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9 Audio Reviews w/ Response

All 11 Reviews

A critical opinion...

Good kick/snap/clap combo. The melody could use some tightening though. Particularly the bass synth and high-pitched strings synth, which could be tweaked to accompany each other a little better. Nice breakdown starting 1:25. Perhaps some overuse of the splash though. If it were me, I would have used a snare patch with more rasp, but that’s not my primary reservation. I really like the flute melody in the build, but dropping it at 2:50 seems anticlimactic, then reciprocating from that section into a progressively descaled outro seems to rob it in a most subtle way of the all-in payoff that should have happened at 2:50. I would normally give this a 3, but considered the many 0’s anything and everything is subject to, 4 it is.

bjoaierjbioaerjgoerj responds:

thanx for the advice!

Terrible

Please do not take anything contained in this review personally.
I'm not exactly sure what this is. First off, it's in the wrong genre, classical rock is not some kind of experimental ambient psychedelic trip (psychedelic rock would be closer than classical rock, but still a long shot from accurately categorizing this). For that, there is either the Ambient or Misc. genres. The vocals were poorly recorded, executed, and modified. The pad was monotonous, unimaginative, and did not contribute in any way to the song, aside of crude background noise. I percieve no musical merit in this, as the support instrument(s) only use one long note through the whole song. What few lyrics are not inaudible are incoherent. The track clips in several places. The mixing quality is below a point I could have imagined was possible in a song with only two instrumental components. As for its potential commercial music value, I do not believe it has any. This is hardly listenable, and as an artist or producer, I could not possibly construe this to constitute music. I would strongly suggest to review some music theory and take a slightly more commercial approach at songwriting.

RNR responds:

Sorry but I did take this personally. You really offended me because this was my most creative song I've ever wrote. BTW, it is classical rock because Pink Floyd does similar experimental stuff. Psy-rock is in the roots of classic rock, if you didn't know that. It is not Ambient or Misc. because of the song structure. It just wouldn't fit. The vocals were recorded by a great program and the reason they clip a few times because i lowered the pitch of my voice using that program. The pad, on the other hand, gave it the plain but mysterious sound to it and added a lot to the song, actually. I no the background isn't musically genius but it still makes the song. And whatever you been by the lyrics not being inaudiblle or incoherent... I don't care if it has no potential commercual music value, it's a song and I'm not a total fan of artists that are making music just for the money and the fame. I do it for the music, just like some of my favourite artists in my profile. This isn't enjoyable to listen? Personally, I have been making better songs with my new program than I ever have with anything else. This has to be one of my favourite songs. I have taking music theory in my music lessons and I've been writing songs for a while now and I've kept more than 10 that I liked. In fact, I'm writing more songs almost everyday. I appreciate your comment for being honest but I wish you could've told me what you did like about it... if you even did like anything about it. Thank you.

Flash or BED

If this were less active it would be relaxing. I can't say much for the mixing or production qualities, but for an acoustic jam, that's not important. The compositional elements are fairly typical for this genre, it's smooth and somewhat flowy, but, as with many jams, not exactly cohesive as a whole. True to form, it ends unresolved, as there is no reciprocal melody and as a result, it doesn't have much re-playability. For that reason, its character is limited. This may become useful for a movie flash artist focusing on an 'outback' atmosphere. Short of that, it isn't much of a standalone song. You could expand on some of these ideas, and having as many structural elements as it does, you would probably find that a simple rearrange may lend to a mostly complete track. As for the execution, it's not bad for being live instrumentation, but too many inconsistancies decrease its cosmetic value and ultimately makes it best suited as a BED track.

HDG responds:

wow. you've given probably the most detailed review i've seen yet. anyway, thanks a lot for it. this was basically a little demo of what i plan to expand on. the title, containing the word "jam" wasn't really meant to be taken very litterally, but i can't blame you for pointing out specific things since this is a review. as for the production, it's pretty much the best i can get right now with my extreme budget 'recording studio.' anyway, i appreciate your feedback....

Not great, not bad

This is catchy. It reminds me of many a game soundtrack battle theme. Effectively named, that. It's a bit short, the 303-ish bass lacks diversity (a changeup every now and then wouldn't hurt), the lead synth is outright annoying (of course, what game OST lead synth isn't?), but taken with a grain of salt and the right application, this may come in handy for a flash artist. It doesn't really hold its own as a complete song; as a loop it may, but then the problem is that it doesn't perfectly loop. The mixing is okay, but not particularly sharp. The cymbals (especially hi-hats) could be a bit louder, a 3-6dB boost (Q=3) to 12k on them may make a significant difference. I may be mistaking, but it sounds like you mastered it with the Reason multiband.. that's all well and good, but it doesn't tend to give much and in this case I can hear it pumping. This would probably fit reasonably well in an action/adventure game, but I'm not optomistic about its musical merit standalone. Then again, perhaps it isn't intended to be standalone in the first place. In short: not great, but not bad either.

tedJohnston responds:

hey, thanks for the review!

yeah, about that lead synth...it's WAYY too loud. made this song on my crappy headphones...i guess the extended version doesn't help too much either, eh?

hi-hats...hmm. i like to have hi-hats alot quieter than most people; most techno artists LOVE to pump their hi-hats up as loud as can be <- pet peeve of mine.

as for the mastering, the Reason Vocoder was soooo yesterday (am i sounding like a valley girl?). with version 3.0, they've integrated a whole new Mastering Suite which includes some crazy EQ'ing tools. i can't hear any of the pumping you're talking about. perhaps it's the "sound optimization" settings on your sound card? (turn those things off! they're usually nothing more than a crappy compressor ^_-). check out Reason 3.0 and the new Mastering Suite, it works wonders.

overall, your review is pretty fair. i didn't intend this to be a masterpiece in any way, and i guess its actually accomplished its purpose.

thanks for reviewing! cheers an g'day.

-Ted Johnston

A skeleton

You have some ideas here, but this doesn't hold its own as a complete song. For its genre, it may have a promising underlying compositional structure, but the recording quality is very poor, it doesn't sound well planned, and the execution needs work. I would strongly suggest, if you intend to expand on this, to write down the individual components and rearrange it into a verse/chorus/verse/bridge/chorus 2 minute punk song. Among other things, it particularly lacks bass, drums, vocals, and maybe an additional guitar, as would be standard for a punk song. It has potential, but that would mostly rely on how well other instruments, especially vocals are executed. That is to say, on its own, it isn't particularly dynamic, and gives somewhat of a 'cruise control' feel, at least that's my take on it. As I mentioned, I think this has potential, but completing the production up to independant industry standards might as well be just as much work as writing an altogether new song. If I were you (retaining my personality), I would consider the stage of production seen here to be more of a milestone in my development to writing commercial music.

EckHart responds:

The thing is, it DOES have bass, vocals, and drums. But my band is on vacation right now, so I couldn't really record it without them here. So once they get back this Sunday, I'll re-record it all, and post the final version. It will sound a hell of a lot better. Thanks for the review, I see what you mean. Thanks for the review, and I appreciate the comments.

~Erik Eckhart~

Some cosmetic faults, but very good overall.

I really liked this. It felt more resigned and calm than sad, at least to me. The brass/wind is very well done. Two mixing issues I noticed were clipping in various places throughout the track, and the cello at 1:00 is slightly too loud. A bit more reverb then some compression on the piano might help bring the orchestral instruments out, since it was hard to hear through the piano for some of the more subtle elements. A nice dose of mastering reverb on this might also go over well. I can definitely hear some expansion on this one.. such as a reciprocal piano line at 1:16 and building from there, instead of just fading out. Keep it up!

SuperTonic64 responds:

Wow! Thanks for your detailed and awesome review! ^_^

You see, I decided to go with a grand piano instead of a bright one, and maybe that is what it is causing to sound compressed.

The clipping could be caused by what notation program I use. :P I have write out the song in music software program first, before I enter it in FL Studio. But I'll work harder next time to prevent the clipping from happening. ;) And next time, I'll remember to turn down the cello patch! :P

The piano is really loud compared to the other instruments, but I think that it wouldn't hurt to increase the volume on the flute a little bit, now would it? :)

I'll probably rework this into a longer piece with an actual ending, soon, so I'll remember all your great suggestions! Thanks for the review!

An opinion...

You certainly get to the point. This is an obvious statement, and while I agree completely agree with the 'just do your thing' approach, the end result is often half-baked. I realize that within a minute and 16 seconds' time it isn't easy to fit together a cohesive production, but short of that, at least some fancy footwork is needed to make it engaging at all. This is more of a segue track instead of an actual "song" and as such I would consider it high-end of mediocre, but it seems to be more along the lines of 'just your style'. To be blunt, it doesn't do anything interesting. If there were accompanying works to make up a more cohesive whole production-a family, of sorts-then I would find it far more listenable. I don't intend to be harsh, and I'm giving it a 4 to help compensate for the score, I just think it needs a bit of work. Keep it up!

tRiPhOp68 responds:

hey thanks for the review. This 'track' was done on a Roland BR8, not the best for using samples and such. It is supposed to be like a filler track, short, sweet, easy. Used turntables and a Oldies sample from a record. Just did it to see how hard or easy it would be to make a production on my 8-track digi recorder - Status....dont try it, to hard, takes too long, stick to the computer progs for it.

Interesting, but somewhat incoherent.

This is a worthwhile effort... trancy, and experimental, and as one may put it, bold. Despite this, the only thing that keeps it from becoming an amalgam is the melody that fades in at 55 seconds into the track... which doesn't rest on the root note. The sudden stop at 1:30 is abrupt and the melody that follows doesn't seem to flow logically, but it does work nonetheless. The next abrupt stop at 2:06 is accompanied by an automation or splicing click. It might be necessary to cut out that bridge altogether and run the middle flush with the end, or at least have a trance snare fill lead into the end. Overall, it strikes me as having the FLS sound and the guitar doesn't vary enough to contribute melodically, which leaves it in a percussive role.
I don't mean to be harsh, because I like the track, I just think these are some improvements that could make it even better. Keep it up!

PERVOK responds:

i dont think of this as harsh, but i do find it very helpful.

thanks for the advice

Age 40, Male

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