2025 is halfway through! It has been an incredible year for women in music. We’ve had releases from Epica, Halestorm, Evanescence, Spiritbox, Messa, Beyond the Black, Within Temptation, and so many more! There are still so many releases to come, so it’s hard to generate a best of list early on. BUT, I want to know your favorite woman or top three women in Rock and Metal of 2025! VOTE or Comment below!
Halestorm will waste no time supporting their upcoming sixth studio album, Everest, booking a seven month world tour that includes a lengthy run in the U.S. and Canada between July and October. This is what Halestorm does best, endlessly tour and make sure their millions of fans have multiple chances to see them.
I am intrigued by the first single of Everest, as it sounds more like “Into the Wildlife” style writing and production.
The band recently revealed the first single from their new album titled “Darkness Always Wins” and now we have the full details of their forthcoming release.
Halestorm on the album:
“Our album Everest is a story of our journey as a band, full of beautiful endings and new beginnings. We weave a tangled web of melancholy, frustration, anger, and the vast purgatory of love and love lost. It is a rollercoaster of epic musical detours, great songwriting and completely unhinged twists and turns. EVEREST is an auditory representation of the 4 pillars of Halestorm. Let us introduce ourselves and invite you into our world…if you dare.”
The album is titled Everest and it’s currently on track for an Aug. 8 release date through Atlantic Records. The group worked with producer Dave Cobb on the set.
Check out the album artwork and track listing below and make sure to get in on the album pre-orders.
Halestorm, Everest Album Artwork + Track Listing
Atlantic Records
Fallen Star Everest Shiver Like A Woman Can Rain Your Blood On Me Darkness Always Wins Gather The Lambs WATCH OUT! Broken Doll K-I-L-L-I-N-G I Gave You Everything How Will You Remember Me?
Halestorm Touring Everest
As stated, Halestorm have a heavy tour cycle ahead of them. The group’s 2025 NEverest touring includes dates supporting Iron Maiden and Volbeat, while the band also has shows that feature Apocalyptica, Lindsey Stirling, Bloodywood and Kelsey Karter and the Heroines.
In addition, Halestorm will be one of the bands playing a set at the Ozzy Osbourne / Black Sabbath Back to the Beginning all-day concert on July 5 in Birmingham, England.
Along with the previously announced North American dates supporting Volbeat, the band just revealed a U.S. and Canada headline run featuring Lindsey Stirling and Apocalyptica. Tickets for the run will go on sale this Friday (May 2) at 10AM local time. Check out all the stops below and get ticketing information through the Halestorm website.
Halestorm 2025 Touring
May 15 – Daytona Beach, Fla. @ Welcome To Rockville (festival date) May 17 – Ocean City, Md. @ Boardwalk Rock (festival date)
European & U.K. Tour Dates
May 27-28 – Budapest @ Sportarena (supporting Iron Maiden) May 31 – Prague, Czechia S Letany Airport (supporting Iron Maiden) June 1 – Bratislava, Slovakia @ O’Nepelu Arena (supporting Iron Maiden) June 3 – Leipzig, Saxony @ Felsenkeller Leipzig (headline date) June 5 – Trondheim, Norway @ Trondheim Rocks (festival date) June 7 – Stavanger, Norway @ Viking Stadium (supporting Iron Maiden) June 9 – Copenhagen, Denmark @ Royal Arena (supporting Iron Maiden) June 12-13 – Stockholm, Sweden @ 3Arena (supporting Iron Maiden) June 16 – Helsinki, Finland @ Olympic Stadium (supporting Iron Maiden) June 18 – Tallinn, Estonia @ Helitehas (headline date) June 19 – Riga, Latvia @ Palladium Riga (headline date) June 23 – Lille, France @ Aeronef (headline date) June 25 – Dublin, Ireland @ Malahide Castle (supporting Iron Maiden) June 28 – London, UK @ London Stadium (supporting Iron Maiden) July 1 – Lausanne, Switzerland @ Les Docks (headline date) July 2 – Eindhoven @ Effenaar (headline date) July 5 – Birmingham, U.K. @ Villa Park (supporting Black Sabbath)
North American Dates
July 17 – Denver, Colo. @ Ball Arena (supporting Volbeat) July 19 – Salt Lake City, Utah @ Utah First Credit Union Amphitheatre (supporting Volbeat) July 21 – Auburn, Wash. @ White River Amphitheatre (supporting Volbeat) July 22 – Ridgefield, Wash. @ Cascades Amphitheatre (supporting Volbeat) July 24 – Wheatland, Calif. @ Toyota Amphitheatre (supporting Volbeat) July 25 – Los Angeles, Calif. @ Kia Forum (supporting Volbeat) July 26 – Phoenix, Ariz. @ Talking Stick Resort Amphitheatre (supporting Volbeat) July 28 – Irving, Texas @ The Pavilion at Toyota Music Factory (supporting Volbeat) July 29 – Houston, Texas @ 713 Music Hall (supporting Volbeat) July 31 – Rogers, Ark. @ Walmart AMP (supporting Volbeat) Aug. 2 – Franklin, Tenn. @ FirstBank Amphitheater (supporting Volbeat) Aug. 3 – Alpharetta, Ga. @ Ameris Bank Amphitheatre (supporting Volbeat) Aug. 4 – Tampa, Fla. @ MIDFLORIDA Credit Union Amphitheatre (supporting Volbeat) Aug. 6 – Charlotte, N.C. @ PNC Music Pavilion (supporting Volbeat) Aug. 7 – Bristow, Va. @ Jiffy Lube Live (supporting Volbeat) Aug. 9 – Camden, N.J. @ Freedom Mortgage Pavilion (supporting Volbeat) Aug. 10 – Holmdel, N.J. @ PNC Bank Arts Center (supporting Volbeat) Aug. 12 – Bangor, Maine @ Maine Savings Amphitheater (supporting Volbeat) Aug. 13 – Gilford, N.H. @ Bank NH Pavilion (supporting Volbeat) Aug. 14 – Mansfield, Mass. @ Xfinity Center (supporting Volbeat) Aug. 16 – Hershey, Pa. @ GIANT Center (supporting Volbeat) Aug. 17 – Cincinnati, Ohio 2 Riverbend Music Center (supporting Volbeat) Aug. 19 – Clarkston, Mich. @ Pine Knob Music Center (supporting Volbeat) Aug. 21 – Noblesville, Ind. @ Ruoff Music Center (supporting Volbeat) Aug. 22 – Tinley Park, Ill. @ Credit Union 1 Amphitheatre (supporting Volbeat) Aug. 23 – Marshfield, Wis. @ Central Wisconsin State Fair (headline date) Sept. 11 – Salem, Va. @ Salem Civic Center (co-bill w/ Lindsey Stirling, with Apocalyptica) Sept. 12 – Cherokee, N.C. @ Harrah’s Cherokee (co-bill w/ Lindsey Stirling, with Apocalyptica) Sept. 14 – Bridgeport, Ct. @ Hartford HealthCare Amphitheater (co-bill w/ Lindsey Stirling, with Apocalyptica) Sept. 16 – Syracuse, N.Y. @ Upstate Medical University Arena at the Oncenter (co-bill w/ Lindsey Stirling, with Apocalyptica) Sept. 18 – Laval, Quebec @ Place Bell (co-bill w/ Lindsey Stirling, with Apocalyptica) Sept. 19 – Toronto, Ontario @ Budweiser Stage (co-bill w/ Lindsey Stirling, with Apocalyptica) Sept. 21 – Madison, Wis. @ Breese Stevens Field (co-bill w/ Lindsey Stirling, with Apocalyptica) Sept. 23 – St. Louis, Mo. @ Hollywood Casino Amphitheater (co-bill w/ Lindsey Stirling, with Apocalyptica) Sept. 24 – Cedar Rapids, Iowa @ Alliant Energy PowerHouse (co-bill w/ Lindsey Stirling, with Apocalyptica) Sept. 26 – Welch, Minn. @ Treasure Island Amphitheater (co-bill w/ Lindsey Stirling, with Apocalyptica) Sept. 27 – Duluth, Minn. @ AMSOIL Arena (co-bill w/ Lindsey Stirling, with Apocalyptica) Sept. 29 – Bonner Springs, Kan. @ Azura Amphitheater (co-bill w/ Lindsey Stirling, with Apocalyptica) Oct. 1 – Sioux City, Iowa @ Tyson Events Center (co-bill w/ Lindsey Stirling, with Apocalyptica) Oct. 2 – Grand Forks, N.D. @ Alerus Center (co-bill w/ Lindsey Stirling, with Apocalyptica) Oct. 4 – Winnipeg, Manitoba @ Canada Life Centre (co-bill w/ Lindsey Stirling, with Apocalyptica) Oct. 5 – Saskatoon, Saskatchewan @ SaskTel Centre (co-bill w/ Lindsey Stirling, with Apocalyptica) Oct. 7 – Calgary, Alberta @ Scotiabank Saddledome (co-bill w/ Lindsey Stirling, with Apocalyptica) Oct. 8 – Penticton, British Columbia @ South Okanagan Events Centre (co-bill w/ Lindsey Stirling, with Apocalyptica) Oct. 10 – Vancouver, British Columbis ! Doug Mitchell Thunderbird Sports Centre (co-bill w/ Lindsey Stirling, with Apocalyptica) Oct. 11 – Spokane, Wash. @ Spokane Arena (co-bill w/ Lindsey Stirling, with Apocalyptica)
European & U.K. Dates
Oct. 22 – Wiesbaden, DE @ Schlachthof (with Bloodywood) Oct. 23 – Oberhausen, DE @ Turbinehalle 2 (with Bloodywood) Oct. 25 – Hamburg, DE @ Inselpark Arena (with Bloodywood) Oct. 27 – Stockholm SE @ Fållan (with Bloodywood) Oct. 28 – Copenhagen, DK @ The Grey Hall (with Bloodywood) Oct. 30 – Warsaw, PL @ COS Torwar (with Bloodywood) Nov. 1 – Berlin, DE @ Columbiahalle (with Bloodywood) Nov. 3 – Prague, CZ @ Lucerna Velkỳ Sàl (with Bloodywood) Nov. 5 – Vienna, AT @ Gasometer (with Bloodywood) Nov. 6 – Budapest, HU @ Barba Negra (with Bloodywood) Nov. 8 – Munich, DE @ Zenith (with Bloodywood) Nov. 9 – Zurich, CH @ Komplex457 (with Bloodywood) Nov. 11 – Milan, IT @ Alcatraz (with Bloodywood) Nov. 12 – Barcelona, ES @ Razzmatazz 1 (with Bloodywood) Nov. 14 – Pamplona, ES @ Totem (with Bloodywood) Nov. 15 – Madrid, ES @ La Riviera (with Bloodywood) Nov. 17 – Paris, FR @ Olympia (with Bloodywood) Nov. 18 – Amsterdam, NL @ AFAS Live (with Bloodywood) Nov. 20 – Cardiff, UK @ Utilita Arena (with Bloodywood, Kelsy Karter & The Heroines) Nov. 21 – Glasgow, UK @ OVO Hydro (with Bloodywood, Kelsy Karter & The Heroines) Nov. 23 – Birmingham, UK @ bp pulse LIVE (with Bloodywood, Kelsy Karter & The Heroines) Nov. 24 – Manchester, UK @ AO Arena (with Bloodywood, Kelsy Karter & The Heroines) Nov. 26 – London, UK @ O2 Arena (with Bloodywood, Kelsy Karter & The Heroines)
May 27 – June 28: Supporting Iron Maiden (where noted) July 5: supporting Black Sabbath July 17 – August 22: Supporting Volbeat (where noted) September 11 – October 11: (co-bill w/ Lindsey Stirling, with Apocalyptica) October 22 – November 26: Support from Bloodywood November 20 – November 26: Support from Kelsy Karter & The Heroines
If you’re looking for Halestorm meets ‘Foo Fighters meets Fleetwood Mac, Ginger Evil are right in your wheelhouse. Their new single of off their latest album “The Way It Burns” has soul, blues, jazz, and southern rock flavors that died out sadly in the 1970s. The new wave of this Rock is back in 2025 with some killer offers, and Ginger Evil is a catalyst!
BUY/STREAM HERE Finnish female-fronted rock sensations Ginger Evil are pleased to unveil their new single and official lyric video “Better Get In Line”, taken from their debut album, “The Way It Burns”, out now via Frontiers Music Srl.
The band described the themes of the new track: “Better Get In Line” tells everything essential that is wrong in the world and what is wrong with people. We are now witnessing democratic countries taking their first steps towards dictatorships, led by multimillionaires who are blinded by their own greed and needs. People who care about nothing but themselves and their own delusional reality. Can’t we prevent this? Everyone needs to make personal choices to ensure that such things do not thrive in any country. Small actions have a big impact when the group is large enough. Do we want to gamble with our future?”
Ginger Evil began as Moonshine Inc. in 2005, in a rehearsal room in Helsinki, Finland. After a couple of years of rehearsal and composing, a fruitless search for a singer meant the songs were put on ice.
Meanwhile, guitarist Tomi Julkunen and bassist Veli Palevaara continued gigging in Finland with The Milestones, including arena shows with Deep Purple and Whitesnake. In the aftermath of their fifth album, those Moonshine Inc. songs from a decade back emerged from hibernation, so the search began again for a vocalist.
The powerful voice of Ella Tepponen was known to Tomi and Veli from many theatre and music projects, and drummer Toni Mustonen was already familiar to everyone. Jamming together found a shared musical passion, and a group creative process soon flourished. Ginger Evil was born.
“From Foo Fighters to Fleetwood Mac”, is how the band hears their music, with singer Ella bringing a whole new kind of twist to their rock expression. Once the band got together and songs were taking shape, on board jumped music producer and film director Richard Stanley, known for his work with The Who and John Lennon, heard demos of Ginger Evil and was inspired to co-write lyrics.
In 2022 Ginger Evil signed a deal with Frontiers Music Srl. (Def Leppard, Lynyrd Skynyrd, TOTO, Whitesnake, Skunk Anansie). Debut album “The Way It Burns” was released on February 14, 2025. Organic and fresh sounding album was something that rock fans had been waiting for since the 90’s; something familiar, something new, something that got their asses shaking once more!
“The Way It Burns” Tracklist:
1. Rainmaker 2. Dead On Arrival 3. Shame Old 4. Flames 5. Hands Move To Midnight 6. Arrowhead 7. Better Get In Line 8. Black Waves 9. Whispers 10. Not Your Fool 11. Last Frontier 12. Wake Me
Line Up: Ella Tepponen – vocals Tomi Julkunen – guitars Veli Palevaara – bass Toni Mustonen – drums
Here are ten new releases you should check out for the weekend!
Ànv by Eluveitie
Ànv is finally here! Eluveitie fans have been waiting since 2019’s Ategnatos, which is one of my favorite Metal albums. It’s hard to follow up such an incredible album, but I think they achieved a similar magic with Ànv. Expect soaring Folk Melodies, haunting vocals from the incomparable Fabienne Erni, even more crazy technical Heavy Metal solos, and more violin epics. This album is just MORE of everything I love about Eluveitie. It’s heavier, darker, catchier, more complex, faster, and more layers of the Folk sound. This album plays loud, so that you can hear all eight musicians individually. The addition of Lea-Sophie Fischer on Violin and Hurdy Gurdy is spectacular. She restores the fast paced technicality on Violin that attributes to so much of Elu’s unique sound. Her playing on this album is mind-blowing. Rafael Salzmann and Jonas Wolf exceed expectations for me on guitars. The solos are crisp, the accents are disturbingly eerie, and the rhythm is so paralyzingly fast. Everything is so well constructed and put together, definitely credited to Jonas’s writing ability. It doesn’t get boring or stale. It captures you, like only Eluveitie can, and it doesn’t let go.
Truth be told, I didn’t expect to love this album, and I absolutely do. I don’t know how they keep raising the bar and stay pure Folk Metal. There’s no formula, but you know it’s authentically Eluveitie. It’s yet another dark and beautiful album from them. The talent of this band is unmatched and legendary, and Ànv is a testament to everything they’ve contributed to music. I love the complexity of it. It’s not predictable in any way. Each song is unique and incredibly emotive. This album is definitely on my list of a Best of 2025.
My Favorite songs: Taranoias, The Prodigal Ones, Awen, The Harvest, All Is One, Aeon of the Crescent Moon
The track is taken from the band’s newest album ‘Ànv.’ Out on all music platforms and in various physical formats via: https://eluveitie.bfan.link/anv.yde
Rivers of Nihil Stun with new single
Their self-titled album out May 25th via Nuclear Blast Records may be my album of the year. Based upon the three singles that I have heard, this album is devastatingly good. I’ve heard songs from them in the past, but none compare to the impact of Water & Time. This new song is one of the best songs I have ever heard in my entire life. This song is a masterclass in composition. They went above and beyond on this song. The full body chills I get when I listen to this song are unmatched. This song is worth tens of thousands of reaction videos. I wish I would’ve filmed my reaction to hearing this song for the first time. My Jaw was on the floor. It took everything I had to keep from tearing up. I said “oh my god” multiple times at every change. Then, the Saxophone solo hit, and I was utterly blown away. You have to sit down and experience this song.
Halestorm Release New Dark Single
So, I am really torn on this one. I really want to like this song. It’s overall a great song, maybe one of their most epic songs ever made. The problem I have with the song, is the obvious similarity of “In The Air Tonight” by Phil Collins in the intro. I don’t know if it’s a purposeful sampling, but it’s similar enough to make me wonder. I’m not against lawful sampling, but if it’s done without clearly stating, it bothers me. Regardless, this is a great song and well written. A lot of their writing in the past ten years has been a little stale for me, this is something different.
Fit For a King blaze with new track
One of my favorite Metalcore bands of all time is back with a new extremely heavy dramatic track. It’s a bit predictable, considering about 80% of Metalcore sounds exactly like this right now. I like it, it’s just a bit bland and sounds like anything from Volumes, Bury Tomorrow, Bring Me the Horizon, Memphis May Fire, Architects, Devil Wears Prada, I could go on. I like a lot of songs by these bands, I have nothing against Metalcore. I love Metalcore, but the genre is getting extremely watered down and stale to me. What do you think about Fit For a King and the state of Metalcore?
Ozark Based Etched In Embers Releases All That Remains style track
This song really surprised me. I didn’t expect such good melodic vocals and excellent song progression. These guys only started in 2020, so they’re fairly new. I am interested to see where they go with this style.
Heavy Metallers AMBUSH Combine Old Sounds for New Speedy Track
If you like Hammerfall, Helloween, Blind Guardian, Man O War, and Dream Evil, this band is definitely up your alley. This guy’s range is stunning. The solo is reminiscent of Vivian Campbell on Holy Diver. I like it and can’t wait to check out more of their catalog.
French Prog Metalcore Stun With A dual Language Track
This is one of my favorite songs they have ever released. I’ve been listening to them for a couple years now. I love their chaotic and technical style. I think they’re an underrated band in the genre, along with brothers and sister band Novelists. This is a super emotive song, reminding me of my favorite song by them “Alive”. Love the dynamics and the choir style vocals towards the end. We need a Landmvrks/Novelists tour in the USA.
Portuguese Dark Symphonic Death Metal GODIVA is back!
The legendary Dimmu Borgir adjacent band is back with a new video for blazing track “All Seeing Eye” off of Hubris in 2023. The band formed in 1999, but hasn’t been very active. Hopefully, this video marks a new return for the band. I want more of this. If you like old Dimmu, this is right up your alley
All Girl Trio Blows it Out of the Water
Welsh band Häxan brings a new kind of Rock with absolutely stunning vocals that soar with precision. I have never heard of Häxan, but these girls are spectacular musicians. The guitar solo is tasteful and gorgeously melodic. The bass, like with any power trio, is excellently heard and booming. The song is perfectly constructed. Häxan is the next big thing in Hard Rock, I truly believe they have huge potential
American Family Goes Symphonic Rock With Brand new Epic
LILIAC is a Romanian-American Heavy Metal band made up of members of the Cristea family. I’ve been following this band’s career for awhile now, and I think this is their best song yet. Being that their parents are from Romania, they classify their music as “Vamp Metal” which had me hooked right away. This song was a punch in the face that I need to listen to this band a lot more.
I have been delving into Rock the past year once again after a long sabbatical. I decided to make a detailed list of my absolute favorite Rock albums of all time. While lists are the internet’s favorite way of getting a shit-ton of views and pissing people off in the process, I love sharing my favorite music with people. Hopefully, someone connects with my taste or opinion positively. I am focusing on the traditional idea of Rock on this list, with a couple of Heavy Metal/Hard Rock albums on here. I consider Rock to be entirely its own thing from Metal most of the time, usually containing more clean vocals, slow songs, and a strict time signature and song structure. I don’t know if that’s a fair or correct observation of genre differentiation, but it’s just how my brain processes the deciding factors on what is Rock and what is exclusively Metal.
THIS IS NOT A BEST OF LIST: These are just 20 of my favorite Rock albums. It’s not me telling people what I think is better than anything else out there. This is not a posturing of opinion and knowledge. I’m just a writer who is ultra-passionate about music. I like to get as personal and as real as possible with my writing, and this is such a good way to do so! Do not get riled up because one of your favorites isn’t on the list. It doesn’t mean I don’t love your favorite record. Maybe I haven’t even heard of it yet, so please let me know your favorites in the comments below! I would love to know what albums everyone holds most dear. Always remember music is incredibly subjective, and that the taste is unique to the individual for a whole host of personal reasons.
There are two parts, this is part one. Only 10 per post will appear.
Error- The Warning (2022)
I was sitting in my living room and having ice cream with my mom while we were checking out new music videos in 2023. The Warning popped up on my Youtube feed with the live version of their cover of “Enter Sandman” by Metallica at CDMX. I played the video, quite skeptical of what I was about to hear. Little did I know, this video and the subsequent two videos we watched would forever change my life. This Mexican Rock Trio of the Villarreal sisters is the reason I started listening to Rock again. After so long of exclusively listening to Heavy Metal, Rock just seemed derivative. This band brought back my sweet spot for Rock with soaring vocals, heavy riffs, and innate technical ability with explosive chemistry. They’ve got that magic quality that the early Heavy Metal bands had but with modern twists and exceptionally profound lyrics and irresistibly catchy choruses. They’ve got the “it factor” packed into a power trio, much like Rush, Muse, Chevelle, and Winery Dogs that came long before them. It’s hard to articulate the specialness of this band. They’re just something you truly have to experience for yourself.
The Warning’s Error is one of the best Rock albums I have ever heard. The songwriting, the mastering, the composition, and the supernova of complex emotions and deep cerebral lyrics make Error a cornerstone album in Rock to me. It’s heavy, raw, real, and yet so perfectly refined with the help of legendary producer David Bendeth. “The hits just keep coming” is a phrase that comes to mind often when I listen to this record. Every song is unique, bombastic, catchy, and so well-written. There are no gaps. There’s no dragging on. There’s no filler, just all killer riffs and insanely emotive vocals. Dany Villarreal is one of the greatest vocalists and frontwomen of all time. The song Choke represents that sentiment so epically. Error has elements that if it were released ten to twenty years ago, it would’ve been an instant classic. A lot of that credit also goes to bassist Alejandra for holding this album together with insane grooves, riffs, and pitch-perfect rhythm. The overall tone set by the bass on this record is spectacular, and it reminds me of the old Heavy Metal records from AC/DC, Black Sabbath, and Led Zeppelin. This level of talent from a bassist is just unheard of these days, sadly. This album deserves Grammy and RCA recognition. Being released in these times of Rock and individuality discrimination, it may never be truly recognized for its greatness. The maturity and depth of this album are surprising from three girls, two of them not even out of their teens. If you haven’t heard this album, you’re going to be blown away on the first listen, I promise. I will never not be blown away by this record, and all of The Warning’s material. Error will be in my play rotation as long as I live.
Favorite Tracks: Evolve, Animosity, Choke
Self Titled- Halestorm (2009)
Halestorm, the self-titled album of the American Hard Rock band, is one of the most dynamic bombastic albums I have ever heard in my life. This album came out in 2009, but I didn’t discover it until a year later. When I first heard this album, I was only sixteen or seventeen, it was nostalgic to my childhood harkening back to the 1980s when Heavy Music was king. It’s like the album Heart tried to make, but producers consistently discouraged women from writing heavy music. Halestorm is a combination of melodic guitar lines underneath absolutely pristine soaring vocals by the one and only Lzzy Hale, and perfectly accurate arena rock drums from the “Animal” Arejay Hale. It’s full of angst, anger, raw, and heartfelt with some down and dirty thrown in there. It’s not over-produced, but it’s so clear and well-delivered. Every riff, vocal line, and drum full makes sense and is perfectly crafted together. It’s driven and hard-hitting, especially in the vocal department. Lzzy’s vocals are the centerfold of Halestorm, and it shows on this record. I feel like the self-titled says that this band doesn’t follow any tropes, genres, stereotypes, or eras of music. It’s truly a standalone standout album. There’s nothing like it, because of Lzzy’s voice, the unique deviation in the songs, and the mix of melodic and heavy riffs. It just punches you in the chest soul deep in a very in-your-face loudspeaker way.
Halestorm brought back a lot of heart to Rock as well. I feel like Rock started moving in a more aggressive edgy direction at the time, losing a lot of character and warmth and just inserting random Rap lines and dubstep sounds. The self-titled Halestorm is a perfect mix of aggressiveness, heart, and tasty riffs. It’s catchy as hell without being derivative. There are stories you can relate to. Every song tells a story or a different emotion, going over the complexity of relationships and accepting how other people affect you. The rhythm section is powerful without taking over the music and foreshadowing the melodic qualities. To my ears, this album is nearly perfect, because it has its own identity and a ton of soul. This band put everything they had musically and soulfully into every single song, and it comes across emphatically. I’ve never heard anything quite like it. Halestorm was and will always be incomparable. I think this album is truly an essential Rock album that everyone should listen to.
Favorite Tracks; Familiar Taste of Poison, Nothing To Do With Love, What Were You Expecting
Self-titled- Evanescence (2011)
Evanescence was already a household name in 2009 following two classic Rock records with Fallen and The Open Door. I grew up listening to these records, even basing my room decor on the aesthetics of The Open Door era. Evanescence is a once-in-a-lifetime trailblazing band. They pioneered the Goth Rock scene in North America and added Symphonic elements that lead to the popularity of bands like Nightwish and Within Temptation in the US. Amy Lee has to be on the best singers in Rock list with her soaring multi-octave vocals and heart-wrenching soulful croons. Nobody sounds quite like Amy still to this day, and she’s influenced thousands of young girls to go into the world of heavy music. I always wonder how my music taste would’ve evolved without Evanescence. They opened the door for me into darker music, and that has been a huge outlet for me for the past eighteen years. Amy Lee’s music is so personal and special to me. Choosing one record of theirs for this list was nearly impossible, but I had to go with the Self-titled record. Each records a point in time where music was changed forever, but the Self-Titled turned out to be a dark horse.
Self Titled Evanescence was one of the most anticipated records ever. It had been five years since The Open Door was released and news of the band had been quiet besides a couple of member changes. It didn’t chart as well as previous records, so I find it underrated. I had no idea what to expect with this record because you never know what direction Amy will take. She’s a true experimental pioneer of a unique blend of Rock and atmospheric sounds that are unheard of. Evanescence, the record, is everything the band has to offer. It’s odd, funky, heavy, and a roller coaster of emotions. It’s beautiful from the soaring melodies to the pristine piano lines, but there is a grunge feel to it. The guitars and drums are very grungy and raw, which is such a juxtaposition to the vocals, piano, and the level of reverb on this record. It’s a solid Rock record with catchy riffs, but the opposite of mainstream or anything derivative. The addition of Will Hunt on drums is what stands out to me. His playing is so driven and so perfectly accurate for the feel on every track. It’s so vastly different from the previous records, but still so profoundly Evanescence. This album is perfect, I love every single song on this record and find each one to be uniquely perfect while having this ethereal feel. It has its own Evanescence aesthetic, one you can sink and disappear in. This record echoes Mozart, Bjork, Soundgarden, and Nightwish all together somehow, but is still so vastly different from anything ever made before.
My favorite tracks; are Made of Stone, Sick, and The Change.
5150- Van Halen (1986)
The stress of picking a single Van Halen record for my favorite album was a mountain to climb. Man, they just simply don’t have a bad album. In my opinion, all their albums are instant classics and essential to the world of Hard Rock. They’re one of the greatest and most influential bands of all time. I was probably listening to Van Halen as soon as I was born. They’re a huge part of my family and my musical influences. They’ve impacted millions of people like this, so my family is not unique in this influence, but not a lot of families listen to heavy music all together like mine, I don’t think. We had listening parties before anyone knew what they were, and a lot of those were centered around Van Halen and Iron Maiden. 5150 is one of my mom’s favorites, so I’ve probably heard this record in full more than their other albums. But, it wasn’t until I got older that I was able to appreciate the technicality and level of depth of this album. It was between this and For Unlawful Carnal Knowledge, and nostalgia won over heaviness in this battle. 5150 is larger than life, much like EVH himself.
I love every Van Halen album differently, but 5150 is my bread and butter. This album is one I grew up listening to a lot, so there’s immense nostalgia when listening to it. The technicality of this album atop epic Arena Rock sound and tangible emotion is why it has to be my favorite of theirs. It’s so crisp and so light and airy, leaving so much room for each brilliant musician to come to the forefront. Sammy Hagar’s vocals on this record still give me chills every single time. He is always right dead center on every note while keeping emotion, grit, and tension that fits so undeniably well with Eddie’s guitar lines. They can solo off between vocals and guitars, making Hagar the voice that can go toe to toe with Eddie’s guitars, and I don’t think he gets the credit he deserves for this feat. Hagar’s vocals on Why Can’t This Be Love? are stunning. His vocal scat solo on this blows my mind every single time I listen to it. I also think Michael Anthony is a highly overlooked bassist and I love this bass tone on every Van Halen album. The whole band just really came together on this record and it flows so smoothly. Other VH albums have bursting-at-the-seams chaos to them because Eddie’s genius is just so explosive. 5150 came together, and despite feeling a little short and unfinished, I think it’s one of their best. If I’m in the mood for Rock of Van Halen, this is one of my favorite go-to albums.
Rest in peace, Eddie.
Favorite Tracks; Why Can’t This Be Love?, Dreams, 5150
AB III- Alter Bridge (2010)
One of my most listened-to records of all time, I had to include the incomparable Alter Bridge III. This album got me into Alter Bridge in a huge way. I wore this CD out in every player my family and I had. My dad was a huge Creed fan when I was a kid, so Mark Tremonti’s insanely heavy and precise guitar playing wasn’t lost on me. AB III is an album that brought this band together in a chemistry sense. It sounds like they found their groove on this record with less dead air and less slow instrumentals that seemed to be out of place. This album has a massive sound to it and hits hard immediately. It’s an in-your-face Hard Rock album with incredible melodic vocals and unbelievably good guitars. Every track kind of flows together, almost like a movie playing out in your head. It’s expertly arranged and incredibly emotionally charged. It’s an album that you have to sit down and dig into. Listening to it in passing is not going to translate so well, because of its immense depth and layers. It’s not Radio Rock, it’s not mainstream fluff or over-produced filler. AB III is complex. It’s both dark and bright. It’s heavy but gentle. It echoes the intensity of Guns N Roses, but it is so much more refined and pleasant to well-tuned ears. This is one of my favorite albums for guitar work on this entire list and influenced me as a guitarist more than nearly every album I have ever listened to.
Alter Bridge III is an album that I don’t see on a lot of lists, which is surprising to me because of its loud intensity and well-composed choruses. This album is a classic to me in the realm of Hard Rock and put Myles Kennedy on a pedestal for vocals. He is a one-of-a-kind singer with one of the largest ranges I’ve ever heard. His guitar playing also kicks ass and he even plays some solos, going toe-to-toe with the beast that is Mark Tremonti. I don’t understand the hate that Myles receives, specifically from the Prog world. He is a fantastic vocalist who should be listed among the greatest of all time. Yet, he is consistently ragged on for being too mainstream or mid-tier. I simply think that not enough people have heard this record. If they listened to AB III, they would find it impossible to hate such a well-composed Hard Rock album and epic humble vocalist such as Myles.
Favorite Tracks: Make It Right, All Hope Is Gone, Zero, Life Must Go On
Appeal To Reason- Rise Against (2008)
As a pre-teen in the 2000s, I was very stereotypically a huge fan of Punk Rock. I liked everything from Blink 182, Misfits, Ramones, Yellowcard, Good Charlotte, Fall Out Boy, and of course Paramore who is also on this list. Pop Punk and Punk Rock were at the pinnacle of their popularity in the 2000s, with Warped Tour becoming one of the best-selling festivals in the world. I was exposed to this scene through Fuse and MTV, and I fell in love with the fast-paced-light-heartedness of these bands. I was a goofy teen with a huge sense of humor, a lot of energy, and a huge liking for girls. These bands catered to those things in a big way, but the Metal Head in me eventually reared its head, and I wanted something darker. Rise Against came along with their video for “The Good Left Undone” which was way darker, heavier, and had an edge to it that nothing else had at the time. I was obsessed with this song but never purchased the whole album. It wasn’t until I heard Reeducation Through Labor that I truly became a Rise Against fan and picked up Appeal To Reason when it came out. It was a massive album in Colorado because it was recorded and produced in Fort Collins, CO.
This album is a whole different animal to any Punk album I have ever heard. Even to this day, I haven’t heard anything close to it. It’s essentially about the collapse of America and the entire world and humanity losing its way because of war, social conflict, and out-of-control nihilism. It’s a very complex socially charged album that I can still very much relate to today. Rise Against tackles the hardest issues humanity has to deal with, and I commend them for aggressively tackling these. I hate politics in music. I find politics to be too much of a distraction from the actual issues of humanity. But, this album is an exception and hits me right at my core every single time I listen to it. The idea that America “has fallen from grace” isn’t lost on me and is still relevant today. But, the politics and differing ideals aside, this album is sonically perfect to me. Every riff, every snare and hi-hat and crash, every scream, every group vocal is attacking, in your face, and so perfectly placed. The energy doesn’t stop. It doesn’t let you off the rolling train of disappointment, anger, inspiration, desperation, and hope with excellent driving guitars and clarity. Listening to it again, I am reminded that this is one of my favorite albums ever made. Savior is such a beautiful track and is part of why I fell in love with this band. Tim Mcllrath wears his entire soul on his sleeve for everyone to see and projects it with a perfectly raspy voice. He’s an underrated vocalist in Rock, and this album will be a testament to why that is so true.
Favorite Tracks: From Heads Unworthy, Long Forgotten Sons, Savior, Whereabouts Unknown
Human Clay- Creed (1999)
As I mentioned in the paragraph about Alter Bridge, I am a fan of Mark Tremonti’s 18-wheeler truck-sized riffs. He plays the hell out of his guitars, and you can hear that unfiltered on Human Clay. This album helped Rock and Metal get away from Grunge and Hair Metal and started an entirely new more melodic and cleaner sound. This album is so well refined, but not overproduced to just be pushed on the radio. It is a workhorse of riffs, catchy chesty vocals, and insane bass lines. It’s not formulaic or simplistic. It’s blue-collar Rock and Metal that makes me feel as if I can do anything; like sledgehammer a wall, punch an elitist, or deadlift my goal weight like a beast. This album gets a lot of hate from being overplayed possibly because of its ties to Christianity or Scott Stapp’s public battle with alcoholism, but I think it’s one of the best albums ever recorded to this day. The internet is a hot box vacuum of negativity and undesired hate. I tend to ignore what they say and form my own opinions based on musicality and emotion. If everyone approached music this way, the better musicians would be popular and not work day jobs just to tour and release albums. Maybe more people would exude the positivity that Mark Tremonti’s music tries to impart. Even just posting my love for this album may hurt my viewership on this site, but it’s worth it to talk about one of my favorite albums that changed my music taste.
Human Clay. It’s a breath of fresh air after the depressing Grunge Era, Human Clay is powerful positivity, and self-worth. It exudes such a large hopefulness that I long to hear in other albums. I like dark music, but I also love positivity through heavy music, something liberating to the mind, body, and soul. Creed opened up this door and so many post-nineties bands followed. They brought back the untouchable invigoration that Van Halen, Whitesnake, and Scorpions helped create, but didn’t compromise on absolute unbridled instrumentalism. The talent in Creed is still unbelievable to me. Every time I hear one of their songs, I have no idea why they aren’t all on the “Greatest of All Time” lists. Scott Stapp is such a solid, gritty, powerful vocalist with a burst of emotion and charisma. He is an idealistic frontman and a storyteller. He can belt a seemingly impossible length of time, he can soft speak, he can growl out with a load of raspy character, and sing perfectly in the pocket. I have always loved his voice and long to have that amount of power in my voice. Brian Marshall, the bassist who you never hear about, is a monster bassist. This guy’s lines are so clean, perfectly tight with both the melody and rhythm and boomy in the right places. He is one of my absolute favorite bassists, and yet nobody ever talks about him. What a fantastic rhythm section record with Scott Phillips holding it down on drums as well. Again, Phillips is never mentioned, but has some of the best rhythmic accents in Rock. His use of open hi-hat, ride, and crash accents is so eloquently done and fits so well with the energy of the band. Human Clay is a record created by four brilliant musicians, and it should be highly regarded as such, despite what the internet may say. This album is a 10/10 album for me and is timeless.
Favorite Tracks: With Arms Wide Open, Inside Us All, Higher, Are You Ready
Echoes, Silence, Patience, & Grace by Foo Fighters (2007)
I have been a fan of the Foo Fighters as long as I can remember, and a fan of Dave Grohl in general. It seems like everything Dave has a hand in is golden; Nirvana, Queens of the Stone Age, Them Crooked Vultures, and so many more. Picking a single Foo Fighters album was no simple feat, either, since every album is much different from its predecessor. The variety in the Foo seems endless, covering multiple genres, decades of music, emotion, and differing musicians. The first Foo album was all Dave pretty much, and it was great at that. But, one album stands out above the rest for me, and that is the epic Echoes, Silence, Patience, & Grace when Foo Fighters became a band and not just a solo project. The whole band came together with multiple facets and influences to make one of the most iconic American Hard Rock albums of all time, featuring a song that would explode beyond their expectations and spawn countless covers that would go viral much later on. This is one of those albums that I can’t imagine music without.
Echoes Silence Patience & Grace combines 1970s singer-songwriter acoustics and storytelling with a hard post-Grunge explosivity. The Bomb album cover is so very fitting for an album that keeps building, and building, and then explodes when you least expect it. This album is when the Foo Fighters became a great band for me, and not just a good Rock band. This album is deep, dark, light-hearted, soft, and a stick of dynamite all in one interesting package. It’s a sonic journey of the Early 2000s in America and when Dave Grohl became “comfortable” with his style of songwriting, throwing out the old constructs of heavy music and just writing something meaningful. His heart is out and wide open on this record, and it becomes a really beautiful journey through his life. It’s almost like a memoir of the past and a bridge to the Foo Fighters’ legacy at the same time. This album is meaningful with every riff, every vocal break and lyric, and the incredibly hard-hitting drums from Taylor Hawkins. Chris Shiflett’s solos and licks are vastly underrated, breathing life into the music and bringing a /Tom Scholz and Allen Collins Country Rock vibe back to American music. The word masterpiece is so overused and deflated, but this album is truly Foo Fighters’ masterwork. It’s an album I think should be taught in Band at schools around the world, because it is so meaningful, so central, and so exquisitely played on every instrument. I love this album and it impacted me so importantly as a kid, it still feels the same every time I listen to it.
Rest in peace, Taylor
Favorite Tracks: The Pretender, Come Alive, But, Honestly
Whitesnake (Self-Titled 1987)
Yet another band that gets a lot of undeserved hate, Whitesnake is one of my all-time favorite bands. Whitesnake combined the raw screams and guitars of Led Zeppelin with high-octane hooks. Their self-titled album is timeless to me, still spin it a couple of times a month, it’s one of those albums I just love and can’t decide why I love it so. Whitesnake has a magical quality as an album that surpassed most albums in the 1980s for me. It wasn’t a try-hard overly aggressive Hair Metal record. It’s an album that mixes Blues Rock, Soulful Vocals, and British Invasion vibes with 80s high-flying riffs from the one and only John Sykes. A lot of people saw this record as an “Americanization” or Glam Rock foolery of Whitesnake, but I don’t see it that way and that definitely wasn’t the band’s intention. I think the soulfulness of David Coverdale’s vocals, the orchestral instrumentals, and the complex chord progression proves this release was not aimed at the radio. This album is deliberate in emotion, energy, and sublime composition. It combined the depth of writing of Lez Zeppelin, Rainbow, and Deep Purple with the flashy catchiness of Van Halen in a seemingly impossible way. Then, you have Neoclassical guitar solos thrown in there, giving Malmsteen a run for his money. None of those things fit together, but Whitesnake achieved it and more with this self-titled record.
This is an album I can put on repeat for an entire day and not get listener fatigue. Each track stands out from the next to me and stands out far away from the music of that era. It’s got a depth to it that was lacking with the over-produced Rock of that era. Bad Boys is a song that I find to be so underappreciated, as it conjures the melodic harmonies of Iron Maiden and the hard-hitting drums of Metallica even featuring pristine and fast double bass. This is one of my absolute favorite songs ever written, and I don’t see anyone talking about it today. It’s a song that doesn’t cater to the typical Radio Rock at all, and that’s maybe why it got swept under the rug compared to the monstrous Still Of The Night, Here I Go Again and Is This Love. I fell in love with Coverdale’s voice on Is This Love, as it reminds me of fantastic vocalists Michael Mcdonald, Roger Daltrey, and Robert Plant but with more control than most Rock singers of his generation. His voice and John Sykes playing still give me chills to this day, even though I’ve heard this album hundreds of times. I understand if you’ve heard the singles too much on the radio, but seriously, sit down and listen to this whole record. It is impressively good and somehow so ahead of its time in Hard Rock, but incomparable when it comes to matters of the heart and soul.
Rest in peace, John Sykes.
Favorite Tracks: Is This Love? Bad Boys, Still of the Night, Children of the Night
Riot!- Paramore (2007)
One of my most listened-to albums of all time, though it might be surprising to see it on a “favorite Rock album” list for someone who has been cranking Tech Death and Power Metal. I was 14 about to turn 14 when this album came out, and it blew my mind. A girl that angry and yet singing that well? I hadn’t seen anything like it before. Paramore’s Riot! Is an album that forever split the music industry. People either loved this album or hated it. It often got labeled as “Emo” or “Alt Rock” which were two highly controversial genres at the time. Now, looking back on it, I think the labels and hate this album got were fueled by industry envy, because this album became so much bigger than other records in the same vein. And it wasn’t bought and paid for hype, this was a real album and single sales. Paramore created one of the most energetic, catchy, and hard-hitting albums in the 2000s. This album was created in turmoil, and it sounds chaotic as their emotions were at the time, and somehow it sounds so damn good. It became a timeless anthem for young adults and teens just trying to keep their heads above water whilst navigating an onslaught of changing relationships. Riot!, to me, is an album that will never be replicated or matched. It is a sign of the times classic album that everyone should listen to at least once. It is not “bubblegum Rock”. It is not just an “Emo Rock album with a young Shirley Manson”. It’s a fantastic American Rock album with a ton of influence and amazing composition and energy. Even though I’ve worn this album out, it’s still subjectively such a well-thought-out album. With perfect mastering, sound engineering, and an immensely unique tone.
The vocals on this record are fantastic, nobody can deny that Hayley Williams is one of the best front women in modern times. I could go on and on about how pristine the vocal delivery is, but I’m not going to. I want to talk about the drums and guitars on this album. Nobody talks about how incredible the drums are on every single song on this album. Zac Farro is one of the hardest-hitting most accurate drummers I have ever seen, and Riot! is still his best work. The drums on this are perfectly crafted around a pretty complex song structure for an album considered to be “Radio Rock”. It reminds me of Van Halen I drums because they’re just so hard, heavy, and flashy without a lot of effects like reverb or compression. This is one of my favorite drum records of all time, especially on For a Pessimist. I’m Pretty Optimistic, which sets the entire angry, loud, crashing energy of this album. On top of the drums, you have brother Josh Farro on guitar. As controversial as he is as a person, he was the brilliant musician who wrote three fantastic Paramore albums and added some of my favorite guitar tones ever recorded. His riffs are underappreciated, especially his work on “We Are Broken”, which reminds me of a Fleetwood Mac-level epic ballad. I also have to mention Let the Flames Begin; This song is so underrated and is still their heaviest song to date. The guitars, the passion, the perfect almost operatic scream vocals, and the breakdown is just breathtaking. You HAVE to listen to the live version of this song. Even if you’re not a fan, this song is incredible. It was incredible to go back and just listen to this album again and appreciate all the tasty nuances that have influenced countless bands, including The Warning, who is my favorite band right now. Hayley Willams and company are responsible for returning Good Rock to the radio once again.
Favorite Tracks: For A Pessimist, I’m Pretty Optimistic, That’s What You Get When It Rains, Let the Flames Begin
In the age of social media, everyone is a critic with biased uneducated opinions and we are subjected to constant negativity from old washed up Rock stars that play to a backing track. “Rock Is Dead” seems to be a go to trope when you don’t know what Youtube or Sirius Xm are and think that you’re the last rock star. I am so very tired of the misinformation that “Rock is Dead”. Is Rock suffering monetarily, because big corporations continue to shove their Pop and Rap down our throats? Yes, Rock is not as big as it was in the 1980s and 1990s, and everyone continues to blame Hair Metal and Grunge. Are there good Rock bands? YES there are million good Rock bands still putting out absolutely fantastic music that has progressed without the crutch of technology. Below is a comprehensive list of Rock bands catering to a wide range of tastes! Rock IS NOT DEAD! It’s just been shut out from the mainstream by big corporate radio.
Blondshell- Indie Rock Solo Musician from Los Angeles left Pop to create throwback music like The Cranberries, The Cardigans, Yeahyeahyeahs
The Hellacopters- Swedish Garage Rock band formed in 1994, reformed in 2016. Inspired by Early Punk Rock and Grunge
The Band Camino- American Rock and Electropop with slick guitars and anthemic nostalgic sound
The Warning- Mexican High Octane Rock and Heavy Metal with great riffs and huge vocals and technicality. My favorite band on this list. Prepare to be blown away by these three sisters
Eva Under Fire- Detroit Hard Rock band with 1980s Arena Rock sounds and early 2000s Metalcore. Hell of a voice
Halestorm- Pennsylvania Hard Rock band and Grammy Award winners, this band is still underrated and should be the pinnacle of Rock. One of the greatest singers of all time, Lzzy Hale should be a household name. Like Skid Row, Pat Benatar, Alice Cooper. and so many classics
Chevelle- Chicago brothers bring a dark new feel to Hard Rock with heavy riffs, Proggy drums, and melancholy vocals. These guys don’t get enough credit.
Nonpoint- Groove Heavy Metal with soulful vocals and heavy riffs came out in the Nu Metal era.
Squid- British Post Punk formed in 2016, sounds like The Offspring, Talking Heads, Queens of the Stone Age with Jazz elements
Breaking Benjamin- Pennsylvania Hard Rock band consistently puts out catchy, heartfelt, bass heavy music with expert vocals. Gets looked over a lot due to Christian labels and mistaken for a Radio Rock band despite having one of the greatest Rock albums of the 2000s.
Currents- Connecticut Metalcore band formed in 2011 always changing their sound and evolving to create technical, progressive, heart wrenching music.
The Pretty Reckless- American Grunge and Blues Rock band brings back the glory of American Rock with heavy riffs, vocals with character and power, and great grooves. Akin to Soundgarden, The Winery Dogs, and Southern Rock. You can’t say Rock is dead with these guys around
Illumishade- On the heavier side of things, this band breaks genre constructs and brings Symphonic Metal, Blues, Soundtrack, and Prog Metal altogether with heavy riffs, great solos, and a dynamite vocalist. They have something for everyone.
Plush- Alternative Rock all girl group formed in 2020 aims to bring Rock back to its former glory with epic powerful vocals, insane music chemistry, and great riffs and hooks. One of the best bands on this list, Moriah Formica is one of the most underrated singers of our time, sounding like she could be Chris Cornell’s daughter.
Lords of the Trident- Wisconsin Power Metal band might be a little heavy for Rockers, but they bring a throwback sound that is sure to please an 80s Metalhead. They have neoclassical guitars and dueling solos, Meatloaf and Hagar-esque vocals, and great hooks that are sure to get stuck in your head for days.
Seven Kingdoms- Florida based Heavy Power Metal band bringing back Iron Maiden dual guitars, Speed Metal, 1980s Metal and Rock, and powerful female vocals. One of my all-time favorite bands.
Mammoth WVH: The Son of Eddie Van Halen has launched his solo project. He writes all the songs and plays all the instruments, and not surprisingly creates some of the best Rock I have heard in ages.
Copy and Paste this list in a memo to check out all my recommended bands:
Power Metal band from DeLand, Florida has been on fire since last fall and their successful tour with Unleash the Archers and Aether Realm, and this year’s Power Metal tour with Beast in Black and Striker. I knew once I witnessed Seven Kingdoms live in person, I was witnessing the greatest Power Metal band in America. We don’t get bands like this here. But to be frank, their quality and consistency are unmatched anywhere. With tracks like After the Fall, Empty Eyes, Monster, and epic ballad Valonqar this band knows how to deliver impactful songs. Every member is vastly talented and the chemistry is that of a band that’s been playing for two decades. I have never been more impressed with an opener (well, not since System Divide).
Now, the wait for the crowdfunded album “Zenith” has begun. With the debut original track, Universal Terrestrial, we got absolute speed, dynamic vocals, and amazing melodic solos. The track is simply addictive with unique qualities that I am not hearing anywhere else. The unique tonal quality of Sabrina Valentine Cruz’s voice is divine and surprising: I’ve never heard anything like it, and I can’t seem to get enough of it. I foresee a lot more Reaction videos coming their way soon. The first release from Zenith was insanely surprising: A Power Metal rendition of Joan Jett’s classic “I Hate Myself For Loving You” that screamed. It is one of the best covers I have ever heard, with musical and vocal perfection. It’s a huge upgrade to the original, which in my opinion long outlived its usefulness. The soaring screams and high notes elicit a jaw-dropping experience and “WOWs”. It’s one of those times when you think “why isn’t this going viral?” “Zenith” may be just what this band needs to skyrocket into a bigger fandom that they unequivocally deserve.
Today, Seven Kingdoms dropped the emotional powerhouse of a track “Diamond Handed”. I am forever impressed by this band, but this song brought it to a new level. I love every aspect of this track. It’s classic Power Metal mixed with modern touches in this beautiful emotionally heavy and inspiring track. I am a sucker for dueling guitar solos and Cam and Kevin delivered perfectly fast, technical, melodic solos over Keith’s pocket-perfect metronome double bass. It’s very different from any song they’ve done before, to me, but keeps within the typical Speedy-riffing soaring Power Metal that SK always delivers on. Sabrina’s range on this track is unbelievable, in that I believe she uses a lower section we haven’t heard before. And then, she roars into harmonic screams that seem to resonate forever. It’s vastly impressive. There’s nothing quite like this track, and you really have to play it multiple times to get every tidbit of deliciousness.
For fans of Blind Guardian, Beast In Black, Unleash the Archers, Halestorm, Nightwish, Sonata Arctica, Heart
This week Halestorm announced their new album “Into the Wild Life” and premiered new single “Apocalyptic”, already smashing the Itunes charts with its utter power and raw sound. Halestorm took a completely different direction to recording this record, taking out the possibilities of over production entirely. Lzzy Hale recently spoke about the record saying it is “Apologetically them”, definitely a good thing considering how fantastic the band is live. I expect the new record to be their best yet. While “Apocalyptic” may not be the best song off the record, it is proof that this is Halestorm unfiltered. I look forward to fully reviewing this album in April.
Into the Wildlife out April 3rd EUR, 7th NA, and 6th UK