rio wrote:
Eyesore wrote:
noodles wrote:
just dont write meticulous descriptions of each individual song, reviewers who do that make me want to break their hands so they'll never write again.
That's extremely hard. I like to make the review personal, tie myself into the review to give the words a little credibility. I also like to give a bit of a nod to the band's other work, maybe a little history lesson or whatever.
Some people dislike that style, but I can't help it. I like to talk music.
I'm the same, although I've only written 3 reviews so far. I never agreed with the rule I was always taught at school- that you should never use the first person in formal writing. I think people will enjoy reading your work more if you put your own personality into it.
It just gives the review a personal touch. Do you know how many bands have sent me e-mails thanking me, telling me they appreciate getting a review from someone who actually took the time to listen? No? Neither do I, but there's been a lot!

Elisa C. Martin sent me a killer e-mail when I reviewed the last Dreamaker album, the guy (I forget which one now, Jari, I think) from Slumber sent me an e-mail after I'd reviewed Rapture telling me that my reviewed helped him overcome his writer's block for the new album. That was damn cool. Of course that was like 2 years ago so I think he relapsed.
Everyone has their own style and I don't really care for one more than another when I'm reading the review. I just want to feel like the reviewer knows what they're talking about, especially if it's an album by a band you know. How many time have you read a review for a clear-cut thrash metal band and the reviewer calls them prog-metal or something? I mean, didn't I post a Helloween review back a while ago that said they invented prog-metal? Hahaha.