El Amor Que Guardabas
Roberta
8.3
Roberta (keyboards) — 8.3/10
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: 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."
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."
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."
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."
Larry "Low Life" Logan
8.9
Larry "Low Life" Logan (bass) — 8.9/10
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."
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."