Pushover - Not really my cup of tea. The instrumentation is too harsh.
A Day in Heaven - Honestly, I'm not wild at all about the intro. The percussion is, and I know I'm describing trance, overly simplistic. The three beats on one, the and of one and two are somewhat grating. The choral section manages to create a decent enough contrast to help the listener forget the drums, and while it's not quite as melodic as I might write, it's pretty decent. I also like that Vadney allows the listener to get immersed in the sound instead of just jumping back into the beats. Quite honestly, it makes the beats even better when they do arrive. Overall I think the piece would be great without the first minute or two, or by replacing the heavy drums with a weaker synth beat of some sort.
Campfires at dusk - I realize the guitar was thrown in this one to make it sound unique, but it feels out of place. Guitars are best utilized for melody or for background. In this it's the featured instrument, but has the same measure repeating. I would have either given the guitar a melody or allowed it to be quieter and back up another melody.
Music is My Weapon - This isn't trance, it's techstep (I think). This isn't something I generally listen to so I don't know if my feedback would be worthwhile.
Devotion - Now THIS is trance! Great buildup, not overly simple or complex (for the genre), decent melody on piano; all around quality. In a word: sweet.
Rhapsody - I'm glad this wasn't an attempted trance version of Rhapsody in Blue. I actually prefer orchestration in trance as I feel it gives the music more flavor than you might have otherwise. This wasn't bad at all. It seems to me a bit like Daft Punk meets a trance meets a movie soundtrack.
Stabilizer - This might sound silly, but I swear I've heard this before. And I don't think it was DNB. It's not bad.
I'll check out more later, the phone is ringing again.
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