Album review: TURBULENCE – Frontal

Frontiers Records [Release date 12.03.21]

Lebanese Progressive Rock/Metal band, Turbulence, are crossing a few boundaries with their provocatively titled Frontiers debut, Frontal. It is a defiantly bold attempt to incorporate the music of the wider world into their work. Something only a liberated few in the east – and the west – have attempted.

One of the prime reasons for Prog’s popularity around the globe is the music’s illusion of improvisation. Here, Turbulence have created a tangle of songs that combine hard rock convention with an extemporised ethos, real or imagined.

That said, as opening tracks go, ‘Into The Gage’, is surprisingly conservative. Yes, there’s a lot of moving parts, and all mesh satisfyingly around a wiry melody, but it only truly comes alive when they introduce a short burst of Floydian axework, an airy solo that seems to be over almost as soon as it begun.

From that point, tracks unfold thematically, mixing repeating motifs with slices of virtuoso solos, held together by a melodic thread. Holding hands, Prog and jazz fusion mix and match through many tracks.

Frantic and furious, there’s a religious intensity to ‘Madness Unforseen’, a driven sense of purpose, as the lightly conflicting elements of guitar solos and tough vocal harmonies get pushed aside by bulldozing riffs. ‘Crowbar Case’ is almost off the scale. It’s a densely packed track, at times braking just as hard as it accelerates, snaking through hairpin bends and thick cut riffs, clouding the air in a swirl of combative Prog Metal.

Throughout, the music is crisp and powerful. It has its heavy moments, but it’s always light on its feet and always rich in texture. And sometimes, tracks with luminous melodies, like ‘Faceless Man’ and ‘Ignite’, glide gracefully through the Prog Metal architecture, moving us away from ricocheting art rock toward a marginally more intimate style of music.

No doubt about it, this is a band with a future.  ***1/2

Review by Brian McGowan


Featured Artist: JOSH TAERK

Since early 2020 Josh has been entertaining us with exclusive monthly live sessions,

Check out videos here: https://www.facebook.com/getreadytorockradio




David Randall presents a weekly show on Get Ready to ROCK! Radio, Sundays at 22:00 GMT, repeated on Mondays and Fridays), when he invites listeners to ‘Assume The Position’. The show signposts forthcoming gigs and tours and latest additions at getreadytorock.com. First broadcast 26 April 2026.


UK Blues Broadcaster of the Year (2020 and 2021 Finalist) Pete Feenstra presents his weekly Rock & Blues Show on Tuesday at 19:00 GMT as part of a five hour blues rock marathon “Tuesday is Bluesday at GRTR!”. The show is repeated on Wednesdays at 22:00, Fridays at 20:00). First broadcast on 21 April 2026

How to Listen Live?

Click the programming image at the top of the page (top right of page if using desktop)

Get Ready to ROCK! Radio is also in iTunes under Internet Radio/Classic Rock
Listen in via the Tunein app and search for “Get Ready to ROCK!” and save as favourite.

More information and links at our radio website where you can listen live or listen again to shows via the presenter pages: getreadytorockradio.com


Power Plays w/c 25 May 2026

BABY JANE Midnight Highway (Sped Up) (indie)
ASTRAL ROCKS The Flame In Me (Astral Rocks Prodns.)
INDIGO SYNDICATE dwn4smr (indie)
THE SKBS The Prying Eye (indie)
AGAINST THE CURRENT Dead Man Walking (indie)
ICONIC Tears Keep On Falling (Frontiers)

Featured Albums w/c 25 May 2026

09:00-12:00 The Best of 2003 – 2025 (Melodic Rock)
12:00-13:00 The Best of 2003 – 2025 (Melodic Hard Rock)
14:00-16:00 The Best of 2003 – 2025 (Singer Songwriter)


Our occasional Newsletter signposts latest additions to the website(s). We also include a selection of recent top albums, based on GRTR! reviewer ratings.  The newsletter is sent out a few times a year.

If you’d like to register to receive this occasional mailing please complete the form:

If using a smartphone/tablet please tap here or re-orientate your device

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Recent (last 30 days)


Album review: STEPHEN CRANE- Kicks

STEPHEN CRANE- Kicks

AOR Heaven (Release Date 26.03.21)

The rock world is littered with hard luck stories of people failed by the record industry. One such is Stephen Crane. Already a seasoned figure on the Texas music scene, he was signed to MCA in 1984 and given access to the very best talent – Steve Lukather and Jai Winding produced the album, and sundry Toto members and backing vocalist Richard (Mr Mister) Page and Tom Kelly grace the credits.

However in keeping with the label’s nickname ‘Music Cemetery of America’ it was never properly promoted to the extent that it never even saw a CD release. So beloved has it become of collectors that this limited edition reissue is an occasion big enough to reel out the great Dave Reynolds to provide sleeve notes including an interview.

I was new to the album, which was far from the West Coast fest I imagined from the credits. Indeed Stephen’s gritty smoky drawl drew comparisons with fellow southerners Henry Paul or Gregg Allman or, from the AOR world, Fortune’s Larry Greene. His diction is not the clearest so his voice can be a bit of an acquired taste.

Opener ‘Headed for a Heartbreak’ has a staccato feel but breaks into a strong chorus, while ‘Joanne’ is even better, a real period piece of an eighties pop rocker that would have sat comfortably in the US charts alongside the likes of Eddie Money and Donnie Iris, complete with a good guitar solo and some busy drumming at the end.

Despite boasting some sax work and breathless Stan Bush-style vocals, the title track was not as strong a song, and as the album progresses, a recurring Achilles heel emerges. Time and again, whether on the ballad ‘All My Love’ or rockers ‘Victim of Love’ and ‘Back On My Feet’, the verses start in a rather slow and directionless fashion and the songs only come to life in their second half from the choruses onwards.

‘I Can’t Wait’ is another where he rocks out but in rather unmelodic fashion, though I’ll Take Care of You’ is another classic slice of early eighties American pop-rock with its ‘who-ohs’ underpinning the chorus, and the moody textures of album closer ‘Crying Don’t Look Good On You’ are a welcome change of pace, with those breathless vocals and a superb if short guitar solo.

For those who had the original, this will be a collector’s item to savour after waiting so long. For the rest of us there is still much to enjoy in unearthing a forgotten gem, even if it is less than essential.   *** 1/2

Review by Andy Nathan


Featured Artist: JOSH TAERK

Since early 2020 Josh has been entertaining us with exclusive monthly live sessions,

Check out videos here: https://www.facebook.com/getreadytorockradio




David Randall presents a weekly show on Get Ready to ROCK! Radio, Sundays at 22:00 GMT, repeated on Mondays and Fridays), when he invites listeners to ‘Assume The Position’. The show signposts forthcoming gigs and tours and latest additions at getreadytorock.com. First broadcast 26 April 2026.


UK Blues Broadcaster of the Year (2020 and 2021 Finalist) Pete Feenstra presents his weekly Rock & Blues Show on Tuesday at 19:00 GMT as part of a five hour blues rock marathon “Tuesday is Bluesday at GRTR!”. The show is repeated on Wednesdays at 22:00, Fridays at 20:00). First broadcast on 21 April 2026

How to Listen Live?

Click the programming image at the top of the page (top right of page if using desktop)

Get Ready to ROCK! Radio is also in iTunes under Internet Radio/Classic Rock
Listen in via the Tunein app and search for “Get Ready to ROCK!” and save as favourite.

More information and links at our radio website where you can listen live or listen again to shows via the presenter pages: getreadytorockradio.com


Power Plays w/c 25 May 2026

BABY JANE Midnight Highway (Sped Up) (indie)
ASTRAL ROCKS The Flame In Me (Astral Rocks Prodns.)
INDIGO SYNDICATE dwn4smr (indie)
THE SKBS The Prying Eye (indie)
AGAINST THE CURRENT Dead Man Walking (indie)
ICONIC Tears Keep On Falling (Frontiers)

Featured Albums w/c 25 May 2026

09:00-12:00 The Best of 2003 – 2025 (Melodic Rock)
12:00-13:00 The Best of 2003 – 2025 (Melodic Hard Rock)
14:00-16:00 The Best of 2003 – 2025 (Singer Songwriter)


Our occasional Newsletter signposts latest additions to the website(s). We also include a selection of recent top albums, based on GRTR! reviewer ratings.  The newsletter is sent out a few times a year.

If you’d like to register to receive this occasional mailing please complete the form:

If using a smartphone/tablet please tap here or re-orientate your device

(Note that this registration is separate from site registration which allows you to leave comments and receive daily emails about new content. If you wish to register for this – in addition or separately – please click or tap here – for more information – the form is at the foot of each page. Please read our privacy policy when opting-in to receive emails.


Recent (last 30 days)


Album review: PARIS- 50/50

Paris- 50/50

AOR Heaven (Release Date 26.03.21)

France is hardly a hotbed of melodic rock but Paris, essentially the duo of Frederic Dechevanne and Sebastien Montet with some guest musicians, have now released three albums. They  follow in a distinguished line of American bands named after places, and are respected enough in their field to benefit from a slick production by Britain’s own Steve Newman and Robert Sall of WET and Work of Art fame contributes a guest guitar solo.

However, there is a huge elephant in the room to address in that Frederic’s vocals, at least to these untrained ears, seem flat. The effect is not limited to one song and made it hard to give the album a fair hearing.

It’s a shame as the music is decent uptempo AOR with a slight hi-tech edge, drawing comparisons with Boulevard and Stage Dolls with some Def Leppard ‘Hysteria’ era influences. Though quite keyboard-led overall, Sebastien delivers some crisp and clean guitar solos, though on ‘Crazy Over You’ and ‘Game Changer’ they seem a tad out of context with the song.

There are some good choruses on ‘Can’t Get You Out of My Mind’ and ‘Hero’ while ‘Surrender’ sees a tougher guitar riff. My favourite song was ‘No Bridge Too Far’, with a strong hook and reminding me of some of the underground AOR releases of the nineties, Storyteller in particular. However Other songs were fillers and there was not enough of a variation in tempo. But ultimately an otherwise worthy effort is likely to sit on the shelf as I was unable to get beyond those vocals.    ** 1/2

Review by Andy Nathan


Featured Artist: JOSH TAERK

Since early 2020 Josh has been entertaining us with exclusive monthly live sessions,

Check out videos here: https://www.facebook.com/getreadytorockradio




David Randall presents a weekly show on Get Ready to ROCK! Radio, Sundays at 22:00 GMT, repeated on Mondays and Fridays), when he invites listeners to ‘Assume The Position’. The show signposts forthcoming gigs and tours and latest additions at getreadytorock.com. First broadcast 26 April 2026.


UK Blues Broadcaster of the Year (2020 and 2021 Finalist) Pete Feenstra presents his weekly Rock & Blues Show on Tuesday at 19:00 GMT as part of a five hour blues rock marathon “Tuesday is Bluesday at GRTR!”. The show is repeated on Wednesdays at 22:00, Fridays at 20:00). First broadcast on 21 April 2026

How to Listen Live?

Click the programming image at the top of the page (top right of page if using desktop)

Get Ready to ROCK! Radio is also in iTunes under Internet Radio/Classic Rock
Listen in via the Tunein app and search for “Get Ready to ROCK!” and save as favourite.

More information and links at our radio website where you can listen live or listen again to shows via the presenter pages: getreadytorockradio.com


Power Plays w/c 25 May 2026

BABY JANE Midnight Highway (Sped Up) (indie)
ASTRAL ROCKS The Flame In Me (Astral Rocks Prodns.)
INDIGO SYNDICATE dwn4smr (indie)
THE SKBS The Prying Eye (indie)
AGAINST THE CURRENT Dead Man Walking (indie)
ICONIC Tears Keep On Falling (Frontiers)

Featured Albums w/c 25 May 2026

09:00-12:00 The Best of 2003 – 2025 (Melodic Rock)
12:00-13:00 The Best of 2003 – 2025 (Melodic Hard Rock)
14:00-16:00 The Best of 2003 – 2025 (Singer Songwriter)


Our occasional Newsletter signposts latest additions to the website(s). We also include a selection of recent top albums, based on GRTR! reviewer ratings.  The newsletter is sent out a few times a year.

If you’d like to register to receive this occasional mailing please complete the form:

If using a smartphone/tablet please tap here or re-orientate your device

(Note that this registration is separate from site registration which allows you to leave comments and receive daily emails about new content. If you wish to register for this – in addition or separately – please click or tap here – for more information – the form is at the foot of each page. Please read our privacy policy when opting-in to receive emails.


Recent (last 30 days)


Album review: THE EQUALS – Black Skin Blue Eyed Boys

THE EQUALS – Black Skin Blue Eyed Boys

Cantare [Release date 26.2.21]

In the continued absence of the original recordings by The Equals on digital platforms, and with previous CDs long deleted, this collection of tracks recorded for radio broadcast is most welcome. One of the few racially mixed bands of the late 60’s era, they influenced a host of other artists and this release adds to their legacy.

Sound quality is excellent throughout, and band member interviews with the legendary DJ Brian Matthew are interspersed between the tracks. Matthew’s track intros, in his inimitable style, are a joy.

Stellar versions of their three UK Top 10 hits are an obvious highlight. ‘Viva Bobby Joe’ is full of energy, while ‘Baby Come Back’ and ‘Black Skin Blue Eyed Boys’ are both pretty faithful to the original singles.

There are some choice covers too, including a killer take on the Rolling Stones’ ‘(I Can’t Get No) Satisfaction’, a funk out on Charles Wright & the Watts 103rd Street Rhythm Band’s ‘Do Your Thing’, and a driving run through the Canned Heat classic ‘Let’s Work Together’ (Eddy Grant taking the lead vocal on this to great effect).

A raucous ‘Softly Softly’ (which cleverly twists the riff from ‘Satisfaction’) is superb, and other gems include ‘I Get So Excited’, ‘I Won’t Be There’ and ‘Michael and his Slipper Tree’.

Hopefully Eddy will one day allow the band’s studio recordings to be released again. In the meantime, this fills a gap in the market nicely. ****

Review by Jim Henderson


Featured Artist: JOSH TAERK

Since early 2020 Josh has been entertaining us with exclusive monthly live sessions,

Check out videos here: https://www.facebook.com/getreadytorockradio




David Randall presents a weekly show on Get Ready to ROCK! Radio, Sundays at 22:00 GMT, repeated on Mondays and Fridays), when he invites listeners to ‘Assume The Position’. The show signposts forthcoming gigs and tours and latest additions at getreadytorock.com. First broadcast 26 April 2026.


UK Blues Broadcaster of the Year (2020 and 2021 Finalist) Pete Feenstra presents his weekly Rock & Blues Show on Tuesday at 19:00 GMT as part of a five hour blues rock marathon “Tuesday is Bluesday at GRTR!”. The show is repeated on Wednesdays at 22:00, Fridays at 20:00). First broadcast on 21 April 2026

How to Listen Live?

Click the programming image at the top of the page (top right of page if using desktop)

Get Ready to ROCK! Radio is also in iTunes under Internet Radio/Classic Rock
Listen in via the Tunein app and search for “Get Ready to ROCK!” and save as favourite.

More information and links at our radio website where you can listen live or listen again to shows via the presenter pages: getreadytorockradio.com


Power Plays w/c 25 May 2026

BABY JANE Midnight Highway (Sped Up) (indie)
ASTRAL ROCKS The Flame In Me (Astral Rocks Prodns.)
INDIGO SYNDICATE dwn4smr (indie)
THE SKBS The Prying Eye (indie)
AGAINST THE CURRENT Dead Man Walking (indie)
ICONIC Tears Keep On Falling (Frontiers)

Featured Albums w/c 25 May 2026

09:00-12:00 The Best of 2003 – 2025 (Melodic Rock)
12:00-13:00 The Best of 2003 – 2025 (Melodic Hard Rock)
14:00-16:00 The Best of 2003 – 2025 (Singer Songwriter)


Our occasional Newsletter signposts latest additions to the website(s). We also include a selection of recent top albums, based on GRTR! reviewer ratings.  The newsletter is sent out a few times a year.

If you’d like to register to receive this occasional mailing please complete the form:

If using a smartphone/tablet please tap here or re-orientate your device

(Note that this registration is separate from site registration which allows you to leave comments and receive daily emails about new content. If you wish to register for this – in addition or separately – please click or tap here – for more information – the form is at the foot of each page. Please read our privacy policy when opting-in to receive emails.


Recent (last 30 days)


Album review: HEART HEALER – The Metal Opera by Magnus Karlsson

Frontiers Records [release date 12.03.21]

Magnus Karlsson needs no introduction. Neither do the (all female) vocalists who grace Heart Healer.

Apparently a “Metal Opera” has been something of an ambition of Karlsson’s for some time. The idea is not new of course. Avantasia, Savatage, Epica and others are leading exponents of the style.

In the manner of classical opera, Heart Healer has seven lead vocalists. That in itself, doesn’t lead to us into deep wells of emotion and pathos. Yes, there is a strong lyrical theme, but if we’re honest, the idea of “the concept album” is often simply to create a hook to hang the songs on.

What we get is entertainment. This is an album, a suite indeed, of Symphonic Metal accessibility…filled with track upon track of rock and metal immediacy.

Berklee College graduate, Adrienne (Seven Spires) Cowan has an amazing vocal range and can switch styles in an instant. No surprise she takes the first solo lead, on opening track ‘Awake’. It’s beautifully composed and orchestrated – more movie musical than opera – and in places it’s softer, more muted than you might expect from an artist with a distinct metal and hard rock background.

There are many highpoints to choose from. The ultra anthemic ‘Who Can Stand Alone’, performed by Anette Olzon and Adrienne, is probably one of the outstanding melodic metal moments on the album. And ‘Come Out Of The Shadows’, where the voices of Youmna Jreisatti, Netta Laurenne and Margarita Monet rise above the slick, symphonic swell, isn’t far behind.

Throughout, you can visualise Karlsson striding onto a huge Symphonic Metal soundscape, wielding a rich pallette of many musical colours. And yet, it never suffers from sensory overload. Each track carries it’s own dynamic weight. Each arrangement is tailored to suit the song. He shows a pleasing lightness of touch on ‘When The Fire Burns Out’ (sensitively sung by Netta), while ‘Evil Is Around The Corner’ (Noora Lohimo and Adrienne) and ‘Mesmerise’ (Anette) show their operatic metal teeth, each one gilded with an insanely catchy hook, using the bite and sting of riffed up chordshifts to toughen up the orchestration, and the sound of Timpanis to pound out the meter.

The album has a constant pulse, and a momentum. It just keeps moving forward. It’s
a sonic calling card. If the next Hollywood epic can’t get Newman, Zimmer or Elfman to sign up, they now know where to turn. ****

Review by Brian McGowan


Featured Artist: JOSH TAERK

Since early 2020 Josh has been entertaining us with exclusive monthly live sessions,

Check out videos here: https://www.facebook.com/getreadytorockradio




David Randall presents a weekly show on Get Ready to ROCK! Radio, Sundays at 22:00 GMT, repeated on Mondays and Fridays), when he invites listeners to ‘Assume The Position’. The show signposts forthcoming gigs and tours and latest additions at getreadytorock.com. First broadcast 26 April 2026.


UK Blues Broadcaster of the Year (2020 and 2021 Finalist) Pete Feenstra presents his weekly Rock & Blues Show on Tuesday at 19:00 GMT as part of a five hour blues rock marathon “Tuesday is Bluesday at GRTR!”. The show is repeated on Wednesdays at 22:00, Fridays at 20:00). First broadcast on 21 April 2026

How to Listen Live?

Click the programming image at the top of the page (top right of page if using desktop)

Get Ready to ROCK! Radio is also in iTunes under Internet Radio/Classic Rock
Listen in via the Tunein app and search for “Get Ready to ROCK!” and save as favourite.

More information and links at our radio website where you can listen live or listen again to shows via the presenter pages: getreadytorockradio.com


Power Plays w/c 25 May 2026

BABY JANE Midnight Highway (Sped Up) (indie)
ASTRAL ROCKS The Flame In Me (Astral Rocks Prodns.)
INDIGO SYNDICATE dwn4smr (indie)
THE SKBS The Prying Eye (indie)
AGAINST THE CURRENT Dead Man Walking (indie)
ICONIC Tears Keep On Falling (Frontiers)

Featured Albums w/c 25 May 2026

09:00-12:00 The Best of 2003 – 2025 (Melodic Rock)
12:00-13:00 The Best of 2003 – 2025 (Melodic Hard Rock)
14:00-16:00 The Best of 2003 – 2025 (Singer Songwriter)


Our occasional Newsletter signposts latest additions to the website(s). We also include a selection of recent top albums, based on GRTR! reviewer ratings.  The newsletter is sent out a few times a year.

If you’d like to register to receive this occasional mailing please complete the form:

If using a smartphone/tablet please tap here or re-orientate your device

(Note that this registration is separate from site registration which allows you to leave comments and receive daily emails about new content. If you wish to register for this – in addition or separately – please click or tap here – for more information – the form is at the foot of each page. Please read our privacy policy when opting-in to receive emails.


Recent (last 30 days)


Album review: STEVE HACKETT – Under A Mediterranean Sky

STEVE HACKETT - Under A Mediterranean Sky

Inside Out  [Release date: 22.01.21]

Being the modest chap that he is, Steve Hackett would probably not describe himself as a virtuoso.

However, in a career spanning getting on for fifty years from the early days of Genesis through his magnificent solo career, time has shown it is indisputable that he falls into that category.

Nowhere is this more manifestly self-evident than his solo acoustic guitar work, which has generally fallen into the classical genre with albums such as ‘Bay Of Kings’, ’Momentum’, ‘A Midsummer Night’s Dream’ and ‘Metamorpheus’ – the latter two with an orchestra.

The last of these was 2008’s ‘Tribute’ so a fresh waxing was well overdue.

‘Under A Mediterranean Sky’ has been inspired by Steve’s visits to places all around the Med where he has absorbed sights, sounds and cultures and translated these diverse influences into an absorbing collection of songs.

Unlike previous solo acoustic work which has relied heavily on Hackett’s interpretations of classical works, all bar one track here has been self-penned – albeit with assistance from bandmate Roger King (who took care of the orchestration) and wife Jo Hackett.

The journey begins in Malta with ‘Mdina (The Walled City)’ which commences with pounding drums and orchestra, seguéing into classical acoustic guitar which weaves its way in and out of the orchestration to tell the tale of the city’s centuries of conflict.

‘Adriatic Blue’ with its cascading acoustic arpeggios is inspired by the Dalmation coast and ‘Scirocco’ ups the middle-Eastern vibe with music inspired by winds playing through the historic places of Egypt.

One of the highlights is ‘Joie De Vivre’ – the title giving away its paean to French food, wine and family and its stinging fretwork recalling Beggar’s Opera’s timeless ‘Classical Gas’.

‘The Memory Of Myth’, set in Greece, has a stunning violin intro by Christine Townsend and leads into the only non-original piece on the album – ‘Scarlatti Sonata’ by Domenico Scarlatti (1685-1757), a fiendishly difficult acoustic workout originally written for keyboard.

‘Casa Del Fauno’ features lush orchestration and flute from Steve’s brother, John and fellow bandmate Rob Townsend and celebrates Pompeii.

The centrepiece of the album is ‘The Dervish And The Djin’ – the most middle-Eastern sounding track on the album (as you’d expect) featuring the Tar of Malik Mansurov (from Azerbaijan) and the Duduk of Arsen Petrosyan (from Armenia). At the time of recording their respective countries were blowing lumps off each other. The healing qualities of music eh?

‘Lorato’ is a pleasant folk tune, ‘Andalusian Heart’ does what it says on the tin and ‘The Call Of The Sea’, a song about the Med itself, beautifully played, brings the journey to an appropriate end.

Although solo acoustic albums are by their very nature an acquired taste, and, for those of us who play a bit, aspirational – ‘Under A Mediterranean Sky’ is a great listen.

Superbly recorded (you can almost hear Hackett’s fingernails on the strings), technically jaw-dropping and with sympathetic, rather than over-the-top orchestration complementing the staggering guitar work, it should appeal well beyond Hackett’s devoted fanbase.

This is how these things should be done.  ****

Review by Alan Jones   

An Introduction to Steve Hackett


Featured Artist: JOSH TAERK

Since early 2020 Josh has been entertaining us with exclusive monthly live sessions,

Check out videos here: https://www.facebook.com/getreadytorockradio




David Randall presents a weekly show on Get Ready to ROCK! Radio, Sundays at 22:00 GMT, repeated on Mondays and Fridays), when he invites listeners to ‘Assume The Position’. The show signposts forthcoming gigs and tours and latest additions at getreadytorock.com. First broadcast 26 April 2026.


UK Blues Broadcaster of the Year (2020 and 2021 Finalist) Pete Feenstra presents his weekly Rock & Blues Show on Tuesday at 19:00 GMT as part of a five hour blues rock marathon “Tuesday is Bluesday at GRTR!”. The show is repeated on Wednesdays at 22:00, Fridays at 20:00). First broadcast on 21 April 2026

How to Listen Live?

Click the programming image at the top of the page (top right of page if using desktop)

Get Ready to ROCK! Radio is also in iTunes under Internet Radio/Classic Rock
Listen in via the Tunein app and search for “Get Ready to ROCK!” and save as favourite.

More information and links at our radio website where you can listen live or listen again to shows via the presenter pages: getreadytorockradio.com


Power Plays w/c 25 May 2026

BABY JANE Midnight Highway (Sped Up) (indie)
ASTRAL ROCKS The Flame In Me (Astral Rocks Prodns.)
INDIGO SYNDICATE dwn4smr (indie)
THE SKBS The Prying Eye (indie)
AGAINST THE CURRENT Dead Man Walking (indie)
ICONIC Tears Keep On Falling (Frontiers)

Featured Albums w/c 25 May 2026

09:00-12:00 The Best of 2003 – 2025 (Melodic Rock)
12:00-13:00 The Best of 2003 – 2025 (Melodic Hard Rock)
14:00-16:00 The Best of 2003 – 2025 (Singer Songwriter)


Our occasional Newsletter signposts latest additions to the website(s). We also include a selection of recent top albums, based on GRTR! reviewer ratings.  The newsletter is sent out a few times a year.

If you’d like to register to receive this occasional mailing please complete the form:

If using a smartphone/tablet please tap here or re-orientate your device

(Note that this registration is separate from site registration which allows you to leave comments and receive daily emails about new content. If you wish to register for this – in addition or separately – please click or tap here – for more information – the form is at the foot of each page. Please read our privacy policy when opting-in to receive emails.


Recent (last 30 days)


Album review: SUZI QUATRO – The Devil In Me

SUZI QUATRO - The Devil In Me

SPV/Steamhammer [Release date 26.03.21]

Suzi Quatro is back with her new album ‘The Devil In Me’, which like 2019’s ‘No Control’ album is a joint effort between her and son Richard Tuckey.

As Suzi Quatro explained “Starting spring 2020, almost one hundred of my shows were cancelled and Richard would also have been on tour with his band had not all concerts been cancelled or postponed. So I said to him: ‘We should make the most of our free time, write new material and allow ourselves to be inspired by the things that are currently going on in the world.’ …everybody who’s heard The Devil In Me and all the people who had worked on the previous album have told us: ‘This album is even stronger!’”

As my fellow scribe Nikk Gunns noted when reviewing ‘No Control’, Suzi Quatro covers plenty of musical ground, be it the straight ahead hard rock, sing-a-long chorus of ‘Hey Queenie’ or the blues rocker ‘I Sold My Soul’, which is driven along by some very tasty Hammond.

The title track has been released as the lead single from the album and with its chugging guitar riffs & piano makes for a perfect Quatro rocker. Cherie Currie guests on ‘Betty Who?’ a song that has a 70s feel and a superb chorus. Don’t be surprised if this is the next single released off the album.

Her 2020 Christmas single ‘Heart and Soul’ is on here too, in a long version. It does stick out like a sore thumb compared to the rest of the album, not only due to its seasonal nature, but also as it has an easy listening vibe – soft trumpet, soothing vocals and even a few sleigh bells. Worthy of its place on the album though as it shows what a versatile performer she is.

Her son Richard certainly gets the best out of her singing and playing, as indeed he does with the talented musicians on the album. ‘I Sold My Soul Today’ being a case in point, having a rocking vocal, more of that great Hammond playing and a real ‘wham bam, thank you mam’ song at just over two and half minutes long.

At the other end of the pace scale, ‘Love’s Gone Bad’ is a late night ballad, with a jazz tinged vocal and subtle percussion and sax, wonderful stuff. That sax makes its mark too on ‘In The Dark’, another slower number and a perfect musical come down after the rockier songs earlier in the album’s running order.

‘Motor City Riders’ sees the album finish in style. A party rocker that you could imagine Alice Cooper and Dee Snider wanting to join in with!

One of the few positives from the pandemic has been that many artists have hunkered down in their studios and come out with some of their finest work in ages – Alice Cooper (who namechecks Suzie Q on his album), Thunder, Maximo Park and Foo Fighters to name but a few. Now we can add Suzi Quatro to that list. It is as good as ‘No Control’ and could well be, by the time the annual best of lists come out, that ‘The Devil In Me’ is considered even better. ****

Review by Jason Ritchie


Featured Artist: JOSH TAERK

Since early 2020 Josh has been entertaining us with exclusive monthly live sessions,

Check out videos here: https://www.facebook.com/getreadytorockradio




David Randall presents a weekly show on Get Ready to ROCK! Radio, Sundays at 22:00 GMT, repeated on Mondays and Fridays), when he invites listeners to ‘Assume The Position’. The show signposts forthcoming gigs and tours and latest additions at getreadytorock.com. First broadcast 26 April 2026.


UK Blues Broadcaster of the Year (2020 and 2021 Finalist) Pete Feenstra presents his weekly Rock & Blues Show on Tuesday at 19:00 GMT as part of a five hour blues rock marathon “Tuesday is Bluesday at GRTR!”. The show is repeated on Wednesdays at 22:00, Fridays at 20:00). First broadcast on 21 April 2026

How to Listen Live?

Click the programming image at the top of the page (top right of page if using desktop)

Get Ready to ROCK! Radio is also in iTunes under Internet Radio/Classic Rock
Listen in via the Tunein app and search for “Get Ready to ROCK!” and save as favourite.

More information and links at our radio website where you can listen live or listen again to shows via the presenter pages: getreadytorockradio.com


Power Plays w/c 25 May 2026

BABY JANE Midnight Highway (Sped Up) (indie)
ASTRAL ROCKS The Flame In Me (Astral Rocks Prodns.)
INDIGO SYNDICATE dwn4smr (indie)
THE SKBS The Prying Eye (indie)
AGAINST THE CURRENT Dead Man Walking (indie)
ICONIC Tears Keep On Falling (Frontiers)

Featured Albums w/c 25 May 2026

09:00-12:00 The Best of 2003 – 2025 (Melodic Rock)
12:00-13:00 The Best of 2003 – 2025 (Melodic Hard Rock)
14:00-16:00 The Best of 2003 – 2025 (Singer Songwriter)


Our occasional Newsletter signposts latest additions to the website(s). We also include a selection of recent top albums, based on GRTR! reviewer ratings.  The newsletter is sent out a few times a year.

If you’d like to register to receive this occasional mailing please complete the form:

If using a smartphone/tablet please tap here or re-orientate your device

(Note that this registration is separate from site registration which allows you to leave comments and receive daily emails about new content. If you wish to register for this – in addition or separately – please click or tap here – for more information – the form is at the foot of each page. Please read our privacy policy when opting-in to receive emails.


Recent (last 30 days)


Album review: VINCENT FLATTS FINAL DRIVE – Back In The Saddle

Pete Feenstra chatted to Steve “Bertie” Burton for Get Ready to ROCK! Radio in July 2019. 

 

VINCENT FLATTS FINAL DRIVE – Back In The Saddle

Self release [Release date 01.06.20]

Vincent Flatts Final Drive’s ‘Back In The Saddle’ is a barn burner of an album. You flick the switch and they deliver.

When a reviewer is faced with a mountain of albums under lockdown, a great album leaps out at you like a fresh salmon. This is such an album.

The title refers to the return of the band after a second career hiatus, before the indefatigable Steve “Bertie” Burton’ returned with this exiting new line up bristling with youthful vim and vigour.

The fresh injection of energy has obviously had a catalytic effect on the man himself who is at the top of his game.

The band’s name refers to old school motorbike handles and gives you a big clue as to what to expect. ‘Back In The Saddle’ is 10 celebratory tracks of honky-tonk, beer drinkin’, good-time bar music, shot through with a rough edged blues-rock muscularity.

It’s nothing less than you would expect from a band fronted by Birmingham rock vocal legend Steve Burton, a man clearly born on the wrong side of the pond.

Probably only the man himself – the former Starfighters, Fabulous E Numbers and front man of VFFD for over a quarter of a century – can account for why his charges have never broken out of the Brum club circuit, save for a mid 90’s dalliance in the States.

Perhaps it was all to do with not applying the hand breaks separating the band’s rock and roll rage and their lifestyle excesses. Either way Bertie seems to have lost none of his swagger,  his voice, stage craft or indeed his need to wring every last possibility out of a song.

And ‘Back In The Saddle’ gives him plenty of opportunities to do just that, on a perfect summation of the band’s ability to interpret songs and rearrange them to their own ends.

A brief one liner the back of the album helpfully explains that: “All tracks performed under duress and minimal supervision.”

In fact it was recorded by Phil Booth, live at the famed JT Soars Recordings, a fruit and potato warehouse turned studio in Nottingham.

And Flatts have obviously tapped into it the vibe of the place, to cut an album that bristles with energy and the true spirit of rock and roll.

They open with Delbert McClinton ‘Monkey Around’, which sets out their own musical parameters.

‘The cover  could be mistaken for being a  brusquer version of Delbert himself, except for the fact Bertie attacks the song with unfettered ferocity, just to see what it offers him.

There’s also a Delbert connection on The Temptations ‘Shakey Ground’, which he popularised.  Flatts funk it up some more, inviting guitarist Gary Harper to fill the track with incendiary notes either side of Bertie’s impassioned vocals.

As always, Burton pours himself into the track, by generating his won ad libs and pushing the band to the limit before a sudden stop.

The void is quickly filled by a loping version of Paul Thorne’s ‘Crutches’, on a great example of what they do so well. Bertie really gets inside the lyrics, while the band stokes up a groove.

And it’s that ability to spark so consistently that makes the band so good and this album so essential.

You may not be familiar with much of the material, but as Flatts tear into their own roadhouse party they generate the kind of intensity that once made rock exciting.

In short, ‘Back In The Saddle ‘is a celebratory roots-rocking party album, no more so than on an outrageous version of Joe Louis Walker’s ‘Too Drunk To Drive Drunk’.

Aside from his vocal ability, Bertie has a talent for digging up songs that perfectly fit his world view. With the addition of pianist Jules Benjamin the band steam into the stop-time track, making light of their studio surroundings to rock flat out (poor pun intended), while adding judicious bv’s and a ripping guitar break from Harper, as Bertie exhorts them on to even greater heights.

They are equally good on Bernard Allison’s ‘Chills & Thrills’ which they reignite with a blistering arrangement. The percolating rhythm section of Russ Cook’s rumbling bass and Rich Shelton’s brush strokes perfectly underpins Benjamin’s over-arching organ and Bertie’s gut-busting vocal, either side of Harpers’ wah-wah solo.

Burton’s phrasing is imperious, and the bv’s again add extra zest, on a track that suggests you light the fuse, press record and boogie!

They are equally good on Tony Spinner’s ‘She Gave Me Back My Mojo’, which builds from a hand clapped and brushed stroked vocal  intro, to some rocking country twang in which Harper tears into some hot picking, as the rhythm section again excels.

They then heavy things up on BB Chung King’s ‘Nothing to Lose’ a muscular blues-rocker on which Harper’s bigger tone is counter-weighted by subtle wah-wah work and Benjamin B3 fills.

There’s even a version of Coco Montoya’s boogie shuffle ‘Back In A Cadillac’, which rocks hard, but in truth misses Coco’s warmer vocal timbre, though Harper’s solo does much to redress the balance, as the band teeters on the brink of skanking things up.

The pace barely relents throughout the whole of an album that demands a full listen from being to end.

We may live in a new age of one song download culture (a distant echo of the old 60’s singles), but I’ll wager just one track from this album will lead you to want to hear more.

File under essential rocking and good-time boogie.  ****½ 

Review by Pete Feenstra


Featured Artist: JOSH TAERK

Since early 2020 Josh has been entertaining us with exclusive monthly live sessions,

Check out videos here: https://www.facebook.com/getreadytorockradio




David Randall presents a weekly show on Get Ready to ROCK! Radio, Sundays at 22:00 GMT, repeated on Mondays and Fridays), when he invites listeners to ‘Assume The Position’. The show signposts forthcoming gigs and tours and latest additions at getreadytorock.com. First broadcast 26 April 2026.


UK Blues Broadcaster of the Year (2020 and 2021 Finalist) Pete Feenstra presents his weekly Rock & Blues Show on Tuesday at 19:00 GMT as part of a five hour blues rock marathon “Tuesday is Bluesday at GRTR!”. The show is repeated on Wednesdays at 22:00, Fridays at 20:00). First broadcast on 21 April 2026

How to Listen Live?

Click the programming image at the top of the page (top right of page if using desktop)

Get Ready to ROCK! Radio is also in iTunes under Internet Radio/Classic Rock
Listen in via the Tunein app and search for “Get Ready to ROCK!” and save as favourite.

More information and links at our radio website where you can listen live or listen again to shows via the presenter pages: getreadytorockradio.com


Power Plays w/c 25 May 2026

BABY JANE Midnight Highway (Sped Up) (indie)
ASTRAL ROCKS The Flame In Me (Astral Rocks Prodns.)
INDIGO SYNDICATE dwn4smr (indie)
THE SKBS The Prying Eye (indie)
AGAINST THE CURRENT Dead Man Walking (indie)
ICONIC Tears Keep On Falling (Frontiers)

Featured Albums w/c 25 May 2026

09:00-12:00 The Best of 2003 – 2025 (Melodic Rock)
12:00-13:00 The Best of 2003 – 2025 (Melodic Hard Rock)
14:00-16:00 The Best of 2003 – 2025 (Singer Songwriter)


Our occasional Newsletter signposts latest additions to the website(s). We also include a selection of recent top albums, based on GRTR! reviewer ratings.  The newsletter is sent out a few times a year.

If you’d like to register to receive this occasional mailing please complete the form:

If using a smartphone/tablet please tap here or re-orientate your device

(Note that this registration is separate from site registration which allows you to leave comments and receive daily emails about new content. If you wish to register for this – in addition or separately – please click or tap here – for more information – the form is at the foot of each page. Please read our privacy policy when opting-in to receive emails.


Recent (last 30 days)


Feature: Collectible Collections – FAMILY – Old Songs New Songs (The Definitive Box Set)

FAMILY - Old Songs New Songs

Mystic MYSCD191 (2005)

Don McKay and Martin Darvill at Mystic have done a great service to the name and legacy of Family and Roger Chapman. ‘Old Songs New Songs – The Definitive Box’ is their latest offering and, as the title suggests, includes Family’s album of ‘A’ and ‘B’ sides released in 1971.

Spread across the three other discs are a shed-load of unreleased demos and live tracks. Add in the usual excellent liner notes from GRTR! contributor Pete Feenstra, and this may well live up to its ‘definitive’ title.

Family were a band very much of their time, a quintessentially seventies English rock band, and they pulled off several hit singles, all of which are included here in some shape or form.

The ‘hit singles’ only hinted at the true breadth of the musicianship and band influences, the early Family albums demonstrate in finer detail the eclectic mix of rock, R&B and more exotic flavours.

That ecelectism means Family seldom sounded like anyone else but, if pressed, you might detect early Genesis or prime-time Wings, occasionally Gentle Giant. There was always an undercurrent of pop sensibility in the band’s music which explains their talent for classic three-minute singles.

The band seemed to regularly turn over bassists, including those of the calibre of Rick Grech and John Wetton. But with mainstays drummer Rob Townsend and guitarist Charlie Whitney, their musical credentials were never in doubt. And in Chappo they had a very individual vocalist and talented lyricist.

The strongest set in this collection is Disc 3 which includes the brilliant singles ‘Burlesque’ and ‘In My Own Time’, and tracks from arguably the band’s strongest efforts – 1971′s ‘Fearless’ album and ‘Bandstand’ (1972). (Beware that some of the live tracks across the box have appeared on the Mystic studio album reissues).

If there is one criticism of this collection it is the lack of recording detail; anoraks like this sort of information and sadly it’s not even buried in the expansive sleeve notes. Fans will at least be familiar with the album geography, but the newcomer may flounder a bit.

Disc 1 appears to be taken from vinyl rather than original masters. And it begs the question whether Mystic will see fit to release ‘Old Songs’ as a standalone CD.

Track detail aside, there’s the addition of a bonus CD of demos and live recordings for the first 1000 copies, and a rather nice facsimile of the Isle of Wight programme from 1970. The IOW souvenir does, though, raise another question: what has happened to the band’s performance at the festival when they appeared with such luminaries as Chicago, Taste and Procol Harum on the first day of the event? And, more to the point, why isn’t it here?

As a companion to Mystic’s earlier ‘Family and Friends’ (which showcased Chappo’s solo work) this box set is comprehensive, and pretty much indispensible.  ****½

Review by David Randall

Thumbs UpNice extras.  Family all in one place.

Thumbs DownLack of recording detail.  Some live tracks previously available.

First publsihed 2005

Worth investigating (with a second mortgage): FAMILY Once Upon A Time
(14 disc box set) (Madfish, 2013)

2020 Vision - Rock. Reviewed. Revisited.


Featured Artist: JOSH TAERK

Since early 2020 Josh has been entertaining us with exclusive monthly live sessions,

Check out videos here: https://www.facebook.com/getreadytorockradio




David Randall presents a weekly show on Get Ready to ROCK! Radio, Sundays at 22:00 GMT, repeated on Mondays and Fridays), when he invites listeners to ‘Assume The Position’. The show signposts forthcoming gigs and tours and latest additions at getreadytorock.com. First broadcast 26 April 2026.


UK Blues Broadcaster of the Year (2020 and 2021 Finalist) Pete Feenstra presents his weekly Rock & Blues Show on Tuesday at 19:00 GMT as part of a five hour blues rock marathon “Tuesday is Bluesday at GRTR!”. The show is repeated on Wednesdays at 22:00, Fridays at 20:00). First broadcast on 21 April 2026

How to Listen Live?

Click the programming image at the top of the page (top right of page if using desktop)

Get Ready to ROCK! Radio is also in iTunes under Internet Radio/Classic Rock
Listen in via the Tunein app and search for “Get Ready to ROCK!” and save as favourite.

More information and links at our radio website where you can listen live or listen again to shows via the presenter pages: getreadytorockradio.com


Power Plays w/c 25 May 2026

BABY JANE Midnight Highway (Sped Up) (indie)
ASTRAL ROCKS The Flame In Me (Astral Rocks Prodns.)
INDIGO SYNDICATE dwn4smr (indie)
THE SKBS The Prying Eye (indie)
AGAINST THE CURRENT Dead Man Walking (indie)
ICONIC Tears Keep On Falling (Frontiers)

Featured Albums w/c 25 May 2026

09:00-12:00 The Best of 2003 – 2025 (Melodic Rock)
12:00-13:00 The Best of 2003 – 2025 (Melodic Hard Rock)
14:00-16:00 The Best of 2003 – 2025 (Singer Songwriter)


Our occasional Newsletter signposts latest additions to the website(s). We also include a selection of recent top albums, based on GRTR! reviewer ratings.  The newsletter is sent out a few times a year.

If you’d like to register to receive this occasional mailing please complete the form:

If using a smartphone/tablet please tap here or re-orientate your device

(Note that this registration is separate from site registration which allows you to leave comments and receive daily emails about new content. If you wish to register for this – in addition or separately – please click or tap here – for more information – the form is at the foot of each page. Please read our privacy policy when opting-in to receive emails.


Recent (last 30 days)


Feature: Collectible Collections – CAMEL – Rainbow’s End An Anthology 1973-1985

CAMEL - Rainbow's End An Anthology 1973-1985

Universal/Decca 532 938-3 (2010)

My biggest regret in terms of live music is failing to get my arse over to Liverpool to see Camel performing at the Lomax, a smallish venue, in October 2000*. It may well have been the last opportunity. Who was to know that, some time after, the band’s frontman Andy Latimer was to suffer a debilitating blood disorder which has rendered him – and the band – inactive for half a decade.

There have been various reports since of a few more gigs, not least at High Voltage, and we only hope that Latimer gains in strength to make this a possibility. In the meantime, we have a sumptuous 4-CD retrospective, both engaging and poignant at the same time. A band’s life cut all too short, but arguably after Pete Bardens’ death in 2002 it would never be quite the same again (although Bardens had actually left the band in 1978).

This lovingly put-together set has a useful essay from compiler Mark Powell and brings together key tracks from the band’s albums 1973-1985. The collection is well annotated too with full recording details, the only slight oversight is the lack of attribution for the four tracks from ‘Nude’.

To sum up Camel’s music for the unknowing, they are an archtypal melodic prog band from the seventies, highly accessible and characterised by long, lush instrumental passages lifted by Lattimer’s soaring and searing guitar, Bardens keyboards, and contributions from Richard Sinclair (Caravan) and Mel Collins (King Crimson) who passed through the band’s ranks in 1976-1978.

In truth, after several excellent albums, Camel produced ‘Breathless’ in 1978 (represented by three tracks here) which tended to split the critics, perhaps too eclectic for some, and with Sinclair on vocals not unilike his previous band Caravan. Coincidentally Bardens left before its release.

If there is a minor niggle with this release, Powell refers to certain recordings in his narrative that should have made it to this retrospective. It’s a shame for instance that we couldn’t hear the band’s early live track that appeared on the long-deleted Greasy Truckers Live at Dingwalls (1974).

Or for that matter their ‘memorable’ Whistle Test session and BBC Radio 1 In Concert when they performed extracts from ‘Snow Goose’ . Although we do get the original mix of the classic ‘Lady Fantasy’ which first appeared on the Mirage album in 1974. Arguably this was the band’s most consistent, represented by a further three tracks in this collection. However, fans should beware because this early mix and a live version of ‘Supertwister’ also appeared on the 2002 remaster.

And the earlier remastered albums have also included several other tracks such as the 19 minute ‘Homage To The God of Light’ recorded in October 1974 at the Marquee Club. I assume fans will already own these and therefore should tread carefully here.

Newcomers will be well served by ‘Rainbow’s End’ but may also want to seek out the more straightforward ‘Lunar Sea’ compilation, issued in 2001 which you can get now for a few pounds.

I didn’t see Camel live, but my wife did in 1980 and the abiding image – perhaps strangely for the times – was their afghan coats. For a time Camel typified suitably attired prog journeymen but as this superb set demonstrates there was much more to them than dubious on-stage clothing.  *****

Thumbs UpGood track annotation, most comprehensive anthology for the given period.

Thumbs DownCertain tracks referred to in the liner note missing, including BBC radio material.  Some “bonus” tracks recycled from previous remasters.

Review by David Randall

First published 2010

* PS David did get to see the band in 2014 and 2018.

Gig review (September 2018)

2020 Vision - Rock. Reviewed. Revisited.


Featured Artist: JOSH TAERK

Since early 2020 Josh has been entertaining us with exclusive monthly live sessions,

Check out videos here: https://www.facebook.com/getreadytorockradio




David Randall presents a weekly show on Get Ready to ROCK! Radio, Sundays at 22:00 GMT, repeated on Mondays and Fridays), when he invites listeners to ‘Assume The Position’. The show signposts forthcoming gigs and tours and latest additions at getreadytorock.com. First broadcast 26 April 2026.


UK Blues Broadcaster of the Year (2020 and 2021 Finalist) Pete Feenstra presents his weekly Rock & Blues Show on Tuesday at 19:00 GMT as part of a five hour blues rock marathon “Tuesday is Bluesday at GRTR!”. The show is repeated on Wednesdays at 22:00, Fridays at 20:00). First broadcast on 21 April 2026

How to Listen Live?

Click the programming image at the top of the page (top right of page if using desktop)

Get Ready to ROCK! Radio is also in iTunes under Internet Radio/Classic Rock
Listen in via the Tunein app and search for “Get Ready to ROCK!” and save as favourite.

More information and links at our radio website where you can listen live or listen again to shows via the presenter pages: getreadytorockradio.com


Power Plays w/c 25 May 2026

BABY JANE Midnight Highway (Sped Up) (indie)
ASTRAL ROCKS The Flame In Me (Astral Rocks Prodns.)
INDIGO SYNDICATE dwn4smr (indie)
THE SKBS The Prying Eye (indie)
AGAINST THE CURRENT Dead Man Walking (indie)
ICONIC Tears Keep On Falling (Frontiers)

Featured Albums w/c 25 May 2026

09:00-12:00 The Best of 2003 – 2025 (Melodic Rock)
12:00-13:00 The Best of 2003 – 2025 (Melodic Hard Rock)
14:00-16:00 The Best of 2003 – 2025 (Singer Songwriter)


Our occasional Newsletter signposts latest additions to the website(s). We also include a selection of recent top albums, based on GRTR! reviewer ratings.  The newsletter is sent out a few times a year.

If you’d like to register to receive this occasional mailing please complete the form:

If using a smartphone/tablet please tap here or re-orientate your device

(Note that this registration is separate from site registration which allows you to leave comments and receive daily emails about new content. If you wish to register for this – in addition or separately – please click or tap here – for more information – the form is at the foot of each page. Please read our privacy policy when opting-in to receive emails.


Recent (last 30 days)


Album review: KAT PEARSON – My Roots

Pete Feenstra chatted to Kat Pearson on Sunday 14 March for Get Ready to ROCK! Radio

KAT PEARSON – My Roots

Tone Trade Records [Release date 06.01.20]

Kat Pearson is a London based, West Coast American roots-rock singer with a blues heart.

Unlike many of her contemporaries, she enjoyed early career commercial success with Black Girl Rock and D:ream, while somehow managing to miss the big time with the very popular Comanche Park, after signing to Columbia records for 2 albums

Fast forward 15 or more years, and she started her journey into her musical antecedents with the London based guitarist/producer and label boss Francesco Accurso in Kat & Co, with who they cut two albums.

‘My Roots’ is her debut solo album. It’s full of lyrical reflection and autobiographical tales anchored by a fine band. The latter is given plenty of room to stretch out, but they always support the song.

The ‘live in the studio’ approach also gives the players room to breathe and Pearson a bit more edge as she attacks the songs with gusto and in her brusquer moments offers a distant reminder of Eartha Kitt.

It’s hard to imagine that producer guitarist Francesco Accurso, wasn’t an integral part of Marco Marzola’s Trio before this recording.  His interplay with the Chuck Leavell influenced pianist Nico Menci and the rhythm section of Marzola on double bass and drummer Lele Barbieri  is outstanding.

That said, given that his relationship with Pearson extends to over a decade, it’s perhaps unsurprising that his intuitive playing and attentive production gives the album its vitality.

‘My Roots’ opens with the evocative, slide-led spoken word blues of ‘Cane Creek’ (with just a hint of southern rock.)

Pearson’s expressive vocal gently eases into her understated range to draw the listener into some colourful imagery.

As with the album as a whole, Menci’s gently voiced piano work is impeccable, hovering over Marzola’s treacly bass and Barbieri’s deft brush work.

The following ‘When The Blues Is Over’ is a defining song, as KP delivers her own personal mission statement.  “No one can tell me the hell what to do.”

The song’s message suggests coming out the other side of life experiences as a stronger person. The cool jazzy diversion over a walking bass line provides the perfect conduit to a pounding drum resolution that gives the album extra impetus.

Pearson is clearly a vocalist who believes in the less is more approach. She frequently delivers her opening verse and chorus and then lets the band extends the feel of the song, as on the reflective ‘The Truth’ and the outstanding ‘Can’t Leave It Behind’.

The latter is a lovely groove in which the hypnotic piano figure and interwoven guitar line provides the perfect support for her exclamatory vocal.

The refreshing thing about this album is the way Pearson reconnects with her musical roots through well written and heartfelt songs. They are shot through with integrity and emotional weight, as part of a musical journey with a linear flow.

The album moves from a sultry opening to a harder edged rocking blues to an after hours feel on the impassioned slow blues of ‘Where I belong”, on which her husky phrasing is perfectly supported by a band that wrings every possibility from the material

The atmospheric ‘Ode To My Mother’ veers into cinematic mode with echoey tremolo guitar over some portentous percussion, as Kat delivers an outstanding vocal that digs deep for emotion.

Accurso’s sinewy guitar break cuts through the track like a torch in the dark, with subtle support from pianist Barbieri.

The notably bigger production track lifts the album, but then as if to emphasise the dynamics at play, you only have to wait one more song before the minimalist contrast of ‘Until I Get What I Need’.

Accurso’s’ slightly over-extended piecing and distorted buzz-tone guitar opening racks up a tension which Kat fills with an impassioned vocal.

He then employs a cleaner tone backed by a sumptuous bass line on the rocking ‘Nothing Left To Lose’, a tale of a same sex relationship gone wrong.

And so to the rip-roaring shuffle boogie finish of ‘Labour’s Train’ with its biting lyrics: “When you’re proud to be black, but still trading in hope.”

The combination of Pearson’s husky vocal and Accurso’s wild slide guitar builds an intensity to frame her self affirming autobiographical lyrics. Only a rather perfunctory finish robs the album of the climactic rocking finale it deserves.

‘My Roots’ is a long overdue solo album from an exhilarating vocalist who has much to impart.  Her exploration of all shades of blues runs deep enough to warrant frequent revisits. ****

Review by Pete Feenstra


Featured Artist: JOSH TAERK

Since early 2020 Josh has been entertaining us with exclusive monthly live sessions,

Check out videos here: https://www.facebook.com/getreadytorockradio




David Randall presents a weekly show on Get Ready to ROCK! Radio, Sundays at 22:00 GMT, repeated on Mondays and Fridays), when he invites listeners to ‘Assume The Position’. The show signposts forthcoming gigs and tours and latest additions at getreadytorock.com. First broadcast 26 April 2026.


UK Blues Broadcaster of the Year (2020 and 2021 Finalist) Pete Feenstra presents his weekly Rock & Blues Show on Tuesday at 19:00 GMT as part of a five hour blues rock marathon “Tuesday is Bluesday at GRTR!”. The show is repeated on Wednesdays at 22:00, Fridays at 20:00). First broadcast on 21 April 2026

How to Listen Live?

Click the programming image at the top of the page (top right of page if using desktop)

Get Ready to ROCK! Radio is also in iTunes under Internet Radio/Classic Rock
Listen in via the Tunein app and search for “Get Ready to ROCK!” and save as favourite.

More information and links at our radio website where you can listen live or listen again to shows via the presenter pages: getreadytorockradio.com


Power Plays w/c 25 May 2026

BABY JANE Midnight Highway (Sped Up) (indie)
ASTRAL ROCKS The Flame In Me (Astral Rocks Prodns.)
INDIGO SYNDICATE dwn4smr (indie)
THE SKBS The Prying Eye (indie)
AGAINST THE CURRENT Dead Man Walking (indie)
ICONIC Tears Keep On Falling (Frontiers)

Featured Albums w/c 25 May 2026

09:00-12:00 The Best of 2003 – 2025 (Melodic Rock)
12:00-13:00 The Best of 2003 – 2025 (Melodic Hard Rock)
14:00-16:00 The Best of 2003 – 2025 (Singer Songwriter)


Our occasional Newsletter signposts latest additions to the website(s). We also include a selection of recent top albums, based on GRTR! reviewer ratings.  The newsletter is sent out a few times a year.

If you’d like to register to receive this occasional mailing please complete the form:

If using a smartphone/tablet please tap here or re-orientate your device

(Note that this registration is separate from site registration which allows you to leave comments and receive daily emails about new content. If you wish to register for this – in addition or separately – please click or tap here – for more information – the form is at the foot of each page. Please read our privacy policy when opting-in to receive emails.


Recent (last 30 days)


Album review: JOSEPH PARSONS – At Mercy’s Edge

JOSEPH PARSONS – At Mercy’s Edge

Blue Rose Records [Release date 01.01.21]

Joseph Parsons is a new name to me, however, he has been playing his musical trade for over thirty years now, including releasing thirteen solo albums prior to this one, and a further ten releases as part of other bands. Oh and three albums with fellow songwriter Todd Thibaud.

The band on ‘At Mercy’s Edge’ have been working with Parsons since 2008, consisting of Ross Bellenoit (guitar), Sven Hansen (drums) and Freddi Lubitz (bass).

Listening to the album you are reminded of various other artists (no bad thing!), be it Dire Straits on ‘Changes Everything’ or a bit of Springsteen on ‘Nerve’, then a bit of Tom Petty on the rock ‘n roller ‘Madness’. The title track recalls the storytelling skill of Ralph McTell, musically straddling folk and Americana with ease.

That’s not to say he doesn’t have his own sound, as ‘Greed On Fire’ is a fantastic opening track, full of big guitar riffs, strong melody and incisive lyrics. Or the heartfelt ballad ‘One More’, where the added female vocalist adds greatly to the song.

What would really propel him to the next level is if one of his sings was covered by a name artist and/or he lands a support slot with someone like Bruce Springteen or John Mellancamp. Well you have to aim/dream big!

Joseph Parsons is certainly worth investigating and ‘At Mercy’s Edge’ is an album to play over and over again, as the songs become more familiar yet never lose their charm. ***3/4

Review by Jason Ritchie


Featured Artist: JOSH TAERK

Since early 2020 Josh has been entertaining us with exclusive monthly live sessions,

Check out videos here: https://www.facebook.com/getreadytorockradio




David Randall presents a weekly show on Get Ready to ROCK! Radio, Sundays at 22:00 GMT, repeated on Mondays and Fridays), when he invites listeners to ‘Assume The Position’. The show signposts forthcoming gigs and tours and latest additions at getreadytorock.com. First broadcast 26 April 2026.


UK Blues Broadcaster of the Year (2020 and 2021 Finalist) Pete Feenstra presents his weekly Rock & Blues Show on Tuesday at 19:00 GMT as part of a five hour blues rock marathon “Tuesday is Bluesday at GRTR!”. The show is repeated on Wednesdays at 22:00, Fridays at 20:00). First broadcast on 21 April 2026

How to Listen Live?

Click the programming image at the top of the page (top right of page if using desktop)

Get Ready to ROCK! Radio is also in iTunes under Internet Radio/Classic Rock
Listen in via the Tunein app and search for “Get Ready to ROCK!” and save as favourite.

More information and links at our radio website where you can listen live or listen again to shows via the presenter pages: getreadytorockradio.com


Power Plays w/c 25 May 2026

BABY JANE Midnight Highway (Sped Up) (indie)
ASTRAL ROCKS The Flame In Me (Astral Rocks Prodns.)
INDIGO SYNDICATE dwn4smr (indie)
THE SKBS The Prying Eye (indie)
AGAINST THE CURRENT Dead Man Walking (indie)
ICONIC Tears Keep On Falling (Frontiers)

Featured Albums w/c 25 May 2026

09:00-12:00 The Best of 2003 – 2025 (Melodic Rock)
12:00-13:00 The Best of 2003 – 2025 (Melodic Hard Rock)
14:00-16:00 The Best of 2003 – 2025 (Singer Songwriter)


Our occasional Newsletter signposts latest additions to the website(s). We also include a selection of recent top albums, based on GRTR! reviewer ratings.  The newsletter is sent out a few times a year.

If you’d like to register to receive this occasional mailing please complete the form:

If using a smartphone/tablet please tap here or re-orientate your device

(Note that this registration is separate from site registration which allows you to leave comments and receive daily emails about new content. If you wish to register for this – in addition or separately – please click or tap here – for more information – the form is at the foot of each page. Please read our privacy policy when opting-in to receive emails.


Recent (last 30 days)


Album review: WINDING ROAD- s/t

WINDING ROAD- s/t

AOR Heaven [Release Date 26.03.21]

The thriving Scandinavian melodic rock scene is not just one for young bucks. Winding Road are a new band in which three musicians with a long list of credits in their native Sweden have come together to play in their preferred style, though, judging from some of the names of previous bands in the press blurb, they may be following the Night Flight Orchestra in coming from a heavier background.

‘It’s a Matter of Survival’ is a quietly impressive start, with Jonas Tyskhagen’s clear vocals and, though the song structure is very melodic, the lead guitar of Magnus Akerlund  is prominent. However after starting promisingly with some stabbing keys ‘Summertime’, which goes for the same Survivor-influenced territory as contemporaries Perfect Plan, becomes a missed opportunity, being  rather predictable with a flat chorus.

Both the keyboardsy ‘Stranger in the Night ‘and ‘Call On Me’ have good choruses  and the latter is prevented from slipping too far into an overly lightweight West Coast sound by some excellent guitar solos.  This is a recurring theme and indeed the piano-led ballad ‘I Lost You’ is lifted by another fine solo, not to mention some parping keyboards!

The sound is traditional, even dated with no attempt to emulate the more modern sounds of the Scandinavian contemporaries cited in the press release but, while low budget, Magnus’ production is refreshingly clear with the instruments clearly separated.

However the likes of ‘Out of Control’,  another laid back ballad in ‘Take Me As I Am’,  ‘On my Own Again’ and ‘Shooting Star’ are innocuous and bland, verging on lacklustre.

Indeed by the three quarter mark the album looks to be petering out into anti-climax until out of the blue comes the best by far in ‘Gotta Get Close to You’. A  most enjoyable if predictable rocker in the mould of Joe Lynn Turner-era Rainbow, it is enlivened by a fun synth solo  which borrows the melody of the mid-song section in Iron Maiden’s ‘Revelations’, then a guitar solo calling to mind John Norum in his most Schenker-influenced phase in the original Europe.

It is part of a strong closing trio with the lush sounds of ‘Before It All Falls Down’ the pick of the three ballads and ‘We Can Run Away’ having the anthemic eighties quality of Survivor or Stan Bush.

Indeed the band name could almost be an apt metaphor for an uneven album that is pleasant but at times meanders rather too gently before a rewarding end destination.  *** 3/4

Review by Andy Nathan


Featured Artist: JOSH TAERK

Since early 2020 Josh has been entertaining us with exclusive monthly live sessions,

Check out videos here: https://www.facebook.com/getreadytorockradio




David Randall presents a weekly show on Get Ready to ROCK! Radio, Sundays at 22:00 GMT, repeated on Mondays and Fridays), when he invites listeners to ‘Assume The Position’. The show signposts forthcoming gigs and tours and latest additions at getreadytorock.com. First broadcast 26 April 2026.


UK Blues Broadcaster of the Year (2020 and 2021 Finalist) Pete Feenstra presents his weekly Rock & Blues Show on Tuesday at 19:00 GMT as part of a five hour blues rock marathon “Tuesday is Bluesday at GRTR!”. The show is repeated on Wednesdays at 22:00, Fridays at 20:00). First broadcast on 21 April 2026

How to Listen Live?

Click the programming image at the top of the page (top right of page if using desktop)

Get Ready to ROCK! Radio is also in iTunes under Internet Radio/Classic Rock
Listen in via the Tunein app and search for “Get Ready to ROCK!” and save as favourite.

More information and links at our radio website where you can listen live or listen again to shows via the presenter pages: getreadytorockradio.com


Power Plays w/c 25 May 2026

BABY JANE Midnight Highway (Sped Up) (indie)
ASTRAL ROCKS The Flame In Me (Astral Rocks Prodns.)
INDIGO SYNDICATE dwn4smr (indie)
THE SKBS The Prying Eye (indie)
AGAINST THE CURRENT Dead Man Walking (indie)
ICONIC Tears Keep On Falling (Frontiers)

Featured Albums w/c 25 May 2026

09:00-12:00 The Best of 2003 – 2025 (Melodic Rock)
12:00-13:00 The Best of 2003 – 2025 (Melodic Hard Rock)
14:00-16:00 The Best of 2003 – 2025 (Singer Songwriter)


Our occasional Newsletter signposts latest additions to the website(s). We also include a selection of recent top albums, based on GRTR! reviewer ratings.  The newsletter is sent out a few times a year.

If you’d like to register to receive this occasional mailing please complete the form:

If using a smartphone/tablet please tap here or re-orientate your device

(Note that this registration is separate from site registration which allows you to leave comments and receive daily emails about new content. If you wish to register for this – in addition or separately – please click or tap here – for more information – the form is at the foot of each page. Please read our privacy policy when opting-in to receive emails.


Recent (last 30 days)


Album review: GHALIA VOLT – One Woman Band

Ghalia Volt - One Woman Band

Ruf Records [Release date 29.01.21]

‘One Woman Band’ is much more than it says on the tin. Ghalia Volt is a force of nature, who lets nothing stand in her way to fulfilling her musical vision.

You’ll either buy into her tour de force or you may be taken back by it. Either way, ‘One Woman Band’ is an aspirational roughhouse album that takes no prisoners, but finds enough room for lyrics that cross the life experience and imagination divide.

There may well come a time after the current pandemic, when we’ll look back and recognise certain significant albums and sessions recorded under lockdown which brought out something extra in an artist.

This is such an album. It may be that Belgium’s Ghalia Volt already had the lyrical acumen and musical ferocity, but the chances are that present day circumstances provided the fuse for her vibrant take on down-home blues.

Where Hound Dog Taylor found his source material and energy from the street corners, Ghalia Volt is a more modern day variant on the same thing. She attacks her music with a focused intensity, born of the machinations of being a one woman band (albeit bassist Dean Zucchero, and guitarist ‘Monster’ Mike Welch both make small cameo appearances).

It’s in the way she combines a fearless garage band approach with a total self belief that everything is possible, that she forges her own style.

Inspired by a train journey across the Southern States and drawing on personal experiences, this stripped down album is full of rough-edged grooves, boogie and blues.

It’s all stamped with her unique personality, frequently channelled through a vocal style that at times borders on exclamatory irony. She finds the perfect foil for her vocals with the hypnotic slide guitar boogie and ethereal sounds of ‘Espiritu Papago’ which frames a desert travelogue, bolstered by Patti Smith style stream of consciousness.

There’s a refreshing mix of a European sense of time and place, North Mississippi drone grooves and of course the deep blues traditions of Memphis’s Royal Sound Studio. And it’s all tempered by her own take on minimalist blues, filtered through her own cinematic lens.

Her exhilarating style is derived from a natural musical intensity, counter-weighted by lyrical introspection, while her restless vocal style never lets her settle in one groove for too long, as she ushers in imagery laden narratives

And if Ghalia Volt’s PR makes the most of her 7 year journey from being a Belgian busker to a high profile Billboard chart artist, on the evidence of this album she isn’t about the rest on her laurels.

‘One Woman Band’ is the ultimate plug in and play gig. She rips the hell out of her amp and enjoys seeing where it takes her.

Ultimately the album title is significant, as it excludes the blues tag, meaning that she’s may brush against the ghost of say Memphis Minnie,  Elmore James, Son House and the like, but she lets the music take her where it wants to go, giving the album its joie de vivre spirit.

Happily she has some engaging songs to match her irreverent approach, with the opening ‘Last Minute Packer’ evoking the hustle and bustle of the lyrical theme, as if we’re caught in a snapshot in the last minute whirl of touring.

‘Can’t Escape’ is heavier, being a flinty, drone driven raw piece full of buzz guitar, dirgy vocals and an awkward tempo change, before she returns to the opening North Mississippi feel.

There a real intensity at the core of her music, which carries the album through several ebbs and flows,

There’s the big sounding ‘Bad Apple’, which feels as if the whole album has flowed naturally to this point. Her up-in-the-mix slide has a slightly cleaner tone and dominates the track. As a result her vocal is mixed back so the full drone effect fills the track with an imposing “can do spirit”.

It’s also a good example of the album’s dichotomous nature, bedded in distorted guitar tones and poppy vocals, which mercifully embrace the various nuances of the song at hand.

‘Just One More Time’ is a nice book-end to the album and feels like a sister track to the equally laid back simplicity of ‘Evil Thoughts’, until an unexpected Link Wray style guitar break.

The key to this album lies in Ghalia’s ability to carry you along in her slipstream, even when we’re in the over familiar lyrical territory of ‘Loving Me Is A Full Time Job’, or the awkward cover of ‘It Hurts Me Too’, on which her vocal inflection is annoying and the slide tone very metallic.

No matter, she impresses enough with her own songs such as the dirgy riff driven ‘Meet Me In My Dreams’, which cleverly combines a hypnotic guitar track with spectral vocals.

But it’s not until near the three quarter mark of the album that she inadvertently delivers the album’s real mission statement, as she belts out the line: “It ain’t good, it ain’t bad, and if it ain’t Bad, that’s pretty good,”

In the context of this bulldozer album that translates into the blues artist’s creed, “close enough for the blues.”  ****

Review by Pete Feenstra


Featured Artist: JOSH TAERK

Since early 2020 Josh has been entertaining us with exclusive monthly live sessions,

Check out videos here: https://www.facebook.com/getreadytorockradio




David Randall presents a weekly show on Get Ready to ROCK! Radio, Sundays at 22:00 GMT, repeated on Mondays and Fridays), when he invites listeners to ‘Assume The Position’. The show signposts forthcoming gigs and tours and latest additions at getreadytorock.com. First broadcast 26 April 2026.


UK Blues Broadcaster of the Year (2020 and 2021 Finalist) Pete Feenstra presents his weekly Rock & Blues Show on Tuesday at 19:00 GMT as part of a five hour blues rock marathon “Tuesday is Bluesday at GRTR!”. The show is repeated on Wednesdays at 22:00, Fridays at 20:00). First broadcast on 21 April 2026

How to Listen Live?

Click the programming image at the top of the page (top right of page if using desktop)

Get Ready to ROCK! Radio is also in iTunes under Internet Radio/Classic Rock
Listen in via the Tunein app and search for “Get Ready to ROCK!” and save as favourite.

More information and links at our radio website where you can listen live or listen again to shows via the presenter pages: getreadytorockradio.com


Power Plays w/c 25 May 2026

BABY JANE Midnight Highway (Sped Up) (indie)
ASTRAL ROCKS The Flame In Me (Astral Rocks Prodns.)
INDIGO SYNDICATE dwn4smr (indie)
THE SKBS The Prying Eye (indie)
AGAINST THE CURRENT Dead Man Walking (indie)
ICONIC Tears Keep On Falling (Frontiers)

Featured Albums w/c 25 May 2026

09:00-12:00 The Best of 2003 – 2025 (Melodic Rock)
12:00-13:00 The Best of 2003 – 2025 (Melodic Hard Rock)
14:00-16:00 The Best of 2003 – 2025 (Singer Songwriter)


Our occasional Newsletter signposts latest additions to the website(s). We also include a selection of recent top albums, based on GRTR! reviewer ratings.  The newsletter is sent out a few times a year.

If you’d like to register to receive this occasional mailing please complete the form:

If using a smartphone/tablet please tap here or re-orientate your device

(Note that this registration is separate from site registration which allows you to leave comments and receive daily emails about new content. If you wish to register for this – in addition or separately – please click or tap here – for more information – the form is at the foot of each page. Please read our privacy policy when opting-in to receive emails.


Recent (last 30 days)


Album review: STEVEN WILSON – The Future Bites

STEVEN WILSON - The Future Bites

SW Records [Release date: 29.01.21]

There’s a body of music fans who, if their favourite artist dares to stray from their favoured genre, castigate said artist with the tired (and tiresome) clichés “sold out”, “going mainstream”, “chasing the Yankee dollar”, etc.

Reading a lot of other reviews you would be forgiven for thinking that Steven Wilson had sold his soul at the crossroads to Britney Spears.

No, this isn’t Porcupine Tree. No, this isn’t No Man. No, this isn’t Blackfield. And no, this isn’t the Steven Wilson so revered for solo albums such as “Grace For Drowning”, “The Raven That Refused To Sing”, “Transience” and ‘Hand. Cannot. Erase”.

But he hasn’t left his progressive rock roots behind completely, as some would have you believe – in fact, he has opened up a new listening experience to everyone who has enjoyed his previous work.

By dint of his uncanny ability both as a musician and his way with a lyric, he makes you like music you never thought you would listen to in a month of Sundays.

‘The Future Bites’ is revealed, track by track, to be Wilson’s take on the way society and the world in general is heading – and it’s not a good place.

Originally scheduled for release early in 2020, at the height of Trumpism, the album was held back due to the pandemic but has lost none of its relevance.

Opener ‘Unself’ gently eases you in before ‘Self’ roars in like a party banger – but listen to the lyrics. It’s pop, Jim, but not as we know it and certainly not SW channelling his inner Prince.

‘King Ghost’ starts almost dub-like but segues into a delicious, other-worldly spacial chorus. Amazing, compulsive listening and one of many highlights.

As if to illustrate a previous point ’12 Things I Forgot’ is classic Wilson/Blackfield – almost a love song and pop-like but certainly not for the TikTok generation.

‘Eminent Sleaze’ feels like a mash-up of David Essex’ ‘Rock On’ and 10CC’s ‘Dreadlock Holiday’ whereas ‘Man Of The People’ has a dreamlike, spacey vibe again with killer lyrics “well I can take rejection / what does it take to get your attention / ‘cause you’re a man of the people”.

‘Personal Shopper’ is a vitriolic counterblast to naked consumerism. It has a real Gary Numan feel to it with a great juxtaposition of a pop tune cut with caustic lyrics “Buy in green / buy in blue / buy in patterns ‘cause I tell you to”. Plus a list of stuff you don’t need read out by Elton John, no less, in the style of Viv Stanshall introducing the instruments on the Bonzo’s ‘The Intro And The Outro’. Killer track.

In the same vein, ‘Follower’ takes acerbic aim at social media ‘influencers’ or (influenza, as I prefer) and the album wraps up with ‘Count Of Unease’ which starts like a cassette player I used to own whose ‘wow and flutter’ was around 10% but becomes another spacey voyage. Should keep the proggers happy. Headphones? Defo.

‘The Future Bites’ is an excellent album – among Steven Wilson’s best, but it IS different and will cause some to doubt his path forward. However, you can’t progress by churning out the same album ad nauseum and the best thing to do is just listen to it and make your own mind up.

As George Michael said all those years ago “Listen Without Prejudice”.

One piece of apparent hypocrisy that needs calling out though is in the lyric of ‘Personal Shopper’. There, in the list of pointless purchases of stuff you don’t need, appears ‘Deluxe Box Sets’.

A bit rich considering a one-off Special Edition box set of this very album was snapped up for £10,000 (!) in America. Or was Steven just taking the piss…?

Nonetheless   *****

Review by Alan Jones

 

 

 


Featured Artist: JOSH TAERK

Since early 2020 Josh has been entertaining us with exclusive monthly live sessions,

Check out videos here: https://www.facebook.com/getreadytorockradio




David Randall presents a weekly show on Get Ready to ROCK! Radio, Sundays at 22:00 GMT, repeated on Mondays and Fridays), when he invites listeners to ‘Assume The Position’. The show signposts forthcoming gigs and tours and latest additions at getreadytorock.com. First broadcast 26 April 2026.


UK Blues Broadcaster of the Year (2020 and 2021 Finalist) Pete Feenstra presents his weekly Rock & Blues Show on Tuesday at 19:00 GMT as part of a five hour blues rock marathon “Tuesday is Bluesday at GRTR!”. The show is repeated on Wednesdays at 22:00, Fridays at 20:00). First broadcast on 21 April 2026

How to Listen Live?

Click the programming image at the top of the page (top right of page if using desktop)

Get Ready to ROCK! Radio is also in iTunes under Internet Radio/Classic Rock
Listen in via the Tunein app and search for “Get Ready to ROCK!” and save as favourite.

More information and links at our radio website where you can listen live or listen again to shows via the presenter pages: getreadytorockradio.com


Power Plays w/c 25 May 2026

BABY JANE Midnight Highway (Sped Up) (indie)
ASTRAL ROCKS The Flame In Me (Astral Rocks Prodns.)
INDIGO SYNDICATE dwn4smr (indie)
THE SKBS The Prying Eye (indie)
AGAINST THE CURRENT Dead Man Walking (indie)
ICONIC Tears Keep On Falling (Frontiers)

Featured Albums w/c 25 May 2026

09:00-12:00 The Best of 2003 – 2025 (Melodic Rock)
12:00-13:00 The Best of 2003 – 2025 (Melodic Hard Rock)
14:00-16:00 The Best of 2003 – 2025 (Singer Songwriter)


Our occasional Newsletter signposts latest additions to the website(s). We also include a selection of recent top albums, based on GRTR! reviewer ratings.  The newsletter is sent out a few times a year.

If you’d like to register to receive this occasional mailing please complete the form:

If using a smartphone/tablet please tap here or re-orientate your device

(Note that this registration is separate from site registration which allows you to leave comments and receive daily emails about new content. If you wish to register for this – in addition or separately – please click or tap here – for more information – the form is at the foot of each page. Please read our privacy policy when opting-in to receive emails.


Recent (last 30 days)


Book review: ROY WOOD, KANSAS (On Track…)

ROY WOOD On Track

Sonic Bond Publishing

Roy Wood: The Move, ELO & Wizzard by James R Turner

The ‘On Track…’ series gets to one of my musical heroes, Roy Wood. An interesting musician to cover, as although he still tours, Roy Wood has not released a new studio album since 198’s ‘Starting Up’.

It starts off with Wood’s involvement in the 60’s hitmakers and Brumbeat legends, the Move. Interestingly Jeff Lynne crosses Wood’s path a lot in both their early musical days, as Lynne replaced Wood when he left Mike Sheridan’s band to join the Move (a band Jeff Lynne later joined!). A good portion of the book covers the Move, with Turner critiquing each single and album by the band.

The Move released plenty of hit singles, however, there are some early Wood penned gems to be found on their album’s including ‘Beautiful Daughter’ and ‘Cherry Blossom Clinic’. By the early 70’s the Move (by now featuring Wood, Bev Bevan and Jeff Lynne) released a series of singles (including the much covered Wood penned ‘California Man’) in order to fund their new band, the Electric Light Orchestra (ELO).

ELO only get a mention for their debut album, the only one to feature Roy Wood before he left to form Wizzard. Always one of those ‘what if…?’ scenarios…what if Wood had remained in ELO and how would they have developed musically?

The book really does cover Wood’s 70’s golden era in style, from the big hits like ‘See My Baby Jive’ and that Christmas single, through to Eddy & the Falcons, a chance for Wood to indulge in his love of rock n roll with a big band twist.

Solo albums credited to Roy Wood number just four and each gets an in depth appraisal from the author. Interesting for fans too are the round-up of singles released in the early 80’s, including one of Wood’s finest songs (in this humble reviewer’s opinion) ‘Green Glass Windows’. He is an artist who really deserves a proper re-issue and box set treatment, as many of his albums are not currently available, bar the EMI ones.

As other fellow GRTR! reviewers have mentioned about this series an index would be a most welcome addition. That said, if you like any of Roy Wood’s varied musical output this is a great companion piece as you listen again to the marvellous music he has created over the years.

KANSAS On Track

Kansas by Kevin Cummings

Kevin Cummings is a musician and writer, he also maintains a website offering original music, recordings and arrangements, as well as transcriptions of Kerry Livgren’s music. So he’s pretty well placed to write about the music of Kanas.

One feature in this book is where author breaks down some of band’s classic epics and best known songs, for example ‘Song For America’, highlighting the instruments used, the solos, etc. Maybe a bit too much for the casual fan, although to be fair these ‘On Track…’ series are mainly aimed at an artist’s hardcore fanbase. A big bonus for this book that’s for sure.

Pleasing to see the ‘Power’ and ‘In The Spirit Of Things’ albums given a good summary (this reviewer’s favourite Kansas albums along with ‘Leftoverture’). I like the interludes idea too, whereby the band’s live albums are critiqued (and quite rightly the abomination that is ‘Live at the Whisky 1992’ is given short shrift).

There is a very brief outline of the band members various solo outings and other bands they have been involved with, which would have been good to expand more upon. Even perhaps just focussing on the solo work of Steve Walsh and Kerry Livgren.

Using previously published interviews with band members, past and present, adds to the background. In addition to this are interviews specifically for the book from Kerry Livgren and Billy Greer, which are a real bonus and often something missing from other titles in the series.

Pretty darn essential for any fan of Kansas and their wonderful catalogue of music.

Reviews by Jason Ritchie

On track…Kate Bush, Renaissance, Dire Straits, Joni Mitchell
On track…UFO
On track…Iron Maiden, Thin Lizzy
On track…Mike Oldfield


Featured Artist: JOSH TAERK

Since early 2020 Josh has been entertaining us with exclusive monthly live sessions,

Check out videos here: https://www.facebook.com/getreadytorockradio




David Randall presents a weekly show on Get Ready to ROCK! Radio, Sundays at 22:00 GMT, repeated on Mondays and Fridays), when he invites listeners to ‘Assume The Position’. The show signposts forthcoming gigs and tours and latest additions at getreadytorock.com. First broadcast 26 April 2026.


UK Blues Broadcaster of the Year (2020 and 2021 Finalist) Pete Feenstra presents his weekly Rock & Blues Show on Tuesday at 19:00 GMT as part of a five hour blues rock marathon “Tuesday is Bluesday at GRTR!”. The show is repeated on Wednesdays at 22:00, Fridays at 20:00). First broadcast on 21 April 2026

How to Listen Live?

Click the programming image at the top of the page (top right of page if using desktop)

Get Ready to ROCK! Radio is also in iTunes under Internet Radio/Classic Rock
Listen in via the Tunein app and search for “Get Ready to ROCK!” and save as favourite.

More information and links at our radio website where you can listen live or listen again to shows via the presenter pages: getreadytorockradio.com


Power Plays w/c 25 May 2026

BABY JANE Midnight Highway (Sped Up) (indie)
ASTRAL ROCKS The Flame In Me (Astral Rocks Prodns.)
INDIGO SYNDICATE dwn4smr (indie)
THE SKBS The Prying Eye (indie)
AGAINST THE CURRENT Dead Man Walking (indie)
ICONIC Tears Keep On Falling (Frontiers)

Featured Albums w/c 25 May 2026

09:00-12:00 The Best of 2003 – 2025 (Melodic Rock)
12:00-13:00 The Best of 2003 – 2025 (Melodic Hard Rock)
14:00-16:00 The Best of 2003 – 2025 (Singer Songwriter)


Our occasional Newsletter signposts latest additions to the website(s). We also include a selection of recent top albums, based on GRTR! reviewer ratings.  The newsletter is sent out a few times a year.

If you’d like to register to receive this occasional mailing please complete the form:

If using a smartphone/tablet please tap here or re-orientate your device

(Note that this registration is separate from site registration which allows you to leave comments and receive daily emails about new content. If you wish to register for this – in addition or separately – please click or tap here – for more information – the form is at the foot of each page. Please read our privacy policy when opting-in to receive emails.


Recent (last 30 days)


Album review: LEAGUE OF LIGHTS – Dreamers Don’t Come Down

LEAGUE OF LIGHTS – Dreamers Don’t Come Down

Eightspace Records [Release date 12.03.21]

League Of Lights, the husband and wife duo of Richard (also a member of prog metal band Threshold) and Farrah West, return with their third album. As Farrah explains, “The album is about the past, the present and the future – about taking the best from all that you have been through, the pressures of modern life and keeping your dreams alive in dark times.”

Like many albums now being released this one was mainly written and recorded since the lockdowns began over a year ago. Bizarrely ‘Twenty Twenty One’ was written pre-pandemic in 2019, yet the music and lyrics fit this year perfectly. This was the first single released off this album and it is one of the album’s instant ‘hits’.

One thing that is apparent upon listening to this album is that the musical arrangements have been stripped back more, with the piano leading the way in backing the ethereal vocals of Farrah.

As Richard states, “we wanted it to be more piano-driven than our previous release…more open than before with less synths and more space for Farrah’s vocals to really lift off.” That certainly has been achieved as ‘Modern Living’ and ‘Persephone’ highlight, where the music gives plenty of space to Farrah’s vocals, yet there is still enough going on musically for the listener to pick out different sounds on each subsequent listen.

‘The Collector’ has been released as a single, being another strong piano driven melody and it has the potential to be played on mainstream radio. ‘North Of The Sun’ could be another possible one for a single release, although to be fair all of the album has wide appeal due to its melodic pop roots.

The final song, ‘Echoes of a Dream’, is worth highlighting too, as it is one of those songs that revisits and summarises the rest of the songs on the album. Cleverly done, making a fitting finale to the album.

League Of Lights seem to have found their desired sound on this album – a classy mix of piano led pop, electro and progressive music, with emphasis on the vocals and melodies. Highly recommended, as indeed are the band’s previous two albums. ****

Review by Jason Ritchie


Featured Artist: JOSH TAERK

Since early 2020 Josh has been entertaining us with exclusive monthly live sessions,

Check out videos here: https://www.facebook.com/getreadytorockradio




David Randall presents a weekly show on Get Ready to ROCK! Radio, Sundays at 22:00 GMT, repeated on Mondays and Fridays), when he invites listeners to ‘Assume The Position’. The show signposts forthcoming gigs and tours and latest additions at getreadytorock.com. First broadcast 26 April 2026.


UK Blues Broadcaster of the Year (2020 and 2021 Finalist) Pete Feenstra presents his weekly Rock & Blues Show on Tuesday at 19:00 GMT as part of a five hour blues rock marathon “Tuesday is Bluesday at GRTR!”. The show is repeated on Wednesdays at 22:00, Fridays at 20:00). First broadcast on 21 April 2026

How to Listen Live?

Click the programming image at the top of the page (top right of page if using desktop)

Get Ready to ROCK! Radio is also in iTunes under Internet Radio/Classic Rock
Listen in via the Tunein app and search for “Get Ready to ROCK!” and save as favourite.

More information and links at our radio website where you can listen live or listen again to shows via the presenter pages: getreadytorockradio.com


Power Plays w/c 25 May 2026

BABY JANE Midnight Highway (Sped Up) (indie)
ASTRAL ROCKS The Flame In Me (Astral Rocks Prodns.)
INDIGO SYNDICATE dwn4smr (indie)
THE SKBS The Prying Eye (indie)
AGAINST THE CURRENT Dead Man Walking (indie)
ICONIC Tears Keep On Falling (Frontiers)

Featured Albums w/c 25 May 2026

09:00-12:00 The Best of 2003 – 2025 (Melodic Rock)
12:00-13:00 The Best of 2003 – 2025 (Melodic Hard Rock)
14:00-16:00 The Best of 2003 – 2025 (Singer Songwriter)


Our occasional Newsletter signposts latest additions to the website(s). We also include a selection of recent top albums, based on GRTR! reviewer ratings.  The newsletter is sent out a few times a year.

If you’d like to register to receive this occasional mailing please complete the form:

If using a smartphone/tablet please tap here or re-orientate your device

(Note that this registration is separate from site registration which allows you to leave comments and receive daily emails about new content. If you wish to register for this – in addition or separately – please click or tap here – for more information – the form is at the foot of each page. Please read our privacy policy when opting-in to receive emails.


Recent (last 30 days)


Album review: ORDEN OGAN – Final Days

AFM Records [Release date 12.03.21]

Orden Ogan might not be the band on everyone’s lips when Progressive or Power Metal is the subject of conversation. But they should be. And if their last album, Gunmen, didn’t put them there, Final Days will rectify the matter.

The band’s upward trajectory accelerates with every new release. They are clearly way ahead of the curve, trailing most others in their wake.

Living in the “Anxiety Age”, it’s not difficult to see why the end of the world as we know it might become the basis of a concept album. And so, Orden Ogan’s sixth album, Final Days, documents Armageddon, with each song having a common thread, stretching from the beginning of the album to the end. For Prog fans, a concept, or at least a theme, is an subject of great tradition and familiarity.

The idea of music being a substitute for images is normally confined to Cinema, but Sebastian Leverman, singer/writer/producer for Orden Ogan, succeeds in creating a Metalised version through his writing and arrangements.

‘Heart Of The Android’, ‘Inferno’ and ‘Hollow’ are his band’s equivalent of a major event firework display, building momentum through verse (“We’re Gonna Burn It Down”), then launching into an explosion of light and sound in the chorus.

‘In The Dawn of The AI’ and ‘Interstellar’ continue the story in a glorious rush of amplitude, speed and complexity. These are knowing, surefooted Progressive Metal songs that play to the band’s strengths, propelled by singing synths and scything axework, each filled to the brim with aurally adhesive hooks.

On albums like this, track sequencing is vital. Symphonic ballad ‘Alone In The Dark’ slows the tempo for a few necessary minutes, undercutting the bombast, allowing us to catch our breath. The song, understandably reflects on survival. Guest, Yiva (Brothers Of Metal) Erikksen adds an operatic gravitas to an already powerful piece of writing and performance.

Magnificently apposite closing track ‘It Is Over’ sees the planet go down in a blaze of glory, as the asteroid hits, and the spacecraft carrying the last few survivors escapes Earth’s gravitational pull. Dramatic or what?

To try to pick a standout track from such a consistent body of work would be foolish and pointless. Suffice to say it’s an album that will sustain even the most ravenous and demanding metal fan. ****

Review by Brian McGowan


Featured Artist: JOSH TAERK

Since early 2020 Josh has been entertaining us with exclusive monthly live sessions,

Check out videos here: https://www.facebook.com/getreadytorockradio




David Randall presents a weekly show on Get Ready to ROCK! Radio, Sundays at 22:00 GMT, repeated on Mondays and Fridays), when he invites listeners to ‘Assume The Position’. The show signposts forthcoming gigs and tours and latest additions at getreadytorock.com. First broadcast 26 April 2026.


UK Blues Broadcaster of the Year (2020 and 2021 Finalist) Pete Feenstra presents his weekly Rock & Blues Show on Tuesday at 19:00 GMT as part of a five hour blues rock marathon “Tuesday is Bluesday at GRTR!”. The show is repeated on Wednesdays at 22:00, Fridays at 20:00). First broadcast on 21 April 2026

How to Listen Live?

Click the programming image at the top of the page (top right of page if using desktop)

Get Ready to ROCK! Radio is also in iTunes under Internet Radio/Classic Rock
Listen in via the Tunein app and search for “Get Ready to ROCK!” and save as favourite.

More information and links at our radio website where you can listen live or listen again to shows via the presenter pages: getreadytorockradio.com


Power Plays w/c 25 May 2026

BABY JANE Midnight Highway (Sped Up) (indie)
ASTRAL ROCKS The Flame In Me (Astral Rocks Prodns.)
INDIGO SYNDICATE dwn4smr (indie)
THE SKBS The Prying Eye (indie)
AGAINST THE CURRENT Dead Man Walking (indie)
ICONIC Tears Keep On Falling (Frontiers)

Featured Albums w/c 25 May 2026

09:00-12:00 The Best of 2003 – 2025 (Melodic Rock)
12:00-13:00 The Best of 2003 – 2025 (Melodic Hard Rock)
14:00-16:00 The Best of 2003 – 2025 (Singer Songwriter)


Our occasional Newsletter signposts latest additions to the website(s). We also include a selection of recent top albums, based on GRTR! reviewer ratings.  The newsletter is sent out a few times a year.

If you’d like to register to receive this occasional mailing please complete the form:

If using a smartphone/tablet please tap here or re-orientate your device

(Note that this registration is separate from site registration which allows you to leave comments and receive daily emails about new content. If you wish to register for this – in addition or separately – please click or tap here – for more information – the form is at the foot of each page. Please read our privacy policy when opting-in to receive emails.


Recent (last 30 days)


Album review: THUNDER – All The Right Noises

THUNDER – All The Right Noises

BMG [Release date 12.03.21]

Thunder have been on something of a purple patch album wise since 2015’s ‘Wonder Days’ and that form continues on this, their thirteenth studio album (if you include 2019’s acoustic led ‘Please Remain Seated’). They have gone big on the backing vocals (who include the Duchess from Space Elevator), brass and strings on some of the songs, plus recorded quite possibly one of their heaviest songs to date, ‘Destruction’.

The album opens with the raucous ‘Last One Turn Out The Lights’, where the band’s songwriter Luke Morley doesn’t shy away from letting you know where he stands on Brexit! This song has it all from a borrowed Led Zep riff (which to be fair, that band borrowed from the blues pioneers), sassy female backing vocals and brass. Quite possibly their best song since ‘She’s So Fine’. This is quickly followed by ‘Destruction’, dealing with mental health and the heaviest song Thunder have recorded to date. The guitar on here is distorted and loud, with Danny Bowes in simply stunning vocal form.

‘Sin City’ will be a live staple I am sure, with its chugging riff and instant chorus. Again the band add in a bit of brass to give the song that little something extra. ‘You’re Gonna Be My Girl’ is a fun blues rocker harking back to ‘Backstreet Symphony’ days, complete with honkytonk piano. ‘She’s A Millionairess’ is the other party rocker on here. Loving the use of backing vocals and the electric piano, which gives it a little bit of Faces feel.

Trump rears his ugly head on ‘Force Of Nature’ – and quite possibly the subject matter of ‘The Smoking Gun’. The latter is a song based around the acoustic guitar and Danny’s vocals. ‘Force Of Nature’ starts slow, before the guitars kick in and like the rest of the album, the rhythm section of Chris Childs and Harry James groove as one.

Seeing Britain from the eyes of a refugee on ‘St George’s Day’ certainly pulls no punches. Another thought provoking lyric.

Now Thunder are rightly known for their emotionally charged ballads and rightly so, with this album providing us with ‘I’ll Be The One’. I will wager this one will feature on few future romantic rock playlists and rockers’ weddings. It has it all from the piano and strings working their musical magic, through to another emotionally charged vocal performance from Danny Bowes.

If funds allow do invest in the double CD edition as not only do you get eight of the album’s songs recorded live last summer at the legendary Rockfield Studios, but four other new songs too. Pick of these are the mid-tempo rocker ‘The Fires That Roar’ (featuring some of the album’s best guitar on it) and the ballad ‘Hero’.

Thunder fans will love this album as it touches all the band’s key strengths – memorable songs, party rockers, ballads, lyrics to make you think and above all, well-crafted hard rock tunes. An Album of the Year and one that could turn out to be their best since their legendary debut album. ****1/2

Review by Jason Ritchie


Featured Artist: JOSH TAERK

Since early 2020 Josh has been entertaining us with exclusive monthly live sessions,

Check out videos here: https://www.facebook.com/getreadytorockradio




David Randall presents a weekly show on Get Ready to ROCK! Radio, Sundays at 22:00 GMT, repeated on Mondays and Fridays), when he invites listeners to ‘Assume The Position’. The show signposts forthcoming gigs and tours and latest additions at getreadytorock.com. First broadcast 26 April 2026.


UK Blues Broadcaster of the Year (2020 and 2021 Finalist) Pete Feenstra presents his weekly Rock & Blues Show on Tuesday at 19:00 GMT as part of a five hour blues rock marathon “Tuesday is Bluesday at GRTR!”. The show is repeated on Wednesdays at 22:00, Fridays at 20:00). First broadcast on 21 April 2026

How to Listen Live?

Click the programming image at the top of the page (top right of page if using desktop)

Get Ready to ROCK! Radio is also in iTunes under Internet Radio/Classic Rock
Listen in via the Tunein app and search for “Get Ready to ROCK!” and save as favourite.

More information and links at our radio website where you can listen live or listen again to shows via the presenter pages: getreadytorockradio.com


Power Plays w/c 25 May 2026

BABY JANE Midnight Highway (Sped Up) (indie)
ASTRAL ROCKS The Flame In Me (Astral Rocks Prodns.)
INDIGO SYNDICATE dwn4smr (indie)
THE SKBS The Prying Eye (indie)
AGAINST THE CURRENT Dead Man Walking (indie)
ICONIC Tears Keep On Falling (Frontiers)

Featured Albums w/c 25 May 2026

09:00-12:00 The Best of 2003 – 2025 (Melodic Rock)
12:00-13:00 The Best of 2003 – 2025 (Melodic Hard Rock)
14:00-16:00 The Best of 2003 – 2025 (Singer Songwriter)


Our occasional Newsletter signposts latest additions to the website(s). We also include a selection of recent top albums, based on GRTR! reviewer ratings.  The newsletter is sent out a few times a year.

If you’d like to register to receive this occasional mailing please complete the form:

If using a smartphone/tablet please tap here or re-orientate your device

(Note that this registration is separate from site registration which allows you to leave comments and receive daily emails about new content. If you wish to register for this – in addition or separately – please click or tap here – for more information – the form is at the foot of each page. Please read our privacy policy when opting-in to receive emails.


Recent (last 30 days)


Album review: WILDLIFE – Burning (reissue/remaster)

Rock Candy Records [Release date 12.02.21]

FM and Steve Overland have bona fide legendary status in the annals of UK Rock’n'Roll. It began with Wildlife in the late seventies. Overland and the Jupp brothers, Chris and Pete, were the core of the band, and would later become the core of FM.

Discovered by the late Adam Faith, the band recorded Burning (1980), which has now been reissued in remastered form by Rock Candy Records.  Produced by Rupert (Rush/ Saga) Hine, it’s a buoyant, focused debut, with writing and/or co-writing credits attributed to Eric Troyer, founding member of ELO II and much sought after backing vocalist; and Mark Booty, well known keyboard player of the time, as well as the band.

They started as they meant to continue. The songs and the production are clearly influenced by US AOR. The title track, ‘Too Close To The Heart’ and ‘If The Night’ are high calibre material. But despite its quality, it was tough for a UK band to make a mark in the genre. So, many people passed on it.

Embryo FM fans focused instead on the self titled follow up, which gained additional interest due to the production and writing involvement of Free’s Simon Kirke and Mick Ralphs.

As in the case of their other reissues, Rock Candy are clearly stepping up the value add. Thick volumes of “how the album was made” booklets are included with each expertly remastered CD reissue.  ***

Review by Brian McGowan


Featured Artist: JOSH TAERK

Since early 2020 Josh has been entertaining us with exclusive monthly live sessions,

Check out videos here: https://www.facebook.com/getreadytorockradio




David Randall presents a weekly show on Get Ready to ROCK! Radio, Sundays at 22:00 GMT, repeated on Mondays and Fridays), when he invites listeners to ‘Assume The Position’. The show signposts forthcoming gigs and tours and latest additions at getreadytorock.com. First broadcast 26 April 2026.


UK Blues Broadcaster of the Year (2020 and 2021 Finalist) Pete Feenstra presents his weekly Rock & Blues Show on Tuesday at 19:00 GMT as part of a five hour blues rock marathon “Tuesday is Bluesday at GRTR!”. The show is repeated on Wednesdays at 22:00, Fridays at 20:00). First broadcast on 21 April 2026

How to Listen Live?

Click the programming image at the top of the page (top right of page if using desktop)

Get Ready to ROCK! Radio is also in iTunes under Internet Radio/Classic Rock
Listen in via the Tunein app and search for “Get Ready to ROCK!” and save as favourite.

More information and links at our radio website where you can listen live or listen again to shows via the presenter pages: getreadytorockradio.com


Power Plays w/c 25 May 2026

BABY JANE Midnight Highway (Sped Up) (indie)
ASTRAL ROCKS The Flame In Me (Astral Rocks Prodns.)
INDIGO SYNDICATE dwn4smr (indie)
THE SKBS The Prying Eye (indie)
AGAINST THE CURRENT Dead Man Walking (indie)
ICONIC Tears Keep On Falling (Frontiers)

Featured Albums w/c 25 May 2026

09:00-12:00 The Best of 2003 – 2025 (Melodic Rock)
12:00-13:00 The Best of 2003 – 2025 (Melodic Hard Rock)
14:00-16:00 The Best of 2003 – 2025 (Singer Songwriter)


Our occasional Newsletter signposts latest additions to the website(s). We also include a selection of recent top albums, based on GRTR! reviewer ratings.  The newsletter is sent out a few times a year.

If you’d like to register to receive this occasional mailing please complete the form:

If using a smartphone/tablet please tap here or re-orientate your device

(Note that this registration is separate from site registration which allows you to leave comments and receive daily emails about new content. If you wish to register for this – in addition or separately – please click or tap here – for more information – the form is at the foot of each page. Please read our privacy policy when opting-in to receive emails.


Recent (last 30 days)


Album review: LION – Dangerous Attraction (reissue/remaster)

Rock Candy Records [Release date 12.02.21]

Lion’s 1987 album, Dangerous Attraction, featured ex Tytan, Kal Swan on vocals, and talented guitarist, Doug Aldrich, who was just beginning his career. Between them, they wrote all the material. This remastered version has now been reissued by Rock Candy Records.

In the eighties, the mainstream media was awash with Melodic rock and AOR. Every label wanted to sign bands who “looked and sounded like that band on MTV”. Released on the Scotti Brothers label (home of Survivor), this was an album that polarised opinion. “Too generic” for some. “One of the finest albums of the era”, say others.

It can be reasonably claimed that it was unfinished business. Neither Swan nor Aldrich had fully developed as musicians and songwriters. Still, for the times, it was pretty gutsy melodic rock. Putting aside the cliched lyrics, ‘Armed & Dangerous’, ‘Never Surrender’ and ‘Fatal Attraction’ were all powerful advocates of the band’s hard hitting, bruising approach to the genre.

Elsewhere, it can be uneven. ‘Powerlove’ and ‘Shout It out’ might just scrape a B minus, but in fairness you can hear a couple of really good songs trying to get out. They just needed a little more time, a little more finesse.

Worth adding that the label’s tech guys have learned the trick of gaining sonic clarity without sacrificing dynamics for loudness. The Remastering sounds good. All power to them.

Swan retired from the music business in 1999, after 8 years fronting Bad Moon Rising. Aldrich went from strength to strength, and is currently lead guitarist with the Dead Daisies.  ***

Review by Brian McGowan


Featured Artist: JOSH TAERK

Since early 2020 Josh has been entertaining us with exclusive monthly live sessions,

Check out videos here: https://www.facebook.com/getreadytorockradio




David Randall presents a weekly show on Get Ready to ROCK! Radio, Sundays at 22:00 GMT, repeated on Mondays and Fridays), when he invites listeners to ‘Assume The Position’. The show signposts forthcoming gigs and tours and latest additions at getreadytorock.com. First broadcast 26 April 2026.


UK Blues Broadcaster of the Year (2020 and 2021 Finalist) Pete Feenstra presents his weekly Rock & Blues Show on Tuesday at 19:00 GMT as part of a five hour blues rock marathon “Tuesday is Bluesday at GRTR!”. The show is repeated on Wednesdays at 22:00, Fridays at 20:00). First broadcast on 21 April 2026

How to Listen Live?

Click the programming image at the top of the page (top right of page if using desktop)

Get Ready to ROCK! Radio is also in iTunes under Internet Radio/Classic Rock
Listen in via the Tunein app and search for “Get Ready to ROCK!” and save as favourite.

More information and links at our radio website where you can listen live or listen again to shows via the presenter pages: getreadytorockradio.com


Power Plays w/c 25 May 2026

BABY JANE Midnight Highway (Sped Up) (indie)
ASTRAL ROCKS The Flame In Me (Astral Rocks Prodns.)
INDIGO SYNDICATE dwn4smr (indie)
THE SKBS The Prying Eye (indie)
AGAINST THE CURRENT Dead Man Walking (indie)
ICONIC Tears Keep On Falling (Frontiers)

Featured Albums w/c 25 May 2026

09:00-12:00 The Best of 2003 – 2025 (Melodic Rock)
12:00-13:00 The Best of 2003 – 2025 (Melodic Hard Rock)
14:00-16:00 The Best of 2003 – 2025 (Singer Songwriter)


Our occasional Newsletter signposts latest additions to the website(s). We also include a selection of recent top albums, based on GRTR! reviewer ratings.  The newsletter is sent out a few times a year.

If you’d like to register to receive this occasional mailing please complete the form:

If using a smartphone/tablet please tap here or re-orientate your device

(Note that this registration is separate from site registration which allows you to leave comments and receive daily emails about new content. If you wish to register for this – in addition or separately – please click or tap here – for more information – the form is at the foot of each page. Please read our privacy policy when opting-in to receive emails.


Recent (last 30 days)


Quick plays: JANET SIMPSON, D’ERCOLE

JANET SIMPSON – Safe Distance

JANET SIMPSON Safe Distance Cornelius Chapel Records [Release date 19.03.21]

Singer, songwriter, composer and multi-instrumentalist, Janet Simpson’s latest album covers many human stories and emotions from running away from demons, to retreating from your troubles, and more. It also marks the first album to go out under her name as she has previously released music as part of Delicate Cutters, Teen Getaway, Timber and toured the US and Europe as a member of Wooden Wand and the World War IV.

Joining Janet Simpson on the album are guitarist/vocalist Will Stewart (with she also fronts the band Timber with), bassist Robert Watson, and drummer Tyler McGuire.

Janet Simpson’s strength is that her songs can appeal to those outside of the country market, as she states on ‘Nashville Girls’, she is not your stereotypical country singer. In fact on the album’s closing track ‘Wrecked’ she sounds uncannily like Joni Mitchell. Other standouts include the laid back ‘Silverman’ and the title track, a mid-tempo country number featuring wonderful guitar playing from Will Stewart.

Impressive music and lyrics from Janet Simpson, who will hopefully get wider recognition she deserves with ‘Safe Distance’. ***1/2

Review by Jason Ritchie

D'ERCOLE - Hard Core

D’ERCOLE – Hard Core Rock Company Records [Release date 03.02.21]

Seventh album from D’Ercole who feature Damian D’Ercole on guitars and the man that never sleeps, Phil Vincent on vocals. ‘Hard Core’ marks the fiftieth release on the Rock Company Records label which seems fitting for a release featuring one of their most prolific artists!

The album is mastered by Jacob Hansen (Volbeat, Pretty Maids) and Vince O’Regan (Vincent’s band mate in Legion) guests adding lead guitar, to what is a very heavy album overall. For proof of this the opening duo of ‘Keep It All Together’ and ‘Bad Dream’ blow the cobwebs from your speakers, a great opening salvo of riff heavy hard rock.

‘This Is Your Life’ has a neat 80’s keys riff, whilst the ballad ‘Far Away’ is pretty decent and the seven minute closing song ‘The Only One’ is a good mix of heavy riffs and harmonies. ‘Shark’ and ‘So Many Lies’ suffer a bit from the guitar assault. I love guitars but sometimes less is more!

Worth getting if you are a fan of D’Ercole/Phil Vincent, however, there is a little bit too much in the way of guitar solos at times that can detract from a song’s melody. ***

Review by Jason Ritchie


Featured Artist: JOSH TAERK

Since early 2020 Josh has been entertaining us with exclusive monthly live sessions,

Check out videos here: https://www.facebook.com/getreadytorockradio




David Randall presents a weekly show on Get Ready to ROCK! Radio, Sundays at 22:00 GMT, repeated on Mondays and Fridays), when he invites listeners to ‘Assume The Position’. The show signposts forthcoming gigs and tours and latest additions at getreadytorock.com. First broadcast 26 April 2026.


UK Blues Broadcaster of the Year (2020 and 2021 Finalist) Pete Feenstra presents his weekly Rock & Blues Show on Tuesday at 19:00 GMT as part of a five hour blues rock marathon “Tuesday is Bluesday at GRTR!”. The show is repeated on Wednesdays at 22:00, Fridays at 20:00). First broadcast on 21 April 2026

How to Listen Live?

Click the programming image at the top of the page (top right of page if using desktop)

Get Ready to ROCK! Radio is also in iTunes under Internet Radio/Classic Rock
Listen in via the Tunein app and search for “Get Ready to ROCK!” and save as favourite.

More information and links at our radio website where you can listen live or listen again to shows via the presenter pages: getreadytorockradio.com


Power Plays w/c 25 May 2026

BABY JANE Midnight Highway (Sped Up) (indie)
ASTRAL ROCKS The Flame In Me (Astral Rocks Prodns.)
INDIGO SYNDICATE dwn4smr (indie)
THE SKBS The Prying Eye (indie)
AGAINST THE CURRENT Dead Man Walking (indie)
ICONIC Tears Keep On Falling (Frontiers)

Featured Albums w/c 25 May 2026

09:00-12:00 The Best of 2003 – 2025 (Melodic Rock)
12:00-13:00 The Best of 2003 – 2025 (Melodic Hard Rock)
14:00-16:00 The Best of 2003 – 2025 (Singer Songwriter)


Our occasional Newsletter signposts latest additions to the website(s). We also include a selection of recent top albums, based on GRTR! reviewer ratings.  The newsletter is sent out a few times a year.

If you’d like to register to receive this occasional mailing please complete the form:

If using a smartphone/tablet please tap here or re-orientate your device

(Note that this registration is separate from site registration which allows you to leave comments and receive daily emails about new content. If you wish to register for this – in addition or separately – please click or tap here – for more information – the form is at the foot of each page. Please read our privacy policy when opting-in to receive emails.


Recent (last 30 days)


Album review: SLAMMIN GLADYS – Two

JIB Machine Records [release date 12.02.21]

In a reversal of conventional wisdom, Slammin Gladys have gone for the “2 years to write our first album”, and “20 years to write the second” approach.

Proteges of Jani (Warrant) Lane, they recorded their self titled first album in 1992, 2 years after they formed. It was just in time to be too late to catch the Melodic Rock/AOR wave. Not only was their timing out, but their rock/funk formula had to go head to head with Electric Boys, Bang Tango and others, bands who were already accomplished practicioners of the genre. And so their star fell to earth as fast as it had ascended.
20 years later, smack in the middle of the Covid Pandemic, they have released the follow up, “Two”.

Being in the right place at the right time is clearly not one of their key strengths.

But it’s an interesting album (and not in a Chinese way). The Rock/funk survives, Listen to ‘Dragon Eye Girl’ and ‘Light Up’, and witness the taut, tight chordwork and chirping backing vocals, chiming with rubbery bass lines. Both tracks take us back to the Prince and Chic like pop funk of the late seventies/early eighties.

Would we have enjoyed a full album of that? Damn right we would, but…
Instead we get bluesy ballads with pop undertones, full of cowboy guitars and Hammond organs, like ‘Durango’ and ‘Lost In Texas’ (which enjoys a riff borrowed from T Rex’s ‘Telegram Sam’). We get the nitetime groove of ‘Lose My Mind’ and of course ‘Toxic Lover’, which, as the opening track, makes us think we’re in for 40 minutes of tuneful, stripped down garage rock, crisp and tight, reminiscent of The Stage Dolls and The Backyard Babies, in a compact, pop punk kinda way. But of course we aren’t. It’s confusing. We need time to adjust. But we don’t get it.

The balladic, 7 minute closer, ‘Poison Arrow’, just blows us away. It’s knee deep in swampy blues, pop and soul. David Brooks’ elemental vocals, overflowing with conviction, fit just right with JJ Farris’s expansive axework. By some distance, it’s the album’s standout track.

Above all else, they know just how to close an album out with style. ***

Review by Brian McGowan


Featured Artist: JOSH TAERK

Since early 2020 Josh has been entertaining us with exclusive monthly live sessions,

Check out videos here: https://www.facebook.com/getreadytorockradio




David Randall presents a weekly show on Get Ready to ROCK! Radio, Sundays at 22:00 GMT, repeated on Mondays and Fridays), when he invites listeners to ‘Assume The Position’. The show signposts forthcoming gigs and tours and latest additions at getreadytorock.com. First broadcast 26 April 2026.


UK Blues Broadcaster of the Year (2020 and 2021 Finalist) Pete Feenstra presents his weekly Rock & Blues Show on Tuesday at 19:00 GMT as part of a five hour blues rock marathon “Tuesday is Bluesday at GRTR!”. The show is repeated on Wednesdays at 22:00, Fridays at 20:00). First broadcast on 21 April 2026

How to Listen Live?

Click the programming image at the top of the page (top right of page if using desktop)

Get Ready to ROCK! Radio is also in iTunes under Internet Radio/Classic Rock
Listen in via the Tunein app and search for “Get Ready to ROCK!” and save as favourite.

More information and links at our radio website where you can listen live or listen again to shows via the presenter pages: getreadytorockradio.com


Power Plays w/c 25 May 2026

BABY JANE Midnight Highway (Sped Up) (indie)
ASTRAL ROCKS The Flame In Me (Astral Rocks Prodns.)
INDIGO SYNDICATE dwn4smr (indie)
THE SKBS The Prying Eye (indie)
AGAINST THE CURRENT Dead Man Walking (indie)
ICONIC Tears Keep On Falling (Frontiers)

Featured Albums w/c 25 May 2026

09:00-12:00 The Best of 2003 – 2025 (Melodic Rock)
12:00-13:00 The Best of 2003 – 2025 (Melodic Hard Rock)
14:00-16:00 The Best of 2003 – 2025 (Singer Songwriter)


Our occasional Newsletter signposts latest additions to the website(s). We also include a selection of recent top albums, based on GRTR! reviewer ratings.  The newsletter is sent out a few times a year.

If you’d like to register to receive this occasional mailing please complete the form:

If using a smartphone/tablet please tap here or re-orientate your device

(Note that this registration is separate from site registration which allows you to leave comments and receive daily emails about new content. If you wish to register for this – in addition or separately – please click or tap here – for more information – the form is at the foot of each page. Please read our privacy policy when opting-in to receive emails.


Recent (last 30 days)


Album review: TROY REDFERN – Thunder Moon

In this interview special for Get Ready to ROCK! Radio, Troy Redfern chats to Pete Feenstra with tracks from the album ‘Thunder Moon’.  First broadcast 7 March 2021.

Troy Redfern - Thunder Moon

Self release [Release date 03.12.20]

When it comes to recording, Troy Redfern is very much a renaissance man. He’s long been in the vanguard of contemporary home recording, but it’s taken this predominantly instrumental album to finally capture his real spark.

And while his electric and acoustic guitar playing are firmly routed in the Zappa, Satriani and Vai camps -with a passing nod to Jeff Beck – the sparkling results are all his own.

He channels those influences into something unique, while still leaving enough room to explore real frisson on several spellbinding moments when he communes with the stars.

It’s a ripping broad-based album that rocks hard with sweat dripping intensity, but there’s still room for cool dynamics, subtle grooves and plenty of percussion.

The latter is something of a surprise as there is no drummer credited here. Presumably he’s done it all himself, no mean feat for a self-recording which at its best sounds like a full band thrashing away.

Apart from a short vocal on ‘Way Out East’, ‘Thunder Moon’ is an instrumental album that balances subtlety and poise with powerful tension breaking moments that recall a time when rock was still exciting.

It’s the way he sometimes teeters on the brink of several possibilities, before resolving them in his own way that makes this such a great album.

His exhilarating melodies match is solid progressions while his moments of imperious improvisation are still magically part of the song.

This album is so good it begs the question why he didn’t release an instrumental project before. If the answer is that it potentially offers him less scope, then the music here suggests otherwise. His ideas are fresh and the playing is inspirational, as he moulds occasional external influences to his own ends.

And therein lies the strength of the album. Redfern takes us on a journey that is all his own. The only retro thing here is the linear progression of the album itself which ebbs and flows as all good music should.

He sets out his stall on the bluesy ‘Westward The Sun’, which distils his virtues of tonal clarity and slide playing with a lightness of touch, as he leans into the groove.  His moves from a sinewy to a huskier tone and resonant sustain over big cymbal splashes to give the track its capacity.

He lights the touch paper at the 2 and half minute mark, as he reaches for a different level of intensity with shredded bursts and a gnawing wah-wah inflected solo that recalls early Jeff Beck.

It’s the kind of intensity he returns to over the course of a well paced album on which he makes each genre bending twist and turn count.

‘The Veil’ is a good example of that, as it shifts from a Robert Fripp style percolating guitar opening into a delicate acoustic piece that could be Al Di Meola, but with an Eastern feel that will trigger the imagination of eager listeners

He switches to resonator on the down-home feel of ‘The Trail.’ It’s a piece that slips and slides as it builds up a head of steam before returning to the opening theme and a perfunctory finish.

He employs a keen tonal variety too, most notable on the echo laden, ambient drone of ‘Playing In Tongues’.

The combination of a Brian Eno style ambient back drop and angular guitar evokes the mysteries of song title itself. The same might be said of the electronic soundscape opening of ‘Ethereal Dreams’ with its Eastern sounding chording.

It’s an imperceptible evolving piece that evokes Gong, with space rock and fusion elements.

In many respect this track is the key to the album as a whole. It not only sits perfectly as a conduit between  ‘Sofia’ – a percussive, Eastern flavoured Zappa style track – and the closing  stripped down resonator-led title track, but it provides an extra musical colour to an album that also features the much heavier bluster and shredding of the Satriani and Vai influenced ‘East Of Eden’.

And it’s the way he successfully achieves such stylistic flow over contrasting genres that makes this album so essential.

Nothing sounds out of place, no matter how experimental. ‘Rain Over Dresden’ for example, joins the dots been Edgar Varese and Frank Zappa (circa ‘Waka/Jawaka’). The unusual mix of percussion and cello pulls our focus in different directions before the last note decays into the ether.

‘Way Out East’, is full of sonic detail as it combines electronica with an interwoven guitar line and handclaps to give it a cinematic feel, topped by Redfern’s only vocal on the album. Sonia Hammond’s sonorous cello feels like the proverbial painter’s final brush stroke.

‘Thunder Moon’ is full of passionate playing and inspirational moments, all of which are featured on the album highlight, the outrageous ‘Sub Rosa’.

The track fuses Zappa with King Crimson and the intense opening riffs and breathtaking improvisation would surely have made Zappa smile.

After the more introspective ‘Island’, I didn’t see ‘Thunder Moon’ on the horizon.  It’s belligerent, intelligent, adventurous, imaginative, brilliantly played and easily a career highlight  *****

Review by Pete Feenstra

 


Featured Artist: JOSH TAERK

Since early 2020 Josh has been entertaining us with exclusive monthly live sessions,

Check out videos here: https://www.facebook.com/getreadytorockradio




David Randall presents a weekly show on Get Ready to ROCK! Radio, Sundays at 22:00 GMT, repeated on Mondays and Fridays), when he invites listeners to ‘Assume The Position’. The show signposts forthcoming gigs and tours and latest additions at getreadytorock.com. First broadcast 26 April 2026.


UK Blues Broadcaster of the Year (2020 and 2021 Finalist) Pete Feenstra presents his weekly Rock & Blues Show on Tuesday at 19:00 GMT as part of a five hour blues rock marathon “Tuesday is Bluesday at GRTR!”. The show is repeated on Wednesdays at 22:00, Fridays at 20:00). First broadcast on 21 April 2026

How to Listen Live?

Click the programming image at the top of the page (top right of page if using desktop)

Get Ready to ROCK! Radio is also in iTunes under Internet Radio/Classic Rock
Listen in via the Tunein app and search for “Get Ready to ROCK!” and save as favourite.

More information and links at our radio website where you can listen live or listen again to shows via the presenter pages: getreadytorockradio.com


Power Plays w/c 25 May 2026

BABY JANE Midnight Highway (Sped Up) (indie)
ASTRAL ROCKS The Flame In Me (Astral Rocks Prodns.)
INDIGO SYNDICATE dwn4smr (indie)
THE SKBS The Prying Eye (indie)
AGAINST THE CURRENT Dead Man Walking (indie)
ICONIC Tears Keep On Falling (Frontiers)

Featured Albums w/c 25 May 2026

09:00-12:00 The Best of 2003 – 2025 (Melodic Rock)
12:00-13:00 The Best of 2003 – 2025 (Melodic Hard Rock)
14:00-16:00 The Best of 2003 – 2025 (Singer Songwriter)


Our occasional Newsletter signposts latest additions to the website(s). We also include a selection of recent top albums, based on GRTR! reviewer ratings.  The newsletter is sent out a few times a year.

If you’d like to register to receive this occasional mailing please complete the form:

If using a smartphone/tablet please tap here or re-orientate your device

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Recent (last 30 days)


Album review: KEN HENSLEY – My Book Of Answers

KEN HENSLEY - My Book Of Answers

HNE Recordings [Release date 05.02.21]

Proving that the language of rock’n'roll is universal, the late Ken Hensley’s final album is a collaboration with Russian poet and lyricist, Vladimir Emelin. My Book Of Answers grew out of a chance meeting between the two when they were boarding the Moscow flight out of the EU two years ago.

Hensley is hardly a household name, but in the music world, he’s been steadily accumulating cultural stock since 1970, principally with UK Rock legends, Uriah Heep, but also as a solo artist, and by working with others, including mega selling US rock bands like WASP and Cinderella.

Emelin is a fan. Over the months, Hensley translated his lyrics to English, shaping and forming them into 9 eminently accessible rock songs.

In his last studio recording, Love And Other Mysteries, Hensley set about tracing the fault-lines between loneliness and love. The songs on My Book Of Answers radiate that same emotional fragility. The thoughts of a man who’s been sold a false dream one too many times.

Every frame is exquisitely lit. ‘Silent Scream’ and ‘Cover Girl’, encompass the tragic and the beautiful, the arrangements and production are sleek and clean lined. He builds and layers the arrangements like a studio craftsman, immediately reminding us of this on openers, ‘Lost’ and ‘Right Here’, but not for him the anguished complexity that often translates into clutter.

As with all Hensley’s songs, the narrative is there to tell a story, whether it’s reaching across the gospel choir fringed soundscape of the anthemic prayer, ‘Stand’ or articulating the huge heart and soul spilling out from the edges of the beautifully orchestrated ballad, ‘Suddenly’.

That said, there’s no question he’s got an ear for a memorable tune. The dramatic ‘Cold Sacrifice’ may well be driven by big doomladen chords and bluesy, barbed axework, but it’s the melody that gives it emotional weight.

It’s the same with album closer, ‘Darkest Hour’. It has a spirituality, and an intimacy that’s typical of Hensley’s work, but at the core of it is the melody. And he makes it sound effortless. The mark of a true artist. ****

Review by Brian McGowan


Featured Artist: JOSH TAERK

Since early 2020 Josh has been entertaining us with exclusive monthly live sessions,

Check out videos here: https://www.facebook.com/getreadytorockradio




David Randall presents a weekly show on Get Ready to ROCK! Radio, Sundays at 22:00 GMT, repeated on Mondays and Fridays), when he invites listeners to ‘Assume The Position’. The show signposts forthcoming gigs and tours and latest additions at getreadytorock.com. First broadcast 26 April 2026.


UK Blues Broadcaster of the Year (2020 and 2021 Finalist) Pete Feenstra presents his weekly Rock & Blues Show on Tuesday at 19:00 GMT as part of a five hour blues rock marathon “Tuesday is Bluesday at GRTR!”. The show is repeated on Wednesdays at 22:00, Fridays at 20:00). First broadcast on 21 April 2026

How to Listen Live?

Click the programming image at the top of the page (top right of page if using desktop)

Get Ready to ROCK! Radio is also in iTunes under Internet Radio/Classic Rock
Listen in via the Tunein app and search for “Get Ready to ROCK!” and save as favourite.

More information and links at our radio website where you can listen live or listen again to shows via the presenter pages: getreadytorockradio.com


Power Plays w/c 25 May 2026

BABY JANE Midnight Highway (Sped Up) (indie)
ASTRAL ROCKS The Flame In Me (Astral Rocks Prodns.)
INDIGO SYNDICATE dwn4smr (indie)
THE SKBS The Prying Eye (indie)
AGAINST THE CURRENT Dead Man Walking (indie)
ICONIC Tears Keep On Falling (Frontiers)

Featured Albums w/c 25 May 2026

09:00-12:00 The Best of 2003 – 2025 (Melodic Rock)
12:00-13:00 The Best of 2003 – 2025 (Melodic Hard Rock)
14:00-16:00 The Best of 2003 – 2025 (Singer Songwriter)


Our occasional Newsletter signposts latest additions to the website(s). We also include a selection of recent top albums, based on GRTR! reviewer ratings.  The newsletter is sent out a few times a year.

If you’d like to register to receive this occasional mailing please complete the form:

If using a smartphone/tablet please tap here or re-orientate your device

(Note that this registration is separate from site registration which allows you to leave comments and receive daily emails about new content. If you wish to register for this – in addition or separately – please click or tap here – for more information – the form is at the foot of each page. Please read our privacy policy when opting-in to receive emails.


Recent (last 30 days)


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Turbulence Frontal

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Album review: TURBULENCE – Frontal

Turbulence Frontal

Frontiers Records [Release date 12.03.21] Lebanese Progressive Rock/Metal band, Turbulence, are crossing a few boundaries with their provocatively titled Frontiers debut, Frontal. It is a defiantly bold attempt to incorporate the music of the wider world into their work. Something … Continue reading

Album review: STEPHEN CRANE- Kicks

STEPHEN CRANE- Kicks

AOR Heaven (Release Date 26.03.21) The rock world is littered with hard luck stories of people failed by the record industry. One such is Stephen Crane. Already a seasoned figure on the Texas music scene, he was signed to MCA … Continue reading

Album review: PARIS- 50/50

Paris- 50/50

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Album review: THE EQUALS – Black Skin Blue Eyed Boys

THE EQUALS – Black Skin Blue Eyed Boys

Cantare [Release date 26.2.21] In the continued absence of the original recordings by The Equals on digital platforms, and with previous CDs long deleted, this collection of tracks recorded for radio broadcast is most welcome. One of the few racially … Continue reading

Album review: HEART HEALER – The Metal Opera by Magnus Karlsson

magnus hearthealer

Frontiers Records [release date 12.03.21] Magnus Karlsson needs no introduction. Neither do the (all female) vocalists who grace Heart Healer. Apparently a “Metal Opera” has been something of an ambition of Karlsson’s for some time. The idea is not new … Continue reading

Album review: STEVE HACKETT – Under A Mediterranean Sky

STEVE HACKETT - Under A Mediterranean Sky

Inside Out  [Release date: 22.01.21] Being the modest chap that he is, Steve Hackett would probably not describe himself as a virtuoso. However, in a career spanning getting on for fifty years from the early days of Genesis through his … Continue reading

Album review: SUZI QUATRO – The Devil In Me

SUZI QUATRO - The Devil In Me

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Album review: VINCENT FLATTS FINAL DRIVE – Back In The Saddle

VINCENT FLATTS FINAL DRIVE – Back In The Saddle

Pete Feenstra chatted to Steve “Bertie” Burton for Get Ready to ROCK! Radio in July 2019.    Self release [Release date 01.06.20] Vincent Flatts Final Drive’s ‘Back In The Saddle’ is a barn burner of an album. You flick the … Continue reading

Feature: Collectible Collections – FAMILY – Old Songs New Songs (The Definitive Box Set)

FAMILY - Old Songs New Songs

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Feature: Collectible Collections – CAMEL – Rainbow’s End An Anthology 1973-1985

CAMEL - Rainbow's End An Anthology 1973-1985

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Ghalia Volt - One Woman Band

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STEVEN WILSON

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ROY WOOD On Track

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orden ogan final days

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THUNDER – All The Right Noises

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wildlife burning

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lion dangerous

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Quick plays: JANET SIMPSON, D’ERCOLE

JANET SIMPSON – Safe Distance

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SLAMMIN-GLADYS-Two

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Troy Redfern - Thunder Moon

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KEN HENSLEY - My Book Of Answers

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