I Feel the Everblack Festering Within Me by Lorna Shore Review 2025

Full disclaimer, I am not the biggest Deathcore fan or Death Metal fan. My knowledge on this music is limited compared to other sub genres of Metal. I love heavy, extreme, brutal music for the most part, but don’t often seek out Deathcore. Like many people, Lorna Shore is an exception however. I feel that Lorna Shore’s “To The Hellfire” is one of the most iconic Metal songs in two decades. This song is responsible for so many people getting in to this type of music, as evident on the comments on YouTube on the song and the Reaction videos. It’s not very often a Metal band goes viral for a good song, and Lorna Shore did this emphatically. That puts Lorna Shore in a very unique position in Extreme Metal or Deathcore to be on the world’s biggest stages. What they’ve done for the longevity of Metal is unprecedented. Between some of the most epic music we’ve ever heard and wholesome fan interactions that rival any VIP Experience, this band has a microscope put upon them by millions. This level of success has never been possible for this kind of music before Lorna Shore. I feel like there’s too many reasons to name to get into this band, even if they’re not typically your style of music. Their heartfelt, personal, uncensored, vulnerable lyrics combined with unrivaled technicality and an immersive ambience of descending into ethereal hell worlds is an experience like no other on the planet. Lorna Shore combines the lightness, the sensitivity and grandeur sounds of Classical Music with the most brutal Speed riffs and demonic sounds in a seemingly impossible feat. I don’t even know how this level of music is mixed, balanced, or played live on a regular basis. It’s like Dimmu Borgir, Death, Strapping Young Lad, and Vivaldi had a cursed offspring that bloomed into something beautiful. Whatever genre or style Lorna Shore is, it’s completely unexpected and so locked in that there’s nothing like it..

I wasn’t a fan of Pain Remains as much. Maybe I wasn’t in the right headspace to appreciate it, or maybe I just didn’t understand it. In time, I will probably come to love it when I come back around to it. My expectations for this new album were low. Heavy Music feels like it’s on a lull to me; most of it sounds like bands just going through the motions or heavy for the sake of being heavy with no purpose other than shock and brutal-ism. So the last thing I wanted was a Lorna Shore record in this point in time. I didn’t expect to like it or be able to even get through this album. “I Feel the Everblack Festering Within Me” is not even a shred of what I expected in the best way possible. I don’t review albums anymore unless it’s something innovative or thought provoking, and of course Lorna Shore achieved a spot on my blog. “I Feel the Everblack Festering Within Me” is an insane journey of sonic excellence. This album has everything I want in a Metal record, but at the highest level. The symphonic sounds are perfectly layered with the guitars from the incomparable Adam De Micco, who I think is one of the greatest guitarists of all time. The synths and orchestration is done by guitarist/bassist Andrew O’Connor and he did an impeccable job at it. The orchestration rivals any Symphonic Metal band in thirty years, and I mean that as a huge Symphonic Metal buff. I find “I Feel the Everblack Festering Within Me” to be more melodic and anthemic than any of their previous releases. Songs like Unbreakable, Glenwood, and Forevermore are gigantic songs that feel deserved of being played with a full orchestra and choir at Plovdiv or Sydney Opera House. Everywhere you think the album could go, it strafes and goes even grander. I am truly blown away by this album, which hasn’t happened this year by many releases for me. I never expected a Lorna Shore album to have a Celtic or Tolkien vibe to it. It works. The different sound to it freshens Lorna Shore’s sound in a way I didn’t expect. Listening to “I Feel the Everblack Festering Within Me” is an exhilarating and inspiring experience from beginning to end. There’s not a weak track. It is the most epic battle music. Every member is peak on this album. You will not be disappointed even as a first time listener. This is by far one of the greatest albums of the year and shockingly perfect from a band continually reinventing itself. Lorna Shore pushed every boundary, every theme, every ounce of their being with this album. Austin Archey on drums is always perfect, but this album is an unbelievable feat of Extreme Metal drumming that rivals anything else. He is a drummer for the ages. He doesn’t just blast, he utterly destroys laws of human anatomy and physics on every song. I cannot express how incredible he is. If nothing else, just listen to the drums on this record.

Overall, I do think this is Lorna Shore’s best album yet. It’s the most fully immersive and complete release I’ve heard since Ramos joined the band. Some of his demon noises get a bit repetitive and don’t really add much, but the technicality and uniqueness is surely a novelty. I think this album sets itself apart from any heavy record of the year, because it’s not just heavy for shock and awe. This level of brutality is well thought out, intentional, and meaningful. It is not for attention, it’s for art. It’s like the utter despair and pain Dante Alighieri’s Divine Comedy expressed in Extreme Metal form. It’s all class, no filler, and fantastic composition. If you’re a reader of this blog, you know how much I love “Wall of Sound” production style, and this album nails that completely deep and wide listening experience. The wall is an infinite abyss. It is a cacophony, and I absolutely love it. It doesn’t get any better than “I Feel the Everblack Festering Within Me” in 2025. This is a huge album of the year contender for me. No spoilers, but Forevermore might be one of my favorite songs of all time.

Links:

https://centurymedia.store/pages/lorna-shore-i-feel-the-everblack-festering-within-me

https://lornashoreband.com/

https://lornashoreband.com/pages/about

https://www.facebook.com/LornaShore

https://www.instagram.com/lornashore/

“The Immortal” by Swedish Melodic Death Metal Band In Mourning Review 2025

The Immortal out August 29th, 2025 via Supreme Chaos Records and Dalapop

In Mourning is one of the most underrated bands on the planet. The Swedish Death Metal group has created albums that are forever burned in the fans’ memories. Albums like The Weight of Oceans (2012) mix Melodeath, Progressive, and Gothic elements to create a truly unique listening experience. This is a band I think everyone should pay more attention to, especially with the rising popularity of Insomnium and In Flames. If you dislike the more mainstream direction In Flames has taken, maybe In Mourning can be your new Melodeath favorites. Although, In Mourning do not sound like anyone else to me. They are distinct. Three vocalists, all playing different guitar riffs and licks, and a Prog minded drummer all set In Mourning apart to me. They still have epic guitar solos as well, which is a great deviation from Modern Metal’s lack of guitar eloquence. The Swedish SadBois are back in 2025, but does the new album live up to their previous releases?

In Mourning have finally unleashed “The Immortal” after waiting four years and little teasers. “The Immortal” is everything you’d expect from a Melodeath album, and even more special coming from In Mourning. This album is a special experience. If you’re driving through the mountains in pitch black darkness with reckless abandon and the winter doldrums setting in, “The Immortal” is 47 minutes of soundtrack. It is not just an album, a collection of In Mourningesque ideas; The Immortal is a soundscape, laying out so much material and influences. They return to their roots, so you know it’s authentic, but it is not formulaic. It builds, it ebbs and flows, and it chugs. I had high expectations, but honestly didn’t expect to like this album as much. There’s something up with Me and Metal music this year. I am just continually disappointed with new releases. In Mourning has broken the lull for me.

“The Sojourner” is an instant classic Melodeath track for me. This song has everything I want from In Mourning, the Progressiveness, the longing feeling, the technical solo, the soulful clean vocals: It’s perfection. “Song of the Cranes” is just as good and a track with even more soul crushing depth. Each song stands on its own, but they all have the same moodiness and driving beat that ties it all together. If you’re a recovering Ghost Brigade fan, this album is the closest thing you will get to GB in 2025. “Moonless Sky” is all I love about Melodeath. It is an ode to the bands that have come before them, and a cementing outline of what In Mourning will continue to create. The emotion in this band is nearly unparalleled in 2025. I haven’t heard many heavy releases that really resonated with me this year, but In Mourning smashed the walls down and made me believe in Metal again this year. They go from emotional and moody atmospheric track “Moonless Sky” to Death Metal smasher “Staghorn”. That’s one of the most surprising moments in music for me this year. This song, as well as the rest of the album is so easy to get lost in. That’s what I expect from Metal. I expect an all encompassing, emotionally driving, unique artistic listening experience. I expect the highest level of catharsis. “The Immortal” hits these notes profoundly with each song. Of course, In Mourning always achieves these points on every release, but “The Immortal” packs a serious Death Metal edge that is so very satisfying.

“North Star” is a true tear jerker of an epic Melodeath song, reminding me so much of Insomnium in all the best ways, but even more satisfyingly heavy. The guitars are so tight. The chemistry in this band rivals old Dark Tranquility and Belakor for me. Each element feels so meticulously planned and thought out, but not over produced. It’s tight and clean, but not bloated like so much Metal is for me today. This album could’ve come out in 2010, because of its sheer precision and unfiltered emotion. It doesn’t have 500 layers of Pro Tools edited guitar tracks with huge compression or reverb. It sounds like In Mourning right off the board, which is exactly what I have always loved about them. Yes okay, maybe the songs become a bit predictable after awhile and you know when the instrumentals and soft parts are coming. But there is a “my comfort album” element here to immerse yourself into. It’s just absolutely solid Melodeath and no bullshit.

“The Immortal” closes with one of the best songs on the album, “The Hounding”. It is a blazing Death Metal track with blast beats, Black Metal worthy screams and chilling guitars, and atmospheric elements. What holds this song, and the entire band together is undoubtedly the drums. While they’ve changed drummers from one of my favorite drummers, Joakim Strandberg-Nilsson, now with Dark Tranquility, to Cornelius Althammer, there’s no difference in the Progressive Metal influence that stands out to me. “The Hounding” absolutely sold me on Cornelius Althammer and I am very impressed by his speed.

Overall, “The Immortal” is objectively a great album. The tracks standalone. While the album starts out a bit slow and predictable, it builds and becomes truly great. It will take a few listens to soak it all in, especially if you’re in an over stimulated state like I am these days. The album is worth replays and I think it holds up fairly well to In Mourning’s previous releases. It is nowhere as epic as previous ventures, but it is still surprising and enjoyable. If you like Melodeath, I think this album hits all the right Sadboi goodness. If you don’t like Melodeath, I am not really sure if this is an album to change your mind. If you’ve never heard In Mourning, start with “Song of the Cranes” and then listen to the rest of this album.

LINKS;

https://inmourning.bandcamp.com/

https://www.discogs.com/artist/1830039-In-Mourning

https://www.facebook.com/inmourningband/

“Coda” Novelists Review 2025

Progressive Metalcore entered my diverse music catalog in 2020 during COVID.  I was introduced to Periphery upon suggestion by the one and only Devin Townsend.  Devin had worked with Perriphery’s studio bassist and songwriter Nolly Getgood for the DTP’s Transcenjdence.  Periphery came up on Twitter, and Devin said they were one of the best Prog bands today, if my memory serves me right.  I was immersed in the world of Prog Metalcore, and never looked back.  This led me to discover some of my favorite songs and albums.  Spiritbox’s Eternal Blue entered my radar and utterly took over my listening habits for three months.  I also became a huge fan of ERRA, Volumes, Currents, Make Them Suffer, and eventually the French band Novelists in 2021.  Novelists was a huge discovery for me.  They seemed to stand out, much like Spiritbox, but had this Jazz tone to the guitars and song structure that mentally clicked.  The clean vocals weren’t my favorite in the genre, but the musicianship in Novelists was and is undeniable.  You can imagine that when they debuted “Okapi” in 2024, my love for this band skyrocketed to new heights.  I didn’t expect to love Novelists like this, but they became one of my most played bands of all time.  The addition of Camille Contreras has brought this band to the peak of excellence for me.  There are a lot of bands in the genre, but Novelists dare to be different with Pop genre blending and gorgeous Jazz and Blues guitar solos.

Coda is one of my most anticipated albums in 2025, and also just in my entire life.  After so many years of reviewing albums and having expectations or preconceived notions, I have abandoned it completely.  My bias is turned off.  I aim to experience each album individually without comparison or objectivity.  Coda lends itself to blowing all expectations and ideals about modern music out of the water.  Abandon everything you expect from Novelists.  Abandon everything you think about Modern Metal.  It is part Progressive Metalcore, it’s part Radio Rock, and it’s part Ariana Grande in all the best ways.  Experiencing this album for the first two times while I’m writing this review is one of the most titillating and enlightening experiences I’ve had.  This album isn’t defined by past releases.  It is not defined by genre or comparison.  This album could and should be on any listening or sales chart.  It is heart-wrenching, pulse-pounding, moody, aggressive, and beautiful.  It’s full of catchiness and cool nuances that make it feel sleek and modern, but the vocals are so classic in a ’90s R&B tone.  It’s an eclectic mix of sounds and influences.  It has a Spiritbox feel with the atmospheric airiness and the layered guitar tracks for texture.  But the song structure and vocals are unlike anything I have ever heard in my life.  Coda stands out from any album I have heard, while remaining relevant to the Metal scene.

Coda abandons constructed genres.  Say My Name is a punchy Prog Rock track with light and airy vocals and smooth guitars, definitely a welcome breath to be played on any radio station.  The guitar work on this song is visionary, as well as on every song on Coda.  The title track is a Metalcore-centric piece which fits the classic Novelists sound, but with the most gorgeous soaring vocals they’ve ever had.  This track is genial to me, it just works so well in structure and hooks the listener in.  All For Nothing is more atmospheric, more extreme, from soft to hard.  It shows the incredible range of this band and the expansiveness of Camille’s voice.  Her screams and cleans have exponentially improved and add much-needed dynamics to the record.  Maldición de la Bruja is a Spanish track in your face with sass, attitude, and a Rap breakdown exquisitely delivered by multi-lingual Camille. This song is a surprising gem of heaviness and groove.  In Heaven is a very heartfelt, atmospheric track with a million layers to dissect.  This is such a departure from previous albums.  I have never heard vocals this open or toned in Metal.  The vocals combined with the djenty rhythmic guitar and bass remind me so much of Voyager and Periphery.  This may be one of their best songs to date. Flo and Pierre are two of the best guitarists in Modern Metal, and Coda is a gigantic testament to that.

My favorite track on the album is Sleepless Nights.  The way this song flows is fantastic.  It is one of the most satisfying songs with a build-up.  It feels like the burdens and pain are lifting off your shoulders.  The guitar work is sublime, especially all the tasty bends and runs.  It scratches my brain, but it is also chicken soup for the soul.  It is a perfect blend of a breakup song and Prog and Modern Metal.  The guitar parts are just so addictive on this song, as well as Camille’s impossibly smooth vocals.  The bridge has one of the longest-held pitch-perfect notes I have ever heard in my life.  The build into the solo is one of the finest pieces of music of 2025.  The final chorus opens up, and Camille just belts with pure emotion.  God, I love her voice, and I love this song.  And, I love how it continues with 78 rue to send the theme of ends with the album.  This is smart songwriting.  The album’s closer K.O., sends the message home of being torn into pieces and thrust into the darkest moments of your life, and then trying to come back out of it.  This is another favorite of mine on the record, and it’s just such an emotional track about having to let go.  Novelists do build-ups like no other, and K.O. is such a great example.

Coda is a fantastically personal album from a band that is reinventing itself.  Novelists have come out of their shells.  The purity is as crisp as music gets.  The technicality is mind-blowing.  The song structure keeps you guessing at every turn.  Regardless of genre, this is one of my favorite albums of the year and of the 2020s.  This is a must-hear album for Metal lovers and Pop music lovers alike.  This could be an album that runs people onto completely new music, and that is an incredible feat.  I think Novelists have achieved everything they wanted to do with this album.  It is a treat to hear such diverse and fantastic vocals in Metalcore, which sometimes lacks in vocal range for me.  The band’s technicality is truly like anything I’ve ever heard.  The speed of these musicians while maintaining clarity is unmatched.  It’s not Djent with muddy tones or down-tuned just for the heaviness.  Coda is crisp, clean, heavy, and vastly interesting compared to 99% of everything I’ve heard this year. I love this record and hope people give it a fair chance, as it deserves.

Store: https://www.novelists.store/home

My Favorite Metal Albums of All Time: Part Four

Here we are at Part Four of this blog series.  It’s blazing by.  Even though it seems like a lot of work, it’s going by fast, and I am still enjoying writing it.  This blog/site is much more enjoyable now that I get to share personal taste, rather than technical reviews of new albums.  Reviews are useful for promotion, and I still enjoy doing “mini reviews”.  But sharing personal experiences feels much more rewarding and authentic.  I feel like these lists of my favorite albums make it easier to understand my taste if I wish to return to reviews.  However, after completing these lists and other writing projects, including my first book, I may be taking a sabbatical from writing.  This sabbatical will be to pursue other projects such as music, an Instagram page of hobbies, and video projects.  I haven’t decided.  I am not sure what the rest of the year holds for me.  My family and I plan on moving to the city for better access to amenities, healthcare, and shows!  So, that may take up most of my time.  I can’t wait to see where this year takes me.  I am open to any positive change.  It has been an immensely challenging ten years for my family and me, and we are ready to make the changes needed to improve our lives.  None of that will be done without music, however.  And, I don’t plan to ever stop writing about music and sharing my passion in the most genuine way possible.

So, here are the next ten albums of my favorite Heavy Metal albums of all time.  As with any post, taste is subjective.  I am not aiming to list the greatest albums of all time.  These are my favorite albums.  These albums are inherent to my life through memories tied to them.  Music should always make you feel something.  Seek out poignant, deeply resonating, and impactful music that isn’t just about dancing the night away or leaving your significant other.  If you need fun music with lighthearted energy, I get it.  I listen to it, too, especially while writing romantic arcs in my books and stories.  But when it comes to music with depth, Metal is my home to find cerebral, philosophical, and empathetic music.  There’s nothing that resonates more with me than Metal music.  Maybe if more people realize the power of heavy music and Metal, the world will be a kinder and caring place.  Anything that forces you to think differently and see outside of yourself is important.  I recommend listening to these albums at least once in your life.  Who knows, one of these albums could change your life, as they have utterly changed mine for the better.

21. Beyond- Omnium Gatherum (2013)

As a fan of Melodic Death Metal, it’d be expected to see At the Gates or In Flames on this list.  As I said in the intro, conventional is not my jam.  While I love those bands and appreciate their contribution to the genre, I have to go with another band for my top thirty.  Omnium Gatherum is a band I could listen to their music for an entire month and not tire of it.  Having the pleasure of seeing this band live four times now, their energy is unmatched in Melodeath.  They bring a completely different atmosphere to a typically nihilistic or melancholy sub genre.  Gothenburg Melodeath was a huge revelation for me in my metal journey.  This genre is unlike anything else ever created.  With bands like Arch Enemy, Insomnium, The Haunted, early Carcass, Dark Tranquility, and more, this genre is a cornucopia of offerings and moods.  Omnium Gatherum is like the sun in an otherwise nocturne arena of music.   They’re a breadth of ambiance, speed, and empowerment.  Other bands of the genre are desolate and decimate your emotions, transporting you to the deep, snowy forests of Scandinavia and Finland.  Omnium transports you to places in the skies, the embrace of a long-lost loved one, and the warmth of a fire.  These positive and emotive themes are more my style these days.  While I enjoy and require the catharsis that dark, angry, and depressive music can only provide, uplifting music creates a balance in my listening habits that is extremely beneficial.  Some days, you need battle music or sounds that lift you to conquer whatever you’re dreading.  Omnium Gatherum provides that vehemently.  

Beyond is an album that is difficult to describe.  The album is cavernous in emotion and soaring sounds, and some of the deepest gutturals on the planet.  I would’ve never thought Melodeath could be innately soulful.  Beyond has more heart than most typical Metal records, and Markus Vanhala is the blood that fuels that heart.  His melodic presence on the guitar is unmatched.  He creates melodies that stick in your head for months while balancing the heaviness and Speed Metal themes.  He is forever on my favorite guitarist list.  His tone, his phrasing, and his ability to let the music breathe and not overwhelm it are all spectacular qualities I love about Vanhala.  I also enjoy his clean vocals.  There is something deeply profound and gratifying about the guitars, synths, and overall sonic atmosphere on Beyond.  It definitely sounds as if you’ve ascended to heaven and are attempting to make peace with what you’ve left behind.  It also combines the 80s synths of Rush’s Moving Pictures and modern Melodeath and speed metal all in one raw package.  I absolutely love the airiness of this record.  It is immensely heavy but extremely beautiful.  There’s a romanticism to Omnium Gatherum’s music that shines on this album.  It’s a sound I can easily get lost in.  It’s immersive.  It doesn’t get choppy or repetitive.  It smoothly flows from track to track.  The composition is peak.  The little instrumental pre-choruses and verse intros to bridges are masterful, and not a common construction in today’s music.  

The personal connection I have with this album, yet again, goes back to spending time with my older brother.  This is an album we would put on repeat whilst driving to concerts, playing video games, making art, or just working in the same room.  Every time I went to stay at his house between 2013 and 2016, it seemed like we had this album on.  I don’t know what it is about this band, but they’ve always brought us together.  The memory we still joke about to this day is when we first saw Omnium Gatherum at the Bluebird Theater in Denver, Colorado.  I had come to his house the day before Friday, and he was working a half day.  He wanted to show me a game before we left to go to the concert.  We had this album playing, of course, and it was on the epic last track, White Palace, when his PC suddenly hard locked, and the sound of Jukka’s signature Cookie Monster-like growl was stuck on repeat.  It created an unforgettable cacophony of Death Metal growls that is irreplicable and utterly hilarious.  I laughed for months about this horrifying sound of a computer dying to the soundtrack of Omnium Gatherum.  Since then, we’ve seen Omnium three more times, and each time we’ve screamed “White Palace” right before the band comes on. It is one of our many music-related inside jokes that I will never forget. 

Favorite songs: New Dynamic, In The Rim, Who Could Say,  The Unknowing

22. Zenith- Seven Kingdoms (2022)

Seven Kingdoms is one of my favorite bands of all time for their speedy technicality, throwback 80s sound, and uniquely emotional Power Metal.  This Florida-based band has blended Symphonic, Power, Heavy Metal, Speed Metal, and Hair Metal with Game of Thrones-inspired lyrics since 2007.  It was 2009 when powerhouse vocalist Sabrina Cruz joined the band as lead vocalist and made the band completely soar.  They signed to Napalm Records for their second album, first with Sabrina at the helm, and the self-titled album was something truly different from anything we’d ever heard before.  Seven Kingdoms brings a flair that is unique in the “New Wave of Femme Metal”, which is overrun by a lot of Symphonic Metal with technicality and orchestral elements, but not as much heart.  Seven Kingdoms got out from under the pretenses of their contract with Napalm Records after 2017, and this is when the band shot into my radar.  This gave them complete control and freedom over the music they truly wanted to make.  This led the band to go crowdfunding the making of their albums and pay for big tours with Powerwolf, Unleash The Archers, and headlining tours.  Seven Kingdoms’ story is harrowing and awe-inspiring to me.  My respect for this band is “Neverending”, and the incredible quality of Zenith in 2022 only made my love for this band grow exponentially.

Zenith is an epic Space Heavy Metal record with insane technicality, speedy dueling guitars, and quality soaring vocals that you cannot get anywhere else.  This album is an absolute workhorse.  It pummels with riff after riff and hook after hook, unapologetically nodding to the 1980s while adding modern twists.  This band has immense energy.  It’s completely tangible and infectious.  From start to finish, this album is a supernova of emotive vocals and dynamic riffs.  This album is literally a monument to how hard this band has worked.to get back from a low point in Power Metal and personal strife.   Power Metal has taken a lot of hits from the Metal community over the past decade for being “trite”, “cheesy”, or “formulaic”.  The fixation on the elitism of sub genres is truly mystifying to me.  Seven Kingdoms isn’t simply just a Power Metal band, and the sub genre is as fantastic as it has ever been because of them.  This album has a little bit of everything and dares to break all the rules of Modern Metal.  It’s not a chugging, down-tuned, incoherent sound; It’s huge Arena sounds with no filler and no filter.  It’s refreshing after so much Deathcore and Metalcore to come back to clean Power Metal with no bull.  Variety is key to my listening habits, and Zenith is a cornucopia of different influences and sounds.  It ranges from Proggy Power Metal, to speed metal, to space-age Star One style, to 1980s Arena Metal.  I love every song on this record individually, and together, it creates a one-of-a-kind listening experience.

 Zenith is a record for anyone who’s fallen to their lowest point and is trying to climb out. It is incredibly impactful, and that is definitely due to Sabrina Cruz’s incredibly powerful vocals.  Her delivery is soul-deep with intent and fantastic diction.  Every word is sung with power and feels heavy coming out of the singer’s lungs.  There’s something immensely profound about the way Sabrina sings that is unlike anything I’ve ever heard in Metal.  She has a twang to her voice that reminds me of 1970s Southern Rock, giving a homey, comforting feel to the music.  This quality sets them apart and catches your ear upon the first note.  She is one of the favorite vocalists of all time, regardless of genre.  There’s nobody like her, and there’s nothing quite like Seven Kingdoms.   Hopefully, Power Metal comes back in a big way, and Seven Kingdoms is carrying the torch.  This band deserves 110% more recognition than they receive, and I am hoping in time, more people will discover this diamond of a band.

Favorite songs: Love Dagger, Diamond Handed, A Silent Remedy

23. The Black Album- Metallica (1991)

Yes, I chose Metallica’s “sell-out” album for my favorite Metal album list.  Predictable for a ’90s kid?  Maybe so.  Nostalgia or number of plays aside, The Black album or Self-Titled album is always going to be one of my favorite Metal Records.  The notion of a made-up concept of “selling out” is one I have never believed in when it comes to the world of Heavy Music.  Heavy music since the fall of Hair Metal in the late 80s/early 90s has struggled to find huge commercial success for the most part.  Metallica has stayed successful because of their ability to create the Metal people want to listen to.  It’s the Metal we grew up with in a shinier, more compact package without bloat or flashiness.  If they dropped the raw Thrashiness of their sound like on Master of Puppets, then so be it.  No band can be successful without reinvention, it’s not possible.  I never wanted a part two of their older records.  I’ve never been a huge fan of Thrash Metal and despise the elitism the genre’s fans have created around it.  The Black Album is a perfect mix of Thrash, classic Metallica sounds, and a 90s Heavy Metal sound that set it apart from Grunge, which was huge at the time.  To me, Metallica didn’t sell out.  They did what they’ve always done; they dared to be different and were heard by the masses with emotive Heavy Metal.  And, it worked well.  Maybe it’s because I was probably listening to this album before I was even born, when my mom was still carrying me.  Maybe it’s because I rediscovered this album at the age of 13, and I learned some songs on my very first bass a year later.  But I love this album and always will have a soft spot for it, even though I barely listen to Metallica these days.

While I’ve grown out of Metallica in general, going back to this album and experiencing it again after 10 years is a refresher on my journey.  I’ve always loved metal, but this band was on a whole other level for me as a young kid.  Their live shows that got uploaded to YouTube were so influential to me.  I will never forget watching those with my cousins at all hours of the night in the summer.  We idolized this band, and they were the pinnacle of Metal to us then.  These were some of the first live Metal concerts I was exposed to.  Many firsts came for me with Metallica.  Their music just makes you feel unstoppable.  It’s powerful.  It’s a shot of testosterone.  It’s heavy, but also melodic and emotive.  It’s complex; not just your typical angry Thrash album, it’s meaningful to me personally.  It goes back as far as I can remember.  My brother and mom loved this album, and it was a part of the most formative years of my life.  I get chills every single time I listen to Nothing Else Matters.  This song is at the very core of what I love about Metal: the emotion and meaning that Metal can only harbor for me.  They dared to be vulnerable and soft.  They dared to be brash, heavy, and loud, and then completely melt you with ballads.  This mix is why I love Metal, and I don’t think I knew that until revisiting this album.  This album influenced me inherently, but also brought Heavy Metal back to the mainstream, and that contribution should never be taken lightly.  The Black Album has sold seven million copies domestically.

The instrumentation overall is fantastic on this record.  To me, this is Metallica’s tightest album.  They just sound like one heartbeat in perfect synchronization.  The Black Album was purged of all the lengthy instrumental parts and the attempts at speed metal in earlier albums.  I think if Metallica had switched drummers, maybe they would have progressed with the speedy Thrash influences.  Lars Ulrich is a basic beat drummer.  He is good at creating a pocket and a backbone, but speed and progression are not his strong suits.  The Black Album fits his style to a T.  I will never say he’s a bad drummer, because he never misses a beat and always keeps time even when Hammett is going off on his solos.  He may not be up to my ridiculously high standards, but The Black Album is flawless in the rhythm section.  My favorite part about this album is the bass.  Jason Newstead was tasked with the impossible role of Metallica’s bassist after the tragic loss of Cliff Burton in 1986.  He shines on this album.  My Friend Of Misery is one of my most influential bass lines of all time and one I still warm up with to this day.  I will never forget spending countless hours learning this album entirely on bass and cutting my chops as a heavier vocalist.

The Black album contributed to a lifetime of memories with friends and family members and influenced some of my favorite bands like Epica, The Warning, Parkway Drive, Eluveitie, Unleash the Archers,  and countless more.  I once again can appreciate this album is a whole new light and enjoy listening to it.

Favorite songs: The Struggle Within, Nothing Else Matters, My Friend of Misery

24. Dragonslayer- Dream Evil (2002)    

Dream Evil is another band from my early teen years.  I am not sure how, but my brother discovered them around the same time as Hammerfall and Lacuna Coil.  We had just moved back to Colorado from Arizona in 2004, two years after Dragonslayer came out.  This album was played heavily by my brother, and it still sits in his giant CD player in his truck.  If there’s a significant music memory worth writing down for me, you can almost always bet my brother, and driving around in his truck is a part of it.  There’s a story behind every album and song for me, as it is the way for most people, and that’s why music is so powerful.  It can become a part of an era of your life, or just a moment, or at a certain age.  This era for me was sound tracked by the bands my brother discovered in College as well as the Pop Punk I was exposed to on MTV and Fuse.  These bands were a huge comfort in a very chaotic and uncertain time in my life.  Looking back now, music is one of the only things besides movies that helped me feel comfortable in a new house, a new school, and new friends.  That’s a powerful connection that I didn’t even realize I had with music back then.  So, my music journey truly started when I was just eleven years old.  I’ve been emotionally attached to music a lot longer than expected.

Another band on this list from the Metal Mecca of Gothenburg, Sweden, Dream Evil is one of those essential Power Metal bands that have written Metal anthems.  Their song “The Book of Heavy Metal (March of the Metallians)” is a song featured in many intros for Wacken Open Air.  The legendary band was formed in 1999 by rhythm guitarist and main writer Fredrik Nordstrom, who quickly recruited the absolute beast of a lead guitarist, Gus G of Firewind.  While he was only in the band for nearly six years, he made his mark on the sensational sound that became Dream Evil.  If you don’t know who Gus G is, he is a virtuoso guitarist with NeoClassical influences and Yngwie meets EVH shredding.  He is one of my top twenty favorite guitarists of all time.  He has played on so many fantastic Metal albums, including a stint with the Metal God Ozzy Osbourne from 2009 to 2016, before launching his mega-successful solo career.  He attributed my favorite Dream Evil and Firewind records before the age of 20.  Gus was a huge influence on the success of Dream Evil, but what continued my love for them is lead singer Niklas Isfeldt.  Niklas’s vocal delivery is smooth, unwavering, and dynamic.  He is a storyteller, much like Dio, who is a huge influence on the band.  This is what makes Dream Evil a once-in-a-generation band.

Dragonslayer is an album that sounds exactly like the name and cover portray.  If you’re going on an epic quest to slay the dragon that’s been haunting your village for a century, or just battling an ungodly onslaught of rush hour traffic, this is an album you’d put on.  It is a soundtrack for the ages.  It is bombastic, energetic, and a nonstop barrage of riffs and crisp vocals.  This album is one of the few I would ever classify as a Masterpiece.  For me, this is one of the greatest Power Metal records ever created.  I consider it to be highly influential to today’s Power Metal because of its pristine production quality.  Not many records of that era had this level of meticulous mixing, and it meshes very well with my music OCD.  It sounds spectacular.  Every instrument is crystal clear and perfectly crunchy.  The bass is punchy.  The vocals occupy the midsection and meld well with tasteful choirs, reverb, and group vocals.  The drums are like an 1980s Arena Rock record, and it somehow works perfectly.  I love how damn good this album sounds.  The way it is engineered and written, it could’ve been released in 1985 or 2016, making it timeless in concept and sound.  I love the guitar work with tasteful but epic solos and crunchy driving rhythm.  Listening to this, I realize Seven Kingdoms reminds me of Dream Evil, and it makes me love both bands even more.  

Admittedly, the main reason I love Dragonslayer so much is a single song on the album. The Chosen Ones is one of my favorite songs of all time.  It mixes Symphonic Metal with Power, which is in my wheelhouse..  You add Niklas’s immense range and smoothness to it, and it just hits me in the gut every single time.  There’s a depth on this track that I hardly hear in Power Metal, let alone any genre of music.  It’s difficult to describe, but it’s as if a Knight has reserved himself to going to hell even after he saved his lands from a nasty dragon.  The emotion in it is so tangible, it takes you to the theme of the whole album and immerses you in it emphatically.  I love music that transcends time or reality and takes you to a fantasy land.  Dream Evil does that well with Dragonslayer.  I think it is a must-hear for any Heavy Metal Fan.

Favorite songs: The Chosen Ones, Save Us, The 7th Day

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25. Atoma- Dark Tranquility (2016)

As a Melodeath fan, it is impossible to leave Dark Tranquility off of a Favorite album list.  They are a quintessential band; maybe part of the “Big 4” of Melodeath.  Dark Tranquility began in 1989 under the name “Septic Broiler” until 1990 when they changed their name.  The name change was a brilliant move.  I don’t think I could ever feel the same way about a band called Septic Broiler as I feel about Dark Tranquility.  Their name reflects exactly how their music sounds.  Dark Tranquility started in Gothenburg, Sweden, along with fellow trailblazing bands of the genre In Flames, Arch Enemy, and At the Gates. This “Big 4” changed music forever with an entirely new and unique brand of Metal.  It combined Thrash, Hardcore, Melodic Metal, and Death Metal in an utterly decimating way.  Melodeath is one of the most emotive subgenres in the scene, and Dark Tranquility with Mikael Stanne is a large contributor.  This band has a song for everyone who’s experienced something beautiful, something tragic, and painful memories that everyone holds within them.  It is pure brutality in poetry, and there’s nothing else like it on the planet.  Dark Tranquility is a rare beast indeed, as it is so rare that I love every album in a band’s long catalogue.  Each of Dark Tranquility’s albums is a diamond in the rough with immense meaning and excellent writing. 

The band has had many lineup changes over the years.  Even the original iteration had Anders Friden of In Flames on vocals and Stanne on guitar.  My favorite iteration of the band contained original guitarist Niklas Sundin.  There’s something about Niklas’ Speed Metal guitars that just drives Dark Tranquility’s energy through the roof.  He is also a brilliant album cover artist, doing nearly every album for DT, many for In Flames, Eternal Tears of Sorrow, and over fifty other bands, as well as layouts for Arch Enemy.  Niklas is an incredibly artistic and introspective person.  His contribution to Dark Tranquillity from the beginning will never be forgotten, and I don’t think the band will ever be the same without him.  I loved the new albums without Nilkas, but for me, nothing will ever compare to the artistry and mastery of Atoma.

Atoma is a poetic masterpiece that hooked me from the beginning.  Original bassist and rhythm guitarist of the band, Martin Henriksson left the band a year before Atoma was released, marking a huge change in the band’s lineup.  I don’t know if this sad departure of Henriksson had anything to do with the exceptional bleakness of Atoma, but it feels like Dark Tranquility hit its stride here.  Atoma is a bleak outlook on the decline of value in humanity.  For me, it reflects the deep resentment humanity has developed for itself.  It marks a split for me where humans no longer value each other, and those remaining with empathy stand alone.  This album revived the depth and love for Melodeath, after so many bands had disappointing departures in sound.  This album proved that Dark Tranquility is forever.  They are inseparable, regardless of how many original members leave.  Stanne has a huge hand in this band’s momentous sound and ability to stay profound and current.  He is one of my favorite vocalists of all time and one of the most underrated lyricists in music.  His lyrics and vocals on Atoma will forever remain in my heart as one of the most important albums in my life.  To this day, this album appears in my dreams as a soundtrack to anything from the world ending, horrifying events, and falling in love.  This album is peak Melodeath to me, and will always be my favorite Dark Tranquillity album.

Favorite songs: Atoma, Encircled, Clearing Skies

26. Seasons- Sevendust (2003)

Sevendust has been a mainstay of American Metal since 1994, but has never received the recognition that other bands like Mudvayne, Korn, and Godsmack have.  They’ve only received one Grammy nomination in 30 years of great songwriting.  It is a complete mystery as to why Sevendust isn’t as consistently successful and hasn’t received awards for its unique blend of Rock and Metal.  This band is hard to nail down by critics, making it hard to put them in a box of subgenres.  I think that’s why this band hasn’t been a bombshell of commercial success.  They’re different from their peers.  You can’t compare Sevendust to anybody else. I don’t think anyone sounds like them, not even close.  They’re a once-in-a-lifetime band that has its own style that can’t be replicated.  Bands that dare to mix styles and genres and be themselves unapologetically are my bread and butter.  Sevendust is one of those bands that dares to be different, and mixes soulful vocals with deep rhythmic groove, and I just can’t get enough of it after twenty years of listening to this band.

2003’s Seasons is a Nu-Metal album with progressive and groove elements and a gorgeous tone.  After the Grunge and Post-grunge parade of toneless and needlessly twangy vocalists, Sevendust’s Lajon Witherspoon brought a gorgeous raw tone that heavy music was lacking.  This album is full of aggressive riffs, groovy drum beats, and gorgeous vocals.  Out of all the vocal performances on any album besides Evanescence’s Fallen, Seasons is undoubtedly my favorite.  Songs like Suffocate and Honesty highlight Lajon’s range, as well as the multi-part harmony Sevendust uses.  Clint Lowery’s songwriting is a mountain on this record, it rises so high it’s nearly out of reach.  The dark moodiness of it was incredibly heavy and desolate for the times.  It was a lot more emotionally impactful for me compared to the other records of the time.  Disgrace is especially soul-turning with the vocals and tension in the guitar work.  It’s exceptionally moving, and the outro is one of the most devastating pieces of music of the decade.  Apart from that, this album is impossible not to headbang to.  The pocket Morgan Rose creates is one of the best things in Metal, and the band just flows so smoothly into it.  All of their records possess this quality, but Seasons is a uniquely tight record that sets itself apart from anything of the era.  

Seasons may not be the best drum record in Sevendust’s catalog,  but Morgan Rose remains one of my favorite drummers of all time.  He effortlessly blends Progressive beats with immense groove.  He always keeps you guessing what he’s going to do next.  He’s one of the biggest parts of Sevendust’s unique sound.  As co-writer and perfectly harmonized backing vocalist, he crafted Sevendust’s eclectic mix and added well-delivered harsh vocals.  This is all crucial to every song, but Face To Face is particularly a shining moment for this accomplished musician.  Enemy is also a great, typical Morgan Rose track.  I have no idea why this guy hasn’t gone viral for his live performances.  He is one of the best drummers I have ever seen live and is immensely fun to watch.  He adds so much character to Sevendust and an unpredictability you can only find in Jazz.  Sevendust is a special band, and Seasons will always be my favorite work from them.  Although their acoustic album,  Time Travelers & Bonfires, is a close second, I like the plugged-in punchiness of Seasons.

Favorite songs:  Suffocate, Honesty, Enemy

27. Fever- Bullet For My Valentine (2010)


Bullet For My Valentine is one of the biggest genre-defining bands of the early to mid Metalcore era.  They have crafted some of the most influential riffs and choruses in Modern Metal.  Their impact on the popular Metal scene spans two decades.  Metalcore, and bands included in the subgenre like Bullet For My Valentine, have received a bad wrap on the internet by Elitists.  To me, the hatred of a corporate genre term is ignorant and completely unfounded.  The massive umbrella that is Metal has way too many subgenres.  It is pitting groups against each other, which is what I believe the entire system is based on.  No one ever became rich and successful without competition, hence the constant need to put bands in a box to create division.   BMFV is one of those bands people either love or hate.   Whether it’s based on personal preference or the bandwagon to hate metalcore, I have received a bad wrap for liking this band, as well as other bands considered Metalcore.  I couldn’t care less what people think, because BMFV has some of the best riffs and songwriting in modern Metal.  

I love all of their albums, although the newer ones are not my favorite iteration. But Fever was a highly influential album to me while I was a Sophomore in High School.  The darkness and bravado of Fever spoke to me very deeply at the time.  It’s still a very chilling album today.  This album reminds me of Metallica’s “Black Album” in that it balances raw riffs, heartfelt vocals, and pummeling heaviness while remaining as catchy as Metalcore can achieve.  The balance of clean guitar melodies and down-picking riffs is one of my favorite aspects of Metal, and BMFV nailed it on Fever.  Matt Tuck and Michael Paget provide hooking, perfectly technical, and Thrashy riffs.  They provide a complimentary melody and chunky, groovy rhythms.  Fever is a treasure trove of hooks that forever stick.  It’s an album that sits on the cusp of “Emo”:  With beautiful, heart-wrenching melodies on Bittersweet Memories and A Place Where You Belong, it hits that niche explosion right in the gut.  While original fans of the band didn’t care for the departure on Fever compared to Scream Aim Fire, I found it to be a refreshing, diverse balance between the super heavy BMFV and Matt’s alt-metal style vocals.  I appreciate bands who want to evolve, and BMFV achieved this hugely on Fever.  It’s fast, punchy, gripping, and an extremely cohesive album.  A Place Where You Belong and Bittersweet Memories hit me every single time with the emotional diction of Matt Tuck and the melodic licks.  In High School, I lived a very isolated life.  I didn’t have many friends.  The friends I made in Middle School faded away with school changes and me coming out in a Lutheran school.  This album was a huge comfort and one of my earliest memories of an experience with catharsis.  This album helped me through the loneliness and find the Metal community online.

 I was never impressed with the “Emo” bands of the time, nor the Death Metal or many other Metalcore offerings.  BMFV hit in between these scenes, while keeping a classic Heavy Metal sound that peaked in the 1980s.  That era seemed more vocal-centric and replaced screams with good guitar playing.  Bullet dared to keep riffs pure and still put out shredding solos.  The music industry has been trying to kill good guitar playing and riffs since the 90s.  The Grunge era, despite Jerry Cantrell and Kim Thayil’s offerings, truly popularized lazy noisy riffs instead of technicality.  Metalcore in the early 2000s gave the industry the middle finger and made sick riffs and solos anyway.  That’s why my appreciation for Metalcore is so profound, and I choose not to believe the haters.  BMFV is a band that kept solid and clean guitar playing alive, along with bands like Killswitch Engage, Parkway Drive, and Trivium in the early 2000s.  I truly believe that kept Metal alive and kept it mainstream. 

Albums like Fever make me think that Grunge and the Telecommunications Act of 1996 didn’t kill Metal, like so many people and I originally thought.  Maybe Metal just evolved so much that not everyone was prepared for such a huge advancement and departure after Hair Metal.  Maybe BMFV and other industry leaders that were classified as Metalcore hit in between times and generations, and that’s why they get such a bad wrap.  They’re not just Heavy Metal, or Thrash, or Emo, or Metalcore, they’re their band that you can’t put in a box.  And when people can’t put something in a society-designated box, they get angry.  That’s becoming more apparent.  Our society is driven by emotion and immediate gratification, and hating on successful bands in the Metalcore scene seems to be a fun, quick, and easy way to get attention or confirmation bias.  Whether you like Bullet For My Valentine or not, you can’t deny that their albums have had a huge positive impact on the Metal scene for the past 20 years.  I will always appreciate their contributions and the memories I have tied with this legendary band.

28. Disarm the Descent- Killswitch Engage (2013)

I love Metalcore, especially the main bands that popularized the scene.  These bands have produced some incredibly meaningful music.  Killswitch Engage is the very first band I think of in Metalcore.  They are absolute trailblazers of Metal, bringing a new take on a blend of Melodic Metal and Death Metal.  They have a unique blend of screaming vocals, melodic vocals, and melodic guitars with chunky riffs.  Metalcore is an enormous genre, but to me, KSE  is the pinnacle right above Bullet For My Valentine.  The band started in 1999 in Massachusetts and began mixing Hardcore Punk, Heavy Metal, and Melodic Vocals.  They became local icons very early on, and rightfully so.  Their ability to combine so many good influences and put on fantastic, high-energy shows is legendary.  There were other bands in the scene doing similar things, and they’re great as well. But KSE’s songwriting and consistency make them stand out to me.  There’s a soulfulness to their music that speaks to me more than other bands of that early Metalcore scene.  Their depth to capture the forlornness of existence is

As Daylight Dies is one of the most iconic Metal albums ever released.  It is highly rated among three generations of Metal fans.  Howard Jones brought a new tone and flavor to heavy music that was unlike anything I’d ever heard before.  I’d been searching my entire life for music like KSE’s Melodic Metalcore. Their music is a huge influence on my music taste as well as my love for guitars and vocals. Songs like This is Absolution, The Arms of Sorrow, and My Curse put KSE in my top ten all-time favorite bands for fifteen years.  My brother and I discovered this band, as many others did, from the horror action hit Resident Evil: Apocalypse soundtrack.  The song was The End of Heartache, and it blew my mind in 2004.  From there, it was all about KSE for a long time for me.  I don’t think I realized how huge and early on their impact was for me until I started this article.  While I didn’t choose the early albums for this list, they’re still a big deal in my life.  These albums helped shape Metal and take it in a new direction.  For me, this band has been instrumental in helping me overcome any obstacles I have faced.  I might’ve been too young at the time to fully understand it.  This band stayed with me.  As Daylight Dies will always be one of my favorite albums, but I didn’t pick it for this list.  Another album personally impacted me more than words can ever express.

KSE released Disarm the Descent when I was 20 years old.  It was a big time in my life.  I had just started treatment for the depression I’d been suffering from since High School.  I was just starting to realize my off and on long distance relationship was toxic.  I had just fallen back in love with soccer, specifically the United States’ Women’s National Team and the new budding National Women’s Soccer League.  I started getting back in shape and taking care of my mind, body, and spirit.  I left the toxicity behind.  And, Disarm the Descent was a soundtrack to my healing and growing.  This album was played every day for six months.  Whether it was for a road trip to see a game, a concert, or family, this album was in the car CD player.  While I was devastated that Howard Jones left KSE and music due to health problems, I quickly found a new bond with original singer Jesse Leach.  This guy is a force of nature.  His voice, scream, and lyrics are unmatched in Metal.. To compare anyone to Howard Jones is ridiculous, so I never compared the two singers.  I loved both iterations equally.  Disarm The Descent hit me at the right time, where I just wanted new KSE.  Little did I know, it’d become one of my favorite Metal records of all time.  

I’m glad I didn’t focus too much on the order of this list.  In order, this album should be much higher in importance.  It is vital to my mental health to this day.  I listen to this album, and it centers me every time..  No matter how chaotic or dark life gets, this album is a fire in the darkness.  It is a perfectly crafted storm of emotion and riffs, and brilliant dynamic vocals.  Every song gets better with time.  In Due Time is a hit for the ages with pure emotion, almost reading like a power ballad, but it’s a motivational speaker’s anthem.   It is one of the most inspiring songs of all time, especially for a late bloomer like me.  This album is written for anyone who’s ever struggled with inner demons.  Jesse Leach and the incomparable Adam D on lead guitars wrote one of the most profound albums.  I think a lot of people slept on this album, unfortunately, because this is the peak of their songwriting with Jesse.  Many Metalcore albums have tried to reach this songwriting depth, but I don’t think it’s possible.  Songs like The Hell In Me, A Tribute to the Fallen, and Always are among my favorite songs of all time.  These songs are masterpieces, for lack of a better word.  They are so epically satisfying for me to listen to.  They hit the perfect spot for me of heavy and melodic.  It’s emotional, lighter, and immensely inspiring.  I love this album and every single song.  KSE outdid themselves with this album.  Disarm the Descent is my favorite Metalcore album of all time.

29. The Storm Within- Evergrey (2016)

2016 is among my favorite years in music of the decade (2010-2020).  I feel like music took a big leap in innovation.  Prog peaked in 2016 with albums from Opeth, Haken, Porcupine Tree, Dream Theater, and so many more legendary bands.  This was a particularly good year for me, for the most part.  I was on fire with writing, attended some great shows, became close with my best friend, and we decided to go full-time to commit to moving out of my childhood home.  Things were looking up in the meantime.  Although I discovered that dealing with change is not one of my strong suits.  These changes and the amount of work I was putting into everything caused great anxiety.  I hadn’t had much anxiety since high school. 2016 was full of change and relationships that made me vastly uncomfortable.  That’s when Evergrey came into my life, and they lulled the anxiety more than any band before.  2016 was a bittersweet year.  While overall it had good points, the anxiety for me peaked here and didn’t calm until ten years later.  The Storm Within will always be a positive memory from this year, however.

When Evergrey released The Storm Within, I was doing a lot of music reviews.  I received this album from Napalm Records’ promo list.  I had never heard of the band and was excited to find something new.  What caught my interest about the album was two tracks featuring the great Floor Jansen, who was my favorite singer at the time.  The song In Orbit immediately caught my ear.  This was the first song I listened to from Evergrey.  I was blown away by Tom Englund’s soaring and soulful vocals and the bluesy guitar solos.  The bridge is truly one of my favorite pieces of music ever written.  From there, I was hooked on The Storm Within.  Distance perfectly sums up any long-distance relationship with tasty chugging guitars and a Pantera-like groove.  I could listen to this song as well as In Orbit on repeat for days, and never tire of it.  They give me butterflies and back-of-the-head chills with every single listen.  There is something deeply special about Evergrey’s music.  The heartfelt diction of Tom Englund’s voice and smooth delivery is what makes it special.  It is a melodic triumph.  Their music hits an emotionally similar place as The Police’s Every Breath You Take, Simon and Garfunkel’s The Sound of Silence, Nights In White Satin by the Moody Blues, and Nina Simone’s cover of House of the Rising Sun.  It is difficult to describe Evergrey.  It’s a unique experience with music.  The song that explodes this sentiment into the atmosphere is The Paradox of the Flame, a ballad featuring the gorgeous vocals of sister Carina Englund.  This song is one of the most devastatingly beautiful things I have ever heard.

Evergrey’s songwriting is masterful to my ears.  They can cover such a range of influences from Doom, to Symphonic, to Hard Rock, to Prog Metal.  This band can bend any genre to make a song impactful.  Their music stays with you.  It’s a lingering thought, like a dream you remember for the rest of your life.  The Storm Within is one of those perfect albums that only come once in a lifetime.  I have no idea why it didn’t go Platinum in most countries.  It deserves far more credit and recognition than it has ever received.  This album deserves radio play.  It deserves awards.  But like with anything beautiful and deep, it falls under the radar.  Corporate music thrives on quick money, something basic and formulaic that is a crowd pleasure.  If they put the same budget into promoting bands like Evergrey, the payoff would be immeasurable over time.  I truly believe that bands like Evergrey deserve more recognition.  More people just need to give this music a chance, because it might change their lives.  Maybe with music so profound and all encompassing, the obsessive need to take in social media, politics, news, and be overwhelmed by the negativity of society would fade.  This music has a chance to impact humanity, and I wish people would realize the gravity and quality of Evergrey.

30. Abrahadabra- Dimmu Borgir (2010)

2012 was a big year for me in Music.  It was also the year I graduated from High School and decided to skip college.  The discovery of European music had me on a high.  It seemed Euro Metal was on a roll, as well as my love for Stone Sour, Evanescence, and Halestorm.  My taste was highly evolving, and that opened me up to the world of Death Metal.  Cradle of Filth, Epica, Insomnium, System Divide, and Dimmu Borgir came into my radar.  I went to Colorado Springs to see Halestorm headline a show at the famous local dive bar, The Black Sheep.  It is one of the last small venues Halestorm ever played.  It was a great show.  From there, I spent a week with my brother on a summer vacation.  This is when more music discoveries happened that would forever change my life.  Getting into Death Metal in 2012 would impact my music taste and my life for the foreseeable future.  Death Metal and its subgenres would go on from 2012 to inspire me almost more than any genre of music in my lifetime.  I had already experienced forms of it with Fear Factory, Early Within Temptation, and After Forever, but Dimmu Borgir took my appreciation to a whole new level.

Abrahadabra is a Symphonic Death Metal album that combines the drama of Mozart with Norwegian Black and Death Metal.  The mix has a shock factor to it, which made it popular in early reaction videos, especially the live performances with an orchestra.  Dimmu Borgir took two very intense sections of music and combined them.  This mix is brilliant to me.  Both aspects have to be truly technically perfect to work, and Dimmu Borgir is just on the money with it.  Gateways blew my mind from the get-go.  The speed of this song was unlike anything I’d ever heard.  Fear Factory is fast, but Dimmu Borgir’s blast beats just seemed even faster to me back then.  Combine this with a cluster of shrill violins, horns, and a choir, and it’s a match made in heaven (or more fittingly in this context, a match made in hell).  The costumes and face paint added another thing to the grand and horrific ambience of Dimmu Borgir to me, and it hooked me.  It was like a perfect soundtrack to Dante’s The Divine Comedy: Inferno.  Abrahadabra is the first Death Metal album I ever purchased.  This album led me to countless more discoveries..

Gateways was literally a gateway to a whole new world for me.  This track featured vocals from Agnete Kjølsrud.  Her vocals are some of the most harsh and interesting vocals I’ve ever heard to this day.  She sounds like a priestess right from hell or an imp.  And her scream on this just completely blew my mind.  I’d never heard a woman sing like that.  I think this is one of the most important discoveries in my life, because it led me to find more female vocalists like her.  I think this opened me up to the world of female harsh vocals.  This was an origin story for me.  Honestly, if I’d never heard this song, I don’t think my uncorrupted brain would’ve been open to bands like Arch Enemy, Spiritbox, Jinjer, and most importantly Ankor.  I had always loved harsh vocals deep down.  I’d been doing them as a joke since I was a kid, because my brother dabbled in harsh vocals as a teen, and I thought it was hilarious.  When I started taking it seriously, harsh vocals became one of my favorite things in my life.  Deep down, I always wonder if it’s something I should pursue as my small pension to be able to do them in multiple types and ranges without much effort.  Regardless of whether I ever pursue them, Agnete will always be a huge influence on me.

While Abrahadabra wasn’t a hugely emotional album for me, it lured me into more Technical, darker, Neo-Classical influenced Metal.  Their proficiency at what they do is still mind-blowing.  I love to watch people in Music, sports, and Art who are at the pinnacle of their craft.  Dimmu Borgir is one of those bands that is just perfect live, despite the chaotic nature of their music.  While this album wasn’t well received by Dimmu Borgir’s cult of fans or critics, I still think it’s their best contribution to music.  This is still one of my favorite Death Metal records of all time.  I will be forever grateful to my brother and Dimmu Borgir for exposing me to this extreme form of art and music.  My life would not be as joyous, cultured, or well-balanced without it.

What are your favorite Metal albums? Let me know below!

New and Improved Femme Metal Valkyries Channel

Looking for new content that showcases the world of women in Metal? Below is a link to a new Youtube channel featuring compilation videos made by me that highlights the best of the Valkyries in Metal. If you have any ideas for a video, let me know what you’d like to see on the channel! I plan on making a lot of compilation videos of women in Rock and Metal that are the best in the scene. None of these videos are made using AI, I do it all by myself. It’s a lot of work, but it’s fun and has been very rewarding.

https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC_FtvqoaiRJDGWNEktNwpfQ

My Favorite Metal Albums of All Time: Part Three

This installment of the list is eight more albums of the thirty I picked as my all-time favorite Heavy Metal albums.  There may be another part where I talk about the next ten or twenty on my list.  I’m not sure where I’m going to go with list-making.  It hasn’t been as much of a conversation starter as I’d hoped.  But it’ll be a permanent page on the site, so people can go roast or review my taste.  So, please share your favorite albums in the comments, and let me know if you like any of the same ones on my list!  I want to know people’s tastes in Metal records. As it’s probably all different ones from all over the world, I’d like to add more high-quality Metal albums to my “Must listen” list.

So let me know in the comments what Heavy Metal albums I must hear or just what your favorites are!

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 30 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.

Part 3

13. Obsolete- Fear Factory (1998)

I remember listening to Fear Factory when I was probably much too young to understand it.  It ranged between fun and scary at times, but I knew I loved it because my brother loved it so unabashedly.  When someone you love experiences a band so tangibly, it’s impossible not to share the joy of it for me.  Fear Factory became a pinnacle band for my brother and me. We’ve been listening to them together for over twenty years.  It’s a band we love unconditionally, no matter how many times they change members. I think they’re one of the most consistently good bands in my repertoire besides Epica.  Every album has tracks that have remained with me for years.  It’s not just industrial speed metal from the depths of “Skynet” created hell.  Fear Factory creates very psychologically deep music.  It challenges every topic of human existence and even places it from the view of an automaton.  This idea, akin to the visionary  Isaac Asimov’s I., Robot, captivates me on a fundamental level.  I grew up reading and watching Sci-Fi that was themed around the transferring of a human consciousness into a machine or even a transference of the soul entirely.  This trope endlessly fascinates me and terrifies others in the new dawn of AI. Fear Factory’s music explored these ideas long before we had half of the technological advances we have now.  It is incredible to realize that a lot of these advances were only fiction then, and that a Metal band was expanding upon them in such a realistic level.

Choosing an album of Fear Factory’s for the list came down to three albums: Obsolete, Digimortal, and Archetype.  I went with Obsolete because of its stunning dynamics between machine-like riffs and gorgeous soaring melodies like on Resurrection and epic ender Timelessness.  When I want to listen to Fear Factory, this is my first choice.  The songwriting on this album is solid and is truly a prime example of what Fear Factory has to offer.  They polished their sound from the previous release.  This makes for clearer and concise tracks.  The clarity is refreshing for an Industrial album of that era.  There was nothing quite like this album, and there still isn’t anything comparable.  Dino Cazares and Burton C Bell are one of my favorite writing duos of all time.  It seems like they came together on this album and made something truly beautiful while not compromising the heaviness.  But Burton wrote the lyrics solely for this record, and I think he proved he is a revolutionary lyricist on his own.  It’s easy to connect with Burton because of the soul he puts into such a cold sci-fi concept and the emotional depth he shows in his vocals.  He may not be the most technically sound singer, but he gives you chills like no other.  He was the first growler/screamer I’d ever heard.  That led me to a lifelong love of dual-sided vocals that accounts for probably half of what I listen to.

The message of each song is more fluent on this record, like Mechanize..They made Fear Factory with a more Metal Radio sense to it, and it turned out brilliantly, I think.  While the personal experiences and memories may contribute heavily to why I love this album, I’d still put it atop the greatest.  The mix Dino contributed to on this record is an audiophile’s dream.  This record sounds good on any format or listening device, but on FLAC quality with Beyerdynamic headphones, it is a true experience.  Obsolete is one of the best-sounding records I have heard, regardless of genre.  The attack on every note and the mid and bass are so punchy, causing for a more engaging sounding record.  The distortion is crisp, not muddy or too low.  The vocals sound like they’re taken right off the board with a perfect amount of reverb.  You know how much I love reverb on a mix.  The engineering is as flawless as it can get for a Metal record.  

Fear Factory is one of the key bands that got me into Metal and is my reason for having such a high standard for emotional and sonic depth.  They’re a part of some of my earliest music memories and my bond with my older brother.  Hopefully, we can see them together in concert one day, even though it’ll never be quite the same without Burton.   That contribution to my brother and I’s bond is invaluable.  I still think my brother should’ve tried out when they were looking for a new vocalist, but I really enjoy Milo’s tribute to Burton and his precise guttural techniques.  

My favorite songs are Shock, Edgecrusher, and Resurrection.

14. Holy Diver- Dio (1981)

Two artists are rarely left off “Best” or “Favorite Metal albums of all time” lists: Iron Maiden and Dio.  They are two quintessential Metal artists who forged the genre.  Often referred to as the “Heavy Metal God”, Ronnie James Dio created an unmatched legacy in the genre.   He is a household name to all that observe Rock and Heavy Metal, and rightfully so.  His contributions to the genre foreshadowed many that came before him.  His stints with Black Sabbath and Rainbow changed Heavy Metal forever and helped create his everlasting legacy.  I don’t need to explain how impactful Ronnie James Dio was on music, it’s a well-known fact that he is the one who made Heavy Metal a movement, a lifestyle, a way of being, and a brotherhood.  Without Dio, my most favorite bands would not sound like they do today.  His solo work is responsible for influencing my collective favorite genre, Power Metal, which combines Heavy Metal and Classical Music and Fantasy themes.  It is impossible to imagine Heavy Metal without Dio.  I didn’t always know of his impact on Metal.  I just thought he was a singer my dad loved when he was in the Air Force.  

Upon delving into the world of Heavy Metal on a more scholarly level, nobody’s name came up more as an influence than Ronnie James Dio.  his presence wasn’t just soaring technically perfect vocals, but storytelling, a light in the dark, and a character of acceptance of the children judged by the “Satanic Panic” in the 1980s.  RJD was a haven for those who didn’t fit in and were ultimately rejected by the over-glorification of Pop music.  That kind of legacy that affects youth first-hand is irreplaceable.  Because of him, Heavy Metal became a comfort to those who didn’t fit in: The Fantasy nerds. The dreamers and the Metalheads rebelled against the radio, Christianity, and anything that wished to make them conform.  That sentiment still stands today with bands that refuse to give into big corporations’ pressuring them to become something they’re not and go against the formulaic standards of radio.  This is a topic I am extremely passionate about and hope to elaborate more in the future.  I didn’t know this sentiment was one Ronnie James Dio stood for, and now I love him even more.

Holy Diver is an iconic album that has stood the test of time.  Still as crisp and innovative today as it was in 1981, the album is a catchy journey against evil forces.  Listening to this album again, I had forgotten how exquisite the writing and guitar work truly are.  The songs are driving forces, flowing fluidly together, and captivate with every word and every riff.  I don’t think I realized how massive the riffs are on Holy Diver.  I forgot how incredible Vivian Campbell’s playing was on this record, a record he didn’t even write.  He was just the session guitarist in the studio and played the subsequent tours and albums after.  He came in and truly brought this album to life with the screaming solos, speedy riffs, and catchy hooks. With a voice larger than life, Ronnie James Dio overshadows his counterparts, but I think Vivian Campbell is the only guitarist whose voice stands up to Dio’s.  Rainbow was an incredible band, too, with the great Ritchie Blackmore and his Proggy Gothic style, but man, there’s something magical about Campbell and Dio on Holy Diver.  The guitars he crafted fit the epic fantasy theme emphatically.  The lineup on this album truly feels like destiny.  I love that Campbell’s guitar solos span a minute or two.  I love that it completely breaks up the music to create a flashy solo into another verse.  I love how assertively 80s this album sounds, whilst keeping Dio’s 70s Rock roots.  It’s soulful, extravagant, hook-oriented, a little Progressive, and rooted in pure Rock.  Every time I hear Caught In The Middle and Don’t Talk To Strangers, I am reminded of how much I cherish this album.  Caught In The Middle is so heartfelt and punchy, a similar inspiring feel to Holy Diver, but more down to Earth.  

This is my favorite album of Ronnie’s vocals, too.  I love pretty much anything he sings.  He could sing a C++ book and still make me want to listen to every word.  He isn’t just a singer, he’s a storyteller.  The words he sings are exquisitely picked, and the notes are deliberate and exact.  He is the height of technical execution, but he blended the storytelling of the 1970s.  His voice could fit any genre, but thank god Ronnie chose Rock and Heavy Metal as his home.  Holy Diver is unarguably one of the greatest vocal performances ever recorded, regardless of genre.  Every song on this album is an epic or a saga, making it timeless and flawless every time I listen to it, which is impressive after four decades.  

I hear this down-to-earth quality echoed in Power Metal albums today, and it makes me emotional to hear the impact this album has on my favorite music. Ronnie’s voice is timeless, and Holy Diver sounds just as revolutionary today as it did in 1981. It’s one thing to experience Dio’s impact grandly, but personally hearing it impact my favorite musicians today just feels like Heavy Metal has come full circle.  And I wish Ronnie was around to hear bands like Unleash The Archers, Lords of The Trident, Seven Kingdoms, and more that echo his down-to-earth, heartfelt music.

My favorite songs are Holy Diver, Rainbow in the Dark, Don’t Talk To Strangers, and Straight Through the Heart.

15. Legacy of Kings-  Hammerfall (1998)

Yet another classic Power Metal album on my list. I’ve been listening to this album since I was just 12 years old.  They are yet another band my older brother introduced me to.  It was long before I knew anything about European Metal or genres.  This was one album I instantly loved, along with Hammerfall’s debut and another classic, Glory To The Brave.  Choosing between these albums for this list was a mighty task, but I had to go with the more anthemic Legacy of Kings.  Hammerfall’s impact on my music taste is right up there with Dio and Iron Maiden.  They have been consistently in my listening rotation longer than any band on this list.  I didn’t realize that fact until delving into my memories associated with this band.  I started listening to them when my family first moved back to Colorado and have never stopped listening to them.  My brother had their first two records in the car for years to come, and many road trips were soundtracked by Hammerfall and other bands on this list.  It’s Joacim Cans’ illustrious voice that keeps me coming back to Hammerfall.  He is unlike anyone I have ever heard and will always be one of my favorite male vocalists.  When I want solid Power Metal with a nostalgic feel, I turn to Dream Evil or Hammerfall.  Hammerfall has been an ever-driving force in the scene and a pinnacle of Power Metal for me.

Legacy of Kings is an experience of historical tales of Templars setting out on their designed quests, 80s Arena sounds, and unbelievably soulful vocals. The album sounds exactly like its name and the cover art.  It is a no filler, no bullshit, battle Metal album with lyrics that will stick in your head forever.  It captures elements of Dio, Iron Maiden, Scorpions, Def Leppard, and Manowar but with the Brotherhood of the Templars at the helm.  I am forever fascinated by the Templars and Crusade history, and Hammerfall brought this to a sonic basis.  It’s a cool thematic concept that instantly transports you to a different time and place.  Legacy of Kings is an album I put on while gaming, walking, or on road trips, as mentioned earlier.  The music is so fast-paced and interesting; it speeds any task up exponentially and makes it a more enjoyable experience.  This would be a perfect soundtrack to a miniseries about the Templars, I can just envision the story line and characters with momentous battles every time I listen to it.  I may even write an inspired book series one day, in hopes I can capture some of the magic in this album.  I love the theme, the guitar tone, the drums, the level of reverb, and the clarity of the vocals.  There’s just not an album like Legacy of Kings, and I don’t think there ever will be.  While I dislike the use of the word “masterpiece” and find it way overused. I would use it to describe this album in a heartbeat.  

What sold me on Hammerfall is their ability to write epic, long, high BPM songs and then drop an absolutely heart-wrenching ballad.  Songs like Glory to The Brave, The Fallen One, Second to None, and Remember Yesterday are unbelievably amazing.  The songwriting throughout their albums is masterful, but to me, the ability to write great ballads is a prime example of a great band.  The Fallen One, being one of my favorite ballads, ends Legacy of Kings in a forlorn way that makes me want to restart the album immediately.  Joacim Cans over a Classical Piano part is simply gorgeous and is a must hear concept.  This singer is incomparable.  Seeing Hammerfall live and experiencing Joacim’s voice in person was indescribable.  He doesn’t miss.  He doesn’t waver.  He is one of the strongest vocalists I’ve ever heard, and Legacy of Kings is a peak example of his unbridled talent. 

I can’t imagine my life without ever hearing Hammerfall, and I will continue to listen to them as long as I can hear (Seeing Sonata Arctica or Unleash the Archers again might just do my ears in).

My favorite songs are The Fallen One, Legacy of Kings, Remember Yesterday.

16. The Congregation- Leprous (2015)

This is one of the most unique albums on the list, I think.  When I first discovered Leprous in 2018, it was difficult to dissect what I was hearing.  Leprous is a listening experience that simply cannot be described.  They’re an eclectic, avant-garde sound that can’t be categorized.  It’s Metal, it’s Prog, it’s Trip Hop, it’s Symphonic, tastes of Meshuggah, it’s a little Broadway Musical; It’s Leprous, the only Leprous.  There’s nothing like this band in my 31 years of music listening.  Everything they do challenges genre, the usual notation and chord progression, and the typical range of music.  The talent in this band is incomparable.  Their music is weird but in a good way.  They create some of the strangest mind-bending soundscapes that are so visceral.  No matter what they create, you can always expect an album that takes many listens to digest and sink your teeth into the meaning of.  I think Leprous creates a piece of deeper music.  This isn’t just music for the sake of making sound or a shock factor, it’s exclusively meaningful.  This band gives 110% on every single song, performance, and album.  You can hear the immense effort they put into every detail and every note.  A band that works intricately and organically in the dawn of AI, copy and paste, and overproduced music cannot go unnoticed by me.   They uniquely blend Pink Floyd, King Crimson, Devin Townsend, Tool, and Meshuggah chugs to create music more than worthy of a lifetime-achievement award.  Leprous has created an innovative sound that has been immensely influential in everything that I create and made a new standard for Progressive Metal that isn’t just “Djenty” guitars.

The Congregation is an album that sums up their dark, moody, intense, and progressive-oriented sounds whilst combining singer Einar Solberg’s love of Massive Attack.   This creates a sound that captures me instantly.  I also love Massive Attack and Trip Hop since I was introduced to the genre on The Matrix Reloaded Soundtrack in 2003.  This album could be taken right out of that Soundtrack.  So, there’s a nostalgic element to it as well as a fresh take for me.  The Congregation is full of mind-bending sounds, beautiful and haunting melodies, and exquisite drum-work.  This was the first album they’d done with drummer Baard Kolstad.  You can hear the enormous impact he had on the band.  His drum beats melded with Tor’s funky off-time guitar riffs.  This album is a time signature nightmare, and I love it.  It’s completely unpredictable.  The Price, Third Law,  and Moon highlight the beast that is Baard on drums.  He is one of the hardest-hitting drummers.  The attack he puts into every beat grabs your attention immediately.  You have no idea where the song structure is going to go next.  It’s like improvisational Jazz put into Heavy Metal, and I think it’s utterly brilliant.  I love the drum work on this album, but the vocals are what put Leprous on the map for me.  

Einar Solberg’s vocal performance on The Congregation defies all boundaries of male vocals and genre constraints.  He has the most beautiful voice I’ve ever heard in male vocals.  He can move mountains with his voice, even in a whisper falsetto.  His unbridled vocal power carries every song in an emotional gut-wrenching journey that is irreplicable.  Songs like Rewind, The Flood, and the absolute soul-bursting Slave illustrate his immense range and explosive vocals.  The dynamics he shows are unlike anything I have ever heard.  It’s as though he is the love child of Devin Townsend, Ihsahn, Colm Wilkinson, and Daniel Tompkins.  He is one of my favorite vocalists of all time, and The Congregation is the opus for me.  His performance on The Flood is a top favorite of all time for me.  The emotional impact this song has is everlasting.  It is a cry for help when no one is listening, a release of unimaginable pain into the void, and the clouds inevitably parting on the constant storm life torments us with.  I’ve created art pieces to try to capture how deeply The Flood and other songs off the album impacted me, but it’ll never be enough to truly iterate the supreme catharsis this album bestows.

Leprous is an all-time favorite artist of mine and will remain forever on this list with The Congregation.

My favorite songs: The Flood, Third Law, and Moon

17. Eternal Blue- Spiritbox (2021)

I know I’ve talked about this band before, and everyone’s probably getting tired of hearing about them.  However, leaving them off this list is not an option.  Spiritbox is one of my all-time favorite bands.  They reignited my love for Metalcore whilst introducing me to a new genre that would become one of most listened to: Progressive Metalcore.  This genre has been vitally important to my mental health and musical journey.  Not only did it provide Spiritbox, a band that got me inspired to pick up drums again, but it also gave me Periphery, Whitechapel, ERRA, Novelists, Jinjer, and most especially Ankor.  This band not only gave me some of my most personal connections with music, but they also gave me other bands I would connect with even deeper.  They opened a window to a whole new world of music for me, and I found new parts of myself scattered within the same genre bubble.  I discovered the band with their massive breakout single Holy Roller, and I admit it took a long time to grow on me.  The other singles from Eternal Blue emphatically won me over to the immense talent of vocalist/lyricist Courtney LaPlante and guitarist/writer/producer Mike Stringer.  Like Burton and Dino, they’re one of my favorite writing duos of all time.  Spiritbox’s writing is superb.  It is easy to hear why they’re one of the biggest Metal bands on the planet because Eternal Blue is perfectly crafted.  I think this band deserves every amount of the hype they receive.

Eternal Blue is a beautiful and tragic journey through COVID isolation, depression, nightmares and night terrors, self-hatred, and fighting societal pressures of conformity. This album’s lyrical content sounds exactly like 2020-2021 was for me.  It was fast, a blur of emotion constantly changing, and a calm amongst the storm.  It’s a devastatingly heavy album in both instrumentation and emotional continuity.  Each track flows together, but no two tracks sound the same.  Somehow, it’s all in an idea bubble and sounds like the same theme, but it is completely different.  It’s a crazy feat in songwriting to achieve that continuity without repeating or following the same formula.  I think it’s because of the shifting in dynamics and wall-of-sound production.  It immerses you in a vibe, for lack of a better word, and keeps you there for days, much like Courtney’s described nightmares that inspired this album.  I love immersive, deep, huge sounding records, and this is a best effort in a decade.  It exists in the same space in my mind and heart as Strapping Young Lad records.  There’s brutality, airiness, relief, gigantic guitars, and soulfulness in complete desperation.  This album emotionally wrecked me for months, but in a good way.  It took me out of my comfort zone while giving me a haven amongst the chaos.

Songs like The Summit, Secret Garden, and Halcyon are lighter and a breath of fresh air amongst a stale, isolated lifestyle during COVID-19 times.  These are tracks I would often go to sleep to or practice musical meditation to.  There’s something profoundly spiritual about this record for me.  It’s a cleansing of the spirit, which isn’t surprising considering the name of the band.  Eternal Blue surprised me with how deeply it impacted me.  I didn’t expect such a heavy guitar record with djent tropes to be so cathartic and emotional.  I think Courtney’s vocals give their music that relatable quality.  You can hear every word she says and clearly understand how it makes her feel.  That emotional resonance is what makes this band special.  A lot of singers are fantastic at singing and conveying a story or emotion because that is the job of a vocalist to audily convey the meanings of the song.  What Courtney does is another level of crushingly soul-bearing vocals that dig into you and stay there for a long time.

 A powerful quote about pain inspiring art is, “Great art comes from great pain,” which comes from Tortured Artists by Christopher Zara.  I think Spiritbox resembles this message in a good way. Spiritbox’s impact on music is unarguably profound, but the emotional connection they’ve made with their fans, including me, is rarely talked about or honored.  Spiritbox allows a haven for the anger, pain, and self-doubt we all may deal with throughout our lives.  That is such a beautiful kind of catharsis. 

My favorite songs are: We Live In A Strange World, The Summit, and Constance.

18. Victims of A Modern Age- Star One (2010)

I was already in love with European Metal early on because of Hammerfall and Within Temptation.  Epica is the band that hooked me on Euro Metal and the pursuit of finding more Symphonic Metal and Death Metal.  But, Arjen Lucassen and his many Prog projects were also a huge influence to my quest of the Euro Metal discovery.  It became a passion to pick out each contributing artist from Arjen’s projects and deep dive into their subsequent bands and albums.  It was like the “Six Degrees of Separation” but with incredible Metal.  Once my brother and I went down this rabbit hole (Star One pun), we discovered many of our favorite artists of all time.  I feel like we should write an extensive thank-you letter to the streaming service, Pandora.  This service exposed us to most of the European artists we know and love today.  They had the best collection of this kind of underground Metal we could access in America in the 2000s and 2010s.  I fear to think what my life would be like without this music, especially without Arjen Lucassen.  I remember my brother and I freaking out and “fangirling” to Victims of A Modern Age and all of Arjen’s discography together in his living room.  It was a liberating experience that I think strengthened our bond even more and made me the metalhead that I am today.

Victims of a Modern Age is a nerdfest of Progressive Metal and geeky themes like The Matrix, Planet of the Apes, A Clockwork Orange, and Blade Runner.  Arjen is heavily inspired by Sci-Fi to create Space Metal through project Star One.  I have loved Sci-Fi series, books, and TV Series since I was young enough to sit and read or watch them.  This love of sci-fi combined with Metal is such a personal niche.  Especially since opening bombastic hook track Digital Rain is based on my favorite movie series of all time, The Matrix.  This is, in my opinion, one of his best works because of its more band-like feel with Dan Swano, Damian Wilson, Russel Allen, Floor Jansen, Ed Warby, Peter Vink, and Joost Van De Broek.  It was a lot easier to perform live shows and put together solid Metal records.  This album is evidence that progressive metal doesn’t need 50 musicians and 5000 notes in a measure to be good.  This album is hook-laden, anthemic, and bombastic.  It is unapologetically nerdy and cheesy, and I love it immensely.  Arjen Lucassen’s music writing is some of the best of our modern times, and his ability to compile the absolute best singers and musicians is a stroke of brilliance.  Victims of A Modern Age is an album I wish I wrote and created.  It is a Metal ode to Sci-Fi in the biggest way ever achieved, with some of the greatest vocalists of all time to tell the story.  

The performances on this record are unbelievable.  The first time I’d ever heard Russel Allen was on this album, and it blew me away more than 99% of singers I’d ever heard.  It also introduced me to the mighty Floor Jansen, and that forever changed my life.  I didn’t know women sang Power Metal, so when I heard her powerful vocals stand up to Russel and Damian Wilson, it had me hooked for life.  Hearing Floor for the first time forever changed my view of female vocals and sent me to loving After Foreer, then Revamp, and then Nightwish.  Arjen getting Floor Jansen heard on a larger scale in 2010 is probably one of the most significant moments in music for me.  I think his loaded projects lead to a lot of discoveries for a lot of metalheads.  Because of Ayreon and Star One, many of these artists have gone on to bigger projects and collaborations.  I have no idea how Arjen does it, but he keeps crafting the best progressive music this generation has to offer, with the absolute best lineups.  If I could ever achieve one percent of what he has, I’d be happy with my music career.  The man is an absolute genius and wizard, and just knows how to bring the best out of the best musicians.

Victims of A Modern Age is yet another transformative release in my  Metal History.  It inspired me to plunge into the world of Metal head first and soak up Euro Metal like my life depended on it.  Through this discovery, I found bands like Threshold, Adrenaline Mob, Porcupine Tree, After Forever, Stream of Passion, Symphony X, Between the Buried and Me, and so many other artists that impacted my taste in music writing.  I think Arjen is a great writer, musician, collaborator, producer, and all-around nice guy.  I don’t believe he gets the worldwide recognition, sales, or credit he deserves for being such a consistent contributor to music.

My favorite songs; Digital Rain, Cassandra Complex, 24 Hours

19. Audio Secrecy- Stone Sour (2010)

Of all the albums on this list, this might be the most influential to me personally.  Devin Townsend, Brittney Slayes, Amy Lee, Joacim Cans, Simone Simons, and more top my favorite singers of all time list.  But, before I dived into the Progressive and Power world, it was Corey Taylor who topped my list.  The range, diversity, emotional diction, and character in Corey’s vocals made him stand out for me.   Corey Taylor’s unique style is still unlike anything I have ever heard.  Many have been inspired and replicate the style of rap, Metal gutturals, and soaring anthemic cleans that could organize a thousand people.  His power is unbelievable to me.  Even to this day, his live performances are staggeringly good.  His vocals with Stone Sour are somehow different altogether.  They’re softer, more nuanced, and more thought out to give a tonal quality.  This makes Stone Sour stand out, blending the 60s and 70s with the Alternative Rock and Metal of the 2000s.  I’ve been listening to Stone Sour since 2007 or so.  I’ve always loved Jim Root’s guitar playing.  Roy Mayorga is also a very underrated drummer.  But, when Audio Secrecy came out, it changed my entire world as a music listener.  This album was going to be on my list of “Favorite Rock Albums of all time”, but the drums and chugging guitars made this album fit Metal a little bit more to me.  It’s just one of my favorites, regardless of genre.

I was listening to Turbo and Sirius XM recently, and Brent /Smith from Shinedown told the story of singing Guns N’ Roses’s Appetite For Destruction every Friday night in his garage as a kid.  That’s how he got his start as a Rock vocalist.  I related to that story because when Audio Secrecy came out, I practiced singing through it at least twenty times a week.  It came out in September, and I think I was still practicing it the next October 2011.  This strengthened my voice immensely and gave me so much confidence overall.  While I’ve never sung in public or front of a band, at least I know I could sing some of those songs in a bad imitation.  Those are the memories you hold onto forever with albums.  When music makes you feel like you’re at your best, it leaves a permanent imprint on the deepest parts of you.  That’s a powerful connection that makes music a unique experience.  Regardless of whether I ever become a singer or not, I’ll always remember what album made me feel like I could be a rock star.

Audio Secrecy is sonically perfect; Stone Sour at their absolute apex of writing and song construction.  This record is so well mastered, so well composed and engineered, it sounds like a late 1970s release.  It sounds uncompressed, unfiltered, and so open and airy.  It’s a massive-sounding album that combines Arena Rock with Deftones-inspired riffs and melodic vocals.  It is hard-hitting.  Every song is an attack.  Every one of Roy’s hits punches you in the chest.  The driving explosive choruses hook you in.  Mayorga’s cataclysmic drumming on this record captivates me every time I listen to it.  The bass line on Say You’ll Haunt Me would make Paul McCartney cry, it’s so damn good and smooth. The ballads cool off the tension, especially the power ballad Hesitate which is among my favorite songs of all time.  The vocals are utterly perfect on every song, but I think Heisitate and Imperfect are two of Corey’s best clean performances of his entire career.  This is undeniably the most relatable album in Stone Sour’s catalog, and I think that’s what makes it so beautiful.  Corey put his whole heart into this album, as Slipknot had just lost bassist Paul Gray.  Corey’s life has been full of loss, pain, and making it out by the skin of his teeth, and those parts of him are bare on Audio Secrecy.  This accentuates the deep connection fans like me have made with him.  It is Stone Sour’s best album, and I don’t think it will ever be replicated in the slightest.

Audio Secrecy is a once-in-a-generation album, and I will always remember it as my favorite album to sing along to.  Seeing this album played almost entirely live was a highlight of my life that I’ll never forget.

My Favorite songs are: Digital (Did YouTell), Hesitate, Threadbare

20. All Hope Is Gone- Slipknot (2008)

Slipknot is one of my favorite bands of all time.  Slipknot is what originally got me into Heavy Metal when I was 12 to 14 years old.  Maybe it’s cliche at this point because Slipknot is one of the biggest metal bands of all time, but their impact is undeniable.  They’ve inspired countless artists and young metalheads, exposing them to a whole new world of American Death Metal and Metalcore.  I heard Slipknot as a kid because my brother and one of his friends were into Metal and shared albums, but it was probably too much for me at eight years old.  I can imagine that, as sensitive as I was, the masks and the aggression would’ve freaked me out.  But, as I got older, this aggressive music became essential to me.  As a typical American teenager, Slipknot was heavy in my rotation long before the era of streaming.  Though, I did have Youtube, and I would religiously watch Slipknot’s videos and attempt to decipher the visual subtleties Shawn Crahan hid in every video.  Every aspect of Slipknot was endlessly fascinating to me.  The fact that they hid their identities for so long, the horror-themed music videos, and all the strange sounds they used in their music were captivating and confusing at the same time.  

All Hope Is Gone is an indescribable album of aggressive sound, piercing screams and DJ effects, and incredibly heavy drums.  This is undoubtedly one of the best drum albums in Metal.  Joey Jordison blended Progressive and Death Metal influences with solid Rock beats to complete the almost tribal backbone of Slipknot.  He is a household name all over the world for his incomparable contributions to the world of Metal drumming.  This album is my favorite of all his works, despite it being slightly lighter and more radio-friendly than others in the Slipknot arsenal.  I also think this has some of the best guitar work of any Slipknot record.  It sounds like Jim Root and Mick Thomson at their best to me.  The mix of melodic hooks and depth with the pummeling speed riffs is something we don’t hear often in American Metal.  The riffs remind me of early In Flames and At the Gates on this album, which, to me, is an upgrade in pedigree.  There’s a musical depth to this album that intrigues me more than most Metal albums ever released.  In some respects, it is so European and Death Metal oriented, and then there are anthemic sing-song parts in between.  It’s a unique and eclectic mix that was very surprising for 2008.  It sounds like this album could’ve been released in 2024, but on the other hand, it could’ve been an early 90s Thrash record.  It’s hard for me to pin it down, and that’s what Slipknot always goes for.  That’s what I love about them; they literally don’t sound like anyone or anything else, and they don’t try to be anything but themselves.

Slipknot creates some of the most unique Metal ever released with a staggering amount of influences and different musicians.  I love bands who dare to be different, don’t aim to create radio rock, and are eclectic.  Slipknot manages to be strange as hell and yet sell millions of records.  This proves the idea of “mainstream” is an elitist construct of misinformation and old-fashioned thinking.  Nothing Slipknot does is conforming to the radio or record company conglomerates, yet Sulfur, Before I Forget, Dead Memories, and Duality are some of the most played Metal tracks on the air.  I love that they’ve flipped off all the doubters and all the elitists and stayed true to their chaotic and angry roots after all this time.  While they’ve stayed true to this vacuum pretty much the whole time, besides recent release The End So Far (seriously, what the fuck was that album?), I think All Hope is Gone is going to remain my favorite Slipknot album of all time.

While I’ve moved on from Slipknot to completely different music, I will always love the nostalgia of hearing them on the radio.  They are still a band my mom and I share every once in a while, and I will never forget the surprise of my mom loving Slipknot and everything Corey Taylor.  I hope to see them together one day.

My Favorite songs are; Dead Memories, Snuff, Butcher’s Hook, Sulfur

There it is, my top 20 favorite Heavy Metal albums of all time! What are your favorites? Did you like or dislike any of the albums I listed? Start a conversation in the comments below!

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

Tsunami Sea: Spiritbox’s Boldest Album Yet

March 7th, 2025

Today is a great day for Spiritbox fans. They have unleashed their brand new album Tsunami Sea, their most bombastic and genre bending venture yet. This album is a combination of their crushing riffs, heart-wrenching vocals, and industrial sounds that combine Nu-Metal nostalgia and Modern Metal at its finest. Tsunami Sea is everything you love about Spiritbox, magnified by a thousand suns. They are a band that doesn’t miss because of their uncompromising concept of defying all expectations, Ironically, you simply can’t put them in a box. Eternal Blue is one of my to 40 albums ever made, so I had incredibly high expectations coming into Tsunami Sea. However, it is impossible and unfair to compare albums, as they’re entirely separate in every way. Tsunami Sea is a monument of brutality that stands entirely on its own. It is extreme. The spectrum and enormity of this album is staggering. I’ve only heard this level of extremity a few times in my life, and I love it. Spiritbox are experts at absolutely pummeling you with riffs, then soothing your soul to a meditative state with beautiful clear vocals and smooth rhythms. Tsunami Sea expands on this concept and does it expertly with wall-of-sound production. To say this is a special album is an understatement. It is dedicated entirely to the late and great Spiritbox bassist Bill Burr wo unexpectedly passed away last July. This tribute is gut-wrenching and so beautiful to all who knew Bill and how much he contributed to the Metal community.

Tsunami Sea is the rawest Spiritbox album yet. It is a lot to take in upon the first couple listens. This is going to be a slowburner for the rest of the month for me. This release feels like a long time coming after listening to Eternal Blue approximately 500 times since it came out. It is everything I expected, but so much more. I feel like adding Josh Gilbert to the lineup was a brilliant idea. The bass and backing vocals add so much to this record. He and Courtney have great harmonies and chemistry, which adds texture and depth that is vastly different from Eternal Blue. I think Zev Rose is a bit quieter on this record, but still adds some groove that breaks up the brutality of the seemingly endless layers of guitars. I prefer the guitar sounds on Eternal Blue, just because there were more layers of melodic harmony that added heart and atmosphere to the album. But, if this album is a personification of anger and pain, the instrumentation, lyrics, level of distortion, and truly inhuman growls amplify the theme perfectly. The highlight is really Courtney LaPlante’s vocals and storytelling on this album. It’s like she’s narrating the struggles they’ve been through in such a fluent way. It just hits so hard, it lingers for hours after you listen to it. She is a once-in-a-generation vocalist with unbridled power and shock factor that will last her entire career. Tsunami Sea is Courtney LaPlante at her apex.

Overall, this is a great Modern Metal record. This style of Music is not usually my thing nor area of expertise, but Spiritbox are the pinnacle of this new wave of Progressive Metalcore/Deathcore. They’ve brought brutality to the mainstream and crossed-genres of fans from every walk of life. Tsunami Sea shows the impact and the pure power of this band to absolutely captivate with their sonic presence. I love this band and I am so far really impressed with Tsunami Sea.

My favorite songs so far: Ride The Wave, Perfect Soul, Tsunami Sea, A Haven With Two Faces

Check out Tsunami Sea:

https://palechord.com/blogs/news/spiritbox-tsunami-sea-out-now

Discover My Favorite Heavy Metal Albums of All Time: Devin Townsend

My Favorite Metal Albums of All Time:

I began the impossible task of cataloging my favorite Metal albums of all time at the beginning of February.  It’s so arduous because I could easily list 100 albums.  It started with about 47 albums. For the readers’ sake, I narrowed it down to 20.  I love Metal as if that isn’t obvious with this decade-old blog. I’ve been listening to Rock and Heavy Metal my entire life. I have loved many bands and albums over the last 18 years of exclusively listening to Heavy music.    The goal of this was to critically think about why I love these albums so much.  The other goal of writing this article was to create a more personal approach to lists and share my slightly unconventional taste in Metal records. 

When I asked the internet about their favorite Metal albums, I found a lot of the usual suspects on there; Black Sabbath, Metallica, Slayer, Dream Theater, and Opeth.  It made me wonder why none of these ended up on my list.  The impact these bands and their releases had on the Metal genre is undeniable and I enjoy many of their songs.  I can’t sit and listen to a whole album by any of those artists.  None of the “conventional Metal” albums hold my interest for long.  I went to Rate Your Music and scoured their Metal chart to see if I had forgotten any of my favorite Metal albums, and I found my taste to be once again drastically different from the majority.  Going back through other’s lists and listening to these albums, I realize how weird my taste is. My tastes remain heavily in Progressive and Power Metal. 

You won’t find a lot of “classics” on this list.   I think it’s because I was raised with so many different kinds of music to where I seek out a lot more variation.  Sticking to a theme isn’t always my thing.  I like unconventional artists who push technicality and emotions to the ultimate limits.  I seek out singers with multi-octave ranges and unique tones.  I like heavy, fast drums, dueling guitars, and extremely punchy basslines.  I like Metal which makes me think, tells a story, and evokes profound soul-deep emotion.  I love albums that toe the line between Opera and Metal, and that don’t play by any genre rules. I like it Heavy as fuck, but well balanced with beautiful melodies.  None of these albums on the list will be a surprise to those who know me and will be hopefully interesting to those who don’t.

As with all my posts, music 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 personal taste.  They’re not even in order by most 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 the most 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.

Devin Townsend

I decided to do Part One entirely of my favorite albums by Devin Townsend.  Being my favorite artist of all time his music accounts for most of my listening habits.  He is so influential to me and such an integral part of my life.  I couldn’t choose only one album from his discography to list.  Devin has created some of the most special music over the years.  My entire music taste has been a long search for artists who wish to achieve the same heights of emotional and technical ability.  Maybe it sounds elitist, but he’s my absolute favorite musician and writer.  I said I wouldn’t let an artist become my entire personality.  After hearing Z2 by Devin Townsend Project in 2014, his music took over my listening rotation.  His music is mostly what I listened to for eight months straight or more. It was so transcendental and became so important to uplifting me and inspiring my music and dreams.  That powerful connection with music is what I always strive to find, and I hope other people can find such a connection.  Nothing compares to that connection.  I don’t think I’ll ever find anything like it again.  I find everything he releases to be personally impactful and spiritual.  Spirituality and Music have been intertwined since the dawn of when man would sing and beat bones on skins for entertainment.  This relationship between the two didn’t occur to me until I discovered Devin Townsend, and that’s the main reason why I am such a fan of his music. I’ve been wanting to write this article for years, but never thought it was a good idea until this year. I focused exclusively on Devin’s heaviest albums or what I think are his heaviest albums, and chose my absolute favorites. Honestly, I love all of his material. Everything he puts out is valuable to me, emotionally or just musically.

Going back through Devin’s catalog for this article was such an incredible journey this time.  Experiencing his music again and thinking about why I love these albums and songs so much just fueled me to keep going with my creative projects.  Every time I consider taking a step back from music or writing and think about going back to school, Devin reminds me of where my heart and talent truly lie.  His music inspires me to take my dreams to the absolute pinnacle of where they can go.  If he never gave up despite everyone telling him his ideas were crazy or he was clinically insane for thinking of them, then nobody should ever give up on anything they want to achieve in life.  His musical career has survived the worst possible things someone can go through.  If he can do it through pain and darkness, then so can I.  I truly believe he is the most underrated artist of all time and should be listed among the absolute greats, not just in Metal, but in all music.  Considering the power of his message, his virtuoso guitar playing, and his immense possibly four-octave vocal range, I have no idea why this guy isn’t as big as Eric Clapton and Paul McCartney.  His music may be crazy and extreme at times, but it is always beautiful and profound.  His contribution to music should never be forgotten and deserves a lot more credit.  The albums below are essential to that thought.

I think of Devin and I like kindred spirits, because I relate to his music and his journey on such a deeply personal level.

  1. City- Strapping Young Lad (1997)

City, listed as one of the greatest Metal albums of all time as coined by Kerrang and Revolver, is a bombastic assault on the senses and psyche.  It is the most extreme album I have ever heard in my life.  City is Los Angeles personified; An overwhelming chaotic darkness that you have no choice but to dive into.  This album is beyond all reason, all genres, and everything we knew about Metal.  Extreme music wasn’t new in 1997, but it had never gone to this cracked-out level as City did.  This is an audible documentation of someone in complete turmoil in one of the hardest times of their life.  Devin had moved to Los Angeles from Canada and was sleeping on friends’ couches whilst trying to figure out life after Steve Vai and a copious amount of drugs.  It is the most raw level of dealing with one’s emotions audibly.  It is pain from the depths of a soul coming out in the most angry and anxiety-fueled ways you can ever experience.  It is an audible account of someone’s mental health breaking down due to their environment.  It is a rawness artists aspire to, but will never reach.  Nobody expresses the pain of human existence like Devin Townsend.  While Strapping Young Lad started as a farce to make fun of the Heavy Metal scene, they ended up creating the most iconic Extreme Metal records.

I discovered this album for the first time in 2018.  Finally, I decided to go through Devin’s entire catalog and do a deep dive.  This was one of the best decisions I have ever made.  Listening to Strapping Young Lad is a religious experience, in a sense.  It is a spiritual cleanse, a purge of all the darkness and rage I think most people hold inside.  First time I heard this record, my jaw dropped to the floor and tears flooded to my eyes. It was just so overwhelming. Devin has this ability to take the idea of catharsis and take it to the soul-crushing extremes.  City, and most SYL albums, are painful to listen to.  It’s chaotic, abrasive, cloying, and overwhelming beyond anxiety.  It’s like El Paso traffic on a weekday with Metallica in town.  It’s like the height of COVID where everything is telling us the world is ending, we’re all going to die, and humanity is a shit show.  Despite all these negative descriptors, City makes me genuinely happy to be alive and able to experience this album. I still get happy tears listening to the utter brilliance of Gene Hoglan and Devin Townsend together. Gene’s drumming on this record makes all the hair stand up all over my entire body.  His drumming with the riffs on this album is just genial to me.  “All Hail The New Flesh” has to be one of the greatest Metal songs I’ve ever heard in my life.  It’s just so damn relentlessly fast, and still so groove-oriented.  City cements why Gene Hoglan is one of my favorite drummers of all time.  He is the only drummer that could’ve drummed on these SYL albums. I wish I was half as good as he is at drums.

City, it’s insane how great this album still sounds today.  It’s too short, but somehow just right as intense as it is for thirty-nine minutes.  It is all so extreme, but ends one of the most philosophical mind-bending tracks.  I think this is one of the highlights of Devin’s career as a Progressive Metal musician.  There’s just something about the way the chaos ends with such a deep, dark, and interesting track.  The transition is a stroke of brilliance.  I just love Devin’s ability to mix so many different styles in one album.  “Spirituality” is kind of the soul predecessor to the next album on this list, Ocean Machine: Biomech.  Listening to it and Ocean Machine back to back is an eerie experience that can never be replicated.  Experiencing all the sides of Devin is a revelation, but City will always be the apex of the journey for me.  This is where music became limitless for me. I began to understand how extremism and Prog can work together.  It was an eye-opening first experience that I will cherish forever.  “City” is an album that will forever be on the timelines of Metal.  I wish Devin’s other albums received as much press and acclaim as this one.  Maybe he’d be as big as Opeth and Dream Theater, and rightfully so.   

Favorite Songs; All Hail the New Flesh, Spirituality, Detox

 2.Ocean Machine: Biomech- Devin Townsend (1997)

When I am asked what my favorite album of all time is, Ocean Machine is my immediate response.  Choosing an absolute favorite is difficult and contrived in a way.  There have been so many iconic, influential, and important Metal albums since the 1960s.  Choosing one out of a million albums just seems elitist in a way.  Though, I can’t help but let one album define my ultimate personal taste.  Ocean Machine best highlights my favorite sounds in Metal and also highlights some of my personality traits.  Ocean Machine was written at a critically important time in Devin’s life when he had to choose his Mental well-being over the success of Strapping Young Lad.  He began to notice a cognitive discourse between the anger of SYL, and the solo music he was writing while at home.  The two extremes lead to Devin being diagnosed with Bipolar disorder.  Somehow his mental health issues became audibly documented, which is such an interesting experience to hear the separation of two personalities.  It’s an incredible feat, even if it was entirely unintentional.  Through Ocean Machine and his other solo works, Devin began to heal and move on from the most tumultuous years of his life.  You can experience this journey with him through his music.  Unintentionally, Devin became an outlet for so many people struggling and he built a unique cult following that found immense positivity through his music.  This is one of the most profoundly beautiful things I’ve ever seen in music and is why Ocean Machine is so vital to me.  It’s the ultimate catalyst to healing, and god knows, humanity has a lot to heal from.

Ocean Machine is where Devin’s “Power of Positivity” through music began.  Songs like “Life” began this new voice for Devin and allowed a connection to form with new lifelong friends and fans.  Everyone should experience this album at least once in their life.  It is a Progressive and atmospheric triumph with exquisite guitar chord progression and fantastic vocals.  It is a love child of 90’s Alternative, Pink Floyd, Rush, and Genesis…  Yet, the album stands on its own entirely.  I’ve never heard anything quite like it in my entire life.  I feel like describing it is such an arduous task.  Ocean Machine is complex; Still one of the most complex records I have ever heard.  The atmosphere in it captures sitting by the ocean in the dark alone so vividly.  It paints such a unique picture in my head with such profound feelings.  It’s loss, it’s freedom, it’s rejoicing, and so many complex human emotions.  Devin is the most proficient at capturing these sentiments I have ever heard.  Thus, the most epic quad of songs I have ever heard is what makes Ocean Machine an everlasting one-in-a-million experience.  I strive for this level of emotional depth and positivity every day of my life, but still have a lot of work to portray this message. Devin is on another level of self expression. That quality comes out on Ocean Machine so poetically. That’s why it’s my favorite album. It’s not held back by commercialism. It’s not refined. It’s not heavily edited. It’s raw and real tangible emotion. It is a musical of the Human Condition of sorts, and I just can’t get enough of it.

Most call it a trio, but I consider the last track to be an integral part of the journey.  This quad begins with the heartbreaking “Funeral”, where Devin continues to hash out the death of a childhood friend.  It continues with the painful, epic, and droning “Bastard”, one of the darkest songs I have ever heard in my life.  The guitar on that song is absolutely sensational and so unique to anything I’ve ever heard.  “The Death of Music” is a long epic; a dark Peter Gabriel-esque tribal track that perfectly sums up the theme of the album “It’s like a death becomes Musical”.  Devin’s crooning on the bridge “Don’t die on me. Don’t go away. When I need you here. In my need” is one of the most spine-chilling things I have ever heard.  This song is a milestone.  It’s a once-in-a-lifetime underrated masterpiece, and I love it irrevocably.  Ocean Machine closes with one of the most depression-inducing songs I’ve heard. While it’s a bonus track, it was added to the album later on.  “Thing Beyond Things” is everything about unexplainable heartache sonified.  It was originally a demo and featured in his collection “NoiseScapes” as one of the oldest recordings of Devin.  It features an unbelievable 10-second fry vocal scream featuring harmonics that only Devin can seemingly reach.  It is the most epic scream I have ever heard.  Devin puts his body on the line for music again and again, and his ability to perform these songs even today is a superhuman feat.  This album is what made Devin Townsend my favorite artist of all time and it will remain my favorite probably for life. I’m considering doing a bass playthrough of the entire album on Twitch or Youtube this year!

Favorite Songs; Voices In The Fan, Seventh Wave, Funeral, Regulator

3. The New Black- Strapping Young Lad (2006)

This is one of the first albums I put down while compiling this list.  When I think of my favorite Metal albums, The New Black is one I never talk about but it lives in my mind and heart forever.  This is Strapping Young Lad’s last record. I think it’s a perfect representation of SYL’s immensely unique sound.  This album may not have received the acclaim of “City” and “Alien”.  I still find it to be one of my favorite albums Devin has ever released.  It is highly influential to the music I want to write.  The guitar and drum sounds on it are unlike anything I’ve ever heard.   “The New Black” is still as extreme and heavy as ever, but this is where Devin’s awakening in refinement and self-editing began.  His extreme approach to music would continue with “Ziltoid; The Omniscient” and “Deconstruction” which are the “last breaths of SYL”, but this album marked the end of an era.  This album would separate the fans forever.  Many have not moved on from SYL and still refuse to accept Devin as a solo artist.  That is how impactful SYL was on the Metal community.  While it brought Extreme Metal and Prog together for me, it seemingly separated the SYL fanbase  I understand why people have not moved on from SYL, but they’re missing out on the transformation of Devin and everything he’s created since.

“The New Black” is an eclectic mix of Prog Metal, Extreme Metal, and Industrial rhythms that keeps you guessing with every listen.  I find this album to be the turning point of Devin’s vocals, where his refined operatic style began to come out.  It appeared on other tracks before this album a bit, but not as forefront or epic as on The New Black  This is probably one of the greatest transformations in Music.  His grasp on clean vocals and fry vocals is unparalleled in music to me.  Nobody does this transition quite like Devin, with such range, technicality, and pure unedited emotion.  It is quite a sound to behold on any record of his from “The New Black” and on.  This album is where my favorite music of all time began to take its shape.  I also think this album has some of the best riffs in SYL history.  The Title Track, “Far Beyond Metal”, and my absolute favorite song “Almost Again” are filled with groovy and pummeling riffs with the unique Devin Townsend tone.  I hear these riffs ghosted on anything from Gojira to Periphery to Orbit Culture.  SYL and “The New Black’ impacted Metal a lot more than I originally thought.  I had no idea what a big deal SYL was to Metal. I don’t participate in forums or fan-groups, so it wasn’t until other artists started talking about SYL did I realize how influential they were.

Now, listening to this album back to back, I hear so many bands that borrowed from this album. But, I have yet to hear anyone recreate the magic and utter devastation of “Almost Again”.  This song is my favorite SYL song, right above “Love?”, “Spirituality”, and “Skeksis”.  This song has one of the fastest and most incredible drum parts I have ever heard.  It feels like a million volts of electricity pummeling your heart and neurons.   Gene Hoglan really defied the parameters of speed drumming on this song, to the point where few drummers can even play this song today and it has only been played live a couple times.  The technicality blows me away on “Almost Again”, but SYL doesn’t have a slouched song.  They’re pioneers of Extreme and Progressive Metal.  Every song on this album is a triumph to me. “The New Black” forever altered my music taste, and I’ve sought out that balance of heavy and Prog ever since. Devin always achieves a unique blend of styles, but The New Black is definitely one of my favorites. I love that it doesn’t sound like anything else in that era of music. Yet, I find it nostalgic to that time where Industrial Metal was popular. This era of Metal had a unique atmosphere to me that hasn’t been recreated since. It’s a desolate feeling to listen to. It’s eerie, but in a good way. It has a dystopian futuristic feel that would fit in a Bladerunner or Dune film. It’s such a cool experience I’ve only had when listening to Industrial Metal. I think SYL is one of the best at capturing this vibe.

Favorite Songs; Almost Again, The New Black, Wrong Side

4. Accelerated Evolution- The Devin Townsend Band (2003)

The Devin Townsend band, while it shares members with the DTP, was only created to make two keystone albums for Devin Townsend.  This album was a huge departure from his other works.  It was more personal, less about being heavy or extreme.  The band was put together in under a year with local musicians to create a whole fresh experience.  It is the polar opposite of the self-titled SYL album that was recorded at the exact same time.  The Devin Townsend Band began touring with SYL after the albums came out, and they were both really well critically received.  When I discovered Devin in 2014, I had never heard of another musician being so prolific.  Two bands at once and multiple albums in one year under different projects was inhuman to me. His explosive creativity always astounds me.  I think this band was created as a buffer for the chaos that SYL brought.  This was a group of people that Devin could just jam his ideas with and create whatever came out of his head without the need for a theme or time constraints.  Music is not a job or a hobby for Devin, it is a necessity to express emotion and work through it all.  This necessity birthed what I think is one of the greatest songs ever written: Deadhead.

Accelerated Evolution is full of quirky, Hard Rock, and Progressive Metal tracks that rise up quick and soar above anything I have ever heard before.  There is an intangible vibe to this album that reminds me of Superunknown by Soundgarden, Ten by Pearl Jam, and Rush.  It was the most concise, most hook-heavy, and most well-thought-out album Devin had put out in that era.  It was less frantic, more groove-driven, and Industrial at the right point in Music.  It was catchy without going too commercialistic.  It had the potential to be as popular as Fear Factory at the time, but of course, it didn’t receive the promotion it deserved.  I think Accelerated Evolution has some of Devin’s absolute best guitar work, especially the solo on “Suicide” and the complete guitar solo track “Away” which still mesmerizes me to this day. “Away” is such an underrated guitar track.  I like every song on this album and think each one is very distinct from anything ever released as usual. I believe this is one of the strongest albums in his extensive catalog and will always be one of my favorites.  Most of my current music material emulates this album to some degree because the guitar tone and drums are just of the utmost quality.  I like big sounds and big “Rock” mixes, and this album is mixed so well for 2002.  Devin uses so much reverb in his mixes and his guitar effects, it’s become an inside joke among him and the fans. I love it. I love how all encompassing his mixes are. Accelerated Evolution was the first album I noticed this “wall of sound” production, and I fell in love with it.

I just have to talk about “Deadhead’.  This song is one of Devin’s most popular songs and has become unanimous with how people identify him.  It’s an ambiguous song that has never been revealed to what it exactly means to Devin.  But, he always describes it as a “song about love” and a song “written for his wife”, which fits the relationship theme of the album.  It is one of the first songs Devin ever wrote on his very first electric guitar.  He was very inspired by the industrial Metal band Godflesh at the time of writing most of the album.  I think that influence helped create the unique and devastating atmosphere of “Deadhead”, but also a lot of SYL’s atmosphere.  I had never heard a more emotionally painful song in my life.  It’s the drone, the slow tension of the guitar, the backbeat of the drums, and the harmonic fry scream that emulates pain.  I had heard a handful of singers’ harmonic screams before, but none to the frequency or sheer audible pain of Devin.  This song healed things in me that I didn’t even know still pained me.  That’s how powerful this song is.  It can be interpreted as a difficult relationship, a first love, or a really dark break-up song.  I think all of these interpretations of painful situations hit me like a freight train at once. So, I listened to the song until the pain went away.  This course of time was about three months. While some people may think it’s unhealthy to listen to the same song on repeat for that long. I find whatever helps you heal to be absolutely necessary. I fear to think where I’d be in my mental health journey without this song, or any of Devin’s music. I truly think there’s a song in Devin’s discography that can heal anyone.  I don’t know if that’s what he was shooting for with Accelerated Evolution. But, it impacted me as gigantic as the mix is and I think it’s impacting even more people over a decade later. It still hits me like it did when I first heard it, especially the live versions where he even exceeds the original power. His music is forever, and Deadhead is the flagship of that infinite contribution.

My favorite Songs; Deadhead. Traveller, Away

5. Transcendence- Devin Townsend Project (2016)

I featured the very last SYL album, so it’s no surprise I’d feature the last album ever released by DTP, the power group we all loved for a decade.  At the point the DTP was working on Transcendence, I saw a big change in Devin.  He started to relinquish some control of his musical projects and delegate to the other guys, Ryan, Mike, Dave, and Beav in the DTP.  Transcendence was a true band collaboration, which is something we hadn’t seen with Devin’s solo work.  It was a promising turning point to solidify the project as a band, and maybe grow it further for future releases and add more personality to it rather than just being one of Devin’s solos.  And boy, did I love this idea emphatically.  I had become very attached to Ryan Van Poederooyen, the drummer, who is still one of my favorite drummers of all time.  That powerhouse of a drummer and a very inspirational self-sufficient guy inspired me to pick up the drums again, and I’ve had so much fun with the instrument and learning his interesting patterns.  DTP had become kind of a buffer to Devin’s eccentric “madman” style of music.  Ryan and co kept Devin grounded and definitely helped hone in his ideas for one of the best Prog Metal albums ever, Transcendence.  

Transcendence is an anthemic Progressive Metal album that’s a full-circle journey with incredibly complex guitar riffs and one of the best drum performances since Dream Theater’s Images and Words.  It is a huge-sounding record that makes the hair on my arms stand straight up every single time I listen to it. I think this is the “magnum opus” of the DTP.  It’s perfectly constructed with each track just flowing together in perfect timing and harmony.  The Wall-of-sound production from Devin and Periphery’s Nolly Getgood is utterly exquisite.  I will never get over how good this record sounds.  Is it mixed to sound good on every possible form of media?  God, no.  This is an album you have to listen to in FLAC with spatial audio either 2.1 with a sub or 5.1, and that’s perfectly acceptable.  I don’t want to listen to Devin’s music on my “airbuds” while I’m cleaning.  I want to sit down and listen to this album, and have a completely immersive audio experience.  I listen to DTP’s music to be uplifted, emotionally conquered, and unironically “transcended” to a different state of mind.  That’s exactly the intent of this album and it achieves it so loudly.  It’s the loudest mix on a DTP album, so you can hear each member with perfect clarity.  The result is actually mind-boggling. I have no idea how such a perfect mix was achieved.  There are so many layers to this album. 

The choirs, immense synths, many guitar tracks, and the biggest sounding drums ever recorded.  Yet, it sounds so damn good.  On songs like “Failure” and the instant classic “Stormbending” you can pick out each musician, and everyone gets a “solo” of sorts.  The heaviness, and yet the airiness and spine-tingling sounds this album achieves are unlike anything I’ve ever heard before.  My favorite song of the album tops it all off for me, though.  “Stars” is a bombastic track with incredible vocals, syncopated guitar and bass, and epic imagery.  I was lucky enough to watch this song come to life on stream in only a couple hours.  It was a once-in-a-lifetime experience to watch Devin speed-craft such a beautiful song.  His talent knows no limits and really came to shine on this song in particular.

It’s a mind-blowing emotional and thought-provoking album that makes you feel like you can rise above absolutely anything.  Whether it be self-doubt, social anxiety, the negativity of social media, the depressing news media, or isolation, this album works through all those aspects in a very logical sense.  The connection I made with this record is just so affable, one article where I’m keeping it as short as possible is not enough to go through each song.  It’s just so monumental to me.  How do you possibly articulate an album that encapsulates everything you stand for and believes in?  I can say just go listen to arguably the most epic and perfect track on this album “Higher”.  That song alone may make you understand just how significant this album is and get the message loud and clear, “Don’t let the bastards grind you down.”  Transcendence and its message have never been more relevant than in 2025 with a world full of hatred and divisiveness.  “Higher” is about rising above negativity and making your own life without the influence of others. It’s taken from the concept of Buddhism and Transcendental Meditation, which are teachings I have brought into my own life. I will always associate this song with Ryan, too, as it’s my favorite work from him on drums and part of his teachings.

In 2016, I was lucky enough to partially experience this album live in person.  Seeing DTP on one of their last tours was phenomenal.  I still can’t believe I got to see them headline at a one-off show in Denver.  It was an experience I am forever grateful for.  I thought the DTP would go on and last for their entire careers as musicians, but sadly, the project was disbanded in 2018 after the release of Ocean Machine Live at Plovdiv.

Favorite songs; Stars, Failure, Stormbending

6.  Empath- Devin Townsend (2019)

While I’m grateful for the DTP and I still love the guys, I found out that I was so wrong about Devin needing people to reign him in and tame him.  This idea is good for some albums, but when it comes to Devin’s unhinged visions, some of the best music has been created without constraints.  Empath was a collection of ideas Devin had long before deciding to disband DTP, but he never had the time to sit down and expand on these ideas.  Talking with Frank Zappa guitarist Mike Keneally over the phone, he would let these ideas flow out.  The two compiled an album together in this manner and went into the studio to record what I think is one of the best Prog Metal albums ever created.   This album is all of Devin’s ideas, personality, and deepest thoughts without limit.  It is infinite in reverberation, full orchestra, full choir, and about thirty very different musicians.  It’s a weird personification of Devin going on an island vacation with his family, but it’s also the journey of life in a chaotic and profound Metal Opera.  There are so many layers and sounds on this record, that it returns him to that “musical madman” viewpoint.  Empath was Devin’s huge launch into solo work 12 years after his last solo release, and I believe it is one of his best works but also one of the best works of music ever created. 

Empath is a fantastical Prog Metal album with all of Devin’s past and present influences combined with infinite layers and the genial guitar work and mixing of Mike Keneally. It is “The most Devin album that Devin has ever recorded” as said by the Angry Metal Guy.  This album is insane and watching him create it over two years was insane in the best way possible. Witnessing this album, as well as all of Devin’s albums, is one of the biggest reasons I am thankful to be alive, to be honest.

Empath is an explosive Prog Metal album with Opera, Symphonic, Extreme, and Ambient influences created by some of the best musicians I’ve heard in my entire life.  It is Devin Townsend to the one-millionth power, and it took so many people to make the sounds of this man’s Synthesia-laden mind come to life.  Mike Keneally took these colors, patterns, and shapes and helped Devin translate them to a team of musicians, essentially learning a new language and creating one of the best relationships in music.  Somehow all of this chaos, passion, multitude of emotions, and influences came together in a Prog Metal epic.  It took three drummers, eight vocalists, four guitarists, three producers, a choir, a pedal steel guitar player, a whistle player, and immense work from Mike, Devin, and Nolly Getgood to create this epic.  It is Devin without limits or constraints, and my god, it is incredibly beautiful.  While it is the least accessible and commercial album he has ever created, it is a piece of pure art that will be forever irreplicable.  It may not be the best example of his vocals or guitar solos, but it is a purge of all the sounds that have ever existed in a brilliant musician’s head, and I think it’s incredible. 

It’s a soundtrack to Devin Townsend by Devin Townsend, and predictably, I love it.  The other musicians also really shine on this album, exposing me to the brilliance of Mike Keneally, Morgan Agren, and Nathan Navarro.  Nathan’s bass lines on this album are absolutely sensational.  It’s one of the things I love most on this album.  You can hear him decimate the bass on “Evermore” and “Genesis” with his unique thumb-picking that just fits so well with Devin’s guitar playing and tone.  These collaborations are just so perfect, it seems as though it was all meant to happen this way.  It made the shock and pain of disbanding the DTP worth it to me because Devin finally had musicians who understood him and could meet the expectations of brilliant musicality.  

I want to talk about some of the songs.  I think “Why?” is one of the most special songs in Devin’s entire catalog and highlights his perfect operatic vocal ability so beautifully.  Metal and opera are no strangers to each other, but rarely do I hear male vocals so well done in this mix. It’s so beautiful.  It really speaks to the message of Empath and how relationships with Empaths work in a group setting.  I really relate to this song, but also most of the songs on the album  I also think “Borderlands” gets stuck in my head more than any Devin Townsend song.  It’s just so catchy and rhythmically interesting.  While it’s kind of ambiguous and seemingly simplistic, it’s such a deep Jungian concept.  It attaches music to a “Muse” and describes upholding a balance to sate the “Muse” and a nuclear family, giving Devin a literal sign to make this album.  The way his mind works is incredible and it comes out so profoundly on this album, but no more profoundly than on “Requiem” and the epic “Singularity”.  “Requiem” is a closer to the era of DTP and a look ahead to the future of Devin’s music.  A choir echoes the beautiful chorus to “Stormbending” which is probably the biggest song DTP ever released and gives you a feeling of closure.  Devin’s full circle approach to his music where he reuses older lyrics is a personal touch that always captivates me. I love how he “rips his own material off”.

“Singularity” is the final to this epic transformation of Devin as a solo artist.  I think it’s a goodbye to his previous works, but also an insight into the “Moth” project coming out in 2025 where he moves to Symphonic work.  This is one of the most epic and gorgeous songs I’ve ever heard in my life.  It’s split up into multiple movements that all encompass every style of music he’s ever done.  It’s got industrial Meshuggah parts reminiscent of SYL,  a little bit of Transcendence and Epicloud, Infinity, and Addicted.  It is one of my favorite songs he’s ever written.  I listen to the “Here Comes the Sun” section of repeat, because Anneke’s vocals are just so uniquely beautiful on “Through the Storm, may you become a Rainbow.:”  This song mirrors the epics of Dream Theater, Porcupine Tree, and While Heaven Wept in such an ornately Devin Townsend way. I truly believe this is Devin’s magnum opus. I love this song so hugely, I think everyone NEEDS to hear it in full at least once in their life. It’s like listening to a film soundtrack. I envision a short film: A man goes through unbearably dark valleys of loneliness and despair to rise and transcend into the beautiful nebulas with love and light. It’s a sublime piece of music, one of my absolute favorite songs ever written.  I will be listening to it and Empath for the rest of my life and honestly trying to recreate this brilliance in my own music, although I don’t think it’s possible for anyone to ever replicate it.

I await to see if “The Moth” is as visionary as “Singularity”.

Favorite Songs: Singularity, Genesis, Why?

To sum it all up, I love Devin’s music irrevocably. Anything he puts out is significant to me in multiple ways. His music always seems to find me when I need it the most. Whether it be a death in the family, a break up, an injury, or living in an isolated place, his music is always what lifts me up. That’s what his music means to me; It’s about rising about any obstacle and any darkness while accepting everything life has to offer. On “Genesis” Devin screams on the chorus “Let there be light let there be moon! Let there be stars and let there be you! Let there be monsters, let there be pain! Let us begin to live again
From the top to the bottom genesis!” I repeat this message in my head every day. It’s become my mantra. It seems to get me through absolutely anything. Through Devin, I’ve learned to accept pain and find the strength to rise out of it. That’s what his music means to me. Throughout his music career, I find his message of “transcendence” to be loud and clear. Whatever happens in life, you can transcend it and come out of it stronger than you were before. Bad shit is always going to happen, and you can’t fight it. Pure acceptance of the journey has helped me more than any pharmaceutical I have ever tried. His music is literally better than drugs for me. His music is essential to every aspect of my life. I know a lot of people find his music this way. Some people even wonder if he’s a demigod walking and screaming about cheeseburgers among us. I think he’s just an incredible human being with a feast of knowledge and experience to share. Whatever goes on in life, I will always have his large discography to be my soundtrack. I remember who I was before his music. I know who I am after discovering his music. I know it forever changed me for the better, and I hope more people discover him this way.

I could go on and on about Devin’s music for more articles, and I will! Let me know what your favorite albums of Devin’s are. Maybe I will run a poll just for fun.

Check out his work here: https://hevydevy.com

My Favorite Devin Song Live

My top 20 Songs by Devin Townsend (in no particular order)

  1. Deadhead
  2. Ubelia
  3. Jainism
  4. Singularity
  5. Kingdom
  6. Voices In The Fan
  7. True North
  8. Almost Again
  9. Love?
  10. Ih Ah
  11. Genesis
  12. Supercrush
  13. Om
  14. Stars
  15. Failure
  16. Stormbending
  17. Fallout
  18. The Greys
  19. Awake
  20. Funeral

Discover My Favorite Rock Albums of All Time 1

My favorite albums collage

I have been delving into Rock the past year once again after a long sabbatical.  I decided to make a detailed list of my absolute favorite Rock albums of all time.  While lists are the internet’s favorite way of getting a shit-ton of views and pissing people off in the process, I love sharing my favorite music with people. Hopefully, someone connects with my taste or opinion positively.  I am focusing on the traditional idea of Rock on this list, with a couple of Heavy Metal/Hard Rock albums on here.  I consider Rock to be entirely its own thing from Metal most of the time, usually containing more clean vocals, slow songs, and a strict time signature and song structure.  I don’t know if that’s a fair or correct observation of genre differentiation, but it’s just how my brain processes the deciding factors on what is Rock and what is exclusively Metal.

THIS IS NOT A BEST OF LIST:  These are just 20 of my favorite Rock albums.  It’s not me telling people what I think is better than anything else out there.  This is not a posturing of opinion and knowledge.  I’m just a writer who is ultra-passionate about music.  I like to get as personal and as real as possible with my writing, and this is such a good way to do so!  Do not get riled up because one of your favorites isn’t on the list.  It doesn’t mean I don’t love your favorite record.  Maybe I haven’t even heard of it yet, so please let me know your favorites in the comments below!  I would love to know what albums everyone holds most dear.   Always remember music is incredibly subjective, and that the taste is unique to the individual for a whole host of personal reasons.  

There are two parts, this is part one. Only 10 per post will appear.

  1. Error- The Warning (2022)

I was sitting in my living room and having ice cream with my mom while we were checking out new music videos in 2023.  The Warning popped up on my Youtube feed with the live version of their cover of “Enter Sandman” by Metallica at CDMX.  I played the video, quite skeptical of what I was about to hear.  Little did I know, this video and the subsequent two videos we watched would forever change my life. This Mexican Rock Trio of the Villarreal sisters is the reason I started listening to Rock again. After so long of exclusively listening to Heavy Metal, Rock just seemed derivative.  This band brought back my sweet spot for Rock with soaring vocals, heavy riffs, and innate technical ability with explosive chemistry.  They’ve got that magic quality that the early Heavy Metal bands had but with modern twists and exceptionally profound lyrics and irresistibly catchy choruses.  They’ve got the “it factor” packed into a power trio, much like Rush, Muse, Chevelle, and Winery Dogs that came long before them.  It’s hard to articulate the specialness of this band.  They’re just something you truly have to experience for yourself. 

The Warning’s Error is one of the best Rock albums I have ever heard.  The songwriting, the mastering, the composition, and the supernova of complex emotions and deep cerebral lyrics make Error a cornerstone album in Rock to me.  It’s heavy, raw, real, and yet so perfectly refined with the help of legendary producer David Bendeth.  “The hits just keep coming” is a phrase that comes to mind often when I listen to this record.  Every song is unique, bombastic, catchy, and so well-written.  There are no gaps.  There’s no dragging on.  There’s no filler, just all killer riffs and insanely emotive vocals. Dany Villarreal is one of the greatest vocalists and frontwomen of all time.  The song Choke represents that sentiment so epically.  Error has elements that if it were released ten to twenty years ago, it would’ve been an instant classic.  A lot of that credit also goes to bassist Alejandra for holding this album together with insane grooves, riffs, and pitch-perfect rhythm.  The overall tone set by the bass on this record is spectacular, and it reminds me of the old Heavy Metal records from AC/DC, Black Sabbath, and Led Zeppelin.  This level of talent from a bassist is just unheard of these days, sadly.   This album deserves Grammy and RCA recognition.  Being released in these times of Rock and individuality discrimination, it may never be truly recognized for its greatness.  The maturity and depth of this album are surprising from three girls, two of them not even out of their teens.  If you haven’t heard this album, you’re going to be blown away on the first listen, I promise.  I will never not be blown away by this record, and all of The Warning’s material.  Error will be in my play rotation as long as I live.

Favorite Tracks: Evolve, Animosity, Choke

  1. Self Titled- Halestorm (2009)

Halestorm, the self-titled album of the American Hard Rock band, is one of the most dynamic bombastic albums I have ever heard in my life.  This album came out in 2009, but I didn’t discover it until a year later.  When I first heard this album, I was only sixteen or seventeen, it was nostalgic to my childhood harkening back to the 1980s when Heavy Music was king. It’s like the album Heart tried to make, but producers consistently discouraged women from writing heavy music.   Halestorm is a combination of melodic guitar lines underneath absolutely pristine soaring vocals by the one and only Lzzy Hale, and perfectly accurate arena rock drums from the “Animal” Arejay Hale.  It’s full of angst, anger, raw, and heartfelt with some down and dirty thrown in there.  It’s not over-produced, but it’s so clear and well-delivered.  Every riff, vocal line, and drum full makes sense and is perfectly crafted together.   It’s driven and hard-hitting, especially in the vocal department.  Lzzy’s vocals are the centerfold of Halestorm, and it shows on this record.  I feel like the self-titled says that this band doesn’t follow any tropes, genres, stereotypes, or eras of music.  It’s truly a standalone standout album.  There’s nothing like it, because of Lzzy’s voice, the unique deviation in the songs, and the mix of melodic and heavy riffs.  It just punches you in the chest soul deep in a very in-your-face loudspeaker way.  

Halestorm brought back a lot of heart to Rock as well.  I feel like Rock started moving in a more aggressive edgy direction at the time, losing a lot of character and warmth and just inserting random Rap lines and dubstep sounds.  The self-titled Halestorm is a perfect mix of aggressiveness, heart, and tasty riffs.  It’s catchy as hell without being derivative.  There are stories you can relate to.  Every song tells a story or a different emotion, going over the complexity of relationships and accepting how other people affect you.  The rhythm section is powerful without taking over the music and foreshadowing the melodic qualities.  To my ears, this album is nearly perfect, because it has its own identity and a ton of soul.  This band put everything they had musically and soulfully into every single song, and it comes across emphatically.  I’ve never heard anything quite like it.  Halestorm was and will always be incomparable.  I think this album is truly an essential Rock album that everyone should listen to.

Favorite Tracks; Familiar Taste of Poison, Nothing To Do With Love, What Were You Expecting

  1. Self-titled- Evanescence (2011)

Evanescence was already a household name in 2009 following two classic Rock records with Fallen and The Open Door.  I grew up listening to these records, even basing my room decor on the aesthetics of The Open Door era.  Evanescence is a once-in-a-lifetime trailblazing band.  They pioneered the Goth Rock scene in North America and added Symphonic elements that lead to the popularity of bands like Nightwish and Within Temptation in the US.  Amy Lee has to be on the best singers in Rock list with her soaring multi-octave vocals and heart-wrenching soulful croons.  Nobody sounds quite like Amy still to this day, and she’s influenced thousands of young girls to go into the world of heavy music.  I always wonder how my music taste would’ve evolved without Evanescence.  They opened the door for me into darker music, and that has been a huge outlet for me for the past eighteen years. Amy Lee’s music is so personal and special to me.  Choosing one record of theirs for this list was nearly impossible, but I had to go with the Self-titled record.  Each records a point in time where music was changed forever, but the Self-Titled turned out to be a dark horse.

Self Titled Evanescence was one of the most anticipated records ever.  It had been five years since The Open Door was released and news of the band had been quiet besides a couple of member changes.  It didn’t chart as well as previous records, so I find it underrated.  I had no idea what to expect with this record because you never know what direction Amy will take.  She’s a true experimental pioneer of a unique blend of Rock and atmospheric sounds that are unheard of.  Evanescence, the record, is everything the band has to offer.  It’s odd, funky, heavy, and a roller coaster of emotions.   It’s beautiful from the soaring melodies to the pristine piano lines, but there is a grunge feel to it.  The guitars and drums are very grungy and raw, which is such a juxtaposition to the vocals, piano, and the level of reverb on this record.  It’s a solid Rock record with catchy riffs, but the opposite of mainstream or anything derivative.  The addition of Will Hunt on drums is what stands out to me.  His playing is so driven and so perfectly accurate for the feel on every track. It’s so vastly different from the previous records, but still so profoundly Evanescence.  This album is perfect, I love every single song on this record and find each one to be uniquely perfect while having this ethereal feel.  It has its own Evanescence aesthetic, one you can sink and disappear in.  This record echoes Mozart, Bjork, Soundgarden, and Nightwish all together somehow, but is still so vastly different from anything ever made before. 

My favorite tracks; are Made of Stone, Sick, and The Change.

  1. 5150- Van Halen (1986)

The stress of picking a single Van Halen record for my favorite album was a mountain to climb.  Man, they just simply don’t have a bad album.  In my opinion, all their albums are instant classics and essential to the world of Hard Rock.  They’re one of the greatest and most influential bands of all time.  I was probably listening to Van Halen as soon as I was born.  They’re a huge part of my family and my musical influences.  They’ve impacted millions of people like this, so my family is not unique in this influence, but not a lot of families listen to heavy music all together like mine, I don’t think.  We had listening parties before anyone knew what they were, and a lot of those were centered around Van Halen and Iron Maiden.  5150 is one of my mom’s favorites, so I’ve probably heard this record in full more than their other albums.  But, it wasn’t until I got older that I was able to appreciate the technicality and level of depth of this album.  It was between this and For Unlawful Carnal Knowledge, and nostalgia won over heaviness in this battle.  5150 is larger than life, much like EVH himself.

I love every Van Halen album differently, but 5150 is my bread and butter.  This album is one I grew up listening to a lot, so there’s immense nostalgia when listening to it.  The technicality of this album atop epic Arena Rock sound and tangible emotion is why it has to be my favorite of theirs.  It’s so crisp and so light and airy, leaving so much room for each brilliant musician to come to the forefront.  Sammy Hagar’s vocals on this record still give me chills every single time.  He is always right dead center on every note while keeping emotion, grit, and tension that fits so undeniably well with Eddie’s guitar lines.  They can solo off between vocals and guitars, making Hagar the voice that can go toe to toe with Eddie’s guitars, and I don’t think he gets the credit he deserves for this feat.  Hagar’s vocals on Why Can’t This Be Love? are stunning.  His vocal scat solo on this blows my mind every single time I listen to it. I also think Michael Anthony is a highly overlooked bassist and I love this bass tone on every Van Halen album.  The whole band just really came together on this record and it flows so smoothly.  Other VH albums have bursting-at-the-seams chaos to them because Eddie’s genius is just so explosive.  5150 came together, and despite feeling a little short and unfinished, I think it’s one of their best.  If I’m in the mood for Rock of Van Halen, this is one of my favorite go-to albums. 

Rest in peace, Eddie. 

Favorite Tracks; Why Can’t This Be Love?, Dreams, 5150

  1. AB III- Alter Bridge (2010)

One of my most listened-to records of all time, I had to include the incomparable Alter Bridge III.  This album got me into Alter Bridge in a huge way.  I wore this CD out in every player my family and I had.  My dad was a huge Creed fan when I was a kid, so Mark Tremonti’s insanely heavy and precise guitar playing wasn’t lost on me.  AB III is an album that brought this band together in a chemistry sense.  It sounds like they found their groove on this record with less dead air and less slow instrumentals that seemed to be out of place.  This album has a massive sound to it and hits hard immediately.  It’s an in-your-face Hard Rock album with incredible melodic vocals and unbelievably good guitars.  Every track kind of flows together, almost like a movie playing out in your head.  It’s expertly arranged and incredibly emotionally charged.  It’s an album that you have to sit down and dig into.  Listening to it in passing is not going to translate so well, because of its immense depth and layers.  It’s not Radio Rock, it’s not mainstream fluff or over-produced filler.  AB III is complex.  It’s both dark and bright.  It’s heavy but gentle.  It echoes the intensity of Guns N Roses, but it is so much more refined and pleasant to well-tuned ears.  This is one of my favorite albums for guitar work on this entire list and influenced me as a guitarist more than nearly every album I have ever listened to.  

Alter Bridge III is an album that I don’t see on a lot of lists, which is surprising to me because of its loud intensity and well-composed choruses.  This album is a classic to me in the realm of Hard Rock and put Myles Kennedy on a pedestal for vocals.  He is a one-of-a-kind singer with one of the largest ranges I’ve ever heard.  His guitar playing also kicks ass and he even plays some solos, going toe-to-toe with the beast that is Mark Tremonti.  I don’t understand the hate that Myles receives, specifically from the Prog world.  He is a fantastic vocalist who should be listed among the greatest of all time.  Yet, he is consistently ragged on for being too mainstream or mid-tier.  I simply think that not enough people have heard this record.  If they listened to AB III, they would find it impossible to hate such a well-composed Hard Rock album and epic humble vocalist such as Myles.  

Favorite Tracks: Make It Right, All Hope Is Gone, Zero, Life Must Go On

  1. Appeal To Reason- Rise Against (2008)

As a pre-teen in the 2000s, I was very stereotypically a huge fan of Punk Rock.  I liked everything from Blink 182, Misfits, Ramones, Yellowcard, Good Charlotte, Fall Out Boy, and of course Paramore who is also on this list.  Pop Punk and Punk Rock were at the pinnacle of their popularity in the 2000s, with Warped Tour becoming one of the best-selling festivals in the world.  I was exposed to this scene through Fuse and MTV, and I fell in love with the fast-paced-light-heartedness of these bands.  I was a goofy teen with a huge sense of humor, a lot of energy, and a huge liking for girls.  These bands catered to those things in a big way, but the Metal Head in me eventually reared its head, and I wanted something darker.  Rise Against came along with their video for “The Good Left Undone” which was way darker, heavier, and had an edge to it that nothing else had at the time.  I was obsessed with this song but never purchased the whole album.  It wasn’t until I heard Reeducation Through Labor that I truly became a Rise Against fan and picked up Appeal To Reason when it came out.  It was a massive album in Colorado because it was recorded and produced in Fort Collins, CO.

This album is a whole different animal to any Punk album I have ever heard. Even to this day, I haven’t heard anything close to it.  It’s essentially about the collapse of America and the entire world and humanity losing its way because of war, social conflict, and out-of-control nihilism.  It’s a very complex socially charged album that I can still very much relate to today.  Rise Against tackles the hardest issues humanity has to deal with, and I commend them for aggressively tackling these.  I hate politics in music.  I find politics to be too much of a distraction from the actual issues of humanity.  But, this album is an exception and hits me right at my core every single time I listen to it.  The idea that America “has fallen from grace” isn’t lost on me and is still relevant today.  But, the politics and differing ideals aside, this album is sonically perfect to me.  Every riff, every snare and hi-hat and crash, every scream, every group vocal is attacking, in your face, and so perfectly placed.  The energy doesn’t stop.  It doesn’t let you off the rolling train of disappointment, anger, inspiration, desperation, and hope with excellent driving guitars and clarity.  Listening to it again, I am reminded that this is one of my favorite albums ever made.  Savior is such a beautiful track and is part of why I fell in love with this band. Tim Mcllrath wears his entire soul on his sleeve for everyone to see and projects it with a perfectly raspy voice.  He’s an underrated vocalist in Rock, and this album will be a testament to why that is so true.

Favorite Tracks: From Heads Unworthy, Long Forgotten Sons, Savior, Whereabouts Unknown

  1. Human Clay- Creed (1999)

As I mentioned in the paragraph about Alter Bridge, I am a fan of Mark Tremonti’s 18-wheeler truck-sized riffs.  He plays the hell out of his guitars, and you can hear that unfiltered on Human Clay.  This album helped Rock and Metal get away from Grunge and Hair Metal and started an entirely new more melodic and cleaner sound.   This album is so well refined, but not overproduced to just be pushed on the radio.  It is a workhorse of riffs, catchy chesty vocals, and insane bass lines.  It’s not formulaic or simplistic.  It’s blue-collar Rock and Metal that makes me feel as if I can do anything; like sledgehammer a wall, punch an elitist, or deadlift my goal weight like a beast.  This album gets a lot of hate from being overplayed possibly because of its ties to Christianity or Scott Stapp’s public battle with alcoholism, but I think it’s one of the best albums ever recorded to this day.  The internet is a hot box vacuum of negativity and undesired hate.  I tend to ignore what they say and form my own opinions based on musicality and emotion.  If everyone approached music this way, the better musicians would be popular and not work day jobs just to tour and release albums.  Maybe more people would exude the positivity that Mark Tremonti’s music tries to impart.  Even just posting my love for this album may hurt my viewership on this site, but it’s worth it to talk about one of my favorite albums that changed my music taste.

Human Clay. It’s a breath of fresh air after the depressing Grunge Era, Human Clay is powerful positivity, and self-worth.  It exudes such a large hopefulness that I long to hear in other albums.  I like dark music, but I also love positivity through heavy music, something liberating to the mind, body, and soul.  Creed opened up this door and so many post-nineties bands followed.  They brought back the untouchable invigoration that Van Halen, Whitesnake, and Scorpions helped create, but didn’t compromise on absolute unbridled instrumentalism.  The talent in Creed is still unbelievable to me.  Every time I hear one of their songs, I have no idea why they aren’t all on the “Greatest of All Time” lists.  Scott Stapp is such a solid, gritty, powerful vocalist with a burst of emotion and charisma.  He is an idealistic frontman and a storyteller.  He can belt a seemingly impossible length of time, he can soft speak, he can growl out with a load of raspy character, and sing perfectly in the pocket.  I have always loved his voice and long to have that amount of power in my voice.  Brian Marshall, the bassist who you never hear about, is a monster bassist.  This guy’s lines are so clean, perfectly tight with both the melody and rhythm and boomy in the right places.  He is one of my absolute favorite bassists, and yet nobody ever talks about him.  What a fantastic rhythm section record with Scott Phillips holding it down on drums as well.  Again, Phillips is never mentioned, but has some of the best rhythmic accents in Rock.  His use of open hi-hat, ride, and crash accents is so eloquently done and fits so well with the energy of the band.  Human Clay is a record created by four brilliant musicians, and it should be highly regarded as such, despite what the internet may say.  This album is a 10/10 album for me and is timeless.  

Favorite Tracks: With Arms Wide Open, Inside Us All, Higher, Are You Ready

  1. Echoes, Silence, Patience, & Grace  by Foo Fighters (2007)

I have been a fan of the Foo Fighters as long as I can remember, and a fan of Dave Grohl in general.  It seems like everything Dave has a hand in is golden; Nirvana, Queens of the Stone Age, Them Crooked Vultures, and so many more.  Picking a single Foo Fighters album was no simple feat, either, since every album is much different from its predecessor.  The variety in the Foo seems endless, covering multiple genres, decades of music, emotion, and differing musicians.  The first Foo album was all Dave pretty much, and it was great at that.  But, one album stands out above the rest for me, and that is the epic Echoes, Silence, Patience, & Grace when Foo Fighters became a band and not just a solo project.  The whole band came together with multiple facets and influences to make one of the most iconic American Hard Rock albums of all time,  featuring a song that would explode beyond their expectations and spawn countless covers that would go viral much later on.  This is one of those albums that I can’t imagine music without.  

Echoes Silence Patience & Grace combines 1970s singer-songwriter acoustics and storytelling with a hard post-Grunge explosivity.  The Bomb album cover is so very fitting for an album that keeps building, and building, and then explodes when you least expect it.  This album is when the Foo Fighters became a great band for me, and not just a good Rock band.  This album is deep, dark, light-hearted, soft, and a stick of dynamite all in one interesting package.  It’s a sonic journey of the Early 2000s in America and when Dave Grohl became “comfortable” with his style of songwriting, throwing out the old constructs of heavy music and just writing something meaningful.  His heart is out and wide open on this record, and it becomes a really beautiful journey through his life.  It’s almost like a memoir of the past and a bridge to the Foo Fighters’ legacy at the same time.  This album is meaningful with every riff, every vocal break and lyric, and the incredibly hard-hitting drums from Taylor Hawkins.  Chris Shiflett’s solos and licks are vastly underrated, breathing life into the music and bringing a /Tom Scholz and Allen Collins Country Rock vibe back to American music.  The word masterpiece is so overused and deflated, but this album is truly Foo Fighters’ masterwork.  It’s an album I think should be taught in Band at schools around the world, because it is so meaningful, so central, and so exquisitely played on every instrument.  I love this album and it impacted me so importantly as a kid, it still feels the same every time I listen to it.

Rest in peace, Taylor

Favorite Tracks: The Pretender, Come Alive, But, Honestly

  1. Whitesnake (Self-Titled 1987)

Yet another band that gets a lot of undeserved hate, Whitesnake is one of my all-time favorite bands.  Whitesnake combined the raw screams and guitars of Led Zeppelin with high-octane hooks.  Their self-titled album is timeless to me, still spin it a couple of times a month, it’s one of those albums I just love and can’t decide why I love it so.  Whitesnake has a magical quality as an album that surpassed most albums in the 1980s for me.  It wasn’t a try-hard overly aggressive Hair Metal record.  It’s an album that mixes Blues Rock, Soulful Vocals, and British Invasion vibes with 80s high-flying riffs from the one and only John Sykes.  A lot of people saw this record as an “Americanization” or Glam Rock foolery of Whitesnake, but I don’t see it that way and that definitely wasn’t the band’s intention.  I think the soulfulness of David Coverdale’s vocals, the orchestral instrumentals, and the complex chord progression proves this release was not aimed at the radio.  This album is deliberate in emotion, energy, and sublime composition.  It combined the depth of writing of Lez Zeppelin, Rainbow, and Deep Purple with the flashy catchiness of Van Halen in a seemingly impossible way.  Then, you have Neoclassical guitar solos thrown in there, giving Malmsteen a run for his money. None of those things fit together, but Whitesnake achieved it and more with this self-titled record.

This is an album I can put on repeat for an entire day and not get listener fatigue.  Each track stands out from the next to me and stands out far away from the music of that era.  It’s got a depth to it that was lacking with the over-produced Rock of that era.  Bad Boys is a song that I find to be so underappreciated, as it conjures the melodic harmonies of Iron Maiden and the hard-hitting drums of Metallica even featuring pristine and fast double bass.  This is one of my absolute favorite songs ever written, and I don’t see anyone talking about it today.  It’s a song that doesn’t cater to the typical Radio Rock at all, and that’s maybe why it got swept under the rug compared to the monstrous Still Of The Night, Here I Go Again and Is This Love.   I fell in love with Coverdale’s voice on Is This Love, as it reminds me of fantastic vocalists Michael Mcdonald, Roger Daltrey, and Robert Plant but with more control than most Rock singers of his generation.    His voice and John Sykes playing still give me chills to this day, even though I’ve heard this album hundreds of times.  I understand if you’ve heard the singles too much on the radio, but seriously, sit down and listen to this whole record.  It is impressively good and somehow so ahead of its time in Hard Rock, but incomparable when it comes to matters of the heart and soul.

Rest in peace, John Sykes.

Favorite Tracks: Is This Love? Bad Boys, Still of the Night, Children of the Night

  1. Riot!- Paramore (2007)

One of my most listened-to albums of all time, though it might be surprising to see it on a “favorite Rock album” list for someone who has been cranking Tech Death and Power Metal.  I was 14 about to turn 14 when this album came out, and it blew my mind.  A girl that angry and yet singing that well?  I hadn’t seen anything like it before.   Paramore’s Riot! Is an album that forever split the music industry.  People either loved this album or hated it.  It often got labeled as “Emo” or “Alt Rock” which were two highly controversial genres at the time.  Now, looking back on it, I think the labels and hate this album got were fueled by industry envy, because this album became so much bigger than other records in the same vein.  And it wasn’t bought and paid for hype, this was a real album and single sales.  Paramore created one of the most energetic, catchy, and hard-hitting albums in the 2000s.  This album was created in turmoil, and it sounds chaotic as their emotions were at the time, and somehow it sounds so damn good.  It became a timeless anthem for young adults and teens just trying to keep their heads above water whilst navigating an onslaught of changing relationships.  Riot!, to me, is an album that will never be replicated or matched.  It is a sign of the times classic album that everyone should listen to at least once.  It is not “bubblegum Rock”.  It is not just an “Emo Rock album with a young Shirley Manson”.  It’s a fantastic American Rock album with a ton of influence and amazing composition and energy.  Even though I’ve worn this album out, it’s still subjectively such a well-thought-out album. With perfect mastering, sound engineering, and an immensely unique tone.

The vocals on this record are fantastic, nobody can deny that Hayley Williams is one of the best front women in modern times.  I could go on and on about how pristine the vocal delivery is, but I’m not going to.  I want to talk about the drums and guitars on this album.  Nobody talks about how incredible the drums are on every single song on this album.  Zac Farro is one of the hardest-hitting most accurate drummers I have ever seen, and Riot! is still his best work.  The drums on this are perfectly crafted around a pretty complex song structure for an album considered to be “Radio Rock”.  It reminds me of Van Halen I drums because they’re just so hard, heavy, and flashy without a lot of effects like reverb or compression.  This is one of my favorite drum records of all time, especially on For a Pessimist. I’m Pretty Optimistic, which sets the entire angry, loud, crashing energy of this album.  On top of the drums, you have brother Josh Farro on guitar.  As controversial as he is as a person, he was the brilliant musician who wrote three fantastic Paramore albums and added some of my favorite guitar tones ever recorded.  His riffs are underappreciated, especially his work on “We Are Broken”, which reminds me of a Fleetwood Mac-level epic ballad.   I also have to mention Let the Flames Begin; This song is so underrated and is still their heaviest song to date.  The guitars, the passion, the perfect almost operatic scream vocals, and the breakdown is just breathtaking.  You HAVE to listen to the live version of this song.  Even if you’re not a fan, this song is incredible.  It was incredible to go back and just listen to this album again and appreciate all the tasty nuances that have influenced countless bands, including The Warning, who is my favorite band right now.  Hayley Willams and company are responsible for returning Good Rock to the radio once again.

Favorite Tracks: For A Pessimist, I’m Pretty Optimistic, That’s What You Get When It Rains, Let the Flames Begin