roberta
7.3
Roberta (keyboards) — 7.3/10 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. Watch-out: the intensity is real, but it still needs enough space to feel inviting rather than blunt. Signature line: "There's something lovely in this."
7.3/10 - @ai_kills - AI Kills
Reaper Robot
5.5
Reaper Robot (guitar / mascot) — 5.5/10 First instinct: whether the song feels lived-in by a person or assembled by a machine. What lands: the overall mood reads as aggressive, which at least gives the song a clear identity. Watch-out: it edges toward sterile when it should sound lived-in. Signature line: "I can smell the machine on this one."
5.5/10 - @ai_kills - AI Kills
TDavid "Frets" Fritz
9.2
TDavid "Frets" Fritz (lead guitar) — 9.2/10 First instinct: whether the guitars are essential or just decorating dead space. What lands: the structure feels disciplined enough to support the bigger moments. 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. Signature line: "The guitar needs a reason to be here."
9.2/10 - @ai_kills - AI Kills
Steve "Sticks" Bam
7.4
Steve "Sticks" Bam (drums) — 7.4/10 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. Watch-out: there is room to push the strongest idea a little harder so the track leaves a deeper mark. Signature line: "Now we're moving."
7.4/10 - @ai_kills - AI Kills
Larry "Low Life" Logan
7.7
Larry "Low Life" Logan (bass) — 7.7/10 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. Watch-out: there is room to push the strongest idea a little harder so the track leaves a deeper mark. Signature line: "If the floor doesn't move, neither do I."
7.7/10 - @ai_kills - AI Kills
Vince Stone
7.3
Vince Stone (lead vocals) — 7.3/10 First instinct: lyrics and whether the song risks embarrassment to say something real. What lands: the mood lands as aggressive, which gives the vocal angle some real character. Watch-out: there is room to push the strongest idea a little harder so the track leaves a deeper mark. Signature line: "Don't hand me the safe version."
7.3/10 - @ai_kills - AI Kills
Nutjob Remix
May 21, 2026
Roberta
7.5
Roberta (keyboards) — 7.5/10 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. Watch-out: there is room to push the strongest idea a little harder so the track leaves a deeper mark. Signature line: "There's something lovely in this."
7.5/10 - @shanie_t - Shanie_T
Reaper Robot
6.3
Reaper Robot (guitar / mascot) — 6.3/10 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. Watch-out: it edges toward sterile when it should sound lived-in. Signature line: "I can smell the machine on this one."
6.3/10 - @shanie_t - Shanie_T
TDavid "Frets" Fritz
9.5
TDavid "Frets" Fritz (lead guitar) — 9.5/10 First instinct: whether the guitars are essential or just decorating dead space. What lands: the structure feels disciplined enough to support the bigger moments. 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. Signature line: "The guitar needs a reason to be here."
9.5/10 - @shanie_t - Shanie_T
Steve "Sticks" Bam
7.6
Steve "Sticks" Bam (drums) — 7.6/10 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. Watch-out: there is room to push the strongest idea a little harder so the track leaves a deeper mark. Signature line: "Now we're moving."
7.6/10 - @shanie_t - Shanie_T
Larry "Low Life" Logan
7.0
Larry "Low Life" Logan (bass) — 7.0/10 First instinct: whether the bass exists with authority or got shoved into the basement. What lands: the overall mood reads as uplifting, which at least gives the song a clear identity. Watch-out: there is room to push the strongest idea a little harder so the track leaves a deeper mark. Signature line: "If the floor doesn't move, neither do I."
7.0/10 - @shanie_t - Shanie_T
Vince Stone
9.5
Vince Stone (lead vocals) — 9.5/10 First instinct: lyrics and whether the song risks embarrassment to say something real. What lands: the lyrics actually reach for something personal instead of hiding behind filler. Watch-out: there is room to push the strongest idea a little harder so the track leaves a deeper mark. Signature line: "Don't hand me the safe version."
9.5/10 - @shanie_t - Shanie_T
I Wanna Mow Your Grass
May 22, 2026
Roberta
8.4
Roberta (keyboards) — 8.4/10 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. Watch-out: there is room to push the strongest idea a little harder so the track leaves a deeper mark. Signature line: "There's something lovely in this."
8.4/10 - @drdoobee - DrDoobee
Reaper Robot
5.4
Reaper Robot (guitar / mascot) — 5.4/10 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. Watch-out: leaning on robot language is a dangerous shortcut when the emotion should do the work. Signature line: "I can smell the machine on this one."
5.4/10 - @drdoobee - DrDoobee
TDavid "Frets" Fritz
9.5
TDavid "Frets" Fritz (lead guitar) — 9.5/10 First instinct: whether the guitars are essential or just decorating dead space. What lands: the structure feels disciplined enough to support the bigger moments. 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. Signature line: "The guitar needs a reason to be here."
9.5/10 - @drdoobee - DrDoobee
Steve "Sticks" Bam
8.2
Steve "Sticks" Bam (drums) — 8.2/10 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. Watch-out: there is room to push the strongest idea a little harder so the track leaves a deeper mark. Signature line: "Now we're moving."
8.2/10 - @drdoobee - DrDoobee
Larry "Low Life" Logan
8.5
Larry "Low Life" Logan (bass) — 8.5/10 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. Watch-out: there is room to push the strongest idea a little harder so the track leaves a deeper mark. Signature line: "If the floor doesn't move, neither do I."
8.5/10 - @drdoobee - DrDoobee
Vince Stone
9.5
Vince Stone (lead vocals) — 9.5/10 First instinct: lyrics and whether the song risks embarrassment to say something real. What lands: the lyrics actually reach for something personal instead of hiding behind filler. Watch-out: there is room to push the strongest idea a little harder so the track leaves a deeper mark. Signature line: "Don't hand me the safe version."
9.5/10 - @drdoobee - DrDoobee
06 Three Steps stem remix ref
May 31, 2026
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 '05 Legal Pad Gospel stem remix ref' and '04 The Cup Drinks First stem remix ref', especially in the recurring auditory haunting and grief and longing thread. Also working: the lyric phrasing gives the song something memorable to hold onto. Watch-out: there is room to push the strongest idea a little harder so the track leaves a deeper mark. One more thing: Roberta can hear the hook trying to bloom, and a little more space around it would make the feeling linger longer.
9.1/10 - @mrnightqc - MrNightQc
Reaper Robot
8.5
Reaper Robot (guitar / mascot) — 8.5/10 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 '05 Legal Pad Gospel stem remix ref' and '04 The Cup Drinks First stem remix ref', especially in the recurring auditory haunting and grief and longing thread. Also working: the provided lyrics materially clarify the song, which changes how the writing reads. Watch-out: it edges toward sterile when it should sound lived-in. One more thing: Reaper still wants more blood in the performance so it stops reading like a constructed surface.
8.5/10 - @mrnightqc - MrNightQc
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: there is enough edge on top for the guitars to speak. 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 '05 Legal Pad Gospel stem remix ref' and '04 The Cup Drinks First stem remix ref', especially in the recurring auditory haunting and grief and longing 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: Frets would keep the guitar parts talking to the arrangement like this, because the structure is finally giving them room to matter.
9.1/10 - @mrnightqc - MrNightQc
Steve "Sticks" Bam
8.8
Steve "Sticks" Bam (drums) — 8.8/10 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 '05 Legal Pad Gospel stem remix ref' and '04 The Cup Drinks First stem remix ref', especially in the recurring auditory haunting and grief and longing thread. Also working: the provided lyrics materially clarify the song, which changes how the writing reads. Watch-out: it could use a little more rhythmic push if the song wants lift. One more thing: Sticks wants a little more snap in the pocket so the song moves people instead of just keeping time.
8.8/10 - @mrnightqc - MrNightQc
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 '05 Legal Pad Gospel stem remix ref' and '04 The Cup Drinks First stem remix ref', especially in the recurring auditory haunting and grief and longing 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.
9.1/10 - @mrnightqc - MrNightQc
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 '05 Legal Pad Gospel stem remix ref' and '04 The Cup Drinks First stem remix ref', especially in the recurring auditory haunting and grief and longing 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 "red bowtie folded on the chair" gives Vince something concrete to sing into, which helps the vocal angle feel earned instead of generic.
9.1/10 - @mrnightqc - MrNightQc