Press

“Everyone will find their favorite part, but the jury is still out on me — I can’t pick just one moment. It’s all so good.” - Underrated Magazine

 ” ‘The Drought‘ is unapologetically dorky, generous with well-placed fuckwords, and genuinely fun.” - We Also Ran

 ”Matt Singer writes to amuse himself, and that’s a good thing. His perspective is delightfully warped with a strong wit and wrapped in gorgeously melodic songwriting.” - Wildy’s World

 ”Laughter, cheers, and people loudly singing along make it hard to hear the naughty things he does with the (former) First Lady.”Beyond Race

 “Matt Singer is all about words. His songs change topic like most people breathe, jumping from the awkwardness of childhood to love, to Jesus, to Jews, to welfare reform, to the hand of judgment to trick-or-treating on Halloween, and back to being ‘the awkward fat kid.’” Urban Folk 

 “His sardonic, side-splitting, politically-infused lyrics – thinly veiled in catchy melodic, folksy hooks – make you ask, “did he really just say that?,” usually followed by an uncontrollable, belly-aching laugh. Plus, he can whistle like a piping hot tea kettle.”  - My Musical Crush

 “… A joyous roots sound strung through an urban outlet… nice string work and fine harmonies.” - The Village Voice

“It’s rare that an entertainer is equally successful making his audience laugh and cry.  It is even more rare that he can make his listeners do both at the same time.  Singer has mastered this art.”   - Allston-Brighton Tab

“Singer’s vocal style is old-fashioned jazz troubadour charm with a modern wicked streak. Wide-eyed, innocently wicked.” -  Indie-Music.Com

“…Genius… Tenacious D had better watch their backs.” - Garageband.com

“Matt Singer writes lyrically expressive tunes… [and] has a feel and a love for what he is doing.” Delusions of Adequacy

“Singer writes protest songs that are serious without taking themselves too seriously.” - The Village Broadsheet

“… Lucid and intelligent… his confidence is such that he addresses issues across the musical genres.” - Russell’s Reviews