Reviews

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Tue
15
Feb

LIONVILLE - So Close To Heaven (2022)

Score: 
80
Categories: 
Reviews

The fifth Lionville album in 9 years sees a drop in quality in both songwriting and production values from their quite marvellous 4th album and indeed, the 3 that preceded that.

The usually divine vocals of Lars Safsund (Work Of Art) seem a little lost in the keyboard heavy mix here and are certainly not as sharp and decisive as we’re used to.

Songwriting seems to be stuck in auto-pilot here – there’s nothing that differs in any way from the material already delivered – and as pointed out, in better quality.

The opening track features the vocal talents of Robbie LaBlanc in a duet performance that overshadows Lars’ own vocal.

It’s still one of the better pure-Euro AOR albums and bands around, with Stefano Lionetti, and Lars doing their best to deliver on what was probably a reduced recording budget.

 
Wed
25
May

CRASHDIET - Automaton (2022)

Score: 
99
Categories: 
Reviews

Simply glorious. No other word for it. The Swedish sleaze kings go a little further mainstream to deliver a melodic hard rock record with the same kind of energy you’d expect from a debut album.

The band continues to deliver album after album of well-constructed, intelligent songwriting, with hooks and melodies always in the forefront of their minds.

The new album has a modern sound, but a classic rock heart, and is immaculately produced and mixed for maximum effect.

Song after song of hook filled goodness – layered harmonies and swirling guitars.

There is a certain kind of kinship this album shares with fellow Swede’s H.E.A.T and Crazy Lizxx, but delivered in their own unique harder edged, sleaze influenced style.

11 songs and a short intro and every one of them demands attention, all that little bit different from the track before it.

This is a really heavy, engaging, in your face, uptempo album of pure melodic bliss.

 
Tue
06
Dec

NOISEWORKS - Evolution (Album Review, 2022)

Score: 
85
Categories: 
Reviews

Aussie melodic rock legends Noiseworks are back with a reunion tour and a ‘new’ album that was recorded several years back but shelved for various reasons. Most notably the cancer battle of guitarist Stuart Fraser, which would eventually claim his life.

So this album and tour is a tribute to him – with Southern Sons’ Jack Jones filling in for the live dates.

The official fourth and likely final Noiseworks album is a mix of classic and modern, with the band reliving its trademark sound from the first two albums in places, but then also delving into the heavier, groovier feel of the lesser liked third album.

The mix works pretty well here, but the standout songs are clearly the ones that lean towards the classic/melodic side. The opener Heart & Soul is among the band’s best tracks – a great feel good anthem.

Amerika is another highlight – a song which is quite literally half classic (the chorus) and half modern and heavier (the verses).

Elsewhere the ballad Long Way delivers a nice sentiment, the decade old Sunshine sounds better today than it did when originally released as a single and Low is a modern moody rocker with a killer vocal from the always amazing Jon Stevens. One In A Million picks up the pace with another good hook before delving back into the album’s familiar mid-tempo groove on Let It Go.

Unfortunately the album is over too soon, and closes on a low note, as the acoustic ballad Ocean Girl isn’t as strong as the rest of the material and the 50 second Touch (Epitaph) isn’t long enough to go anywhere.

All in all, take 34 minutes minus the last two tracks, you get 28 minutes of high quality modern melodic rock, excellently produced and performed by some of Australia’s best musicians.

A great long EP, or a little short for an album.

To add to the conversation, the physical CD packaging is a disgrace – a thin cardboard gatefold with no booklet, no lyrics, little info and bad album cover art. Not much effort has been put into this aspect.

 
Tue
15
Feb

CITY OF LIGHTS - Before The Sun Sets (2022)

Score: 
90
Categories: 
Reviews

City Of Lights is one of the better new names being shuffled onto an increasingly weary buying public by Frontiers Records. It is an album that straddles the line between AOR and hard rock, that is - keyboards a plenty, but with guitars clearly dominating.

This is a collaboration between British newcomer songwriter/guitarist Neil Austin and Greek vocal ‘sensation’ Manos Fatsis. Manos has a quite heavy accent on the vocals at times, but his tone is pleasant – standing alongside the likes of Ronnie Romero or Tony Martin – tough but melodic.

Best appeal of this album is some very catchy songs – varied in flavour, but all delivering a decent chorus and I must say that production is higher than average in recent times.

Maybe because Degreed alumni Robin and Mats Eriksson form the powerful rhythm section.

There are a few of songs here that take a more melodic leaning that will no doubt stand out as instant favourites with the AOR crowd.

 
Wed
25
May

JEFF SCOTT SOTO - Complicated (2022)

Score: 
95
Categories: 
Reviews

The ever reliable and painfully consistent Jeff Scott Soto delivers another classic slice of classy melodic hard rock that will keep his legion of hungry fans well fed, and even perhaps bring in a few more fringe dwellers that by now must accept JSS’ indelible role in the hard rock scene over the past 30 years.

Jeff tends to work best when partnered with some one and on this and the last studio album, it has been the Frontiers’ workhorse Alessandro Del Vecchio given the task of extending Jeff’s winning streak.

Alessandro gets a lot of flack – from me included – for stretching himself too thin, but he too works best when in true collaboration and like his partnership with Jorn, this one with JSS pay dividends.

The pair have written some compelling songs again here, Jeff in top voice as always.

There’s only the one ballad here – but ‘Until I See You Again’ is a monster. The rest of the tracks shuffle between melodic rock anthems and hard rock belters, with Jeff’s long-time drummer Edu Cominato really smacking the skins and lead guitarist Fabrizio Sgattoni shredding away throughout.

Complicated is the title, but not the verdict. Another very accessible commercial hard rock album by one of the scene’s most loved and respected vocalists.

 
Fri
13
Jan

JAIME KYLE - Wild One (Album Review, 2022)

Score: 
92
Categories: 
Reviews

The melodic rock scene is crying out for memorable, well-written songs with heart and passion. And here’s 12 of them in one neat package. The always reliable Jaime Kyle returns with her first studio album in over twenty years.

Proving she’s lost none of the charm, eloquence and melodic prowess, ‘Wild One’ is a mature rock album that crosses several genres and styles but remains cohesive and consistent through that journey.

Kicking off with the most openly AOR track of the album, the title track is a simple melody, yet complex arrangement. Instantly memorable, the song proves Kyle’s cross-genre songwriting chops and a tweak to the mix in any direction could see the song a hit for any pop, country or rock artist.

The diversity of the album is on immediate display with the bluesy rocker Driving With The Brakes On which moves smoothly to the modern pop rock of Change – another really strong song.

The 6-minute ballad Blue Night is simply beautiful and takes us through three relatively laid back but classy songs before the album retains to Jaime’s melodic rock roots on Kiss Dirt.

Dirty Goodbye takes listeners on a midwestern rock n roll rampage before the album is concluded with another big ballad and perhaps the most commercial pop/country song of the while affair.

Some fans may yearn for a more traditional melodic rock sound across the whole record, but it’s been a long time since Jaime’s 1992 debut and this album shows off all her songwriting skills accumulated during a long writing career.

It is a very fine mature singer/songwriter album, with 12 memorable songs and some outstanding lead vocals and some really tasty guitar work thanks to a number of special guests such as Bernie Marsden and Howard Leese.

 
Tue
15
Feb

DEGREED - Are You Ready (2022)

Score: 
96
Categories: 
Reviews

As I’ve followed these guys from demos to their debut and each album thereafter, I have seen the progress Sweden’s modern melodic rock masters Degreed have made. It started high and has been sustained over the last decade, making them one of the most consistent and reliable bands on the planet.

They are at the absolute top of their game and deserve to be mentioned amongst the superstars of the Swedish scene.

Every album has melodic bliss to these ears and their output as always been near the top of my annual Best Of lists. I expect this will be the same come Jan 2023.

The last record featured 3 or 4 ballads, which I thought were major class, but on this record, it is one rocker after another from start to finish. One anthem after another, all in that unique modern rock friendly style the guys have. Big choruses, big melodies and a near-perfect mix and production.

Another absolute blinder from Degreed.

 
Wed
01
Jun

OUSEY/MANN - Is Anybody Listening (2022)

Score: 
92
Categories: 
Reviews

Ousey/Mann is none other than the great vocalist Chris Ousey (Heartland, Virginia Wolf, The Distance) paired with English multi-instrumentalist/guitarist Steve Mann (Liar, Eloy, MSG, The Sweet).

Together the pair have recorded a very fine album together. Suggested as a potential pairing together by the Right Reverend Khalil Turk, chemistry quickly evolved into a set of songs that is now released as the album ‘Is Anybody Listening’.

Fans of Chris Ousey will immediately be drawn the voice and the style of melodic hard rock on offer here – recent Heartland and solo offering compare favourably and fans of classic British hard rock get their fill with some in your face crunch from Steve Mann.

It’s not an unfamiliar sound – especially for Ousey fans – but what is impressive is the energy, the memorable songs on offer and the excellent production and mix.

Plenty of keyboards on offer for those that like some contrast to the riffs, but this is very much a guitar/vocal driven record.

There is an hour of music here, which might be one or two tracks too long, but I’m hesitant to call out any tracks that could have been omitted.

More great stuff for fans of the newly formed duo – and a record whose strength immediately demands a sequel.

 
Tue
15
Feb

KRAEMER - All The Way (2022)

Score: 
87
Categories: 
Reviews

Kraemer is another vehicle for Frontiers’ man for all occasions Alessandro Del Vecchio, this time pairing him with Finnish vocalist Erik Kraemer, a singer and performer who has years of experience touring in his homeland of Finland with different bands and musical productions. He is also known for being one of the singers of Finnish progressive metallers Simulacrum, which explains the metal edge to his voice on this, his step into hard rock/melodic rock territory.

Featuring songs written by all the usual Frontiers names, you might expect something very similar to the usual formula employed, but I’m pleased to say this album offers a lot more than that.

The heavier edge that borders on melodic metal at times helps it stand out from the usual fare, with a crunchy guitar sound dominating proceedings.

The vocals or Mr. Kraemer must be praised with a great deal of enthusiasm and credit given to Del Vecchio for a tight production and mix.

Heavy, but melodic, with some strong choruses delivered by a cracking guitar sound. An album that is being promoted as a step into the melodic, but perhaps should be investigated by fans of Magnus Karlsson style projects.

 
Fri
03
Jun

DEF LEPPARD - Diamond Star Halos (2022)

Score: 
65
Categories: 
Reviews

Def Leppard are back for their first studio album since the 2015 self-titled release.

Things to note about this album: Songwriting direction comes from Joe and Phil almost entirely. The album is a real mish-mash of styles, with influences from Adrenalize to X to Slang. There is no one dominant theme to the album and it’s all relatively mid-tempo’d. Joe’s voice is also a long way from its best and he sings within himself quite comfortably here, just don’t expect any old-school screams or vocal theatrics.

Despite the 7-year gap between records, many of the songs on Diamond Star Halos sound like they have been leftovers from past records.

For me there is a good 10 song record in amongst these tracks, but at 15 there are too many fillers and for that reason the album’s overall rating suffers. Too look at this album objectively, you have to get past the 'oh my, its anew Def Leppard album' hysteria first.

The album gets off to an energetic start, with 3 solid typical mid-tempo, mid-heaviness rockers – the type of song Def Leppard could write in their sleep.

The country tinged duet This Guitar (featuring Alison Krauss) totally kills momentum and is the first instant-skip for repeat album playthroughs. At 15 tracks, this was a bonus track if there was ever was one.

SOS Emergency gets things back on track with a cool pop/rock anthem, lead by a heavy riff that sadly doesn’t dominate through the song. A nice ‘Promises’ or Animal’ style commercial song.

Liquid Dust sounds like a Slang off-cut. I dig the vibe as I love that album, but the chorus here is a bit of a non-event.

The title U Rok MI is everything I hate about classic rock bands trying to sound cool. As much as I loved the band at the time, ‘Let’s Get Rocked’ was lame in 1992 and U Rok MI in 2022 is just juvenile. It’s another modern rocker with a Slang meets Adrenalize vibe.

Goodbye For Good This Time is a big sounding ballad, with some orchestral parts and an atmospheric feel, but the chorus does nothing for me and the melody just drags. Unusual for Def Leppard to fail to deliver when it comes to the ballads.

I like All We Need, which is a pleasant melodic feel good number, almost directly contrasted by the dark and moody, modern rocker Open Your Eyes, which I feel again suffers from lack of a good hook.

Gimmie A Kiss That Rocks is another silly title, but its nice to hear an uptempo song after several mid-tempo tracks. Old school Def Leppard here that might have sounded at home on Adrenalize.

Angels is another moody ballad. Its ok but lacks that knockout hook again.

The relatively slow Lifeless immediately sounds tinged with that American country influence and once again features Alison Krauss on duet vocals. Sorry, but no thanks.

Unbreakable and From Here To Eternity are both mid-tempo modern rockers with more Slang overtones. Still, both tracks are missing a knockout chorus and the dominance of slow to mid-tempo tracks on the album weight heavily on my enjoyment of the album.

All in all, just an average album for me. Half ok, half skippable or missing that certain spark the band used to deliver. It’s quite a moody/modern record after the first 3 tracks and I normally like that direction by the band. Here though, there is a serious lack of memorable choruses.

I went out and purchased a copy of the CD. I didn't want the deluxe edition because the bonus tracks are only alt-versions and the packaging is a shitty digipack. So I went for the preferred jewel case, just a shame I couldn't get the cover in colour that way. It won't be an album that I return to rotation. If I'm going to listen to some Leppard, I'll go with Pyromania, Hysteria, Slang and X.

 

 
Fri
17
Feb

FIRST SIGNAL - Face Your Fears (Album Review, 2023)

Score: 
90
Categories: 
Reviews

Redemption all-round here! Harry Hess takes greater control over the First Signal project, the fifth album for the name, just one of the many Frontiers ‘project bands’, and instant rewards are reaped.

The last album ‘Closer To The Edge’ was as bland as they come. No spark and no energy, so Harry tells me he took far more control over this album, co-writing the songs and choosing the heavier direction. Daniel Flores is out and a trio of Italians come in.

The new team behind the music have delivered an album to rival the energy of the first two records. One thing that they do deliver which really took me by surprise, is a killer drum sound – really punchy and a hard-hitting performance which matches the energy of the songs, in fact, this is one of the heavier albums I have heard Harry sing in his career.

I have no idea who produced the album, as the press release and bio only covers the band up until the last album. There’s no actual info about this album at all. But credit to whoever it is.

It’s obviously not Harem Scarem in style, but it does have the great vocals of Mr. Hess, really going for it at his outer limit for range and rasp, yet still plenty of hooks and harmonies for everyone.

A great melodic hard rock record I’m pleased to say. Night and day compared to the energy and quality of the last record.

 
Fri
18
Feb

CIRCLE OF FRIENDS - The Garden (2022)

Score: 
92
Categories: 
Reviews

Bruce Mee is one of the better-known personalities behind the scenes of the melodic rock world. Starting with Now & Then Records he moved into his role as owner and editor of the now iconic Fireworks Magazine, which has dedicated fans worldwide.

Circle Of Friends is the moniker given to this project, put together by Bruce as a tribute to his late mother, who died of cancer in 2020. The majority of the singers and musicians appearing on the album are personal friends of Bruce’s and were all willing to help bring this wonderful concept to life – hence the title.

Of the 13 tracks featured on this wonderful slice of melodic beauty, four are covers and the remaining 9 are originals, most written by Sweden’s Mikael Rosenberg. Mikael has delivered some terrific songs here and his presence throughout gives the album a certain connectivity and consistency that some various artists projects don’t manage to pull off.

The lineup is really a who’s who of the melodic rock world. The rhythm section is supplied by drummer Josh Devine (Levara) and bassist Wayne Banks (Saxon etc) while Fredrik Folkare and Steve Morris provide guitars with Joel Hoekstra (Whitesnake) and Steve Mann guesting. Backing vocals come from Mick Devine (Seven), Gary Hughes (Ten) and Kevin Chalfant (Storm). Eric Ragno is here on keyboards and there’s many more. Read the full bio for all the credits!

All this has been meticulously put together by producer Khalil Turk of Escape Music with a phenomenal mix by Fredrik Folkare.

To the vocalists. There is the Queen of Metal, Doro Pesch, delivering the high energy opener ‘Little Piece of Heaven’, Jaime Kyle brings her own song ‘Take My Love To Heart’ to the CD, with backing vocals supplied by Kevin Chalfant (The Storm, Two Fires). James Christian gives one of my favourite pomp-friendly vocals on ‘Never Gonna Make Me Cry’; Jeff Scott Soto goes full melodic on ‘Bad Blood’ and Robin Beck (with James Christian on backing) does a ripping version of the Abba classic ‘Knowing Me, Knowing You’.

New star to the scene, Tao’s Karen Fell delivers the moody AOR of ‘Truth Or Dare’ and Robin McAuley knocks the big ballad ‘Alone’ right out of the park.

Canadian great Darby Mills delivers what she calls one of her favourite vocals on the big 80s anthem ‘Trick Of The Light’.


There are no fillers here, so discover the rest for yourself. Credit to everyone involved for making a really consistent, ‘contemporary’ classic 80s melodic rock record with plenty of keyboards, layers of harmonies and some outstanding lead vocal performances.

Production and mix are spot on and the songs are enjoyable from start to finish. The dominance of female lead vocals will give fans of that genre something extra to smile about.

PRE-ORDER: https://www.the-music-shop.net

 
Sat
02
Jul

JOURNEY - Freedom (Album Review, 2022)

Score: 
92
Categories: 
Reviews

Let’s go straight to the bottom line – I’m loving this record and I’m sure many others are going to feel the same. Its brash, diverse and challenging. But it’s not without flaws and the main one is the production (or mix) quality. It is an issue. For the most part I’ve adapted my ears to the choices the band has made here and for that reason I can enjoy the performances and the songs for what they are. Some however, may not be able to get around it, or over it or past it, and listening enjoyment may be impacted.

But the performances are blindingly good and the songs are quite superb.

For the record, the album was recorded remotely – with Arnel in the Philippines, Neal and Narada Michael Walden in San Francisco, Randy Jackson in Los Angeles and Jonathan Cain at home in his own studio. That kind of separation can impact the end result of an album, and it puts premium importance on the mixer. In this case the job was given to Bob Clearmountain – one of the very best mix engineers in the business. He has done an amazing job at piecing the album together. A lot of the sound of a record comes down to how it was recorded in the first place, and how the band want the record to sound.

The album has a raw sound, a somewhat muddy mix in places and some unusual vocal effects when it comes to Arnel’s leads. But you must accept everything for what it is and how it sounds. This is what the band want you to hear.

The album has been with me for a couple of months now and I know it inside and out. Its become one of my most played records of 2022, which has to mean something. I keep wanting to go back to it. And I’ve played it on several different mediums. It actually sounds best in my car. Generally speaking, records shouldn’t sound much different depending on how it is being listened to, but that’s another curiosity of ‘Freedom’ – the new first new Journey album in 11 years, adopting the moniker originally designated for the ‘Raised On Radio’ album, back when Herbie Herbert was in control.

Narada Michael Walden is insane on the drums. He is all over this record. Jonathan Cain delivers a lot of different keyboard and piano textures throughout and Arnel Pineda proves he is again the man – not only for the dead on Steve Perry-isms in certain songs, but also for sounding uniquely himself in other places. Randy Jackson’s bass parts all make their mark – this album has a serious groove to it. And what can be said about Neal Schon? I think he is again the star of the show here.

In fact, listening back to this album over the time I have had it, its like tuning into Neal Schon’s Greatest Hits – there’s parts of Journey, Bad English, Hardline and his solo work all throughout this album.

Journey’s history is well documented, so no there’s reason for any history lesson here. To briefly recap their time with vocalist Arnel Pineda, you have the very successful and commercial ‘Revelation’ record in 2008, followed by the decisively less commercial guitar driven ‘Eclipse’ in 2011, which some dismiss (at their own peril), for being too direct, or less focussed on melodies. I couldn’t disagree more. But now some 11 years on, its time again for AORs most loved band to give something new for fans to complain about, or at least debate endlessly for the next 11 years.

After being criticised (wrongly in my opinion) for being too focussed on guitar on the last album, Journey return with an album largely focussed…yes, on guitars. On several songs, the band, or Neal Schon at least, takes guitar dominance even further than on ‘Eclipse’, delivering some of the heaviest and grooviest Journey songs on record. On the surface that might seem like an odd decision, but those tracks are balanced out by some very traditional Journey style AOR melodies and a few outstanding ballads.

There are really strong comparisons to ‘Trial By Fire’ to be drawn here – the style and feel of the album matches their 1996 comeback album, while other parts touch on ‘Escape’, ‘Frontiers’, ‘Raised On Radio’ and even the early days of the band.

‘Freedom’ is one of the band’s most rhythmically complex record, with layers upon layers of drums, percussion and well, everything – I just wish it could all be heard clearly.

And for those that have been living off samples for the last month or so….don’t judge the record on those – I’ve listened to them to hear what parts of the songs they highlight and they are indeed not telling the full picture or the complexity of this record means the samples are doing just that – ‘sampling’ what’s on offer, but not painting the full picture by any means.

Track by Track:

Together We Run is one of my favourite Journey album opening tracks, just because it’s a little different. Opening with just a piano and vocal, it’s a baladesque intro, but you know its going to go somewhere. When the impact comes it drives the song into the first chorus and from there the song picks up pace. I love the vocal melody through the verse and the chorus is memorable, not only for the hook, but for the guitar and drum rhythms driving the song. There are some keyboard parts in there too, but they are buried in the mix for the most part.

I love the immediate appearance of the soulful harmony vocals, which is a real touch of ‘Raised On Radio’ and ‘Trial By Fire’. The whole album utilises these harmony vocals and is every bit better for it. They really add to the mood and ambience.

A different mix would have really given this song maximum impact, especially in the opening sequence when guitar and then drums first impact. As is the case with the whole album, the songs are fantastic, but the sonic impact could be greater.

Don’t Give Up On Us takes the Separate Ways keyboard and guitar intro parts to get it started before morphing into a free flowing, anthemic commercial rocker, mirroring the vibe of Trial By Fire’s Message Of Love. The second part of the song is a rapid-fire guitar solo and some intense drumming from the unheralded star of this album - Narada Michael Walden. The drum fills and associated percussion parts are mind blowing. Not for the first time on this album am I reminded of the Trial By Fire rocker One More. In traditional Journey style, Neal’s soloing is all over the latter parts of the song.

Still Believe In Love takes a rapid pace de-escalation in the same way ‘Trial By Fire’ did at track 3, delivering the first haunting ballad of the album. More a moody and soulful slow paced intimate musical piece than a traditional ballad, this is a beautiful vocal from Arnel alongside lush harmonies and some brilliant slow guitar work from Neal that reminds me of his ‘Late Nite’ solo album.

You Got The Best Of Me is a big sounding, fast moving Journey rock anthem, with a solid beat and a chunky riff. Keyboards line the track and funnel it towards a big chorus. The verse’s vocal melody is as effective as anything the chorus delivers, as the chorus itself almost sits on top of the track, losing potential impact with an irregular mix that just doesn’t match the rest of the song. To be frank, it is probably just the fact the chorus is so busy, so layered with instruments and vocals that it just doesn’t have room to breathe. The first time I heard it, my ears were immediately challenged. The vocals are lost and the drums sound hollow. But still, I love the track.

Live To Love Again is the big ballad of the album. The big heartfelt, lighters in the air (or cell-phones these days) moment. The tender ballad is something truly special. Keyboards and piano feature prominently, with an orchestral arrangement driving the song, with Arnel blowing the roof off with a soaring vocal, the chorus totally delivering on the sentimentality of the song. One of my favourite Arnel ballads from his time with the band, which gets bigger and bigger as it goes on.

The Way We Used To Be is a song we all know. The groovy mid-tempo rocker has a unique feel and a balanced injection of both guitar and keyboard. The song received mix reviews when it was released as a single early on, but it fits the scope of this album very well and in this almost mid-album position is a good transition song from the ballad before it, to the hard rocker that follows it.

Come Away With Me is an oddity. Played on its own it doesn’t strike me as a natural Journey song. It’s more comparable to the debut Hardline album. Guitar wise, Neal is just all over this song, as is the rhythm section of Randy Jackson and Walden. Heavy, groovy and to offer an alternative view, I could imagine this as a killer 2 minute mid-album mid-instrumental, as it’s the guitar groove that makes the song what it is – not the vocal or chorus as might normally be the case.

The album production decisions are again exposed by this track. Arnel’s vocal is really quite different than anything he’s offered previously. The vocal effects used make it sound as if the vocal was recorded using a loudspeaker in a baseball stadium. But seeing as his voice sounds great elsewhere within the album, one must deduct that the effects used on this vocal were an intended aspect of the song. It’s the guitars that rule this tune.

After Glow is another song that I instantly adored, with Deen Castronovo making his mark on this album with a lone lead vocal. He came back into the fold late and recorded this at the very end of the sessions for the album. This moody ballad reminds me of the If He Should Break Your Heart/Still She Cries combo from ‘Trial By Fire’. As the song builds it goes from a sultry ballad a rhythm and soul driven masterpiece. Walden’s drum parts are just exquisite, even if the mix does burry them somewhat. Neal’s ever increasingly urgent soloing is the stuff of legends. The soulful harmonies are icing on the cake and Walden continues to go to town in the background. The last 40 seconds are absolute melodic perfection.

I have to say that I’m having a love/hate relationship with Let It Rain. A very odd choice as a single to promote the album, it once again features Arnel’s vocals coming direct from under the grandstand speaker. The song itself is a slow, dark, heavy groover – the type of track your average Journey fan might feel is closer to the devil than the heavenly substance to which it refers. Precisely the last track that should have been considered as a masthead to promote the album, but again, Neal looks to mix things up. Listened to in the sequence of the album start to finish, it just works, mainly due to the resounding thump the song has. And it leads perfectly into the snappy rock n rhythm of the faster moving Holdin On.

Holdin On features some snappy drum work again and a big fat bass line, not to mention more magic from the groovemeister Neal Schon. Shredding over the top of a thick riff, this is 100% Neal’s song. Its also another piece of music I could envision as an instrumental. Arnel’s vocals are like nothing I’ve heard him sing and the effects used on them will again cause some fans to suffer strokes, or at least make them reach for the skip button. But I like it.

All Day And All Night is the end chapter in a trilogy of groove-laden hard rockers that sound more like Hardline or Neal’s ‘Piranha Blues’ than Journey. The swagger of this track has its own unique charm and Arnel again sings outside his usual stylistic restraint, with a better sound quality than the two previous tracks, making it my pick of the three.

At this point, the album desperately needs a big commercial rocker and Don’t Go delivers just that. Instantly catchy from the opening seconds through to the closing flurry of notes, this is classic Arnel fronted Journey and will appeal to fans of the commercial side of the band. A big chorus with swirling keyboards and harmony vocals is diametrically opposite to the trio of songs preceding it.

Needing to keep the commercial, more traditional Journey sound coming to counter-balance the darker groove-rockers, the album now delivers United We Stand, which moves the pace and style back closer to the opening number and gives a further taste of ‘Trial By Fire’ in the mood. I love Arnel’s vocal here and the bridge is pure AOR brilliance. The chorus is moody and layered with those soulful harmonies again – I can’t get enough of those. Keyboards hint back to a Separate Ways style. A big drum flurry over Neal’s wailing guitar closes out the track.

Life Rolls On starts softly, building through the keyboard/vocal intro, with some cool percussion in play. Cathedral like keyboards carry the song through the verse into a big guitar rip that turns the song on its head. Classic Schon here as the pace picks up through to conclusion.

It’s been a very unconventional, surprising album so far and to finish things off comes Beautiful As You Are, perhaps the most astounding track of the album. Just a raw, beautiful vocal from Arnel, accompanied by acoustic guitar and an orchestral fill to start things off, with Arnel really reaching those high notes before Neal rips into things with a big riff and Walden bursts to life with a busy-as-ever drum performance. The songs continues to build with those soul-harmonies delivering the bridge and chorus. Through the course of the song’s 7-minute run, things get crazy to the point that the last 90 seconds can only be described as completely bonkers. Love it!

Another great Journey record. A traditional Journey album? Perhaps not, but then what exactly is Journey’s “traditional” sound. The guys have delivered some truly diverse music over the years from album number one, to this, their fifteenth. You can’t pigeon hole this band from just two of those albums, as loved as they are. Journey are much more than ‘Escape’ and ‘Frontiers’ and this record proves it yet again.

 
Thu
09
Mar

NIGHT BY NIGHT - Night By Night (2014)

Score: 
94
Categories: 
Reviews

British melodic rockers Night By Night have been hailed as the future of this aging genre and I’m here to back that claim and push it one step further – its vitally important to the longevity of the melodic music scene that we continue to welcome, nurture and promote awesome new talent like this or we may as well all give it up right now.

Night By Night prove that you can still write catchy, energetic and fresh melodic rock in 2014 and in doing so give some old rockers a kick in the pants as to what is expected that fans want today.

Not everyone wants nostalgia 24/7. But don’t think these guys are an all-new sound, they just take the old sensibilities and make it their own. This is the best of old-school hooks and harmonies, driving guitars and anthemic catchy choruses, delivered with a fresh spunky attitude and a contemporary production sound.And if you feel let down by the latest Tesla album, then this should fire a rocket up you! Vocalist Henry Rundell has an uncanny sound not far removed from Jeff Keith in his heyday.

Guiatrists Ben Christo and Tom Daniel guides the band through some cracking riffs and solos. The production on here is simply fabulous – balanced mix and a crunchy sound. The album has been a long time coming and is well worth the wait.

If Time To Escape, Holding Onto Holding On and Can’t Walk Away don’t blow you away, the more melodic Everywhere Tonight will insert itself into your brain for days at a time. If darker and heavier is what you want, Siren delivers, a hybrid of Tesla, Def Leppard and melodic Dokken.

Then there’s the glorious AOR of A Thousand Lies – perfect melodic rock here folks.

The Moment is another fast moving gem and the band saves one of their most urgent tracks for last – Never Die Again is a pounding guitar driven masterpiece.

 
Wed
09
Mar

RUST 'N' RAGE - One For The Road (2022)

Score: 
88
Categories: 
Reviews

I was a big fan of Rust N Rage’s last album – so much so I released it on my own label at the time. So I was eager to hear this, their third and probably most important outing.

Now on Frontiers - the label with the most bands on the planet, the band needed to up the ante to further their mission, but also to ensure they stood out from the pack of other Frontiers releases, where it is all too easy to get caught up in the mayhem and missed.

Thankfully the quality of this album should fend of both challenges, as the material here easily ups that of ‘Tales From The Wasteland’.

Bigger songs, bigger choruses, bigger guitars, bigger vocals, and most importantly, not only bigger, but better songs.

The pace is also quite fierce. The guys know how to rock and with this album should put themselves on the map with other Scandi hard rockers like H.E.A.T, Treat and US rockers like Dokken and Motley Crue.

A sleazy, glam-fused, hard rock tour de force!

 
Mon
25
Jul

PALACE - One For The Road (Album review, 2022)

Score: 
85
Categories: 
Reviews

PALACE, or more precisely, Swedish singer/songwriter/one-man-band Michael Palace is back with his forth ‘Palace’ album, once again delivering an album that cherishes the classic commercial AOR sound, albeit with a Euro-Scandi bent. When done well, the scene needs records like this. Pleasant, easy going melodic rock.

Great songs are at the heart of the matter here. Not all match the AOR masterpiece quality of the amazing song ‘Westbound’, but there are several other highlights among the album’s 11 tracks.

The programmed drums and one-man-band feel of the production is obvious and a little intrusive at times, but if you’re looking for smooth Scandi-style AOR, then Palace delivers.

 
Wed
04
Aug

JOHN WAITE - Wooden Heart (Acoustic Anthology)(2021)

Score: 
96
Categories: 
Reviews

For not much more than the price of a single CD, singer/songwriter John Waite is selling his brand-new release Wooden Heart – Acoustic Anthology Volume 3 as a triple CD set, featuring the new collection alongside both Volume 1 and 2 in the one package.

And what a joy it is to hear the great man’s voice in such uncluttered surroundings. John Waite’s music has always centred around his unique vocals and his personal, introspective lyrics. Whether delivered by a full band or with John and just an acoustic guitar, it’s always a pleasure to hear.

But on the Wooden Heart trilogy, which mixes up some classic covers as well as stripped back versions of past classics from The Baby’s and his solo years, John’s voice really takes centre stage.

Beautifully sung and emotive throughout, the at times haunting and at others uplifting recordings are perfectly captured and mixed and the voice just soars above the stripped back arrangements. Special mention to John’s musical partner Shane Fontayne, who again excels on guitar and bass on all tracks.


Each volume stands alone as a must have for Waite fans, but if you’ve only gone digital up until now, then grab this independent release as fast as you can at www.johnwaiteworldwide.com now!

 
Wed
09
Mar

FIND ME - Lightning In A Bottle (2022)

Score: 
90
Categories: 
Reviews

The Find Me project has always been popular with fans. Coupling powerhouse AOR vocal superstar Robbie LaBlanc with Swedish producer and multi-instrumentalist Daniel Flores and songs written by various member of the Frontiers recording family.

This time around Flores thankfully turns down the keyboards a touch, but it is still a flurry of layers and layers of instrumentation behind the vocals. The production is over the top, but that’s the nature of his style and all Find Me records to date.

I’m not sure why, but for the first time in the 4 Find Me albums, Frontiers’ song-generating machine Alessandro Del Vecchio is given the sole task of crafting all the songs for this album, which further risks stretching his resources to breaking point. But while there is nothing here we haven’t heard before, I do credit where credit is due – there are some very likable songs here.

Stand out is the appearance of Vince DiCola who plays keyboards on a cover of 'Far From Over', a song by Frank Stallone from the "Staying Alive" soundtrack. A roaring version here.

I like the tempo of the album, being mostly up and free flowing, even if it is all very familiar for fans of this genre.

The absolute star of this album is undoubtedly Robbie LaBlanc. His roaring vocals lift these songs to another dimension and his always passionate and energetic vocals are a joy to listen to.

So if there is one ‘standard melodic rock’ album you must hear this month, it is this one.

 
Mon
25
Jul

ICONIC - Second Skin (Album Review, 2022)

Score: 
90
Categories: 
Reviews

Frontiers patented Random Band Generator has conjured up its latest offering – a more inspired and somewhat natural ensemble this time around. Nathan James – Vocals (Inglorious) Michael Sweet - Guitars, Vocals (Stryper and a dozen other projects); Joel Hoekstra – Guitars (Whitesnake); Marco Mendoza – Bass (everyone) and the great Snake himself Tommy Aldridge – Drums; plus of course, the illustrious writer, producer, mixer and keyboardist Alessandro Del Vecchio.

Quite a lineup there and given the brief to make a Whitesnake hard rock record, the guys have largely nailed that mission. Thankfully Nathan James gets to control the mike for most of the record and is given the best set of songs to sing here since the debut Inglorious record. Michael Sweet pops up on a couple of songs, but largely sticks to backing vocals and guitar.

While this is no Whitesnake clone, the influences and style are unmistakable. And the bigger than normal sounding production helps bring that big Snake sound to bare.

Credit for the production goes to Sweet & Alessandro, who also delivers some tasty Jon Lord inspired organ sounds to accompany his keyboards and Joel Hoekstra delivers some flashy riffing and soloing as you would expect from the current Whitesnake guitarist.

I often criticise the Frontiers productions drum sounds but having Tommy Aldridge on hand all but ensures a killer performance and the quality production gives him the impact needed.

11 tracks and nearly 50 minutes is about as packed as you could want an album like this to be. Any longer and it might have started to drag.

Good songs, big sound with a Euro-American commercial hard rock style that others have tried to emulate, but not half as well as these guys have. As egotistic as the name might be, it’s a very strong debut. I imagine there are already plans for a sequel.

 
Thu
09
Mar

ALIEN – Eternity (2014)

Score: 
92
Categories: 
Reviews

Any Jim Jidhead record is a good record and to have the original Alien back together lifts expectations higher than normal.
Thankfully the Swedish AOR Gods deliver – big time. This album sees direct comparison to their hailed classic self-titled debut. They really seem to have recaptured the magic fans hoped for.
Pure Scandi-AOR, delivered with a strong production and layers of vocals over guitars and keyboards galore….it just doesn’t get better for the pink and fluffy brigade.
This is old-school AOR – mid-80s styled, with a good mix and some very catchy songs. Jim Jidhed sounds great, as does the rest of the band in their respective roles.

This is a very consistent album with enough differences between the songs to make things interesting. The tempo is largely up, aside from a couple of big ballads – I Believe and the stark In Truth are both excellent. The mid-tempo ballad I’m A Fighter also appeals.
Elsewhere around the album, highlights include the terrific opening In Love We Trust; the fast moving Unbroken; the classic AOR of Love Will Lead Me Home and the warmth of Summer Of Love plus the feel good Liar Liar.
The only song that doesn’t really strike a chord with me is the jangly keyboard driven What Goes Up, whose chorus and keyboard fill are both kinda of annoying.

The Bottom Line

Strike another one up for the Swedes. Surely it can’t keep coming without end in sight? Well, regardless of that, let’s enjoy these releases while we can. Quality like this helps fans of the glory days of the 80s continue without any need to move into the now. Welcome back Alien – nice to have you around again.

 
Tue
14
Dec

RUSSELL MORRIS / RICK SPRINGFIELD - Jack Chrome And The Darkness Waltz (2021)

Categories: 
Reviews

Music is all about moods. If there has ever been a ‘mood’ album this is it. Yesterday I had no interest in listening to it at all. Today, with the car windows down, the temperature and the volume up, I couldn’t have been happier cranking this bad boy up.

For those that haven’t heard, Jack Chrome And The Darkness Waltz is the recording project moniker for Australian rock royalty Russell Morris and Rick Springfield – both a product of the Australian pop/rock scene of the late 60s.

Its rough, its gruff, its blues drenched dirty rock n roll, with a dark heart and even darker lyrics. Celebrating the festival ‘Day Of The Dead’, the album glorifies the ying and yang of life and death, with both artists represented equally over the 14 tracks.

Basically this is two EPs of the same style put together. Rick Springfield takes 7 tracks – all written and recorded by Rick on his own in LA – and by ‘on his own’ I mean ‘on his own’ – all vocals and instruments performed by Rick himself.

Russell and his band perform the other 7 tracks, with the sequencing moving back and forth between the two.

Style wise you get two very similar takes, which was obviously the point, but to break it down, Russell delivers his usual gruff, raspy bluesy vocals in the semi-acoustic driven blues rock style that his last 3 acclaimed solo albums have delivered.

For Rick, his half of the album takes the style of The Snake King another step (or two) further into the darkness. His vocals are rougher and raspier than ever for the occasion and the heaviest blues of his last solo album are even more pronounced here.

There is no doubting who either half of Jack Chrome is, but I can imagine many RS fans having a harder time appreciating this than Russell’s fan base.

Rick breaks into a more familiar melody on Death Drives A Cadillac and 50mg Of Hope, but for the most part, this is a solid, dark blues drenched rock record.

If one point is to be taken from this record – its that Springfield is one hell of a guitar player and can deliver a swaggering blues riff alongside the best of them.

The album may not be the style everyone on the commercial rock side of life might want, but its mixed and produced impeccably, it sounds a million bucks.

 
Wed
09
Mar

KISSIN' DYNAMITE - Not The End Of The Road (2022)

Score: 
99
Categories: 
Reviews

How to create a modern hard rock masterpiece by Kissin’ Dynamite.

Not The End Of The Road is indeed not the end of any road for these guys. It could just be the on-ramp to superstardom, thanks to recent placement in the TV series Peacemaker and the blinding quality of this platter of high-energy anthemic European melodic hard rock.

12 tracks and 50 minutes of glorious anthemic, in your face, immaculately produced classic hard rock right here.

It’s the band’s best album to date and their biggest sounding record too. Plenty of variety in the songs and an energy that’s hard to capture in the studio.

“Only The Dead don’t give a damn…” is one of my lyrics of the record, a song begging itself to be chosen for Peacemaker Series 2.

But there’s plenty more gems too and you can’t go past the mid-album feel good melodic rock of Coming Home to nominate for rock radio all over the world.

Quite often confused as one of the block of bands from the glorious Scandinavia, these German rockers have completed their conversion to multi-national super stars. They simply demand the attention of fans worldwide with this exquisite slice of classic hard rock.

 
Mon
25
Jul

CLEANBREAK - Coming Home (Album Review, 2022)

Score: 
90
Categories: 
Reviews

Singer James Durbin has been involved with several projects already that have recently come and gone (Quiet Riot, Durbin) and now his name has been thrown into the ‘Frontiers Random Band Generator’, throwing out the band Cleanbreak, again produced and arranged by in-house go to guy Alessandro Del Vecchio.

Do something often enough and you’ll get it right some of the time. For the projects like Skills that just haven’t worked, there are some that have. Iconic is one that has this year and now that’s joined by Cleanbreak.

I know how hard it is to keep up with all the projects and bands Frontiers throws at us, but Durbin teaming with Riot guitarist Mike Flyntz is his best collaboration yet. Not only do his vocals sound completely natural at last, but so do the songs he’s singing.

Needing employment while Michael Sweet is out doing his multiple projects, Stryper rhythm section Perry Richardson (Bass) and Robert Sweet (Drums) round off this project.

11 tracks, all rockers, no ballads might sound fairly intense, but there’s a good variety in pace and delivery here, so the album doesn’t get bogged down or repetitive.

Its just a good American sounding hard rock/melodic metal record with a strong lead vocalist, a great guitarist and a rhythm section that drives home the beat.

 
Thu
09
Mar

CALIFORNIA BREED – California Breed (2014)

Score: 
92
Categories: 
Reviews

As is the case with several Glenn Hughes fronted projects, this album might be a real handful to get into for some, but the rewards are great. Glenn Hughes moves on from Black Country Communion with pal Jason Bonham and new recruit Andrew Watt to create another groove orientated power trio. This project has more of a Hughes solo stamp on it than BCC did, with control issues between Glenn and Joe Bonamassa now a thing of the past.
And Glenn gets to indulge in his favorite pastime here – delivering groove and blues based classic hard rock with a strong 70s edge. Much of this album could have come straight out of 1978, whilst the rest relies on some contemporary production tricks and effects to make a blend of classic rock for the new millennium.

12 tracks and 51 minutes is probably a touch too long, the album might have been a bit tidier at 40-45 minutes max, but that’s a small issue. The main issue is that this rocks! I’m a longtime fan of Hughes who thinks he is at his best when rocking out. To have a project that does that, but also includes his love of soul and blues is ideal.
And while I was sorry to see the demise of BCC, fans of that project will easily adapt to this band.

From the opening swagger of The Way and the more commercial groove of Sweet Tea, this is Hughes and Bonham at their best. And newcomer Watt gets on the map with his first outing.
The album features a lot of Led Zeppelin influences, Chemical Rain and the ballad All Falls Down most obvious.
Thankfully the guys keep the tempo up for a lot of the album, with rockers like The Grey flowing beautifully.
When they do slow down to that slow Zeppelinesque groove, such as Days They Come and the ultra-slow Invisible, they add in very likable chorus hooks to keep things moving.

Not an album for everyone, but for those it is aimed at, expect an almost unanimous praising of this release. You’re either going to love it or hate it. Thankfully for me I love it – it delivers exactly what I expected from the continued collaboration of Hughes/Bonham and new guy Watt shows he will be around for a long while to come.

 
Wed
19
Jan

GIANT - Shifting Time (2022)

Score: 
85
Categories: 
Reviews

Frontiers Records continue their obsession with a Dann Huff-less Giant, something which for most fans just isn’t going to fly, no matter how you dress it up. It ain’t and never will be Giant guys.

Lineup changes are part of life, but there are specific circumstances when removing one member is akin to removing the soul of the band. And under those circumstances, its time for a new name, like when Giuffria minus David Glen Eisley morphed into House Of Lords for example.

Dann Huff is Giant. He’s not just one member being removed – he’s the vocalist, the main songwriter and guitarist.

Frontiers tried this once before with the Terry Brock/John Roth combo joining the original rhythm section. It wasn’t Giant either but at least was a solid American sounding melodic rock album I personally file alongside my Terry Brock solo CDs.

So now we have John Roth and Giant’s bass/drum combo returning with the great Kent Hilli (Perfect Plan) on vocals. Inspired choice you would think and yes, Kent sings his heart out, but he only replicates the Huff sound on a few tracks. Given his band’s amazing cover of the Giant classic ‘Stay’, I figured he would be closer to Dann’s vocal throughout.

But he doesn’t. And this to me sounds less Giant than ‘Promise Land’ album did. This time with Alessandro Del Vecchio on production and co-writing and a range of Frontiers’ other European writing regulars involved, it sounds more like a typical Frontiers Euro-melodic rock project.

That said, the guys have only picked some high quality of songs available to them and there are a few highlights here that I happily say are among the best Euro-rock songs of recent times. More specifically, the rockers Don’t Say A Word and Never Die Young and the big ballad Anna Lee.

I don’t think the production is as tight as I expected. The guitar sound is quite hollow, and the drums lack major impact, two assets of Giant’s two main studio albums that were impeccable and remarkable.

Well performed and well written and a solid Euro-AOR album overall, that I will buy, but I’ll file alongside my Perfect Plan CDs, as for the most part, that’s what the sound most closely mimics.

 

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