New Heavy Music Friday!

Happy Friday! Here’s a list of new heavy music for your weekend catch up!

Deftones finally return with Progressive and moody new short track

Metalcore legends upload full concert for free!

Trio Hard Rock and Heavy Metal band stun with ingenuity

Tuomas Holopainen returns with side project AURI

Prog Metalcore band djents it out

Progressive Melodeath Band returns with more creative control.

Power Metal with a kick

Indigenous Metal Band

Brazillian Prog Metalcore

My Favorite Metal Albums of All Time: Part Five

This installment took a lot of time to write. These are albums that are very near and dear to me as all the albums on this list. I found these 10 to be exceptionally emotional to write about and listen to. As the list is not in order, and I make it up as I go back through my music catalog and pick my absolute favorites to fit in 100 albums. So, I hope you like this chapter of the series. Let me know what your favorites are and if you’ve checked any of these out upon reading this list.

31. Winter- Oceans of Slumber (2016)

There have been very few albums to make me speechless.  I try to describe any sound or style with emphatic diction and passion.  I have tried to experience every genre, every style, and all the different cultures of music on the planet.  It’s my passion to learn about music and try to understand why I love it so much.  My understanding of the effects of music on culture, language, mind, body, and soul runs deep.  But Winter by Oceans of Slumber is an album that transcends my passion for languages and music genres.  It is a collection of American sounds bred over a hundred years of Blues, Jazz, Rock and Roll, and Metal.  The depth of Winter is unbelievable.  The weight of it is too much for some.  It dares to be different, chaotic, and heavy-handed.  As a Musician and music blogger, Winter is an untouchable album that never got the credit it deserved.  The lack of coverage on this record stands to me as a clue that there is something deeply wrong with American Music and the media coverage of music.  Winter is as good as American Metal gets.  It honors where American music came from, the roots in the South with Jazz and Blues, and the most downtrodden musicians you’ve ever heard in your life.  It mixes the Doom Italian band Paradise Lost curated with the beauty of Nina Simone, with the Blues of Muddy Waters and Robert Johnson, with the Progressiveness of Evergrey, Moody Blues, Dream Theater, and Meshuggah.  It sounds crazy, maybe even disjointed, when you put all these descriptors together, but it works.  This album is a masterclass in Progressive and Gothic Metal, and offers a completely new take that I’ve never heard in my life.

Winter’s songwriting is a triumph in my mind.  It takes all these influences and adds soul.  It reminds me of so many different albums, and at the same time doesn’t sound like anything at all.  Oceans of Slumber’s aim to “redefine Southern Gothic” is achieved far above and beyond anything else in the genre with Winter, as well as all subsequent releases.  It takes the Gothic depressiveness of Evanescence, The Civil Wars, and Doom band Candlemass and adds Soul to it that I love so much.  Soul is not something I hear a lot of in Modern Music, and Oceans of Slumber gives all the soul to Winter.  It takes me to the South of Texas and Alabama on a rainy old porch in the dead of winter, and it’s a feeling that never leaves, much like the Blues and Gospel singer Cammie Beverly grew up listening to and singing with her father.  The music isn’t just technical sounds enthralling your eardrums, it’s tangible.  It’s a place, time, feeling, and mood that overtakes me for weeks on end.  The title track is an introduction to Ocean Of Slumber’s world.  Winter is a mind-blowingly well-constructed track with 50 different elements.  The range of this band is stuffed into nearly eight minutes of smoothly delivered poetry with heavy music carrying it.  This song and album deserved Grammys.  Instead, it got Indie coverage, much less than it deserved.  This song is a modern Progressive Metal masterpiece, and Winter is full of them.  

Oceans of Slumber’s cover of the Moody Blues’ Nights in White Satin is emotionally proficient and unexpectedly updates the classic.  It is airy, soulful, deep, and has a surprising jam-band feel.  This is one of my favorite songs on Winter, even though it’s a cover.  Suffer the Last Bridge is a more straightforward track with some of the best vocals I have ever heard.  The chorus is sublime with my beloved blast beats and speedy chugging guitars.  This is one of my favorite songs of all time.  This would be a great starter song to get into Oceans Of Slumber.  Not all of their songs are initially accessible, and that’s probably why I love them so much.  Their songs require an attention to detail and an emotional vulnerability to connect with. That depth makes Winter so personally significant to me.  Like the Blues, it captures that longing in the depths of your heart and soul.  Whether the longing is for someone, a place, a time, or fulfillment, Winter captures that with Turpentine and This Road eloquently.  There’s not a song that is like another, and yet they all have the same vibe.  Winter is an album everyone should experience at least once, especially in America.  This album is American Innovation at its finest.

Dobber Beverly, on drums, piano, and songwriting, is a mastermind of Progressive Metal.  His Classical technique, combined with his experience in Death and Extreme Metal, is absolutely genial on Winter.  These influences, combined with wife and singer Cammie Beverly’s impossibly velvety smooth vocals and talent for storytelling, create a depth in music I have never heard before.  This album is love, grief, death, loneliness, anger, shame, and healing in one technical package.  The husband and wife team have created some of the most beautiful music on the planet.  There’s nothing like this album, and there never will be again.  I love their discography, but this is still my favorite album from them.  

Favorite Songs: Winter, Sunlight, Suffer the Last Bridge

32. The Unforgiving- Within Temptation (2011)

Taking a long time to decide on my favorite Within Temptation album, I had to listen to their entire discography again.  Their catalog is so diverse.  Picking a singular album as my favorite was difficult.  I have been a fan of WT since around 2008.  I discovered them on the browser version of the Pandora Radio app.  This app introduced many new bands to my listening repertoire, as I mentioned before.  One of its biggest attractions is Within Temptation.  I heard the song Jillian off of The Silent Force, and my taste in music was forever changed.  While Epica spawned my love for all things European Metal, Within Temptation started the fire four years before  I ever heard Epica.  Within Temptation has released some of the most influential albums.  They evolve with each record in a gigantic way.  They play with Gothic Metal, Symphonic, Arena Rock, Prog Metal, and even Electronic Dance music.  It is difficult to find a band in Metal with more range.  It is even more difficult to find a band as successful whilst being emotionally connective with fans.  Within Temptation is a once-in-a-generation band.  They took a risk with a concept album, The Unforgiven, and it paid off, gaining them millions of fans, album sales, and stream plays.  The band has gone on to sell comic books and limited items based on the concept album and excels with subsequent releases, putting them at the top of Symphonic Metal.

The Unforgiving is a high-energy, fist-pumping, and head-banging worthy album of a hundred different influences.  It blends Arena Rock, Symphonic Metal, and Dance Pop fluidly and eloquently.  This album did genre-bending before it was a widespread term in Metal media.  With this album blending so many different sounds, it’s almost a “choose your own adventure” experience.  The comic series based on the album alludes to the premise, the summary stating, “Inspired by The Unforgiving, the newest album from Within Temptation! A powerful medium, Mother Maiden recruits lost souls to be part of her wraith task force to fight evil in all its forms. They each carry a specific guilt about something they did in their lives. Mother Maiden offers them an opportunity to ‘make right what is wrong’ by giving them missions and assignments to hunt down evil as a penance for their previous sins.”  It’s a deeply interesting concept and reflects a battle between good and evil in us all.  This is a concept I am fond of, and I think the album storyboards it in both a fun and emotional way.  

Within Temptation went more “commercially Rock” with The Unforgiven, and I really enjoyed hearing this side of them.  It’s not the most grand or staggeringly huge range of Within Temptation.  It’s more subtle without so many choirs and layers of orchestra.   I hear them as a band much more on this album than on any other album.  While it’s a concept album, it shows a reinvention of Within Temptation.  While I consider Mother Earth to typically be my favorite album from them, I just keep going back to The Unforgiven.  Maybe it’s a nostalgia aspect, hearing this album in my most formative and influential years in Middle School, but there’s something deeply moving about this album.  Fire and Ice is still one of the most beautiful and bittersweet songs I’ve ever heard.  Stairway to the Skies is also a tear-jerking track that is so underrated.  The theme of a lost love one or a longing for someone gets me every time.  Maybe it’s because I am still searching for “the one,” and it feels so far away sometimes that these songs speak to me.  The songs on this album are also incredibly catchy.  Iron and Sinead are breathers of pure energy from the heavier emotive tracks, and I like the massive energy that these tracks show.  I’m not sure if this album necessarily fits on this list, but all of these aspects make it one of my favorites of all time, and I had to include it.

Overall, I think The Unforgiven is one of the most underrated albums out there.  While it sold well and did some charting, it seems to be a memory of the past.  The magic WT harnessed in that album is lost for me.  I like everything they release to an extent, but the magic of the older records feels long and forgotten by the band and fans.  This album was peak WT for me, even if it was never meant to signify their core sound or writing abilities.  It stands the test of time for me as a sign of Sharon Den Adel’s incredible range, emotive ability, and versatility as one of the greatest vocalists I have ever heard.  She is truly what makes the band special to me.  Along with husband Robert Westerholt’s incredible writing contributions, Sharon and Robert have created some of the best music I have ever heard in my life.  I will always miss Robert’s clean, Rock and Gothic Metal-inspired guitar riffs as well as his incredible growls on early records.  His contribution will never be forgotten by me.

Favorite Songs: Fire and Ice, Where is the Edge, Stairway to the Skies

33. The Offering- Lords of the Trident (2022)

Of course, there’s more Power Metal on this list!  I am a Power Metal nerd, even if my underground knowledge is seriously lacking these days.  This is probably one of the more obscure albums on this list.  The Offering doesn’t get half the love it deserves, even if Power Metal is ramping up for a huge comeback.  I was first exposed to the album when the Mad With Power Festival hosted some of my favorite bands.  I had heard of Lords of the Trident before, but the onslaught of releases buried them on my radar.  This happens to me often.  It can take years for me to rediscover a band.  Luckily, when Mad With Power came to my Twitch feed because of Seven Kingdoms, I was fully exposed to the way of the Lords.  Lords of the Trident combines Classic Power Metal with nerdom, Heavy Metal, a little Meatloaf, and some opera-trained vocals from incomparable vocalist and nice guy Ty Christian.    It’s technically perfect Power Metal with Van Halen flair and Neoclassicism from Yngwie-worthy guitar solos.  Experiencing this band at Mad With Power Fest on Twitch for the first time was a religious, transcendental moment that I will never forget.  They gave me visible chills and made the hair stand up on the back of my neck.  The power in their music is indescribable.  It’s something you just have to experience for yourself.  They’re every bit as epic as the ’80s Heavy Metal we all grew up listening to, but have the heart of Unleash the Archers.  They’re a dark horse of bombastic, emotive, and pulse-raising music.  They’re one of the best Power Metal bands around today, and this album stands as a testament to their contribution to the genre.

Read about Mad With Power and the Power Metal community here: https://wp.me/p4Zsl3-8R

The Offering is a concept album that follows a boy taken from his family to become a hero or a martyr of sorts.   The storytelling on this record is chilling, well thought out, and unbelievably emotive.  This is an Epic if I’ve ever heard one.  The tone of the album is set with one of my absolute favorite songs of all time Legend, which could easily be a Bardcore track.  This song has a cadence I’ve only ever heard in Celtic music or the legendary Power Metal band, Falconer.  This album screams a mix of Falconer, Dream Evil, Hammerfall, Tyr, and UTA all piled in together.  Yet The Offering stands apart from those bands and holds its own with epic tracks.  Acolyte is more Arena Rock with speedy dualing guitars with a Judas Priest vibe. Carry the Weight is a tear-jerker explosion of emotion rarely heard in music.  Its depth mirrors some Devin Townsend tracks like Stormbending.  It’s a beautiful song that evokes a powerful vision of losing someone you know.  Offering to the Void is a more Traditional Metal vibe, but with an epic choir-fueled bridge.  Champion could be straight out of the game Oblivion of the Elder Scrolls Series.  It is perfect with high energy and a very headbanging-worthy cadence.  Guitarist Brian Koenig shows his Neo Classicism on the solo, too, which is Twilight Force blazingly fast.  All of the songs on this record are stand-alone sing-along bangers.  The Yngwie continues on the interval, The Invitation, a hair-raising guitar interlude that blasts you into one of the Lord’s greatest tracks, Dance of Control.  Good god, I love this song.  Ty’s vocals are unbelievably good on this track, reminding me of the power of Sammy Hagar and Michael Bolton, with the expert emotive tone of Michael McDonald.  Those are strong comparisons, but once you hear this song, you’ll find it justified.

These Tower Walls is a balls-to-the-wall Power Metal track with speedy guitar sweeps and lush double-tracked vocals. This song is one of the most technically impressive tracks in Lord of the Trident’s catalog.  But it’s not overbearing.  I also enjoy UTA’s Grant Truesdell’s growls on this song.  The Latin chanting on the bridge by Ty is also bone-chillingly good and well executed.   This song is so damn epic, I cannot recommend it enough.  Grant also lends his signature goblin mode growls on Power of Evil, which is one of their biggest songs to date.   This is one of the strongest albums that modern Power Metal has to offer.  I don’t think there’s a weak track.  It all flows together as a story and a stylistic stronghold.  It keeps your ears and mind fully engaged without being overwhelming. Everything about this record makes it special.  The guitar work is sublime.  It’s written so precisely, but not an overload of production or unnecessary layers.  This is the most accessible Power Metal album ever made to me.  It’s Modern, yet nods to the classic sounds.  It has meaning and personal touches.  The songs are made with purpose, so there’s no filler.  

The Offering is a great album that I think deserves infinitely more credit than it receives.  Whether it’s from being self-released and not pay to play or just the lack of education in Modern Music, The Offering has sadly fallen under the radar.  Their self-funded music and the fan base through Patreon are truly inspiring to me.  Their ability to create a mutual environment with heartfelt releases and events is what every artist should strive for.  While the Lords of the Trident are criminally underrated, the community they’ve created will never be dismissed or forgotten.  The Offering will remain one of my top Metal records for decades to come, as well as a testament to Ty Christian’s utterly explosive talent and heartwarming connection with fans through this incredible music.  I want to personally thank the Lords of the Trident for creating some of the most meaningful music, as well as a supportive, inclusive fanbase.

Favorite songs: Acolyte, Champion, Carry the Weight

34. The Dream- In This Moment (2008)

I’m not entirely sure when I first discovered In This Moment, but I suppose it was around 2010 to 2011 when my delve into more Metal began.  I think In This Moment is yet another Pandora Radio discovery.  Maybe it was on Halestorm radio that I first heard them.  It was love at first listen, however.  Maria Brink’s vocals are one in a million.  Much like Stevie Nicks, nobody on the planet sounds like Maria.  You can pick her out of a hundred singers in one recording.  She has a valley girl vocal fry on the end of her notes and an unbelievable amount of power and control.  She is a vocal nerd’s dream of a singer.  Mix this with incredibly unique, heart-pounding Thrash guitars, a bit of Metalcore, and an acceptable amount of ‘80s Reverb, it’s a dynamic sound that you won’t get anywhere else.  Maria and In This Moment put their entire soul into their early records, and it’s an audible masterpiece to my family and me.  This is undoubtedly one of our most listened to albums in the car for a good five years of listening. These early In This Moment records hit a musical sweet spot between Metal and the quirkiness of Blondie, Pat Benatar, and some New Wave mixes.  

The Dream is exactly how the title and album cover portray.  It’s a dreamy-sounding Rock and Metal down a rabbit hole of addictive sounds and airiness.  The music is fluid, emotional, gritty, and perfectly atmospheric.  I can’t compare this album to any piece of music ever made.  There’s nothing like it.  The closest I can get is Evanescence’s self-titled album, but it’s still miles apart in feeling.  It’s got Nu-metal groove and Moody Blues light Prog, like on Mechanical Love, and then jumps into a Bullet For My Valentine-esque solo.  Forever is a standalone Power Ballad with blazingly fast melodic guitars and impossibly soaring vocals.  This is undoubtedly one of my favorite songs.  Her Kiss is a Middle Eastern Groove Metal track with tasty triplets.  This pitch-shifting vocal ability is rarely heard in Western Music and shows Maria’s explosive talent.  Lost At Sea is another one of my favorite tracks.  It ebbs and flows between Metal and Dark Wave in some respects.  It’s very difficult to explain these tracks and break them down.  There’s simply nothing else like them on the planet, and there never will be again.  The Great Divide is a galloping high high-intensity track, another one of my favorite songs on the album.  The bass solo and tone are unlike anything I’ve ever heard, except maybe on a Periphery or Beyond Creation track.  It’s crazy.  The double-track fry screams are so good, too, as well as the double-tapping solo.  This may be one of the greatest songs In This Moment ever created.  I also love the Paramore-esque feel on Violet Skies, which provides a much-needed cool down from such intense tracks.  Maria’s tone is particularly gorgeous on this song.

Then, there’s the title track, The Dream.  This song is a stroke of musical brilliance that only comes around once in a generation.  This is a masterclass in composition, technique, restraint, and creating a vibe. It’s a track that immediately surrounds you in warm tones, much like stepping into the summer sun after six months of winter.  It is a massive song with a perfect slow-burning build-up that gives me chills.  A slow-building song is my absolute favorite style, and not a lot of artists have pulled this off.  This is a song that deserves an epic music video, but never got a visual playthrough, sadly.  This is still one of the most epic songs I have ever heard in my life.   If a song or album ever had to represent all the emotions and story of Alice In Wonderland, this should one hundred percent be the first choice.  I think it evokes the chaos, the utter desperation, the longing, and the isolation of this epic tale by Lewis Carroll.  In This Moment nailed it and created an utterly untouchable album.  

The more I listen to this album today, the more I realize it might fit more into the Progressive category, because of the chaotic nature of the music changes and the utter technical brilliance.  This album is everywhere on the spectrum, and it’s a little eclectic, so no wonder why I love it so.  I like anything that dares to be different, as I have probably stated many times before in this blog series.  In This Moment created a whole new vibe in American Rock and Metal.  I have never heard anything quite like this band, and never will again.  Sadly, In This Moment’s subsequent albums had very little impact on me.  Star-Crossed Wasteland is a close second and contains some more of my favorite tracks of theirs.  Blood was a very heavy and intensely catchy album with some high points.  I liked some of Ritual’s offerings.  Every other album of theirs has been a miss for me.  The band’s decision to lean into a Shock Rock bigger production show style has turned me off completely.  The emotional diction and connection are just gone for me.  They don’t even play the old songs anymore.  I love when a band can evolve and still be authentic, but this did not happen with In This Moment for me.  My theory stands that Maria Brink blew her voice out and has an undisclosed vocal injury that prevents her from singing the old, highly vocally demanding songs.  Now, her live performances contain more theatrics and costume changes than actual songs.  Nothing makes me sadder than falling out of love with a band that used to mean the world to me.  The Dream will always be one of my favorite Modern Metal albums, but it still stings to listen to.  I will always miss this version of In This Moment.

Favorite Songs: Forever, Lost at Sea, The Dream

35. Colours in the Sun- Voyager (2019)

Voyager is a Progressive Metal band from Perth, Australia, with a plethora of awards and a successful stint on Eurovision.  The band has an interesting history that spans two decades, many member changes, and sound changes over the years.  Voyager has always had a Prog Rock and Space Rock influence that sounds right out of Star Trek: The Next Generation.  When I was writing this entry for the list, I went through the band’s entire discography to get a feel for the band’s evolution to their past two releases that I fell in love with.  There’s this Sci-Fi feeling to all their releases that just hits me at my core.  Their first album, Element V, is a stunning 51-minute journey through time.  It sounds like it’s a Rock Opera companion to The Time Machine by H.G. Wells.  The band mixes Power Metal and Prog Rock or Metal with New Wave style vocals.  It’s inguinal to listen to, and wakes up the neurons and gets them firing at whole new speeds you never thought were possible.  The energy vocalist, writer, and keyboardist Danny Estrin puts into this music is an explosion of electricity.    This guy’s range is truly unbelievable.  He reaches Simon Le Bon highs and Peter Steele lows with such ease.  This band is one of the most unique experiences in music I have ever had, and each album is completely different from the last.  They don’t have a bad album or song, and they show immense versatility.  

However, the current lineup with Simone Dow (Guitar), Scott Kay (Guitar), and Alex Canion (bass and backing vocals) is truly sublime.  The past two records, Colours in the Sun and the recent Fearless In Love, just tick all the boxes for Modern Prog for me.  Colours In The Sun is one of my top ten most listened to albums of all time, according to Last Fm stats.  Voyager’s entire discography is worth listening to, but there’s a magical quality to this record that combines so many of my favorite things.  Colours In the Sun is a mix of nostalgic sounds with modern Progressive Metal.  It mixes a Tears For Fears melancholic, smooth vocal with chugging Tesseract-style guitars and breakdowns. As a Djent fan, I appreciate the mix of dissonant riffs and melodic vocals.  The sound is satisfying, as it circles with a perfect closing chord.  This is brilliant writing.  The build-ups don’t leave you hanging, but still, you want more of the sound on Colours.  The flow is interesting.  No two songs sound the same, but they all go together in tone and structure.  This lets you settle into the album, and it becomes perfect to listen to in any situation.   Colours In the Sun can be part of a focused listening session, road trip, workout session, reading, or painting.  It’s an album that sounds good in any medium.  Colours in the Sun is a heart-pounding and uplifting album that has gotten me through just about everything you can think of.  Voyager captured the feelings of heartbreak, letting go, and triumph so exquisitely.  

Songs like Severomance and Brighstar are akin to their early Power Melodic days, but the instrumentals are still hard-hitting and Modern.  This led to old fans being eased into a new era, and new fans discovering how epically versatile Voyager is.  Entropy is an insane duet with Leprous’ Einar Solberg that is one of the jams of the century. Saccharine Dream is full of absolutely gorgeous guitar tone and perfect synchronicity.  The band’s chemistry shines on this song, and it is one of my favorites in the extensive catalog.  Every bend, every chuggy chord, every melodic fiddly solo perfectly matches Danny’s vocals.  This level of perfect chemistry is not a quality I hear much these days.  This band has a bond through music and personal experiences that come out in the sound of their albums.  It’s so warm tonally, and every note is perfect in its place.  They anticipate each other’s progression.  I love hearing this level of chemistry, also heard in bands I love like Leprous, Tesseract, Periphery, and Novelists.  They understand each other’s sound and music personality on a deeper level than most.  You can hear the love, respect, and camaraderie, which makes it easier to connect to the music on a personal level.

I think Colours in the Sun and all of Voyager’s discography are immensely underrated and underappreciated.  I’m not sure why more people haven’t caught on with this fun, inspiring, technically proficient Metal band with never-ending heart.  This music is the cure for any ailment and a deep level of human understanding.  You can feel the empathetic qualities of the members in the album.  That’s the kind of positivity and understanding the world needs right now.  It doesn’t need hollow breakup songs or risque lyrics generated by AI or fifty producers.  The world in all its chaos and beauty needs music that is real and wholesome, and Voyager provides this in spades.  Music should be technically proficient, not perfected by computers.  It should be emotional, cathartic, and vulnerable.  I think we’re getting away from that in modern music, but bands like Voyager stay planted firmly in their down-to-earth roots.  I cannot recommend this band enough for Prog, Metal, Rock, and Pop fans alike.  They will always remain one of my favorite bands, and this album will always be one of my favorites in Progressive Metal.

Favorite songs: Colours In The Sun, Runaway, Now or Never

36.Hermitage: Daruma’s Eyes PT 2- Temperance (2023)

2023 was a packed year for Metal releases.  It was almost impossible to keep up.  With releases from In Flames, Crypta, Enslaved, Sylosis, Beyond the Black, Xandria, and so many more favorites, I was like a kid in a candy store.  It was an insane year for heavy music, but an unforeseen underdog took over my listening habits for the remainder of the year.  I’d been a fan of Temperance since 2018 with Of Jupiter and Moons.  I was tiring of Amaranthe’s formulaic writing a bit and not completely happy with their latest releases.  So, I was looking for a band that has similarly stratospheric energetic music.  The blend of Electronic, Symphonic, and Power Metal just hit me right in a niche spot.  Temperance was recommended to me on YouTube, and I immediately fell in love with the incredibly emotive and powerful track Pure Life Unfolds, which stands to be one of my favorite songs of all time.  The band parted ways with their female singer in early 2023, and I was brokenhearted.  I thought surely that it was the end for Temperance, and they kind of fell under my radar.  The turnaround was incredibly fast, however, and fans were quickly reassured that the band was in good hands.  Little did I know, they would get one of the greatest vocalists of all time to fill the female vocal void.

Shortly after the departure of beloved vocalist Alessia Scolleti, Temperance found a replacement for the ages.  Accomplished Opera Singer and YouTube star Kristin Starkey was announced as the new female counterpart to the great Marco Pastorino and Michele Guaitoli.  Kristin is a singer who can sing pretty much anything.  She’s not afraid to explore any aspect of the human voice and all the emotions that can come out of it.  She is proclaimed as the only singer who could ever fill in for the likes of Floor Jansen and Brittney Slayes, two of the greatest female vocalists of all time.  She is impossibly talented, hardworking, and wears her heart on her sleeve.  Kristin is a once-in-a-lifetime Contralto with an infinite range.  To say she is an upgrade or perfect for the likes of Temperance and Twilight Force is an understatement.  Hermitage was one of my most highly anticipated albums of all time, and it blew all expectations out of the water.

Hermitage is a musical journey, almost a Rock Opera of sorts, akin to the whimsy of Rocky Horror Picture Show or Meatloaf records.  But Hermitage is also incredibly emotional and deep in its roots.  I didn’t read the accompanying novella for backstory, but gathering the meaning and emotions from the lyrics is still humongously powerful.  It deals with loss, self-doubt, being stuck in an unfortunate situation, and companionship through time.  It is immensely profound and beautiful in its anthemic qualities.  If you need an album to get you through a myriad of life’s obstacles, Hermitage is a mainstay for any metalhead’s collection.  After COVID-19, losing a cat, losing my grandma, grandpa,  uncle, and more losses and troubling situations, this album was a breath of life into me.  This album is a shot of adrenaline and a Rolodex of everything beautiful.  It paints a storyboard of conquering everything and keeping your head up to the sky.  The emotion in it is explosive at every turn in such an incomparable way.  I’ve never heard anything like this album besides maybe Devin Townsend’s Epicloud or Z2 when he turned them into live Rock Operas.  That is probably the highest level of praise I can give any album.

I can’t talk about Hermitage without mentioning the mind-blowing vocal performances on it.  I have loved singing since I was a kid and consider myself a “vocal nerd” of sorts.  I like to find the best singers in the world and exalt them, as many people will never hear these vocalists due to the lack of radio play or media coverage.  Society has changed with exalting true talent, partially due to the lack of education and over-commercialization of music, where having technical ability is much less important than making sales.  When I say that Hermitage has some of the best vocal performances I have ever heard in my life, I am not exaggerating or playing it up from bias.  This album truly has unbelievable vocal performances that blew all my standards out of the water.  Not only are the individual performances from trio Starkey, Pastorino, and Guaitoli genial, but the group vocals and playing off of each other are brilliant.  The chemistry is explosive and is an emotional overload in the best way.  The music sounds like they put everything they had into it.  It’s stacked in guest appearances, layers, and melody.  It’s a stark contrast to AI music, computerized auto-tune voices, and algorithm-laden music on the radio today.  This is the kind of album that should be winning Grammys.  Everyone should listen to Hermitage at least once to understand what music should really sound like and the emotion it should provoke.  

Favorite songs: Darkness is Just a Drawing, Glorious, Where We Belong

37.Isolation Songs- Ghost Brigade (2009)

Ghost Brigade is one of the most unheard bands in Melodeath, and yet they have released some of my favorite music to date.  Although they are now sadly disbanded, they have some of the best Melodeath records I have ever heard.  Ghost Brigade was a Finnish Melodeath band that combined the riffs of In Flames’ Clayman with the decimating Doom sound of Paradise Lost.  They were utterly nihilistic and full of resounding despair, the perfect mix of catharsis for us Death Metal heads.  Their songwriting was masterclass worthy. Every song they created had perfect flow and a genial rhythm.  The clean vocals were full of tone and unique vibrato, sitting perfectly in the center of the music.  You could hear each musician individually, as if they were playing right in front of you with a huge PA system.  It was a wall of sound, but it wasn’t overwhelming.  It was just the right level of heavy, atmospheric, Doom-inspired, and gritty.  Ghost Brigade never got the credit they deserved, but their cult following still reveres their albums as being some of the best of all time.  Their riff-heavy and raw music stands the test of time and rivals any Melodeath being put out today.

Isolation Songs is a genre-defining album for me.  Whenever I think of the best Melodeath albums, this is certainly one of the first.  It’s brooding, heavy, atmospheric, and musically interesting.  This album is so unique, despite having such familiar influences.  It’s not heavy and dark just for the sake of brutality.  The moodiness and song structure are deliberate.  It feels handcrafted, instead of being quickly digitally thrown together and finely produced.  The rawness is on purpose, much like Black Metal’s white noise.  This makes for one of the most immersive experiences in an album I have ever heard.  It has a live-in-studio sound to it that I love.  I love it when albums sound like they’re directly ripped off the mixing board.  Nothing is keeping you from hearing the musicians’ natural tones and the crackle in distortion.  Not everything is always perfectly aligned.  Sometimes the drums are behind in a swing time with chugging guitars, which adds to the “Dirge” feel to the album.  This is highly evident on opener Suffocated, which is one of my favorite GB songs.  My Heart Is a Tomb is a classic Melodeath track.  It opens with clean chorus filtered guitars and downtrodden clean vocals.  It explodes into one of the best pre-chorus and chorus combos I have ever heard.  The single song that makes the whole album for me is Into the Black Light.  This song is an explosion of beauty and overcomes all of your senses.  The bass line is perfectly groovy and sharp, it draws you in.  The vocals are classic to Finland’s Nihilistic influences, yet there’s such a gorgeous, unique tone.  This song is an explosion of emotion, and I wish I could experience hearing it for the first time again.  It was a trip through time at one in the morning that I will never forget.

I don’t think another band reached this level of darkness and the utter pit of despair, except for While Heaven Wept, who will be on the list somewhere.  Ghost Brigade combined Death Metal, Melodeath, Doom, and Post-Rock to utterly destroy emotions, I believe. They so effortlessly captured the “Finnish sounds of sorrow” one may feel during a long Finnish winter with little sunlight. Some people may wonder why others seek out music with such a heavy, soul-crushing feel, but it’s all in the name of catharsis.  I think experiencing music like this, which reflects that feeling Empaths get when they’ve given up on humanity, is an important thing.  I think a lot of people may be feeling this way these days.  Some days, Ghost Brigade and their Nihilism reflect the state of the world, and it’s okay to feel that way sometimes.   If this was their intent with their music, they succeeded in reflecting the sad decay of humans caring for each other in such a beautiful way, and it impacted me forever.  I don’t know if everyone felt this deeply when listening to Ghost Brigade, but I certainly felt it.  It sounds negative on the face of it, but once you come out at the end of this listening experience, it’s like the light at the end of the tunnel.  By experiencing such a despairing auditory piece, I saw that light.  I found peace and solace in it, and it became less despairing and more inspiring.  I saw that if others cared so deeply about the decline in authentic human connection and the collapsing belief in believing in something bigger than yourself, then there are still people who care and aren’t running on autopilot.  That’s the power and meaning of Isolation Songs.

Don’t give up on humanity yet.  It’s just getting started.

Favorite Songs: Into the Black Light, Suffocated, My Heart is A Tomb

38. Eclyptic: Wake of Shadows- Illumishade (2020)

Illumishade made its debut in one of the most incredibly difficult situations.  Illumishade was a concept born out of Fabienne’s time in music school and joining the creative mind of guitarist Jonas Wolf.  I consider this band to be a super-group of sorts, and hearing this album, it might be pretty evident they’re all immensely talented.  Illumishade is a special project and band that is very difficult to describe.  It’s deeply rooted in Symphonic Metal and mirrors the cinematic brilliance of Tuomas Holopainen and Nightwish, but Illumishade is vastly different.  It has a mind-bending quality only heard in Hans Zimmer or Trip Hop or Bjork works.  Illumishade has endless atmospheric qualities, but combines the Symphonic mind of German Music Award Winner Mirjam Skal, who has composed for films all over the world, and then the heavy grooviness of Progressive Metal like Jinjer or Evergrey.  This band is an experience like no other.  It’s a completely immersive experience in a completely otherworld.  They created a whole lore and backstory, and divided people into tribes based on personality, and each member is an archetype of the tribe.  It’s so brilliant, it just blows my mind every time I think about it or listen to Illumishade.  If I could pick any band to create a soundtrack for a Fantasy movie, Illumishade would be the number one choice.

Eclyptic is a musical journey through nature, time, and space.  It genre blends in every way you can imagine.  It has no boundaries.  It dares to be out of the box, atmospheric, creative, and even a bit strange.  There’s no formula.  There’s no basic music construct.  It defies everything I have ever known about music and explodes with technicality, emotion, and inventiveness.  Eclyptic is utterly indescribable to me.  I could write about it all day and never even scratch the surface of it.  It is so diverse, expansive, interesting, and layered.  The fact that any of it is recreated live is a human feat beyond measure to me.  This album is one of the most beautiful things I have ever heard in my entire life, and still so tastefully heavy.  It is perfectly balanced, as the concept of Illumishade suggests.  It combines the words Illumination, to illustrate the heavy energy, and the shade, as the quieter, softer songs.  Music needs balance, as does everything in life, but rarely is it ever this profoundly beautiful.  Eclyptic blazes by you, seeming like it lasts only half an hour. It goes by so fast, and yet its impression on me has lasted five years now.  It’s comforting and hits me at my core every single time I listen to it.

World’s End is one of my most played songs of all time, according to Last FM Stats.  I listened to this song endlessly when it came out, probably much chagrin of my parents during lockdown.  I think it painted the portrait of how we all may have felt during the COVID-19 lockdowns.  The news and our government made us feel as though the world was literally at its end.  This song was the ultimate catharsis at the time, and the rest of the songs were more immersive, comforting, or distracting from what was happening.  I think Illumishade, at the heart of it, are empaths who truly care about people.  This shows in their music and their ability to make it connect deeply on an emotional level.  Much like Devin Townsend, who was an inspiration to Jonas and Fabienne and the band Voyager, Illumishade strives to go as deep as possible.  World’s End will always be one of my favorite songs and a reminder of that hellacious period. 

What impressed me most about this album, above the fantastic instrumental, song structure, and epic technicality, is the vocal composure of Fabienne Erni and how well the other musicians complement her.  Having such a powerhouse of versatility, sometimes the vocals overshadow the music for me, but not in Illumishade.  Their musical chemistry is what makes this band truly special.  I feel like every aspect, the heavy and melodic guitars, the Prog Bass lines, the piano and huge orchestrals, and the melodic, almost Broadway style vocals interlace together so effortlessly.  I think when you have a vocalist so versed in multiple styles, they fit into the sweet spot or pocket of music, rather than egotistically overblowing it.  Fabienne is a superb vocalist who never gets the credit or praise that she deserves.

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39. Periphery- Hail Stan (2019)

Progressive Metalcore is one of my favorite subgenres.  Whether you think Metalcore is actually Metal or not is just based on preference.  There are no absolutes when it comes to such a subjective arena as music.  I believe that Prog Metalcore has the best guitarists and the best writing in music in a decade, and that it is a fantastic example of everything Metal has to offer. Music is always based on personal taste.  So, if you hate Periphery for whatever reason that the internet tells you to hate them, just skip this one.  Periphery is either a band people love or hate.  Much like Tool or Rush or even Nickelback, this band is highly debated.  I don’t know whether it’s the fact that Reddit promotes a “hive-like” mentality, or if people just don’t like the music, I see a lot of hate for Periphery.  Their unserious album titles, song titles, and overall attitude might come off as cocky or stupid, but I don’t see this at all.  I often see people use the Reddit term “bro-Metal” to describe Periphery.  This suggests the band lacks emotional and musical sophistication.  I think this term is unjustified and infantile.  Periphery is a band with immense talent, emotional diction, and incredibly intelligent music.  I love this band at its core, even with the goofiness and the meme-like titles.  They are unpretentious.  They truly care about their core fans.  They write incredibly complex music and are very transparent with meanings.  I think they show a lot more heart than people realize.  Songs like It’s Only Smiles, Lune, and epic Sattelites are incredibly emotional and cerebral.  I think more people should dig into the band and not take everything at face value.  

Their starting point should be the electrifying album Hail Stan.  This album defies all constructs within the genre of Metal, hence the title’s playful take on “hail Satan”.  The album is full of addictive riffs.  The build-up to the breakdowns reminds me of early Tesseract albums, but blends more texturally interesting qualities to the “Djent” style of Progressive Metal.  Hail Stan is as heavy as Meshuggah, but breaks up the heaviness with Spencer Sotelo’s cleans vocals and atmospheric instrumentals.  It also has some catchy pop-based choruses that are right for singing along to at shows.  This album is impossibly technical.   The three guitarists of Periphery all have individual styles.  They play fluidly within each other’s spaces, rather than playing on top of each other.  Normally, I’d think three guitarists are too much, especially within such a chaotic theme as Prog Metal.  But Periphery knows how to construct songs that are both intense and have breathing space in the music.  Many Prog bands I’ve listened to over fifteen years lack the ability to use Rests, which are not uncommon in Classical and Jazz music.  Periphery pulls song structure and writing improvisation solos from Jazz.  This keeps the music from becoming predictable or too entropic, as experimental Jazz and Prog Metal can be.  This album shows a lot of maturity and dynamism.  

Hail Stan is a journey of human existence.  It goes from a Reptile man acting as God to control people and a stoner attempting to save the planet, to the brutal battles of Vikings and the English, to personal struggles with suicide, to a song from the point of view of Earth.  It is thematically all over the place, and so is the music.  This album is jam-packed with many elements that don’t normally go together.  Periphery takes so many ideas from each of their musicians, who like drastically different music, and combines them with intricacy.  There’s glue that holds this all-expansive puzzle piece together, and I think that is Matt Halpern on drums.  He holds this insane amount of energy and keeps a calm throughout the music that ties the three guitarists, the chuggy bass lines, and the intense vocals together.  The attack and nuances he puts into the drum parts for Hail Stan is unlike anything I’ve ever heard.  I love the way he plays with groove and swing in such a rhythmically heavy band as Periphery.  Instead of just using blast beats and playing straight, he plays on the backbeat and a bit behind.  It creates tension for the breakdown, but also creates a smoothness the music desperately needs.  This is evident in songs like Follow Your Ghost and Sentient Glow, where he creates each section of music with different parts of his kit.  It’s technically perfect and passionately doneI think Matt Halpern deserves much more credit than he receives for being one of the most emotive and technically sound drummers in Metal.  Every hit he performs fits each section of the music.  It feels just right, but also adds unpredictably.  I think he is an utterly brilliant drummer who makes this band great.

I cannot talk about Periphery without mentioning Satellites.  This is one of the most incredible songs I have ever heard.  Every song on Hail Stan has value and is musically interesting or thought provoking, but Satellites is Periphery’s magnum opus for me.  This song shows maturity, emotional diction, empathy, and incredible composition.  It’s about the Earth looking at man and seeing humanity unbiasedly for what it is.  The lyrics are the Earth asking people to take care of it and also each other.  It’s incredibly poignant from a seemingly silly band.  This is one of my favorite songs of all time.  The buildup of it is so satisfying and electrifying.  It gives me chills and butterflies every time I hear it.  It slowly builds up into this rhythmic thrashing explosiveness on the bridge and outro, and features more of Spencer’s tonally great clean vocals.  There’s something epic about this song, like it should have a cinematic movie to it of the Earth changing and eventually destroying the human race to “reset” things.  This is a special song.  I can tell Periphery put everything they had into it, and I will always appreciate the massiveness and message of this song.

Hail Stan is a record people slept on and discarded for whatever ridiculous reason.  I think it’s an utterly brilliant album.  If people would open their minds and not let the hive mind mentality of the internet dictate their tastes, they’d find this album to be a hell of a huge offering to Metal and music in general.

Favorite songs: Satellites, Reptile, It’s Only Smiles

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40. Shoganai (Mini album)- Ankor (2024)

I originally wasn’t going to include this on the list, because it’s more of an EP or a first installment of an album.  But to leave out one of my absolute favorite pieces of music would be inconclusive.  This list would feel unfinished without this album.  I could’ve included their full albums, White Dragon or Beyond the Silence of These Years.  I love those first albums with Jessie Williams at the helm vehemently.  White Dragon is such a fantastic album with something for everyone to sink their teeth into.  Ankor echoes the intensity of early Linkin Park and Enter Shikari records, mixing multiple genres like Rap, Metalcore, and Electronica to create a sound that is so unique.   This band is almost impossible to pin down.  Not two songs in their entire catalog sound alike.  The amount of different sounds this band packs into one song, let alone a whole album, is utterly staggering.  They have Pop Punk, Paramore-like songs that are so endearing and addictively energetic. They have Progressive Metalcore songs echoing the proficiency and intensity of Periphery or Spiritbox, or Falling In Reverse.  They are endlessly inspired by Japanese music and culture.  No matter what the influences are, Ankor has its sound that is emotive and musically mindblowing.  The talent of this band blew me away just this year in March, and now they are one of my favorite bands of all time.

2024’s Shoganai is one of my favorite pieces of music ever released.  It came to me in March when Sirius XM Octane played the single Prisoner.  I was sitting with my mom in the grocery store parking lot, waiting for my dad to come back.  It was a dreary day for many reasons, and I was in a mentally difficult place with my anxiety. I felt hard times were on the horizon.  I was dreading having to have two more wisdom teeth removed, and my family and I were worried about my grandfather’s state of health.  Prisoner came on, and it utterly overwrote the dark narrative in my mind.  The anxiety just melted away.  The pain went away.  There was something idyllic about this song in that moment.  I believe it came on when I needed it the most.  Ankor came into my life at the singularly perfect time.  I don’t believe in coincidence.  Ankor came on the radio at the perfect time for a reason.  I truly don’t know what the past couple of months would have been like without them.  Their music, especially Shoganai, is like a painkiller or Xanax, but without any side effects or toxicity.  This album is one of the most impactful records in my entire life.   Upon listening to them more, they became an integral part of my life and a muse of passion.  

Ankor and their release, Shoganai, are a catalyst for healing and/or overcoming everything.  Shoganai in Japanese lore translates to “it cannot be helped”, to signify the horrible and beautiful events in one’s life that cannot be stopped or changed.  This can relate to death, love, health problems, your dreams coming true, or just anything that inevitably happens.  Ankor perfectly captured all of these things with this mini album in such a raw and cathartic way.  Every song on it is an explosion of emotion.  It is intense.  It is hair-raising, heart-pounding, and a complete rush to listen to.  Ankor put everything they had into Shoganai and used it for their catharsis to get through their struggles.  What makes this band is the heart they put into every single note, every song, and every second of their performance.  Their energy reminds me of Paramore, but their sound is truly like nothing else in this world, and the heaviness of Shoganai more suits Architects or Periphery.  Their chemistry with new drummer Eleni Nota on this album is spectacular.  She took Ankor and helped raise it to its full potential.  Her drumming is like a stopwatch or a countdown to self-destruction.  She is cataclysmic in her attack and unbelievably fast and technical.  Venom is one of the most impressive drum tracks I have ever heard.  I show the live performance of it at Wacken to everyone I know.  She is the reason Shoganai was able to go to the height the band wanted.  Ankor now feels like a complete band that complements each other.  It takes a hell of a good band to stand with such a dynamic vocalist as Jessie Williams.  I love the guitars, the bass tone, the chaotic structure, and the passion that each member exudes on this album. 

Jessie Williams is one of my favorite female vocalists to ever exist.  When I think about her, it’s impossible to just classify her as a “Metal vocalist” because she is so much more than that.  She can sing in literally any genre and blend into any genre.  Her voice is multi-faceted and multi-ranged.  Her voice and delivery are what make Ankor a GREAT band and what makes Shoganai one of the best releases of the 2020s and of all time.  Her delivery is aggressive, and then gentle and soft, and then explosive.  She defies everything I knew about vocals in Metal and what can work.  She ranges from a J-Metal approach, to Celine Dion level belting to perfectly delivered and intense fry screams.  It blows my mind every single time I hear her sing Darkbeat.  It is unbelievable to me that Darkbeat is sung by one individual.  I’m no stranger to dual-style vocals with Devin Townsend, Corey Taylor, Tatiana Shmayluk, and Floor Jansen, but Jessie’s just seem so drastically far apart in tone and range.  And Jessie makes the switch look completely effortless.  Her vocals are shocking, intense, and then soft and soothing within one second.  Songs like Oblivion, which is one of the most beautiful songs I have ever heard, show this duality eloquently.  This is a singer with both perfect language diction and emotional diction.  Oblivion is an overlooked gem of a song in Modern Metal, and so is Jessie Williams as one of the greatest singers of my generation.  Venom also shows her intensity and quickness with words and ability to stay in the pocket. Her performance on Shoganai is one for the ages.

Shoganai is a special (mini) album.  Each track is a part of a storyboard and an actual mini-series on YouTube.  This is such a brilliant, emotive, and smart creative venture.  It completely immerses you in these characters that all signify love, loss, healing, and most importantly, hope.  I think this album stands to be a beacon of hope.  “The World is A Cruel Place, and it is also Very Beautiful” is the opening track and the overall arc of the album.  It sends the message that pain is inevitable, but so is love and happiness.  This message resonates with me emphatically.  It is something I believe at my very core.  I believe that pain is utterly part of life, and we all have to learn how to overcome it.  Drowning in pain is not an option.  It is giving up and going backwards in human evolution.  This album sends the message that there’s always something on the horizon.  “I’ll be okay” is a phrase said throughout the album as a reminder that no matter what happens, we’ll be okay.  That message is so simple, and yet so incredibly powerful.  This has impacted fans endlessly.  Many have gotten the phrase tattooed on their bodies permanently.  The crowd even holds up signs at Ankor shows that say “We’ll All be Okay”.  That sentiment is truly beautiful and beyond heartwarming.  It stands as a testament to Ankor’s impact as a band and wonderfully empathetic human beings who wear their hearts on their sleeves.  There are a million reasons why I love this band and Shoganai, but there just aren’t enough words to convey that.  Please, go listen to Shoganai with an open heart.


Favorite songs: Darkbeat, Oblivion, Embers

My Favorite Metal Albums of All Time: Part Two

As with all my posts, this one is subjective.  This list doesn’t aim to categorize “the best albums of Metal” because such a feat is just not feasible to me.  This is based on just my taste.  They’re not even in order by my favorites because what is considered my favorite is highly based on my mood.  I just made a master list and narrowed it down to the 20 that are important to highlight my taste.  It should give readers a better sense of what I listen to regularly and just personal taste.  Let me know about your favorite Metal albums below in the comments, I would love to see if any of these albums resonated with anyone else the same way they did with me.

In part one of the series, the first six albums were all by Devin Townsend. Part two highlights a favorite album from my favorite Metal bands.  It was incredible to go back and listen to these.  I listen to them often, but not in this context. Active listening has always been my preferred writing method, but I’ve never done it so personally in depth.  Listening to these albums whilst actively picking out why I love them cemented my admiration.  The whole process was very cathartic and interesting.  I don’t think I ever thought about these albums on such an introspective level.  Each album and its songs have distinct meanings to me.  They even have vivid memories attached to them.  Writing this proved to me how integral music is in our lives.  

7. Apex- Unleash the Archers (2017)

I refer to Unleash the Archers as my favorite band of all time.  I’ve been listening to them since about 2015.  Growing up with Iron Maiden, Metallica, Whitesnake, Dokken, and Judas Priest, I look for similar music.  High octane, dueling guitars, speed Metal, and killer power vocals never fail to grab my attention.  No surprise to me that I’ve become such a fan of Unleash the Archers.   They have all the qualities of those Power Metal/Heavy Metal 80s bands and ooze with the magic of Iron Maiden.  The guitarists Andrew Kingsley and Grant Truesdell are masters of dueling guitars, Thrash riffs, and Melodic Power licks.  They are two of the best technical guitarists I have ever seen.  The sheer speed and accuracy with which they play are miraculous to me.  It’s like Adrian Smith and Dave Murray on a massive amount of Monster Energy drinks.  It is insane to watch them play live and in the studio.  The same goes for drummer Scott Buchanan, who I think is the most underrated drummer of all time.  This guy seemingly effortlessly plays at 150 beats per minute and faster for an hour and a half.  Buchanan looks as if he’s barely moving behind what looks to be a basic Rock drum kit.  I do not understand why he is not recognized as a fantastic drummer.  Nick Miller is also a fantastic bassist, showing his strong presence on the last two UTA albums.  He chugs the hell out of the bass.  As a bass player, his tone and speed captivate me.  He is just so good without being too loud, too low, or too flashy. 

And then, there’s Brittney Slayes:  Where do I even start with the incomparable and iconic vocals of UTA?  It’s hard to sum up her contribution to the band and the Power Metal genre in a paragraph.  She is larger than life in vocal presence.  Her range truly defies everything I knew about vocals. She can sing in many styles and voice types, but it fits perfectly with the music.  The brilliance of her note choices, her ability to sing in the pocket, and her storytelling are the strongest aspects I love about Brittney.  In some ways, I feel like she’s the closest vocalist to Ronnie James Dio in spirit, style, and range, but she also stands on her own.  All of these virtuoso musicians make perfect chemistry in UTA, and are what make the band so special.  There’s nothing out there like them that I’ve heard.  They pull from a plethora of genres and influences to create meaningful, energetic, and technical Power Metal.  

Apex is undoubtedly my favorite album from UTA.  Apex is a once-in-a-lifetime concept album.  It is incredibly emotionally compelling in different ways on each track.  The story of Apex is heart-wrenching.  It follows the story of “The Immortal” and his curse to serve whoever wakes him on Earth.  Over 1000 years, The Immortal sleeps and wakes multiple times.  This time, the evil tyrannical witch queen “Matriarch” wakes him for an evil task.  Her evil knows no limit, and she has power over the entire planet.  She orders the Immortal to bring her four sons back to her to sacrifice them for her own immortality.  Through the story, The Immortal shows his immense power to summon an army of ten thousand to subdue and chase out the sons.  He also shows morality and introspection, trying to decide if it’s all for nothing or if the ends justify the means, and he considers what the good in it all is.  This concept is interesting because, to me,  it reflects the acceptance of Good and Evil in the world and the balance it upholds in the right hands.  Everything about Apex astounds me.  The story, the instrumentation, the composition, the structure of each song, and how it flows together seamlessly.  I love everything about this album, especially the guitars and vocals.

I connect so personally with Apex.  The aspect of The Immortal slumbering in a mountain with this curse and his acceptance of his curse struck me.  I was born and raised in Colorado, and the end of Apex with the title track tells my story in a way.  The curse I view as my disability, Cerebral Palsy, and my acceptance of this thing I cannot change. , being born and raised in Colorado, “The mountain, my home” reminds me that the mountains are my haven.  Apex, the song, is truly one of the most beautiful things I’ve ever heard in my life.  The whole album echoes this beauty to me.  Apex is a masterpiece in both written and sonic form to me.  It’s music that means something deeper.  You can interpret the story to mean different things and take what you want from it.   This is why I think Brittney is brilliant.  It’s a well-composed story, but its meaning is ambiguous and mysterious in a way.  This allows fans to attach to it personally on a possibly deep level, like so many of the best Fantasy novels.  I don’t think Brittney gets enough credit for creating and crafting the stories and concepts of their three-album run.  Apex deserves much more credit for its concept and musicianship.  It is truly unmatched and will always remain an important album to me.

My favorite songs are Apex, False Walls, Earth, and Ashes

8. Ategnatos- Eluveitie (2019)

I’m going to be honest: I wasn’t entirely sold on this album initially.  The heaviness was a drastic change from “Evocation II”, and I wasn’t ready for how hard this band came with Ategnatos.  I’d been listening to Swiss Folk Death Metal band Eluveitie since 2012, so I knew they were pretty heavy in the past.  Some albums take time to grow on me.  After I sat down and was in the mood for something heavy, I listened to this album three times back to back.  The experience was intense, spiritual, and tear-jerking.  This album is an experience from start to finish and is larger than life.  It combines old-Eluveitie with Death Thrash riffs and their signature blend of Folk Instruments and Celtic/Gaulish sounds.  It’s Melodeath meets Ancient Pagan music, and I love it so very much.   If a Metal album could ever sound Alpine, Ategnatos is the prime example.  It’s like walking among your ancestors in the valleys of the Swiss Alps.  It’s so unique and specific to Eluveitie.  While many Metal bands are incorporating Folk inspiration into their heavy music, Eluveitie stands out from the rest to me.  Maybe it’s because I experienced this in concert when I saw them in March of 2023, but they just feel so different from any other band to me.  The first time I’d ever heard of a hurdy-gurdy was in Eluveitie.  It’s such an unlikely instrument for Metal, and it’s almost a comic and unbelievable mix, but it works so well.  They’ve crafted a truly unique sound that is all their own.  With Chrigel’s signature harsh vocals, the Folk instruments, the speedy fiddle riffs, and epic guitar riffs and breakdowns, it’s undeniable that this band is one of a kind.

Ategnatos is a difficult album to stop listening to once you start.  There’s an addictive “Beauty and the Beast” quality that I’ve been hooked on since 2008.  The riffs are catchy on any instrument. Like on Blackwater Dawn, the pipes intro has been in my head off and on since it came out.  Somehow, they packed in heavy chunky riffs, Speed Metal drums, Folky diddies, and Nightwish-like choruses sung by the incomparable Fabienne Erni.  I will never get over her powerful voice and incredible range.  She is yet another Metal singer who can sing anything.  Her performance on Ategnatos is sensational with every note.  She is one of my favorite vocalists of all time. Ambiramus is the Eluveitie song to date.  It was a last-minute addition to the album, and yet it fits the anthemic nature so well.  This song is unbelievably beautiful.  Experiencing it live was a truly spiritually cleansing moment of my life. How she delivers such notes and Alpine calls with volume and clarity is mystifying.  The whole album is a spiritual trip.  Her voice is a pivotal aspect I love about the album.  The riffs and the chanting on The Raven Hill are so epically catchy, along with the unique groove.  It’s like listening to an ancient Celtic celebration with a death growler.  It scratches my brain and satisfies the Scot-Irish in me like I’ve never expected.  I grew up listening to Celtic music, but Ategnatos raised the bar.  The darkness of The Slumber and Worship imprints on me.  The acceptance of one’s fate comes into play, the Death Metal and depth of these songs are eerie, and it’s an interesting feeling.  Breathe is another track where Fabienne’s range shines on, and it shows why she’s considered the heart of Eluveitie.  She sings her heart out on every song, but especially on ” Breathe.  This song reminds me of long road trips out of Colorado and being severely homesick for the safety of the mountains.

I can’t talk about this album without fanning over Rebirth.  Rebirth rounds out the journey of someone who converts to a tribe, becomes a powerful figure, and ascends.  This is one of the best Metal tracks I have ever heard in my life.  Alainn Ackerman is a favorite drummer of mine, and his speed, use of flam, and interesting fills are the backbone of this album.  But my god, his blast beats on Rebirth paired with the shredding of Jonas Wolf and Rafael Salzmann is a stroke of brutal virtuosity.  The first time I heard this song, I was genuinely blown away.  I restarted the song over before it even ended because the intro is insane.  I thought my YouTube playback speed was up by two clicks, but it wasn’t.  I will never forget the first time I heard this song as long as I live.

This album is also personal to me because it spawned quite the saga of dreams.  I began having these dreams in the Spring of 2020.  They were the most interesting dreams I’d ever had.  One dream in particular remains.  The dream began with walking through a valley of the Alps, lush with green native grasses and herds of sheep below.  It was in Switzerland, and it was, of course, beautiful.   I was walking along with members Fabienne Erni and Jonas Wolf.  Fabienne explained to me in detail about the tribes of people from a millennium ago that walked the same path that we walked.  She told of riches, tragedy, triumph against armies, and how Celts and the Gauls were related.  The two led me to a waterfall with a sizable pond below it.  In the pond, they performed a ceremony of sorts, and I was baptized back into my Celtic roots.  When they had me plunge into the pond that was barely deep enough to stand in, I saw seven “beings”.  These seven beings were grey and green, with cloaks.  They had no face or discerning features.  They repeated the words of Ambiramus to me.  I was then pulled out of the pond and was cleansed of bad energy.  It was a “Rebirth” you could say.  The dream was very cinematic and beautiful.  I am known to have very detailed and epic dreams, but this has to be one of my best.  I will always remember it and think of it when listening to this album.

My favorite songs are Ambiramus, Breathe, Rebirth

9. Delirium- Lacuna Coil (2016)

I have been a fan of Lacuna Coil since I was around thirteen or fourteen years old.  My older brother discovered them on the College radio station after we moved to Colorado.  While I remember seeing the Heaven’s A Lie video on a music channel, it was two or three years after I started listening to them.  “Comalies” lived in our car CD player for a good three years after that.  Experiencing the 20th anniversary of Comalies was the biggest wave of nostalgia.  This album has impacted the Metal market in the US and influenced Metal more than people realize.  Before this album, “Beauty and the Beast” style vocals weren’t exclusively done on an entire album, I don’t think.  This concept was only done in passing on songs.  Now, it’s one of the most interesting music concepts that shaped Symphonic Metal and more bands than I can count.  Comalies is an album that will be immortal, much like the Evanescence album that brought female vocals in heavy music into the mainstream.  I’ve loved everything Lacuna Coil has released since (Yes, even Shallow Life).  The moment I became a mega fan of LC was upon the release of “Delirium”.  This is when LC became one of my favorite Heavy Metal bands of all time and Maki became one of my favorite bassists.  

“Delirium” is a deep delve into the human psyche with all its dark manifestations.  It’s heavy, moody, cinematic, atmospheric, catchy, beautiful, and brutal all at the same time.  It could easily be a soundtrack to a miniseries about a serial killer, and I mean that in a good way.  The thematic elements swallow you up and take you into the eerie depths of catharsis.  Delirium is incredibly deliberate and perfectly constructed.  It flows from each song and doesn’t break the tension and dark elements.  It’s an experience as much as it is an album.  It takes you to the literal edge of sanity where you’re losing control of yourself, your relationships, and the perception of things around you.  This album is brilliant in how spot-on it captures its theme.  Rarely does an album concept hit as hard as Delirium does for me.  It’s so literal, which is refreshing in Metal.  I don’t find a lot of albums that speak about a subject so clearly, and I commend LC’s dive into the dark world of Mental Health issues.  Delirium takes me back to toxic relationships, anxiety, and feeling as if my reality was going dark, but in a good way.  It reminds you of how you can live through all the darkest parts in your life and rise above the darkness in your mind.  I love that message.

The sounds on this album are unlike anything I have ever heard.  I don’t like comparing artists too much, and this album is incomparable.  Despite not having an official guitarist at the time, Maki, the bassist and a founding member of the band, constructed some of the hardest-hitting riffs on both bass and guitar.  It’s a rhythmic onslaught of heaviness, but it also drops out to highlight the insanely beautiful tone of Cristina Scabbia.  Cristina is one of the most unique singers in Metal.  This dark and light balance is evident on “Live To Tell”, a solo track for Scabbia’s unique, soulful soaring vocals.  The riffs offset so perfectly, and yet pummel your senses to a pulp on “Blood, Tears, Dust” and “The House of Shame”.  Maki and guest guitarist Myles Kennedy of Alter Bridge created Nu-Metal nostalgia with a punchier bass sound, and I love it.  The drums are also technically perfect.   Every hit matches the riffs so exactly, it sounds like a machine.  The musical chemistry on this album is spectacular.  Everything just flows so well together, A sign of a band that’s been together for so long; they work in exquisite harmony.  Andrea’s screams are a highlight of the album.,  To me, his transformation into a death growler is one of the best decisions ever made in music.  He went from an “okay singer” to me to an absolute guttural god on this album.  It’s the extreme of “Beauty and the Beast” vocals, and I love it so much. 

Lacuna Coil keeps defying the constructs of Rock and Metal and extremifying their concept.  They evolve, change, and grow while remaining unique to them, but I don’t think the perfection of Delirium will ever be topped for me.  

Favorite songs: Ultima Ratio, You Love Me Cause I Hate You, and The House of Shame

10. Seventh Son of A Seventh Son- Iron Maiden (1988)

I’ve mentioned this album in previous posts but never delved into it quite like this.  Iron Maiden is undoubtedly one of my favorite bands of all time. They are one of the most influential bands in Metal history.  I have memories as far back as I can remember of this band.  They’re a band my family loves and has loved since long before I was born.  My late uncle was responsible for my love for Iron Maiden.   He was a traditional Metalhead that brought these bands to my Mom and eventually my brother and me.  Bands like Iron Maiden, Metallica, Rush, Pantera, Van Halen, and more came from my Mom and my Uncle.  That sharing of music was crucial to me.  That’s probably why I have a compulsive need to share music with everyone I know.  Sharing music was the purest form of love I had from my uncle, who was otherwise a problematic person in our family’s lives.  That sentiment is one I wish to pass on to other people.  I’d like to be known by the bands I share and whether that discovery meaningfully impacted someone else’s life the way Iron Maiden impacted mine.  Without my Mom and Uncle exposing me to this music, I probably wouldn’t be a Metalhead and a pretty different person.  There are many weekend memories tied to this album: Packing up the house, going on a road trip, working on a car, or just sitting out on the back patio. I remember listening to this album.  Music is a powerful thing when it is tied to happy memories.  It can remind you of who you are when you’re at your best or happiest.  This album always does that for me.

I haven’t always been a huge Metalhead.  In my childhood, I was exposed to Rock and Metal and generally liked it.  During my childhood, I chose Britney Spears, Whitney Houston, The Cranberries, Fleetwood Mac, and Celine Dion more than anything.  As a teen, I rebelled for a while against what other people were listening to and chose more pop-punk like Paramore, Fall Out Boy, New Found Glory, Incubus, and more of that mid-2000s style.  It’s normal to go through phases, but I think, deep down, I always truly loved Metal.  Iron Maiden was one of the bands that cemented my dedication to Metal when I was 18.  While I credit Iron Maiden, it was more specifically Sam Dunn’s Metal Evolution that made me realize I had an innate passion for Metal.  Watching this anthology in full on VH1 made me realize how deep and scholarly Metal could be.  The theme of the Metal anthology was The Trooper. I had heard the song many times before, but hearing it on this documentary truly reignited my love for Metal.  All of Iron Maiden’s albums are impactful and nearly masterpieces, but I had to go back in time.  The Trooper may be my favorite song of all time, but my favorite Maiden album is undoubtedly Seventh Son of a Seventh Son.

Some consider it a miss or just a mini album of 80s ideas, but it impacted me more than any album.  I will never understand the discontentment for this album.  This album was an experiment, and I love experimental music. While people perceived it as Maiden trying to go Mainstream, I think they were trying to do the opposite and rebel against the Sunset Strip of Hair Metal. Iron Maiden took what Fates Warning was doing and combined NWOBHM with Progressive Metal.  This combo engrained itself into my brain forever.  It is the most influential album to my music taste.  I think many albums on this list have a taste of this record at heart in some way.   Unleash the Archer’s albums remind me so much of this record, and that’s probably why I love them so much.  Seventh Son is a mix of soaring atmospheric synths, melodic dueling guitars, and insanely Proggy drums from the incomparable Nicko Mcbrain.   It sounds like a mix of King Crimson, Deep Purple, Manowar, and Vangelis while still keeping the Iron Maiden grit and epicness.  The technicality of it is staggering.  They keep their anthemic sing-along style but add time changes and syncopated rhythms and flashy ’80s sounds.   In my book, it’s one of their best works and my absolute favorite album from them. Every song is just so memorable without relying on hooks.  It’s creative, emotional, cinematic, and badass in its guitar work and aggressiveness on songs like the title track, Evil That Men Do, and The Clairvoyant.  Oh man, and Steve Harris’s bass playing on this record is just sublime.  The bass could’ve been much louder on this album, but it still impacted my playing, as all Maiden albums have.

Seventh Son of A Seventh Son is one of the most unique Metal records I’ve ever heard.  I will always cherish its technicality and the memories that go along with it.

My favorite songs; Moonchild, Infinite Dreams, and Seventh Son of A Seventh Son

11. Moonbathers- Delain (2016)

While Symphonic Metal is more of a part of my past, Moonbathers is an album that will forever remain special to me.  It’s not the biggest, technically perfect, or cinematic Symphonic album ever made.  It’s not the best mix or engineering on a Symphonic Metal album.  It defies all the things I normally look for in a great album, and yet here it is on my favorite album list of all time..  Moonbathers is an anthemic, moody, dark, masochistic record with more soul than 99% of any Symphonic album ever made.  This album is a whole experience of emotions, thematic sounds, and epic guitar hooks. It’s an eclectic mix of traditional elements of the genre and sounds that are so unique to powerhouse vocalist Charlotte Wessels.  It’s like The Cranberries, Within Temptation, Kate Bush, Nick Cave, and The Birthday Massacre combined into one really neat package.  It’s the rawest Symphonic Metal album I have ever heard.  It’s unapologetically loud, jarring, and campy all at the same time.  Moonbathers is a vocal astonishment and put Charlotte Wessels on the map forever, along with her incomparable performance on Burning Bridges, Masters of Destiny, and her solo work The Obsession.  Moonbathers feels like Charlotte’s Delain, and it is my favorite version of the band that ever was and that ever will be.  

Moonbathers is the moodiest album I’ve ever heard.  It’s an explosion of emotions: anger, pain, love, sadness, and elation to be alive to experience it all.  It’s a concept album in that it holds the same dramatic theme throughout.  It’s more of a vibe than a story for a theme, which is unique in and of itself.  It’s a love letter to those suffering in life in such an epic way.  It’s a little bit Pirate and Hans Zimmer with Hands of Gold, a little bit of 90s Alt-rock, a little bit of soul Vocals, a little bit Queen, and Poppy hooks like on Fire with Fire, Turn the Lights Out, and Suckerpunch.  Pendulum is a Machine Head/Trivium one-two punch with Epica thrown in there.  It’s a crazy record.  The mix of inspirations is unlike anything I have ever heard.  It just hits you right in the chest, like a suckerpunch that stays with you forever.  It’s catchy while remaining musically interesting and progressive.  I’ve never heard anything like it. Despite all the comparisons I’ve made attempting to describe how this sounds to me, it’s a Mason’s Mark all on its own.  Glory and the Scum is one of my favorite tracks of all time.  It’s a “Beauty and the Beast” vibe, with Charlotte and bassist Otto combining for the compelling bone-chilling growls.  Her voice on this song is one of the most mesmerizing sounds to me.  She embodies the idea of a Siren and succeeds in captivating every single time, but especially on this song and power ballad, The Hurricane.  These two songs still astound me today and are some of my favorite performances on any album to date.

Moonbathers is special to me for more reasons than I can even say.  This record inspired me to write books about my two alter egos.  It’s inspired poems, countless riffs, whole songs, short stories, and more dreams than I can even count.  This album spoke to me on a philosophical level in ways words cannot articulate.  It’s a unique nostalgia, a throwback to one of the only bands I have ever loved with my entire being.  It reminds me of all the hard work I put in on myself with meditation, running, soccer practices, and self-actualizing.  This album signifies self-acceptance for me.  It also is the first album I’ve ever bonded with someone outside of my family.  My best friend and I experienced this album for the first time together.  I will never forget writing tens of paragraphs foaming over this album.  It was a very special time in my life, and it cemented our bond forever, I believe.  It’s an album that will always remind me of her and also everything we’ve been through together.  She’s the reason I have continued writing, besides the absolute necessity to express words on paper in which she understands and celebrates more than anyone I’ve ever met.   Moonbathers helped us solidify this connection, and that is irreplaceable. 

Delain with Charlotte will always be one of my favorite eras in music, and Moonbathers is the keystone album for that time to me.

Favorite songs; Glory and the Scum, The Hurricane, Fire With Fire

12. Omega- Epica (2021)

One of the newest albums on this list. I felt odd picking the most recent Epica album.  I have listened to Epica since 2011.  Hearing this band for the first time was a religious experience.  It was as if I was hearing a choir from heaven and an orchestra only fit for cherubs.  As cheesy as that sentiment sounds, it’s the best depiction of my connection with Epica.  There’s a supreme feeling to their music.  It’s all-encompassing and incredibly emotionally moving but also deeply philosophical.  There’s no instrument, topic, theme, or height of technical excellence that this band isn’t afraid to tackle.  This band creates gargantuan albums..  Tackling them in a critical sense is way above any music reviewer’s pay grade.  Talking about the impact this band has had on music and myself is more in the realm of tangible.  Epica is what my brother and I like to say, “a band of all time.”  They just are what they are, and that is massively, unfathomably talented.  People often complain that the days of Classical Composition and the greats such as Bach, Beethoven, Mozart, and Handel are dead.  To me, those days of completely perfect and epic music are far from dead.  Classical Music isn’t dead or gone; it just evolved into Symphonic Metal.  And Epica is the pinnacle of that sentiment.  Epica creating an album called “Omega” is possibly the aptest title any band has ever used.

Omega is an expansive record.  The album contains all of Epica’s typical sounds and ideas compressed into a well-produced package.  It is the omega-ist album they could’ve done, whilst still showing mature restraint.  While Quantum Engima was chaotic, unrestrained, and unfiltered, with a wall-of-sound production with a hundred layers of choirs and orchestras, I loved it.  Omega is massive, but it’s carefully constructed with more beauty and dynamics than past albums.  To me, Epica is at its best when you can hear Simone without constant layers of loud choirs.  Simone is too incredible of a singer to overshadow.  I think Epica got this message loud and clear on this record.  The balance of Metal, choirs, orchestras, keyboards, and vocals is sublime on Omega.  It is my absolute favorite album because of this perfect balance.  It’s fresh and new for Epica, but echoes back to the days of “Sahara Dust” with Middle Eastern instrumentation and Thrashy-Speed guitars.  The melodic inclinations remind me of Design Your Universe and the b-sides of The Quantum Enigma.  The drums are straight from the more Fear Factory-influenced The Holographic Principle.  Not only do Simone’s perfect Operatic belts and trills shine on this album, but every member is quintessentially audible.  

I can finally hear everyone and their styles and influences equally.  Each member creates the capacious illusion that Epica has a hundred members, and it’s so great to hear all six of them as individual musicians.  The members on their own are genial musicians, and together, it’s a cataclysm of the best Metal this generation has to offer.  You need not look further to understand the power of this band than Kingdom of Heaven Prt 3.  This song is among the greatest pieces of Music I’ve ever heard.  Out of all the composers over the last eight hundred years, I think Coen Jansen is the most underrated.  This song is angelic and pristine.  You go from crying to feeling as though you’ve faced your judgment.  It’s genial in every movement, all 17 times and key changes, and all the moments it switches between Classical and Melodeath to a 70’s Prog keyboard solo.  “You get a solo, you get a solo, everybody gets a solo!”.

Epica is the sole reason I began this blog nearly twelve years ago, so it’s a given that this band is sentimental to me.  My brother took me to a headlining Epica show in 2012.  This show was a turning point in my life.  The fact that bands like Epica weren’t huge in America was a travesty to me.  I created “Metal Valkyrie” to be a promoter for European bands like Epica.  My goal was to greatly increase their fanbase here, but the journey expanded into a review site.  It has been a grind, but it has improved my writing, created friendships, and maybe exposed some to these amazing bands.  Epica took the minspration that Iron Maiden and Sam Dunn’s Metal Evolution started, and ignited it to the stratosphere for me.  I’ve quit reviewing and switched entirely to promotion.  While it hasn’t been as successful as I’d hoped in viewership and interaction, it’s a pinnacle journey for me and has benefited my life in ways I’ve not delved into yet.  Epica’s music is immensely inspiring.  The epic atmospheres they create can truly get me through anything.  Their music is forever inspiring.

Because of Epica’s everlasting contribution to music, I will continue this journey with Metal Valkyrie and forever share this band’s incredible music.


My Favorite Songs: The Skeleton Key, Kingdom of Heaven Part 3, Code of Life

TEMPERANCE Unveils Epic Live Album: From Hermitage To Europe

TEMPERANCE Delivers Symphonic Passion on New Live Album, From Hermitage To Europe, out March 14, 2025 via Napalm Records | Pre-Order NOW
 
Watch the Energetic Live Video for “Daruma” HERE
 
Extended European Tour Starts in March

[photo credit: Artur Tarczewski]
I am so insanely excited about this release! Temperance is one of my all time favorite bands. Italian masters of modern melodic metal TEMPERANCE have spellbound their symphonic magic into a thrilling live album, From Hermitage To Europe, out March 14, 2025 via Napalm Records! Captured during the band’s latest extended tour supporting their album Hermitage – Daruma’s Eyes Pt. 2 (2023), the new live recording brings the magical village of Hermitage and fan favorites to life!

Now featured for the first time in live recording form, this story was first explored on the aforementioned full-length studio album, which has since also been released in its orchestral version, featuring many renowned guests such as Fabienne Erni (Eluveitie) and Laura Fella (Faun).


Known for their vocal harmonies, the first single, “Daruma”, is a gift to symphonic lovers, where melodic guitar passages collide with a galloping drum beat. TEMPERANCE’s Michele Guaitoli takes us into their magical world, while his vocal comrade-in-arms Kristin Starkey heats up the tension with her dark timbre. This live recording serves as the perfect prelude to their highly anticipated 2025 European tour, with melodic death metal giants Ignea and symphonic powerhouse Induction.

Marco Pastorino on “Daruma”:
“It’s been years since our only live release, and the time has come to publish material with our current lineup. For the first time, you’ll be able to listen to some of our most renowned tracks in their live versions – such as “Of Jupiter And Moons,” “Diamanti,” and “The Last Hope In A World Of Hopes,” while also including some of the most beloved songs from our latest album, Hermitage, after spending a year on the road supporting it.
 
For this reason, we have chosen to release ‘Daruma’ as the first single, marking the first track released with our Kristin Starkey.
 
We will celebrate the release of From Hermitage To Europe alongside our European headlining tour!”
A symphonic adventure of power, passion and melodies: TEMPERANCE Live!
Rousing guitar riffs, epic orchestrations and powerful vocal duets are a welcome gift for symphonic metal lovers, now captured for the afterworld. While “The Last Hope in a World of Hopes” combines gripping melodies and choral vocals, their stunning live performance can also be witnessed in “Darkness Is Just a Drawing” – fans will experience one of the band’s most magical compositions, shining with masterful vocal harmonies. The palpable energy on fan-favorites like “Diamanti” and “Of Jupiter And Moons“ showcase the band’s extraordinary musical atmosphere.
 
Michele Guaitoli about the album:
“The last years have been a rollercoaster of emotions. TEMPERANCE have grown on every level and have been traveling the world, having the honor of performing in Europe, the UK, the US and South America.
 
Those who follow us are well aware that from “Of Jupiter and Moons” to “Hermitage”, we’ve faced a relevant line-up change. We felt it was fundamental to let our listeners understand who TEMPERANCE is nowadays, as the arrival of Kristin during the EU tour as special guests for Tarja had a strong impact on the sound of the band, thanks to her unique (and outstanding) voice.
 
From Hermitage To Europe gives justice to what you are going to witness live in March during our headline run, and most importantly, sets in stone the essence of this new cycle of TEMPERANCE, which we want to be a cycle of rebirth.”
Get your copy of From Hermitage To Europe NOW:
Temperance: From Hemitage To Europe
From Hermitage To Europe tracklisting:
1. Intro (live)
2. Daruma (live)
3. The Last Hope in a World of Hopes (live) 
4. No Return (live) 
5. A Hero Reborn (live) 
6. Welcome To Hermitage (live) 
7. Glorious (live) 
8. Start Another Round (live) 
9. Darkness Is Just A Drawing (live) 
10. Into The Void (live) 
11. Diamanti (live) 
12. Of Jupiter And Moons (live) 
13. Pure Life Unfolds (live)
TEMPERANCE Live 2025:
 
From Hermitage To Europe Tour
w/ Ignea and Induction
06.03.24 PL – Warsaw / VooDoo
07.03.24 PL – Poznan / Pod Minoga
08.03.24 PL – Skarżysko-Kamienna / Semafor
09.03.24 HU – Budapest / Barba Negra
10.03.24 DE – Munich / Backstage
11.03.24 AT – Vienna / Szene
12.03.24 IT – Bologna / Alchemica
13.03.24 CH – Lenzburg / Met Bar
14.03.24 DE – Aschaffenburg / Colos Saal
15.03.24 DE – Leipzig / Hellraiser
16.03.24 DE – Berlin / Orwo
17.03.24 DE – Hamburg / Logo
18.03.24 NL – Tilburg / 013
19.03.24 DE – Hanover / Musikzentrum
20.03.24 DE – Bochum / Matrix
21.03.24 BE – Kortrijk / DVG
22.03.24 NL – Drachten / Iduna
 
TEMPERANCE are:
Kristin Starkey – Vocals
Michele Guaitoli – Vocals
Marco Pastorino – Guitars & Vocals
Luca Negro – Bass Guitar
Marco Sacchetto – Drums
 
TEMPERANCE online:
Website
Facebook
Instagram
Napalm Records

Promotional material from Napalm Records direct

Temperance Hermitage: Daruma’s Eyes Hermitage Part 2 Review 2023

Release date 10/20/2023

A band I have been listening to for a decade is back in 2023 with half a new lineup and new sound that has utterly stunned me. With the departure of two key components of the band in early 2023, I thought Temperance were doomed. This Italian Symphonic Power Metal outfit that has been a dark horse for too long has pulled through the trials and reinvented themselves with the most powerful lineup I’ve heard in a long time. I am a huge Power Metal fan, and no stranger to the majority of the new characters in the band, and I can say this record will bring them to the top of the game. Original founder and bassist Luca Negro has leveled up with clinical powerful drummer Marco Sacchetto and the smooth vocals of Michele Guaitoli since 2018 (Visions of Atlantis) and guitarist and epic vocalist Marco Pastorino (Serenity). Though, the newest member was a complete surprise to me. Kristin Starkey, an American Professional Opera and Metal dual vocalist has redefined the female vocal role of the band. Her vocals have brought a smokey darkness and smooth contralto vocals with staggering Power Metal screams. Based upon the singles, I knew this might be my album of the year. Temperance has delivered amazing music over the years, but Daruma’s Eyes PT 2 is just exalted beyond all expectations. I am a sucker for concept albums, and this storytelling delight delivers. It is also narrated and features chuggy punching rhythm guitars by the Dutch Wizard of Prog, Arjen Lucassen of Ayreon and Star One.

Daruma’s Eyes PT 2 is a massive wall of sound with melodies swirling through and emotively telling the story. I’m honestly in disbelief of how much they have tastefully crammed into one record. Each vocalist plays a different part, but comes together perfectly and expertly. Daruma opener is an assault of range and operatic vocals the band is known for delivering, but this is just explosive on a whole other level. On slow song, In “Search of Gold”, the range of these vocalists really shines and delivers emotionally profound music. “Welcome to Hermitage” contains many vocalists with Celtic and glaringly high vocalist Fabienne Erni (Eluveitie, Illumishade) and Laura Fella of Faun who brings elvish smooth vocals and a classic folk sound. Fabienne fits the explosive talent so well and brings another octave of vocals that balances everything out so well. The ladies of Switzerland also feature on Join Me, which is just a beautiful melodic track with heavy instrumentation. Epic track after track continues with No Return, Into the Void, and Darkness is Just a Drawing. No Return brings a sea-shanty sing along beat that is excellently catchy and just solid group vocals on the choruses. “Where We Belong” is a piano, vocal, string ballad that has a Meatloaf Rock Opera sound of tear-jerk nature, and it’s simply brilliant. The orchestration on this record is flawless, expertly highlighting each theme of every track and easy on the ears providing melody and a epic vibe throughout. The attention to detail on this record is virtuoso quality. I just can’t find anything wrong with it. I put Power Metal under high scrutiny, and Daruma PT 2 is at the highest level you can go in the genre.

Daruma PT 2 album is one of those Power Metal albums that make you want to get up off your ass and get you working out or just achieving your goals. Temperance have always been about empowerment and self fulfillment, but following Viktor’s journey is a whole other level of beauty and awestruck emotion. I don’t want to spoil too much about the story for those who ordered the book, but it’s incredibly well done. This record is absolutely clinical from start to finish. Each instrument reflects that Italian Classical refinement and the talent is truly unbelievable. I think their sound has bloomed overall into something huge and incomparably. I think the addition of Starkey is a huge attribute to what makes this record a new cornerstone in Power Metal. Her gorgeous tone, her perfect delivery, and style is so unique and stand out through the entire album. I’m hard pressed to find a vocalist at this level and caliber of raw talent. She has brought this band new life and profoundness that it has so long deserved. She works so well with Michel and Marco, every singer really compliments each other and there’s not a single gap or weakness. 2023 is not over, but this is a huge contender for album of the year for me. I seriously cannot wait to see this band continue with Kristin and Marco, because if they continue on like this, Temperance will no longer be a dark horse and become legendary to the likes of Unleash the Archers, Nightwish, and Helloween.

Rating 10/10

https://www.temperanceband.com/

https://temperanceofficial.bigcartel.com/

https://www.instagram.com/temperanceofficial

New Video Out Featuring Killer Femme Metal Singers

Man, is it just me or are women in Metal absolutely dominating the vocal world right now? With bands like Spiritbox, Entheos, and Crypta all coming out and conjuring the most brutal music right now, it’s hard not to feel like we are in the New Renaissance of Music right now. I love foaming about female singers in Metal, so a couple of years ago I started making compilation videos of them hitting absolutely insane high notes. You can watch all three below from the links. But, I need help for the next episodes! Please send me videos containing super high notes hit by any singer in Metal LIVE and I will feature them!

Send me the videos or clips to Metalvalkyrie@yahoo.com or comment links below on this post!

Part One:




Part Two:

Part Three:

20 Most Underrated Male Vocalists

Danny Estrin- Voyager

Danny is a powerhouse with a pretty impressive range used widely over Voyager’s 20+ year career.  He uses an eclectic throwback sound to the New Wave days in the 1980’s and layers in Power Metal influences and occasional grunts.  It’s an incredibly complex vocal that I don’t think anyone else could replicate.  You hear him sing one note and you know it’s him immediately.  No matter what style Danny   may emulate, Voyager is an absolute  party to listen to and a truly happy Metal band with sick riffs and catchy vocals.  

  1. Devin Townsend

My favorite singer of all time and one of the most technical on this list.  Devin has a four octave range that he utilizes in over twenty styles of music and 25 years of creating.  He is a vocal shapeshifter, switching from harmonic screams to tenor vocals in the smoothest transition.  It is astounding to watch what he can do with his voice as he goes to the absolute limit in every performance, “Screaming until he tastes blood” doesn’t get any more brutal than that.  I will definitely cover this astonishingly beautiful artist throughout my entire career as a Metal writer.  He is one of the greatest singers, forget genres, forget tastes and subjectivity, he is supremely talented.

  1. Phil Romeo- Countless Skies

One of the most surprising voices on this list, Phil Romeo is an operatic tenor Power singer and  bassist in British Melodeth band Countless Skies.  The first time I heard Phil sing was on the track Zephyr, and not knowing anything about this band, I thought it was a Devin Townsend feature.  I was astounded to find out that it wasn’t Devin and that it was this unknown bassist laying down one of the most passionate vocal lines I have ever heard.

  1. Tom Englund- Evergrey

I know, Evergrey is a well known Power Metal band with nearly 30 years of experience under their belt, but I have to say that Tom is a hugely underrated vocalist.  I don’t see him come up on any vocalist list and I think he’s overlooked.  He has such a unique and recognizable smooth tone.  It’s almost a bluesy style, but with insane power.  Nobody sounds like Tom.

  1. Joseph Michael-Witherfall

I only discovered this incredible Doomy Progressive Metal band last fall and I was utterly bombed by Joseph’s voice.  His delivery of vocals in the cover of Foreplay/Long Time by the great Boston is absolutely spectacular and not what I expected in the slightest.  Witherfall is one of the most musically talented bands out there today, and Joseph is the frontrunner of the dynamics.

  1. Dan Cleary- Striker

Striker (not to be confused with 80’s Stryper) is a Epic Power Metal band from Alberta, Canada that is known for playing  throwback traditional style Metal.  They are a nostalgic cheesy Metal band part of a collective touring group NWONMB, that features Lords of The Trident, Unleash the Archers, Seven Kingdoms, and more.  Dan has immense power and range that definitely reminds me of Dokken, Queensrhyche, and Whitesnake.  It’s just good clean Metal with soaring vocals.

  1. Daniel Helman- Lost Horizon

One of the more unknown names on this list, Dan Helman led the great Lost Horizons from Sweden and created a sound that would go on to influence some of the newest and most powerful singers today.  I hadn’t heard of him until Brittney Slayes of Unleash the Archers mentioned LH as an influence.  The song below is an absolute vocal masterpiece of shocking proportion.

  1. Joacim Cans- Hammerfall

I can’t talk about male singers without talking about Joacim Cans.  I don’t see this fantastic melodious Power singer on any list, and it’s an absolute crime.  He is one of the best vocalists I have ever seen live.  His control, consistency, and power belts are unreal.  Hammerfall has been around for three decades and hasn’t received nearly enough credit.

  1. Damian Wilson- Threshold, Ayreon, and more.

Damian is one of those singers nobody talks about, and yet has one of the most distinctive voices of all time.  I was introduced to Damian Wilson on Arjen Lucassen’s Star One and was blown away by his tone.  It’s unlike anything I’ve ever heard.  He goes from singing soft ballad vocals to high powerful belting.  No matter what he’s singing, his vocals are angelic and crystal clear.  

  1. Mike Mills- Toehider, Ayreon

Possibly possessing one of the biggest ranges on the list, Mike Mills has been Arjen Lucassen’s go-to singer for fifteen years.  The Australian Singer, Guitarist, and Songwriter does vocal gymnastics in any song he’s ever done.  He pushes the limit of male vocals, reminiscent of the great Freddie Mercury with his high Soprano operatic vocals and having easily a four octave range.  I have honestly never heard another singer like Mike.  The song below is just five percent of what this guy can do.  I highly recommend checking out his entire discography.  

  1. Patrik Selleby- Bloodbound

There’s quite a lot of Power Metal vocalists on this list, not on purpose but by sheer will of talent.  The subgenre of Metal just has a knack for using the best, most versatile vocalists.   Patrik Selleby has  that belting  higher range vocal that just captivates crowds.  He has so many different techniques he uses.  He can do soffty tenor vocals, dipping into baritone.  He can scream and wail with precise vibrato reminiscent of 80’s Heavy Metal.  He can also use fry vocals to accentuate vowels.  I absolutely love his style and Bloodbound’s overall sound.

  1. Isahn- Emperor

Isahn has one of the most piercing and soul haunting screams I’ve ever heard, but his clean vocals are what truly astonished me.  I hadn’t heard him sing until the release of the EP “Pharaohs”  and I have craved his voice ever since.  If you could ever describe a man’s voice as sultry, it would be Isahn’s.

  1. Einar Solberg- Leprous

Out of all the singers on this list, Einar possibly has the most shocking and distinctive voice on the list.  This man’s voice is breathtakingly beautiful.  I don’t describe male vocals as “beautiful”, but it’s the word that comes to mind.  It is light, airy, and angelic upon every note he sings.  His range is just massive, reaching into the rafters with soprano operatic and epic falsetto that bring chills and tears alike.  It is impossible not to listen to Leprous and not get emotional.  Nobody sounds like Einar.  He is absolutely sensational.  He’s just a brilliant vocalist and songwriter.  The song below says more than I can ever say.

  1. Mathias Blad- Falconer

Falconer is a legendary Medieval Folk Power Metal band with quite the cult following.  The band tried to hang it up in 2016, but due to a high demand, they keep returning for exclusive performances and one final album.  They officially disbanded in 2020 sadly, but Mathias’ legacy lives on.  

  1. Kobi Farhi- Orphaned Land

I have always been enchanted by Middle Eastern vocals since Sting’s  “Desert Rose”.  It’s never been a style I thought “oh, that would work in Metal”, but it absolutely does.  Kobi Farhi of the Israeli Heavy Metal band proves the unique technique fits the Western Heavy Metal instrumentation.  This singing style, Mizahi or monotonic,  requires a lot of control and technique to stay in pitch.  His ability to switch into this and keep it perfectly within the music is spectacular.  He is truly one of the most talented male singers out there.

  1. Spencer Sotelo- Periphery

I could write an entire article about this vocalist and his range.  I didn’t expect to become obsessed with his voice as it is a lot higher than I am usually into.  Spencer has insane control over his instrument, able to switch from screams to falsetto to a softer vocal.  He also has a nu-metal style fry rap in “Marigold” which is just sublimely executed.  He’s effortless in his delivery, as with  most singers on this list.  His range also frequently rises to harmonics, which is one of the highest sectors in music.  He is an unbelievably skilled vocalist and truly doesn’t get enough credit.

  1. Jeff Scott Soto- Sons of Apollo, Yngwie, Trans Siberian Orchestra.

I only see this guy talked about in Prog channels and not more globally honored for some reason.  Soto has a unique style that blends 90’s Hard Rock, Power Metal, and Soul aspects into one powerhouse vocal.  Sons of Apollo is an American supergroup of some of the most talented musicians of all time.  Soto fits this bill and the resounding emotive Heavy Metal style.  He brings the melody so smoothly on top of very rhythmic music, which is hard to do.  He has a massive range from Baritone to high screams, and I don’t think there’s a limit to it. 

  1. Terje Haroy- Pyramaze

Now, I know 99% of Metal listeners have never heard of Terje, making him one of the most unknown on the list, but he is a MUST hear vocalist.  The power, the emotion, the clarity, and the grit of this singer is monolithic.  He produces so much sound from just one held note.   I have no idea how he pushes it to the limit while staying in perfect pitch.  His vocals range from deep drones, to power belting, screams, and sounds I cannot even begin to describe.  Pyramaze has been around for two decades and has been led by some amazing vocalists, but this guy is on a whole other level.  His vocal energy could probably power the entirety of North America.   The song below is one of the best vocal performances I have ever heard in my twenty two years of listening to Metal. 

  1. Markus Vanhala- Insomnium, Omnium Gatherum

A backing vocalist normally known for his songwriting and guitar playing, doesn’t get much credit as a vocalist.  But when Markus’s clean vocals come in, it sets the whole tone for any track.  You know it’s going to be a deeply emotional track when Markus sings.  His tonal quality and breath control is astounding to me.  He can hold notes for two measures without any vibrato or notational deviation.  I had to include him because he is just so distinctive and such an underrated musician.  After hearing him sing live in person twice, I have been in love with his clean vocals ever since.  He could honestly front a band all on his own instead of being in the background.  

  1. Yannis Papadopoulos- Beast in Black

One of the craziest voices I’ve ever heard (besides Mark Slaughter) Yannis has what is best described as a Soprano Male Vocal.  He is only one of the only males I’ve mistaken as a female, and that definitely makes an interesting reaction.  After hearing this guy do operatic soprano, fry vocals, and crazy high screams, I never thought I’d hear him use a more beautiful and emotive vocal.  Once you hear Floor Jansen sing “Ghost Love Score”, you may say it is the only version, but I highly recommend Yannis’ beautiful cover of the Power Ballad.  He has immense range and one of the highest technical abilities I have ever heard.  I think he’s one of those singers that could sing just about anything.  So,  I really want a covers album from this incredible Norwegian Power Metal band.

Honorable Mentions

JB- Grand Magus

Dino Jelusick- Trans Siberian  Orchestra/Whitesnake

PelleK

Andrew Kingsley- Unleash the Archers, Sleeper Ship

Fang VonWrathenstein- Lords of the Trident

Todd La Torre-  Queensryche

Tommy Giles- Between the Buried and Me

Rou Reynolds- Enter Shikari

Who did I miss this time?  Who are your favorite male vocalists?

Disclaimer: This article is written based on my opinions.  It is not meant to be taken as a factual research paper.  

New Music Friday from Seven Kingdoms





Seven Kingdoms in Canada

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

A Metal Insight to 2015

2015 brings in a whole new year of Metal to look forward to as many bands have already announced new releases as well as amazing tours.  After an exploding year of Metal in 2014, I’m guessing this ever diverse musical genre can only get better.  Whether you like Death, Thrash, Symphonic, or Black there’s probably going to be a release for you in the next coming year.  I say this because the genre has recently grown exponentially, adding thousands of all new bands and a resurgence of Metal popularity.  Also, old classics are coming back strong this year, which means a ton of new music for everyone in the new year.   There are negative sides to it growing and getting more recognition however, as Black Veil Brides is still alive and decently thriving.   Below I will list and expand on some releases and tours that you can look forward to that don’t involve your typical Emo-Rock boy bands.

 

Dark Tranquility With Insomnium North American Tour

 

In late December, Dark Tranquility announced a North American tour with Finnish Melodic Death Metal band, Insomnium.  The tour has already embarked but you can check out the remaining dates below.  I have seen both bands live before and highly suggest them one hundred percent.

 

Kamelot with Dragonforce North American tour

 

A night of Power Metal at its best, what more do you want in 2015?  Kamelot are also currently in production of a new album, sadly without much detail yet.  Check out tour dates below.

 

http://enterthevault.com/artist.php?id=47

Nightwish Endless Forms Most Beautiful, NA Tour With Sabaton/Delain

 

2015 is set to be the biggest year for Nightwish since the release of Imaginaerum in 2011, with a brand new album with a new vocalist and a new drummer, but also a massive North American tour.  Nightwish is easily the most revered Symphonic Metal band of all time, so the wait for a new album has been seemingly long.  “Endless Forms Most Beautiful” is said to utilize the softer and beautiful intricacies of Floor Jansen’s vocals.  The title is inspired by a quote from Charles Darwin’s The Origin of Species. The album is also said to have a whole new sound that we’ve never heard from the band.  From the “Making Of” videos for the new album, you can see how hard Tuomas worked to make the new album and truly put everything he had into it.  The entire band has a level of musicianship that is unmatched, so I honestly expect nothing less than a total masterpiece from this album.

 

Nightwish are also embarking on a month long North American tour upon the release of their new album.  This tour is all over the country and features two of the best metal bands right now, Power Metal band Sabaton and Gothic Symphonic Metal band Delain.  There is not going to be a better European tour in the US this year, so I highly recommend buying your tickets as soon as possible. Do not miss this tour.

 

http://nightwish.com/en/news

 

http://enterthevault.com/

 

Battle Beast Unholy Savior  

 

Finnish Female Fronted Power Metal band, Battle Beast, is back in 2015 with new traditional influenced album.  “Unholy Savior” comes out early, January 13th to be exact.  The album features a broader range of styles and different emotional influences than previous albums.  Guitarist and writer Anton wanted to go farther on his “spiritual journey” of music and expand the horizons of Battle Beast’s sound.

 

The Track listing for UNHOLY SAVIOR will be as follows:

 

  1. Lionheart
  2. Unholy Savior
  3. I Want The World….And Everything In It
  4. Madness
  5. Sea Of Dreams
  6. Speed And Danger
  7. Touch In The Night
  8. The Black Swordsman
  9. Hero’s Quest
  10. Far Far Away
  11. Angel Cry

 

http://www.battlebeast.fi/

Sylosis Dormant Heart

Progressive Death Metal band Sylosis are back in 2015 with a crazy technical and shredding album “Dormant Heart”.  With a new drummer, Ali Richardson from DevilDriver, the band aims to come back heavier and darker than ever.  The album drops January 17th via Nuclear Blast Records, but you can preorder it still on their site.

 

http://sylosis.com/

Blind Guardian Beyond the Red Mirror

German Power Metal band are releasing their 10th studio album January 30th, 2015.  “A story between science fiction and fantasy,” explains Blind Guardian vocalist and lyricist Hansi Kürsch. “The story begins with our 1995 album, Imaginations from the Other Side. The two worlds described therein have changed dramatically for the worse since then. While there used to be several passages between the worlds, there is only one gate left now: The Red Mirror. It has to be found at any cost.”  It is their first release in five years and is highly anticipated, because of its recent high mark reviews from Blabbermouth and other popular sites.  For the hardcore fans of Power Metal I can say that this album will be everything you expect from Blind Guardian, no tricks or frills here.

 

Halestorm

 

If you caught any of Halestorm’s studio diary videos or their recent live shows, you know they’ve got a screamer of an album coming very soon this year.  You also know the band is teasing the new album picture by picture, purposely torturing the fans.  The reveal however is set for January 13th.  There are no more details beyond the date and song titles.  Check out more below.

 

http://www.halestormrocks.com/11315

 

http://www.blabbermouth.net/news/halestorms-lzzy-hale-on-upcoming-album-its-very-organic-and-unapologetically-us/

Bands in Production

 

Kamelot

Deftones

Soilwork

Fear Factory

Decide

Five Finger Death Punch

Stone Sour

Symphony X

Dimmu Borgir

Soulfly

Paradise Lost

For a full comprehensive list of heavy metal releases go here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2015_in_heavy_metal_music

Nightwish Announce New Single For 2015

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Nightwish are coming back in a big way in 2015, with new single Elan on February 13th, 2015.  Tuomas wrote a summary for the track,

“Oh, while I live to be the ruler of life, Not a slave
To meet life as a powerful conqueror, and nothing exterior to me will ever take command of me.”

– Walt Whitman

Commented NIGHTWISH keyboardist and songwriter Tuomas Holopainen: “This beautiful quote from my hero Uncle Walt was the starting point for writing ‘Élan’. The underlying theme of the song is nothing less than the meaning of life, which can be something different for all of us. It´s important to surrender yourself to the occasional ‘free fall’ and not to fear the path less travelled by. ‘Élan’ is a wonderful teaser for the full-length album, giving out a little taste, but revealing very little of the actual Journey of Grandeur to come…”

There are no real clues to how the single might sound yet, but it can be nothing short of amazing considering the musicians involved.  Floor Jansen brings in a new era for Nightwish, and whether you like it or not she’s the perfect vocalist for the band.

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