Whatmysays Vampire Love
I have a soft spot for vampire tales, so I have an immediate affinity for these lyrics. Irrespective of the gothic imagery, the song makes a good metaphor for human relationships generally. I think the writing is pretty strong and convincing.
I wonder about the third line in the first verse, where we see 'demon' and then 'devil', where (though I normally advocate variety) a repeated 'devil' might have a sharper edge.
I particularly like the middle 8, i.e.:
"With only pain for company
In a world where no one stays
It becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy
You feel the pain
You breathe again"
These lines are very strong! Well done!
Jdblessing’s When You Get to Where You’re Going
I like songs where we get two views, i.e. "he said/she said". I've used this technique myself, and sometimes attract criticism because I don't always specifiy who is saying what, which makes it ambiguous. However, there is no ambiguity in your lyrics. Here I read the whole sad tale, so you've done pretty well to condense the history of a relationship into in the space of a few verses.
Yonce N Mild’s Perfect Time
The first verse is excellent, and holds the sort of imagery that I find unusual and exciting: "burning eyes", "troubled bones" and "broken megaphone". Great!
Later we hear about "verses of penitence", again adding to the richness of this song.
On the other hand, we have a brief lapse into the mundane with "old guitar", "dusty from the road" and "smoky from the bars". These are more common images, and I was kind of hoping for a continuation of the originality.
I expect, though, that here is a case where the whole is greater than the sum of the parts.
up-fiddler’s The Dream
c.Dave Morehouse 2008
The link to the music
Here, in my view, is a great twist to the "returned soldier" theme. Normally, we hear about the bloke who has been away while the wife waits as patient as Penelope. In this case, it seems the heroine has been slaying dragons and wrestling alligators, to return safely. I like the subtle suggestion that all is not well. There is a veneer of reclaimed domesticity, "she cooks his breakfast", but underneath this, the trauma of warfare lurks, "he can't help her", to trouble her dreams. I think this is a very good piece of writing, where strength emerges through subtlety and understatement.
cnix’s He’s The One
I'll say right off that I am not keen on music with religious themes, so I have to fight my prejudices a bit with this one.
As a literary exercise, I have read better. The phrases used are not highly original, and a glance through any hymn book will reveal very similar. Having said that, as a hymn it is great, because it does all the things a good hymn should do, i.e. exalting the Saviour and all things good.
I do like very much this line: "he broke the chains of every sin". My (admittedly limited) knowledge of hymnody doesn't bring to mind many instances of "chains", except for the Reverend Davis who says ""My dungeon was shook, my chains dropped off" in "I hear the Angels Singing".
rayc's Sewer Song
From the selection of songs, this is the one that appeals to me the most. This is incredibly rich with unusual and vivid imagery. It is a canvas of the weird, like a Bosch painting, as opposed to the linear narrative of a ballad. "Clay cast menagerie", "truncated lover", "red cellophane eyelight", "preach gangrenous love" . . . we have here a treasure trove of wonderfully evocative images. These lyrics seiously impress me!
rayc's The Master's gone away
I think this set of lyrics is meant to be included, so I'll have a quick look at these as well. This song brings to mind medieval ballads, and has a form vaguely similar. It is a much more linear set than "the sewer song", but retains the same haunting ambiguity. I like the unstated mystery that shrouds this brief glimpse of
a misty mausoleum and a vanished master. Again there is great wordcraft: "the mind of the master lay fallow", "Death rode in the soul that was hollow". Well done!!