Book review: On track…THE BEAT, DEPECHE MODE

the beat

On Track…The Beat, General Public & Fine Young Cannibals by Steve Parry Sonicbond Publishing [Publication date 30.06.23]

A fascinating read into how the Beat led to the creation of General Public (who many may ask and they once supported Queen!) and the Fine Young Cannibals, who enjoyed plenty of chart success between the mid-80s and 1992 when they split. Their second album, ‘The Raw and the Cooked’, topped five national album charts including the UK, the US and Australia.

It covers every song from the various combinations and off shoots of these three bands, including a novelty single with Lenny Henry and B-sides. The prose is easy to read and the author has a quick wit which stops the book being stale, which a couple of the books in this series unfortunately are.

The chapters on General Public certainly have the reader intrigued to hear more and the Beat get a thorough overview, as Ranking Roger’s memoir, completed before his passing in 2019, is the ‘go to’ book for those after the Beat’s history from an insider’s viewpoint.

depeche mode

On Track…Depeche Mode by Brian J. Robb
Sonicbond Publishing [Publication date 30.06.23]

Author of this tome Brian J Robb is an experienced writer with books published on Wes Craven, Doctor Who, Laurel and Hardy and many more. It goes without saying he has an easy to read writing style, never too ‘fanboy’, yet the reader never forgets the author’s love of Depeche Mode and their music.

The author sticks to the brief covering every studio album and not getting sidetracked down the musical rabbit hole that is compilations and live releases.

Right up to date as it covers Depeche Mode’s 2023 album ‘Momento Mori’, the band’s first since the death of Andy Fletcher.

Job done as reading this book had me delving back into the musical world of Depeche Mode, including enjoying ‘Songs of Faith and Devotion’, which seemed to pass me by upon its original release back in 1993.

Reviews by Jason Ritchie

More “On track…” book reviews


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 11 May 2026

BREITLER Sentinel (El Puerto Records)
FIRE IN HER EYES Too Late To Change (indie)
KING FALCON Wait (indie)
BEAUTIFUL SKELETONS Come What May (indie)
KARIN PARK Shadow (Size Records)
HARSH Don’t Mess With Me (indie)

Featured Albums w/c 11 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: On track … BOB DYLAN, HAWKWIND, YES, LOU REED, THE JAM (Sonicbond Publishing)

“For the fan a chance to revisit songs and albums and for newcomers a roadmap to hopefully enhance their listening habits. Of course in an age of renewed vinyl interest these books may be the perfect complement.”

We catch up on six months of Sonicbond publications in their ‘On Track…’ series. Publication date in brackets.

Sonicbond continue to publish compact artist surveys in their “On track…” series and they are generally a good, reliable introduction to the music.  Seasoned fans may challenge often subjective views but these tomes are mostly balanced and always written by genuine fans.

Steve Marriott’s death in a fire in April 1991 robbed us of a fine vocalist, musician and frontman. Robert Day-Webb details his work with Humble Pie one of those early 1970s “supergroups” that also came and went far too quickly. They might be best known for the revered “Rockin’ The Fillmore” which Day-Webb describes as “one of the greatest live albums ever.”

Original guitarist Peter Frampton left the band shortly before the live album’s release but the band (now with Clem Clempson) rebounded with the commercially successful ‘Smokin’. Sadly it went downhill from there, with a series of setbacks that permeate the story of rock ‘n’ roll: drugs, alcohol and bad management. **** (June)

On track...Bob Dylan 1962-1970

There’s so much that’s been written about His Royal Bobness – can anyone add to it? Probably not but, in accordance with this series, Opher Goodwin’s book offers 1962-1970 in a bite-sized chunk. Incredibly, given his personal issues during this period, Bob Dylan released almost an album a year. All chronicled here. *** (July)

Lisa Torem mentions that Suzanne Vega has been compared lyrically to Dylan and in interviews she has confirmed him as a major influence. As a journalist Norem has interviewed Vega several times along with some of the movers and shakers such as early collaborator Steve Addabbo. So she probably has a better feel for the artist than most. But do you really need to include a photo of yourself in the illustrations? *** (July)

Sadly Yes had to cancel their UK tour dates this year but Stephen Lambe (head honcho at Sonicbond) has updated his 2018 book on the band. This brings the story up to date with the more recent albums ‘The Quest’ and ‘Mirror To The Sky’.

Lambe has also taken the opportunity to reappraise what was essentially an early title in the series, expanding the live recordings section and altering his original opinion in places. Hindsight is a fine thing and demonstrates the “permanence” of the printed page and the need for accuracy versus online material which can easily be amended. ***1/2

With the passing of David Crosby in 2023 we can take a fresh look at his early band The Byrds with Andy McArthur.

The band’s jangly, commercial psychedelic pop gave way to country/roots rock and influenced many US bands in the 1970s (and beyond) R.E.M. perhaps being the most obvious descendants. The track by track analysis covers their formation, rise and fall and their legacy. **** (August)

On track...Lou Reed 1972-1986

Ethan Roy’s Lou Reed 1972-86 focuses on the singer’s early solo work, following his time with The Velvet Underground. Reed’s personal story is also covered as a backdrop to a period highlighted by the album ‘Transformer’ (1972) where he received support from Bowie and members of his band. **** (August)

The Sensational Alex Harvey Band (SAHB) have long been revered not least for their charismatic frontman whose career started out in Scottish dance halls and then flourished perhaps belatedly in 1972 when he was 37.

Peter Gallagher’s album by album dissection sets Harvey’s trajectory against a tough childhood in the Gorbals district of Glasgow and includes the band Tear Gas which eventually morphed into SAHB. Gallagher’s book should be read in conjunction with John Neil Munro’s 2002 biography. **** (September)

Hawkwind have celebrated 2023 with a Royal Albert Hall gig and a definitive 10-CD box set for Space Ritual’s 50th Anniversary. Sadly this version isn’t mentioned in Duncan Harris’ updated book which follows the band’s progress from 1969. Whilst the core of the band has remained with Dave Brock, discussed here, there’s probably a book to be written about the various band offshoots over the years. **** (October)

On track...Linda Ronstadt 1969-1989

Daryl Richard Lawrence doesn’t attempt to encapsulate the whole of Linda Ronstadt‘s recorded output in one 140 page tome, as is usual with these books. He focuses on arguably her best years (up to 1989) and emphasises how she covered a lot of musical ground from country to mainstream pop rock. She was also a trendsetter in the 1970s when she took control of her career. She published her own memoirs in 2013.

Lawrence sums up the nature of these “On track…” books. For the fan a chance to revisit songs and albums and for newcomers a roadmap to hopefully enhance their listening habits. Of course in an age of renewed vinyl interest these books may be the perfect complement. ***1/2 (October)

The Jam were one of the most significant bands to come out of the punk/new wave era. Author Stan Jefferies was only 11 when the band were playing the pubs of London (in 1976) but it wasn’t until three years later he received a Rickenbacker bass for his birthday ( a la Bruce Foxton) that his Jam love affair really started.

Sadly Jefferies openly admits he hasn’t had access to any band members which is a shame as even Paul Weller is a bit more talkative about nostalgia these days. *** (October)

One of the great advantages of these books is introducing bands that you’ve heard of but know nothing about. They will either whet the appetite or confirm why they’ve escaped your attention. These bands usually sit outside your main era of musical interest. For me, this applies to U.S. rockers The Smashing Pumpkins. For some reason I wasn’t much into music in the decade of grunge.

Matt Karpe provides a decent account of the period of their greatest success (1991-2000) when they actually bucked the zeitgeist and produced anthemic alt-rock. Given that there is no official history of the band, Karpe has culled his material from the usual secondary, mainly online sources but his quotes are not attributed in the main text. As is often the case with these books, this makes it  less useful as a work of reference. *** (November)

It is a very brave task to analyse – track by track – the music of Soft Machine. If you think King Crimson can be somewhat up their own arse, you probably haven’t heard Soft Machine. Full marks then to Scott Meze.

He places the band as prominent in the so-called Canterbury Scene that spawned early collaborator Kevin Ayers and the more accessible Caravan. And he doesn’t mince his words: “No other artist in the history of rock has been as pig-headed.” Meze’s book is designed to make Soft Machine more “hospitable”. Four stars at least for that. **** (November)

On track...Ralph McTell

No such challenge for Paul O. Jenkins who celebrates singer songwriter Ralph McTell and a career that spans over 50 years. Best known for his ‘Streets Of London’ Jenkins demonstrates that this song is just a small part of the picture. McTell was influenced by country-blues artists and many of his best works are actually protest songs.

Perhaps more importantly this new appreciation has McTell’s blessing and he provides the foreword. **** (November)

Review by David Randall

www.sonicbondpublishing.com

Reviews 2023

On track…Van Halen (February 2023)
On track…Eagles (March 2023)
On track…REO Speedwagon (April 2023)
On track…The Beat/Depeche Mode (December 2023)

Other titles

Fleetwood Mac in the 1980s (January 2023)
Manfred Mann’s Earth Band in the 1970s (January 2023)
Queen in the 1970s (March 2023)
Magic: The David Paton Story (April 2023)
Slade In The 1970s (May 2023)


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 11 May 2026

BREITLER Sentinel (El Puerto Records)
FIRE IN HER EYES Too Late To Change (indie)
KING FALCON Wait (indie)
BEAUTIFUL SKELETONS Come What May (indie)
KARIN PARK Shadow (Size Records)
HARSH Don’t Mess With Me (indie)

Featured Albums w/c 11 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 : FIFTH NOTE – Here We Are

Frontiers [Release date : 08.12.2023]

Frontiers world wide scouting system unearthed Fifth Note in Kohima, a town in the north of India.

Originally a Christian Rock band (although India is a predominantly a Hinduism/Islamism country, almost 30 million Christians live there).

More recently, they have turned to hard rock…covering a Stryper song is the nearest they’ve got to their CCM past.

Here We Are is the band’s debut.

It’s the kind of album the term “mixed bag” was designed for.

‘Dreamer’ and ‘Rider’ are frantic, hard driving rock songs. One listen and you might think you’re having an unfortunate encounter with an AC/DC wannabe bar band.

Then ‘Always Love You’ and ‘Here We Are’, the title track, make you sit up and take notice. You’re pretty sure you’re being immersed in the new wave of Scandinavian Melodic Rock. Not a bad thing.

And so the contrasts continue…
‘Falling Apart’ and ‘End Times’ go off tangentially into screaming Prog Metal territory, tearing up the scenery, scaring the horses.

And that’s just six tracks.
Derivative? Yes. Well written? At times. Match that with the band’s obvious enthusiasm and musicianship.

But it’s the ballads that win the day.
Both are sketched around a romantic piano refrain, but each one is different. ‘I Won’t Give Up’ seems like a fairly standard melodic rock ballad until a minor key bridge takes into a slick chorus, leading further to a beautifully reined back guitar solo. Classy.

Even that track is pushed into the background by ‘Drifted’. Again the piano intro, this time more dramatic, as is the spine tingling orchestral arrangement. Singer Samuel Thapa kept back his best vocals for this one, which sound amazingly tense and vibrant, hitting the stratospherically high notes with purpose, not just for effect.

So again, a mixed bag. A way to go, but this debut is a good start. ***

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 11 May 2026

BREITLER Sentinel (El Puerto Records)
FIRE IN HER EYES Too Late To Change (indie)
KING FALCON Wait (indie)
BEAUTIFUL SKELETONS Come What May (indie)
KARIN PARK Shadow (Size Records)
HARSH Don’t Mess With Me (indie)

Featured Albums w/c 11 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)


Gig review: ULI JON ROTH- The Garage, London, 28 November 2023

ULI JON ROTH- The Garage, London, 28 November 2023

A regular on the gig circuit before the pandemic, this was Uli Jon Roth’s first UK tour since, and a particularly welcome return to the stage as he has recovered from major surgery earlier this year. Coming on relatively late at 845 and without a support band, his hippie image had received a bit of a smart makeover with a fringed military jacket worthy of his hero Jimi Hendrix, and a sailor’s cap worn at a jaunty angle (is there ever any other?)

He opened with ‘Amadeus’, an instrumental with trademark classically inspired influences in which there even appeared to be the odd riff recycled from his classic ‘The Sails of Charon’, followed by an old Electric Sun number in ‘Castaway Your Chains’ where he shared vocals with bassist Niklas Turmann, who, tall and bearded, looked like a member of the all conquering West German 1970s football teams.

ULI JON ROTH- The Garage, London, 28 November 2023

However for many years, his days in The Scorpions have been prominently revisited and an otherwise ordinary song in ‘Sun In My Hand’ was enlivened when his guitar partner, the left handed and impossibly youthful David Klosinski moved in, and the two played a beguiling and uplifting twin guitar break. ‘The Cry’ was a brand new instrumental, but Uli drew our attention to the message in a video backdrop that included Martin Luther King’s ‘I Have a Dream’ speech, while again his ‘Sky’ guitar managed to conjure almost violin-like sounds. He was also a musical perfectionist, with gaps between songs as he made sure the guitar was precisely in tune.

ULI JON ROTH- The Garage, London, 28 November 2023

After a Scorps song, albeit far from their best, in ‘Longing For Fire’, came one of the moments of the show for me. In memory of brother Zeno, the latter’s ballad ‘Don’t Tell The Wind’ featured a big vocal arrangement and a sweet extended solo from Uli, albeit in a smoother style than his trademark (Zeno’s self titled album from which it was taken is a AOR classic despite a slating from Kerrang! at the time).

In contrast, ‘Electric Sun’s eponymous track saw the mike turned up on Uli’s vocals, unmistakably distinctive though to put it kindly not the most impressive part of his repertoire. On the other hand, some of his riffs and solos from Scorpions days were truly original and memorable, none more so than ‘The Sails of Charon’, which got the best reception yet and took off into a mesmerising, eastern-inspired jam to a backdrop of a desert scene with camels.

ULI JON ROTH- The Garage, London, 28 November 2023

Yet at that point momentum was killed stone dead when, despite the hour reaching nearly 10 o’clock, the band took a break: it was a concept, much like the video backdrops, better suited to a seated theatre- like venue. Nevertheless the second half was well worth waiting for, being a canter exclusively through those wonderful, and very different, seventies Scorpions numbers.

They began with an out and out rocker in ‘All Night Long’, Niklas doing a very decent job in the impossible task of replicating Klaus Meine, and Uli singing one of his trademarks in ‘Polar Nights’ and being good enough to credit the obvious inspiration of Jimi Hendrix. The two of course even had a common muse in the late Monika Dannemann, but I was only vaguely aware she had co-written ‘We’ll Burn the Sky’ which as expected was an epic building from quiet beginnings to a guitar extravaganza.

ULI JON ROTH- The Garage, London, 28 November 2023

‘In Trance’ was just as wonderful and got the best reception yet from a decent sized crowd, and I hadn’t fully appreciated quite how much twin lead guitar work those early Scorpions songs featured. The progressive and jam tendencies were given full reign on the lengthy ‘Fly To the Rainbow’, as Uli’s box of tricks included feeding a tube into his guitar and pulling back the whammy bar to coax some unique sounds.

There was then a trio of more straight down the line songs in ‘Pictured Life’, where for once the strain of Niklas matching the Meine vocals did show, a rattling ‘Catch Your Train’, and finally perhaps the Scorps song most associated with Uli in ‘Dark Lady’, his singing ending with a call and response which was the only part of the night that tipped into a more meat and potatoes blues rock.

ULI JON ROTH- The Garage, London, 28 November 2023

The curfew had been reached and I edged towards the exit but a large number of people staying at the front obviously knew better than me, and we were treated to a further 20 minutes, in which he essayed a fairly faithful yet always magically interesting spin on two contrasting Hendrix classics in ‘All Along the Watchtower’ and ‘Little Wing’.

Whether paying homage to his hero, revisiting those fascinating seventies Scorpions days that the current band naturally only touch on in passing, or his own classically inspired material, this was a fascinating demonstration from a master guitarist who is one of a kind. It proved Uli Jon Roth is truly an original cult hero to be treasured.

ULI JON ROTH- The Garage, London, 28 November 2023

Review and Photos 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 11 May 2026

BREITLER Sentinel (El Puerto Records)
FIRE IN HER EYES Too Late To Change (indie)
KING FALCON Wait (indie)
BEAUTIFUL SKELETONS Come What May (indie)
KARIN PARK Shadow (Size Records)
HARSH Don’t Mess With Me (indie)

Featured Albums w/c 11 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 : CASSIDY PARIS – New Sensation

Frontiers [Release Date : 08.12.23]

Check out Cassidy Paris’s album promo, ‘Walking On Fire’ on You Tube. it’s surrounded by like minded videos: from Europe, Gotthard, White Lion and The Warning, among others. You can judge a rock artist by the company they keep.

There’s a clear message there… this is a genre album with an energy and intelligence that’s way beyond generic.

Australian born millennial, Cassidy Paris, was “discovered” in her youth, and subsequently mentored, by Paul (Danger Danger/ Defiants/ Darkhorse) Laine. He guided her through the recording of two successful EPs, each a calling card that ultimately led the Frontiers label to her door.

She’s just completed her second UK tour. By all accounts, for one so young (she only turned 21 last month), she commands considerable presence on stage.

There’s a constant pulse running through New Sensation … it’s as if Paris is discovering the excitement of hi energy AOR for the very first time.

Vocally, she’s in the space between Joan Jett and Avril Lavigne, but by no means does the music resort to plagiarism or descend into parody.

Yes, there’s a lot of looking in the rear view mirror – the jangling guitars and lurching riffs of ‘On The Brightside’ and ‘Song For The Broken Hearted’ have punky Lavigne undertones, while ‘Searching For A Hero’ has all the emphatic power of Jett emoting over a hard driving riff.

Her real skill though, surprising in one so young, is capturing that mood of fractured love, so often expressed by John Waite on many an album.

Her controlled, dramatic vocals on powerful opener, ‘Danger’ and on the album’s big ballad, ‘Here I Am’ turn two well written melodic rock songs, much in the Waite mould, into the albums standout tracks,

Cool debut. One to watch. ****

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 11 May 2026

BREITLER Sentinel (El Puerto Records)
FIRE IN HER EYES Too Late To Change (indie)
KING FALCON Wait (indie)
BEAUTIFUL SKELETONS Come What May (indie)
KARIN PARK Shadow (Size Records)
HARSH Don’t Mess With Me (indie)

Featured Albums w/c 11 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)


Gig review: MICHAEL SCHENKER GROUP – Shepherd’s Bush Empire, London, 30 November 2023

Gig review: MICHAEL SCHENKER GROUP – Shepherd’s Bush Empire, 30 November 2023

After various ‘Fest’ and ‘Temple of Rock’ incarnations, Schenker revived the original MSG monicker for a couple of recent albums and has been on a 50th anniversary tour for over two years now. It is something of a divine resurrection. Both the albums ‘Immortal’ and ‘Universal’ are strong; and the tour, if tonight’s scintillating gig is the benchmark, has been an unqualified success. It is so good to see this genuine six-string genius on top form.

Though it didn’t quite start in fifth gear. Kicking off with the instrumental ‘Into The Arena’ felt a little low key. Schenker was tucked up stage right and suffering, from my perspective, with a slightly muffled sound. I shifted position as he introduced Robin McAuley to the stage. ‘Cry For The Nations’ proceeded to hit the sweet spot with the crowd who were suddenly energised on the big chorus. The famed Schenker mid-tones were fully restored in the mix and all was well with the world.

Gig review: MICHAEL SCHENKER GROUP – Shepherd’s Bush Empire, 30 November 2023

Audience participation became a repeating theme throughout a strong set filled to bursting with bonafide UFO and MSG classics. ‘Doctor Doctor’ peeled off the stage early and prompted a good deal of bobbing and frenzied singing amongst the masses.

‘Looking For Love’ from 1981’s ‘MSG’ album was also well received, Schenker grinding out the chunky riff with floaty keyboards over the top and nailing the melodic solo. And then ‘Lights Out’ followed with almost undue haste. This felt like a band in a rush. No messing about. Such a great song and wonderful to hear the solos delivered with every nuance, pause and inflection indelibly captured on the remarkably durable 1979 live opus ‘Strangers in the Night’. (Look, I got to paragraph four before dropping this in, OK?) A word here for long-time Schenker collaborator Steve Mann who was doing a great job flitting between keyboards and rhythm guitar on this track, whilst shaking his tousled mane and looking like he was having an absolute blast.

Gig review: MICHAEL SCHENKER GROUP – Shepherd’s Bush Empire, 30 November 2023

‘Red Sky’ was maybe the first deeper cut. This was the first track for which the bloke next to me didn’t know any words. ‘One of his new ones’ he bellowed at his mate. It’s actually from 1983’s ‘Built To Destroy’, if that counts as new. Delivered here with a dirty riff and loads of space in the slower section for Schenker to weave his lead breaks around a busy, bass-driven drum track from Bodo Schopf.

For the first time I parked my obsession with the blond bomber and properly watched and listened to Robin McAuley. He was doing a fine job. Better than that, he was owning the stage and bringing a powerful delivery. Criticisms of being too lightweight and too melodic for this material have been levelled at McAuley on occasion, but I genuinely didn’t feel that here. ‘Shoot Shoot’ for instance, gave me goose-pimples. And the crowd were only too happy to help out with raucous vocals on pretty much every track.

Gig review: MICHAEL SCHENKER GROUP – Shepherd’s Bush Empire, 30 November 2023

‘Emergency’ came next and was the only new track on view, coming from last year’s ‘Universal’ release. In fact it was the only track in the entire set recorded this century! It sounded dense and insistent tonight, built on a chugging riff and another tight rhythm party from bassist Barend Courbois and Schopf. Another brace of beautiful soaring solos to boot. McAuley handled the vocals well, arguably better than Ronnie Romero on the studio version.

In a recent interview, Schenker was asked how he decided which vocalists got which song, given that he has used four or more on recent albums. He said “I let the universe do the work. I send the same pieces out to everyone at the same time and see who comes back first. Whoever responds first gets the song.” I sometimes wish Romero was slower off the mark…

‘On And On’ is perhaps not the strongest of MSG tracks but again Schenker’s two solos were things of joy, especially the growling, heavy mid-track break. But this was merely a vegetable crudité before the raw steak feast offered up by ‘Let It Roll’. I honestly believe this was the best rendition of the song I’ve ever witnessed. Fast, slow, hard, soft and crystal clear. Note-perfect solos that shivered and withered. Mann worked hard on the keys/rhythm guitar exchanges to keep the thrill levels high and McAuley stage front was smiling and guiding the Empire chorus through lusty vocals. Glorious moments. The highpoint of the night for me.

The next trio were also crowd favourites and blasted along on a rising tide of celebratory enthusiasm: ‘Attack Of The Mad Axeman’, a sublime ‘Natural Thing’ and a wonderful ‘Armed And Ready’. The show had belted along to this point, with barely a moment for the crowd reactions to subside between songs; or for much McAuley chat before the next riff kicked in.

However, the final three tracks of the main set saw a noticeable change of pace. ‘Let Sleeping Dogs Lie’ and ‘Desert Song’, the latter a much less-played track, worked so well together. The grinding riff and pummelling drums of the former contrasted with the measured, expansive sound of the latter. It was the soaring keyboards of both tracks that knitted them together. That and the searing solos casually burning through each.

I hold ‘Rock Bottom’ and its extended guitar solo so dearly and yet I’ve seen and heard it mutilated a few times – including by Schenker himself in some of his darker days. So I’ll confess to a touch of trepidation when those opening notes ring out. No fear tonight though. The audience response that McAuley evoked on the chorus was deafening and made us grin. He departed the stage for Schenker to bring alive his finest instrumental passage once again, aided and abetted by Mann’s keys/guitar. The piece followed the ‘Strangers’ template almost perfectly and the climax was brought home in fine style amid air guitar burn-ups to the left and right of us. Schopf rounded out the track with a drum solo of sorts that sounded more like a thrash-fest, but did the job well. This probably broke in to my top five ‘Rock Bottom’ renditions. (Doesn’t everyone have such a list?)

Gig review: MICHAEL SCHENKER GROUP – Shepherd’s Bush Empire, 30 November 2023

There was no real break before the ‘encore’ and we were back in the fast lane with an almost reckless ‘Too Hot To Handle’, where Steve Mann eagerly grabbed the first solo and featured yet more crowd singing. ‘Only You Can Rock Me’ is a firm crowd favourite and was  good choice to end the evening.

Not an overly long show, just short of 1¾ hours, but stuffed with intensity and played out in a triumphant, passionate atmosphere. No Scorpions tracks in the set, but given the on-going spat between Michael and Rudolph, maybe that’s no surprise. A night of classic tunes delivered by a band in good form and a guitar maestro with apparently all his talents intact at the age of 68. Heck, Schenker had even returned to his fabled, authentic Gibson Flying V of yore. Was this 1983 all over again?

Review by Dave Atkinson
Photos 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 11 May 2026

BREITLER Sentinel (El Puerto Records)
FIRE IN HER EYES Too Late To Change (indie)
KING FALCON Wait (indie)
BEAUTIFUL SKELETONS Come What May (indie)
KARIN PARK Shadow (Size Records)
HARSH Don’t Mess With Me (indie)

Featured Albums w/c 11 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: RICHARD ROZZE – Lion

Pete Feenstra chatted to Richard Rozze for his show on Get Ready to ROCK! Radio, playing tracks from ‘Lion’.   First broadcast 10 December 2023.

Richard Rozze - Lion

Waterbound [Release date 29.09.23]

Richard Rozze’s ‘Lion’ album finds the Kent based story teller counter balancing lyrical introspection with musical ebullience.

He’s a skilful guitarist who lets his tones colour the tracks as part of a new take on the power trio format, in which he uses subtlety, feel, real emotion and dynamics instead of simply power.

At his best he’s Peter Green, as on the haunting solo of ‘Go It Alone’, or Eric Johnson meets Pat Metheny on the more complex ‘Living Man’, which shifts from an opening Stonesy riff into a mellifluous piece.

Above all, he lets the melody breath, while his neo-Nick Drake vocal hovers over a song which regains its equilibrium via a return to a repeated riff  anchored by an intuitive rhythm section.

Then there’s the very 70’s sounding shuffle instrumental called ‘Sovereign,’ which reminds me Steely Dan in general and Larry Carlton and Wes Montgomery in particular.

He’s equally good on the later instrumental ‘Prana’, filled by unison guitars, a dirt toned solo and percolating rhythms which perfectly combine to evoke the life force meaning of the Sanskrit title.

There are many salient influences here, but he defines his own DNA in the way his musical arrangement are an extension of his narratives.  Then there are also the unexpected moments of contrast, as on the Kossoff style opening riff of ‘The River’ (think Free’s ‘Mr. Big’), which is then transformed into subtly crafted meandering musical journey.

He tops it all with a sonorous sub-Jackson Brown vocal and a second bigger clean-toned solo framed by distant chimes. The concluding fluid solo into the fade is the perfect metaphor for his own lyrics: “If you go down to the river, where it flows so deep, so wide and true, through distant lands, from the mouth to its end, a river that flows through me and through you.”

As if to highlight his occasional dichotomous approach, ‘Lion’ is a song that doesn’t immediately connect with the notions of power and strength which you might expect from a title track, though he certainly has the courage to slip into a smouldering groove with a fragile voice which wraps itself round some philosophically tinged poetic lyrics: “See the lion hear him roar, stand with pride for evermore, he wont be silenced or cast aside, or be crucified.”

There’s almost a touch of Neil Young as the repeated chorus gives way to a slow building solo before going back to the hook again.

The cornerstone of the album is both the relaxed interplay between former Tull and Gary Moore drummer Jonathan Noyce and bassist Simon Lea (Ronnie Wood/Jamie Cullum) who lay down a succession of grooves, while Rozzo’s tremulous vocal draws us into a song with far more possibilities than you might imagine.

On the downside he has a limited vocal range, but is smart enough to build interesting arrangements which never ask too much of himself.

Listen for example to ‘Forgotten’, a slice of Americana with a jazz opening and some understated phrasing which shines just enough light on the beguiling lyrics: “There are times that  I’ve forgotten, there are thoughts that I once knew, please don’t let them be forgotten I will follow you.”

There’s a similar understated feel to the sparsely arranged ‘Here On The Ground’. The song spotlights his sinewy timbre and clarity of diction while a final emotive solo evokes the spiritual quest to be found at the heart of the album:  “Here on the ground’ I will be found, there will be something to show me the way. Out of the rain begin again there will be something to show me the way.”

It’s also one of several moments when the trio coalesces seamlessly.

He book-ends ‘Lion’ with another strong opening riff on ‘Voice of the Wind’ which much like ‘The River’ leads to a contrasting undulating melodic sweep.

The song is well suited to his airy vocal which does indeed sound as if it’s being carried by the wind.

His concluding niftily picked solo taps into the same uplifting feel which glues together an album that refreshingly brings rock-blues, folk, funk and jazz elements to bear on his exploration of the human psyche.

You might call it tapping into the inner wisdom of a lion, which would bring us full circle.  ****

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 11 May 2026

BREITLER Sentinel (El Puerto Records)
FIRE IN HER EYES Too Late To Change (indie)
KING FALCON Wait (indie)
BEAUTIFUL SKELETONS Come What May (indie)
KARIN PARK Shadow (Size Records)
HARSH Don’t Mess With Me (indie)

Featured Albums w/c 11 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)


Gig review: THE NEW ROSES- Downstairs at the Dome, London, 26 November 2023

THE NEW ROSES- Downstairs at the Dome, London, 26 November 2023

Despite rave reviews, German rockers The New Roses have yet to achieve the success they deserve in the UK. We can speculate about the reason for this- one being that though they defy pigeonholing, their sound is totally un-German! Hopefully this is about to change, having just toured with Massive Wagons, but too soon to bolster a small turnout at the Dome in Tufnell Park, just up the road from their previous two London headlines at the Underworld.

Indeed the late addition to the bill of Empyre seemed an attempt to add to the crowd. They were an odd match as while the New Roses specialise in party hardy anthems, the Northamptonshire band who have built quite a reputation on the circuit come from a much  darker place and indeed their strapline is ‘killing the vibe’.

THE NEW ROSES- Downstairs at the Dome, London, 26 November 2023

Singer Henrik Steenholdt has a marvellously deep and rich baritone which the slow tempo  of their songs brings out, be they metallic (‘Cry Wolf’ from latest album ‘Relentless’ being a case in point) or wide-screen soundscapes that owe more to U2, Floyd or even indie rock (‘Stone’ and ‘Hit & Run’). ‘Only Way Out’ was the nearest to a hook that could in your brain, before ending with the title track of ‘Relentless’ and ‘New Republic’.

Their self-deprecating humour has become a running in joke (though I wonder how it would translate to a non-English audience) and I was chuckling out rather too loudly at Henrik’s opening remarks “are you having a good time? Well you’ve come to the wrong place’! This nonchalance also seems to have had an impact on their fans- I know for a fact many of them were there, yet when he asked how many people knew the band or had their albums, there was barely a squeak. There is an extent to which you either get them or your don’t- yet I must admit that while the musical style doesn’t appeal to me, I hold them in high regard.

THE NEW ROSES- Downstairs at the Dome, London, 26 November 2023

As The New Roses came on to the strains of ‘Pretty Woman’, it was clear there had been a line up shake up since the Underworld show 13 months ago . Guitarist Norman Bites was back in the fold and his flowing blonde locks, short but electrifying solos in his flying V and mastery of classic guitar hero poses, made a huge difference. But his immediate predecessor the solid but less flamboyant Dizzy Daniels was retained, mainly on rhythm but taking a couple of solos. That in turn allowed singer Timmy Rough, sporting a noticeably shorter haircut, to be pretty much a full time frontman.

His distinctive raspy voice (Google ‘nominative determinism’) gives a harder edge to some insanely commercial songs, of which an opening pair from last album ‘Sweet Poison’ in ‘The Usual Suspects’ and ‘Lion in You’ were both insanely catchy and already got a few people punching the air. The momentum was maintained with the story song ‘Life Ain’t Easy (For A Boy With Long Hair’, proving that the stereotype of the humourless Teuton is exactly that,  and ‘Nothing But Wild’ with bursts of swift soloing from Norman was a glam metal classic worthy of the likes of Danger Danger.

THE NEW ROSES- Downstairs at the Dome, London, 26 November 2023

Joking that they were bringing back the lost art of the power ballad, Timmy donned an acoustic and successfully got us waving our phone lights in the air to ‘All I Ever Needed’ while ‘First Time for Everything’ was a little rockier but equally melodic. Admittedly offering nothing original, this was an extraordinary run of incredibly strong songs only broken by ‘Sweet Gloria’ which didn’t quite hit the same mark.

I’m normally no fan of covers, especially overplayed ones, but ‘Rocking In the Free World’ was a suitable showcase for the tight and no nonsense approach of a band completed by drummer Urban Berz and bassist Hardy. Indeed the New Roses cover a variety of musical bases and both ‘Dead of Night’, apparently only just introduced to the live set  and ‘Devils Toys’, followed by the briefest of solo spots from Norman, were distinctly heavier than what had gone before.

THE NEW ROSES- Downstairs at the Dome, London, 26 November 2023

However ‘Glory Road’ was another rousing good time anthem, with a heartland rock feel and ‘who-oah’ chorus and the superb ‘The Veins of This Town’ even reminded me in its songwriting vibe of Tyketto. The rest of the set was one singalong after another with a fast and furious ‘Warpaint’ followed by ‘Forever Never Comes’ with Bon Jovi-like chanting and the anthemic youthful tale of Down By The River, as if Bryan Adams had grown up in Wiesbaden rather than Vancouver.

There was a surprise for the first encore, Timmy solo and acoustic on ‘One More For The Road’ showing what a fine songwriter he is, then another huge anthem in ‘Every Wild Heart’ and what judging from audience requests during the show is their trademark song, ‘Thirsty’ with the band jamming to a climax.

THE NEW ROSES- Downstairs at the Dome, London, 26 November 2023

Impressively a 90 minute set flew by with barely a pause for breath between songs. I just hope that UK breakthrough is imminent, as I certainly left wanting to see them again as soon as possible.

Review and Photos by Andy Nathan

THE NEW ROSES- Downstairs at the Dome, London, 26 November 2023


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 11 May 2026

BREITLER Sentinel (El Puerto Records)
FIRE IN HER EYES Too Late To Change (indie)
KING FALCON Wait (indie)
BEAUTIFUL SKELETONS Come What May (indie)
KARIN PARK Shadow (Size Records)
HARSH Don’t Mess With Me (indie)

Featured Albums w/c 11 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: THEA GILMORE – Thea Gilmore

THEA GILMORE - Thea Gilmore

Mighty Village Records  [Release date: 17.11.23]

Twenty one albums into a career that has set the bar so high in the singer/songwriter genre, Thea Gilmore has, at last, had the self-confidence and artistic freedom to release an eponymously titled set of songs.

The emotional rollercoaster of her previous album, released under the epithet ‘Afterlight’, where she bared her soul about her long-term relationship breakdown, was to many (myself included), a first proper insight into the real Thea Gilmore – unencumbered by external musical dictats and allowing her own music to tell its own, often painful, story.

Thea bookended that album with two spoken word pieces and employs the same approach here on an album of such brilliance and not a little bravery that, to be honest, moved this admittedly cynical bastard in a way very few albums have done previously.

Should we be surprised?

No, as this is one of the finest singer/songwriters this country has ever produced and whose way with words is, and always has been, the platform on which her entire raison d’être has been built.

The emotional catharsis she has been through has helped her tap into a rich vein of absolute killer songs – yes, reaching into the very depths of despair at times – but also lighting the way for both her, and the rest of us, to believe in a life-affirming future.

Twelve tracks here and not a word is wasted on any of them – demonstrating a need to move on but with a bitter look back in the rear-view mirror.

From the opening beat-poem-alike ‘Nice Normal Woman’ to the superlative album closer ‘The Bright Service’, every track carries a message – not in a hectoring way but in a way that skewers the subject – be it ‘Bones’ with its coruscating lines “You took me right down to the ashes, like all the things you owned, but there’s a fire still burning here inside me, yeah, you really should have known”, or the wonderful counterpoint on ‘Unravel Me’.

There’s the biting lyrics of ‘The Next Time You Win’ or the (surely) Billy Bragg-inspired feel of ‘That’s Love Motherfucker’ – although it’s odd on the latter hearing such language from a quiet Oxford girl…

There’s optimism on ‘The Chance’ and more aim-taking at her relationship on the acoustic ‘Talking Out Of Tune’.

You may have heard the moving ‘She Speaks In Colours’ that Thea wrote about Ellen Raffell from Blyth who died at just 16 from anaphylaxis in 2019 and which had its debut on BBC TV’s The One Show as part of the 21st Century Folk project.

And what can you say about ‘Home’ – an affecting insight into what went on: “this is my home you know, this is the place he said I belonged, under the roof of regret, the safety of knowing I’m wrong, this is what I learned as love, til now”. Wow.

Thea Gilmore has crafted here an album for the ages that anyone with even half a heart can enjoy for its musical excellence alone – but for those who have experienced relationship breakdown, a comfort-blanket delivered in words and music that’s simply breathtaking.    *****

 Review by Alan Jones

The Best of 2023

UK dates 2024

29 Jan Celtic Connections, Glasgow
31 Jan St George’s, Bristol
01 Feb SJE Arts, Oxford
02 Feb Huntingdon Hall, Worcester
03 Feb Ropetackle Arts Centre, Shoreham-by-Sea


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 11 May 2026

BREITLER Sentinel (El Puerto Records)
FIRE IN HER EYES Too Late To Change (indie)
KING FALCON Wait (indie)
BEAUTIFUL SKELETONS Come What May (indie)
KARIN PARK Shadow (Size Records)
HARSH Don’t Mess With Me (indie)

Featured Albums w/c 11 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: STEELEYE SPAN – The Green Man Collection

steeleye span the green man

Park Records [Release date 01.12.23]

Steeleye Span went into the studio in September of this year to record four new tracks for inclusion on this collection, which also includes two newly recorded studio tracks from 2019, six songs selected from their ‘Dodgy Bastards’ and ‘Est. 1969′ albums, two live recordings from 2018 (‘Edward’ and ‘Sir James The Rose’) and the previously unreleased song ‘The Green Man’.

The latter will be of particular interest to Steeleye Span fans as it is a ‘lost’ recording from 1986 or 1987, written by former member Bob Johnson. The band have also recorded a 2023 version of the song, included as one of the four new songs on this fifteen track collection.

Maddy Prior gives the background to ‘The Green Man’ song – “We found it on a cassette. We were doing an album in the ’80s and it didn’t go on there for whatever reason, I don’t remember why, I can’t even tell you which album it was! It could have been anything – we were working a lot and rowing a lot – we did come to blows and all that sort of stuff! As a way of understanding the world, and particularly the western world it’s a very interesting song.”

The 2023 version of the song shows the rock emphasis Steeleye Span put into their folk, courtesy of Spud Sinclair and Julian Littman. Maddy Prior is on fine vocal form, whilst the fiddle of Athena Octavia is the icing on this song’s musical cake. The original version certainly sounds from the 80′s with the distinctive drum sound and a younger sounding Maddy Prior! The band’s trademark harmonies lift the chorus nicely, along with the fiddle playing of Peter Knight.

Keeping the rocking theme going, Status Quo’s Francis Rossi guests on ‘Hard Times of Old England’. The original version came out ion 2019 and for this version they added the undoubted talents of Mr Rossi! A proper foot stomper and ff Quo went folk it would sound a lot like this…

‘Hey Nonny Violence’ was written by Maddy Prior, a “reflection on the coexistence of beauty and violence in the world.” Steeleye Span may have been around the block a few times, however, they still pen relevant songs that pack a punch. Athena Octavia nearly steals the show with her sublime fiddle playing.

They do a stunning version of Elvis Costello’s ‘Shipbuilding’, where the vocal performances are truly breath taking. Steeleye’s version of ‘New York Girls’ is a tad slower paced than Bellowhead’s, yet they add a guitar to good effect.

Good to see ‘January Man’  and ‘Harvest’ included from their ‘Est. 1969′ album, one of the band’s strongest albums in many a year. Ian Anderson guesting on ‘Old Matron’ also makes this collection.

Part compilation, part new recordings, ‘The Green Man Collection’ will certainly delight the band’s fans, both new and old. A good a place as any to delve into the musical world of wonders created by Steeleye Span. ****

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 11 May 2026

BREITLER Sentinel (El Puerto Records)
FIRE IN HER EYES Too Late To Change (indie)
KING FALCON Wait (indie)
BEAUTIFUL SKELETONS Come What May (indie)
KARIN PARK Shadow (Size Records)
HARSH Don’t Mess With Me (indie)

Featured Albums w/c 11 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: MAGNUM – Here Comes The Rain

David Randall chatted to Bob Catley and Lee Morris playing tracks from the new album. First broadcast on Get Ready to ROCK! Radio, 24 December 2023.

MAGNUM - Here Comes The Rain

SPV/Steamhammer [Release date 12.01.24]

Magnum celebrated their 50th anniversary in 2022 when they finally got to tour “The Monster Roars” following the covid interregnum. No such constraint with the latest release with a European tour scheduled for April.

As we have reported for previous albums, Magnum are unlikely to release a duffer and each release merely tops up an enviable back catalogue. And each album, for fans, is a matter of weighing up relativity if not similarity to predecessors.  The album does repay repeat listens, always a good sign of solid songwriting and musicianship.

We don’t expect any great innovation with the band these days but they remain contemporary. Opener ‘Run Into The Shadows” actually has the urgency and musical patina of Winger in its opening and recurring riff.  In truth the portent of that opening salvo quickly dissipates.

With Bob Catley’s mellowing tones, the songs are arranged accordingly and this might also explain on balance the propensity of mid-tempo songs (such as the glorious title track, ‘Some Kind Of Treachery’ and ‘The Day He Lied’). In different hands these might become a bit dirgey but Catley’s more seasoned tones actually suit. And they are all good for a sing-along.  The more upbeat ‘After The Silence’ chops and changes between croon and more uplifting chorus whilst ‘Broken City’ is all the more poignant for current political events. Ditto ‘Borderline’.

The hardcore may prefer a bit more hard rock in the mix but that seemingly is not how the band operate these days. Let the back catalogue meet that need. For many the standouts will therefore be that opener, and the rock and roll ‘Blue Tango’.

As ever there is great backup from Rick Benton’s keys and solid rhythm from Lee Morris and Dennis Ward. Benton is responsible for the rich widescreen orchestration of these pieces even if at times the band again veer into John Parr/John Farnham territory c.1984/6. Clarkin’s guitar remains restrained throughout with minimal solos.

In fact this might be the biggest difference to older sorties, the lack of lead guitar which is not compensated for by any great use of solo keyboard. Only the use of brass on ‘The Seventh Darkness’ (continuing with recent tradition) provides a welcome new texture.

As we say, though, never a duffer. ****

Review by David Randall

Feature: The GRTR! Grotto of Greatness (Magnum, December 2023)

The GRTR! Grotto of Greatness


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 11 May 2026

BREITLER Sentinel (El Puerto Records)
FIRE IN HER EYES Too Late To Change (indie)
KING FALCON Wait (indie)
BEAUTIFUL SKELETONS Come What May (indie)
KARIN PARK Shadow (Size Records)
HARSH Don’t Mess With Me (indie)

Featured Albums w/c 11 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: The GRTR! Grotto of Greatness – MAGNUM (December 2023)

The GRTR! Grotto of Greatness - MAGNUM (December 2023)

MAGNUM - Aberdare Coliseum, 5 June 2019
Photo: Darren Griffiths

They nearly folded in 1983, played the arenas in the late 1980s, and nose-dived in 1995. But – fifty years on – Magnum remain magnificent

Magnum have figured prominently in our coverage at GRTR! since 2003. This certainly reflects the collective interests of the review team but the band’s “second coming” has also paralleled the lifetime of our website. In 2012 we celebrated the band’s 40th anniversary and in 2022 we celebrated their 50th anniversary with an extensive feature.

Since 1972 the band have captured the imagination of fans who remain steadfastly loyal. They’ve watched their heroes develop from semi-prog/melodic pop rock practitioners, through the late eighties when they filled Wembley Arena and, in the 1990s when they ultimately imploded.  They regrouped in 2000 and since that time have gone from strength to strength, characterised as ever by Bob Catley’s charismatic vocals and Tony Clarkin’s consistently good songwriting.

The GRTR! Grotto of Greatness recognises the band’s consistency since 2003 when they’ve released a strong album every couple of years interspersed with special releases or DVDs.

MAGNUM – Liverpool Arts Club, 6 February 2015
Photo: David Randall

I think the highlights would be playing the NEC and Wembley and touring the States with Ozzy in the 80′s. The low point has to be the day Magnum split up, so reforming was a real high point for me.

Bob Catley, 2002


Photo: Simon Dunkerley

Have we anything left to say about one of our favourite bands? On the eve of the release of their 23rd studio album it is timely to review our coverage and fill in the gaps left by our 2022 feature.

Magnum 

 

Magnum may not be filling the NEC’s and Wembley Arena’s like the late 80’s but the band is still a creative force both in the studio and in the live arena.

**** Review by Jason Ritchie

Album review (Brand New Morning, 2004)

Our first live review of the band – in October 2004 – was written by long-term fan (and liner note writer) Joe Geesin who wrote: “All in all, we got the early pomp and prog, the anthemic rock and the modern heavier material. The complete works.”

Jason Ritchie, our News and Reviews Editor, is another long-standing fan having followed the band since their appearance at Donington (Monsters Of Rock) in 1985.

Bob Catley

Our next live review of the band appeared in April 2005 when the band celebrated the 20th anniversary of the classic ‘On A Storyteller’s Night’ playing the whole album in the second half.  An expanded version of the original album was released.  A live album also appeared and a DVD.

Perhaps not surprisingly, given Magnum’s new found ascendancy, there was also the re-release of 1970s albums in 2006 with bonus tracks. (In 2023 the Jet albums were collected and reissued as a box-set). An excellent live recording from the original Storyteller’s Night tour in 1985 – culled from Radio Clyde – was released in 2004.

Fast-forwarding ten years, to 1995, the band’s live swansong Stronghold was re-released in 2006

Photo: Noel Buckley

Magnum 

 

Magnum return with possibly their most intricate album with regards to production and instrumentation.  

***** Review by Jason Ritchie

Album review (Princess Alice And The Broken Arrow, 2007)

Both Jason and Joe provided a joint review for the band’s gig at the Mean Fiddler in London in May 2007 when Joe thought that the band could shake the set-list up a little and introduce some earlier tunes like ‘Changes’ or ‘Back To Earth’.


Bob Catley chatted to David Randall for the GRTR! podcast in December 2007.  Their wide-ranging interview included reference to Bob’s solo work.


Magnum - The Tivoli, Buckley, 20 April 2014
Photo: Simon Dunkerley

I have had quite a bit of input into the albums I have done with Magnum and Hard Rain. Although Tony writes the songs he is very open to ideas. He has to be my biggest influence. He has taught me so much.

Al Barrow, 2003

MAGNUM - Liverpool Arts Club, 6 February 2015
Photo: David Randall

The Magnum tour was fantastic- incredibly easy to adjust – I found it very natural to play with the lads. What was pretty unnatural were Al Barrow’s feet! But you gotta love him for that!

Harry James, 2003

I’m quite happy to be the main songwriter, I find it easier to write on my own.

Tony Clarkin, 2005

It is fair to say that it is the promoters and the record label (Magnum have been with German label SPV since 2001) that encourage Magnum to revisit certain back catalogue. This explains a further tour in November 2007 when the band played the whole of ‘Wings Of Heaven’ ahead of the album’s 20th anniversary. Jason again: “Magnum are really on form currently – a great studio album released earlier this year and live wise they are as good as their late 80′s days.”


Tony Clarkin chatted to David Randall in February 2008 for the GRTR! podcast.  They covered a wide range of subjects including Wings Of Heaven Live and songwriting.


MAGNUM – Manchester Apollo, 11 May 2008

The tour continued in May 2008 when Ian Pollard noted that the band had consulted die-hard fans before the tour about set-list changes.

Amongst those songs added in were ‘Changes’, ‘Midnight’ and even ‘We All Need To Be Loved’ from the oft-overlooked ‘Rock Art’, the band’s semi-swansong in 1994. “Having seen the band live 70-something times, I am never going to leave a gig disappointed because Magnum always deliver the goods. This time, however, there was something extra.”

Another big fan Andrew Lock reviewed the band at The Assembly in Leamington Spa in November 2009 and wrote “With such a back catalogue the band are surely spoiled for choice when it comes to the older material and the set included material from at least six of their earlier albums.

Stand out tracks from the main set included the anti-war classic Les Morts Dansant from their best known album On A Story Tellers Night, Dragons Are Real from the 2007 album ‘Princess Alice and the Broken Arrow’ and the sheer power of the all time classic Vigilante.”

A live recording of the tour was released in 2008.

Magnum 

 

Overall possibly less pomptastic than 2007′s ‘Princess Alice…’ but instead you get a more varied song mix and heavy in many respects as well. With the excellent Rodney Matthews artwork it may actually take you some time to open your CD case! 

****1/2 Review by Jason Ritchie

Album review (Into The Valley Of The Moonking, 2009)

The compilations continued in 2009 with The Classic Collection. There has been no shortage of this sort of recycling and Magnum have always been plagued by similar releases for which they derive no income. Thankfully, an almost-definitive box set was released by Sanctuary/Universal in 2010.

MAGNUM – High Voltage, 25 July 2010
Photo: Lee Millward

In 2010 the band featured in the inaugural High Voltage when Andy Nathan commented “I realised, in conversation with a friend, that despite seeing them every tour this was the first time I’d seen Magnum at a festival since 1987!”

Magnum 

 

They may not have the instant appeal of some melodic rock based bands but the joy of Magnum songs is that they grow better after each listen.  

**** Review by Jason Ritchie

Album review (The Visitation, 2011)

 

Magnum, photo by Noel Buckley

Another festival appearance for the band – in December 2011 – saw them at Hard Rock Hell in Prestatyn, North Wales. Keith Thompson thought the gig took a bit of time to warm up: “After a slow start one of Britain’s hardest working rock bands had eventually turned around a strangely lethargic court. True professionals with a back catalogue most bands couldn’t steal, Magnum were not about to go through the motions and left the stage with the reception they deserved.”

Reviewing Magnum’s gig at the Tivoli in Buckley, North Wales in April 2011 David Randall noted the last time he saw the band was in the 1990s at the same venue, and once in a week when they preceded Oasis. Randall decreed: “Magnum are sounding more majestic, and magnificent, than ever.”

Photo: Noel Buckley

Magnum
 

 

They may not have the instant appeal of some melodic rock based bands but the joy of Magnum songs is that they grow better after each listen.  

**** Review by Jason Ritchie

Album review (On The 13th Day, 2012)

Get Ready to ROCK! celebrated the band’s 40th anniversary in 2012 with a year-long promotion. Jason Ritchie reviewed the band in November at London’s Islington Academy. “The set list featured a lot of songs from their albums since they returned back in 2001, showing how good these albums have been… With the rock solid rhythm section of Al Barrow and Harry James, this is the strongest Magnum line-up for me and live they are one of the most consistent acts out there today.”



David Randall chatted to the band members at rehearsal in November 2011.

Magnum - Escape From The Shadow Garden 

 

It is fair to say that with Magnum you will probably never get a naff album.  Tony Clarkin’s songwriting sensibilties and the band’s standards are far too high for that.  

****Review by David Randall

Album review (Escape From The Shadow Garden, 2014)

MAGNUM Album Launch, Robin 2, Bilston, 25 March 2014Photo: Simon Dunkerley

The band’s 2014 album was launched at the Robin 2, West Midlands in March 2014 an event covered by photographer/reviewer Simon Dunkerley. Magnum returned to the Tivoli in North Wales in March promoting the new album when David Randall wrote: “I am left with the conclusion that this is a band that very much plays to Clarkin’s tune both literally and metaphorically. With a songwriter who is known for his consistency this might not be perceived to be a problem but in terms of risk taking and adventure it may not be the best option.”


Photo: Simon Dunkerley

Randall regretted that the band’s setlist remained remained reasonably static revolving around a clutch of new tunes from the current album and the core of “classics”. “Some more setlist surprises could only endear us more.”

Magnum should be treasured as jewels in the crown of British Rock. 

Darren Griffiths

In Glasgow, a week or so later, Live Editor Dave Wilson provided the rejoinder: “With such a large back catalogue to choose from and with so many great songs it would be hard to please everyone.”

The tour concluded in London at Islington Town Hall when Jason Ritchie noted: “It shows the strength of Magnum’s back catalogue that they can leave out classics like say ‘Just Like An Arrow’ and feature a handful of songs of their new album. A highly enjoyable night of music and everyone went home smiling as that’s what a Magnum live show is all about, escaping to a magical world of music created by five fine musicians.”

Magnum - The Tivoli, Buckley, 20 April 2014
Photo: Simon Dunkerley

The band rounded off 2014 with an appearance at Planet Rockstock in December when Darren Griffiths wrote: “Although the setlist is not all about the past, the biggest cheers are for songs from the classic Storytellers Night including ‘How Far Jerusalem’ which sends everyone into a jumping frenzy with their hands aloft pumping their fists into the air to the chorus.”

David Randall, reviewing the band in early 2015, continued to bemoan the lack of adventure.

“Surely the key to a great gig is where the band drop in a few surprises, a few obscurities and a few well remembered classics post-1986, if only to please the hardcore and maybe to get newcomers searching out the older stuff? That’s good marketing sense, if nothing else.”

Magnum’s enveloping sound filled the room with a portentous feel that was lapped up by a capacity crowd. 

Pete Feenstra

The gig was a warm-up for the Giants Of Rock gig when Simon Dunkerley commented that “Magnum spent much of the day doing dutiful signings and meet ups with the roaming fans and could be seen a number of times over at the fantasy artist Rodney Matthews‘ stall; most will know Rodney designed their classic album covers.”

MAGNUM - Sacred Blood, Divine Lies 

 

From the opener and title track ‘Sacred Blood “Divine” Lies’ Magnum seem to have regained their late-eighties, early-nineties mojo. 

 ****1/2 Review by David Randall

Album review (Sacred Blood “Divine” Lies, 2016)

Darren Griffiths reviewed the band in May 2016 when he wrote: “Magnum have always been and will remain, a special band to me; they are one of those bands that once you become a fan, you will always be a fan. Granted over the last few album releases I haven’t exactly fallen head over heels like I did with ‘On A Storytellers Night’ and ‘Vigilante’, but there are always pieces of brilliance that I love and admire in this band and they are a must see every time they tour.

Darren noted also the wide range of demographic: “all the youngsters dotted around the crowd, some no older than late teens who have either grown up with their Fathers’ music (or being brainwashed by it) but either way there is another generation of Magnum fans to take over the mantle.”




Bob Catley chatted to David Randall for Get Ready to ROCK Radio.  First broadcast 25 December 2016.  This was not long after Mark Stanway’s departure from the band and the interview also includes Bob chatting about his career.


Early January 2017 saw the release of a compilation The Valley Of Tears – The Ballads following an idea from Tony Clarkin’s daughter. This featured remixed tracks but no new material, contrasting with the earlier Evolution. In his review David Randall remarked that the only album missing in the band’s discography is a fully orchestral offering. Although the title track of their next studio album was actually orchestrated …


Mark Stanway was featured in a two-part interview special broadcast on Get Ready to ROCK! Radio in February 2019.  In the first part he chats about his time in Magnum with selected tracks


In September 2016 Mark Stanway announced he was leaving the band during their autumn UK tour. Stanway went on to form ‘Kingdom of Madness’ playing a selection of earlier Magnum material.  Rick Benton (ex-Rebecca Downes Band) was drafted in immediately to conclude the series of dates.

Magnum - HRH PROG VI - Pwllheli, North Wales, 17-18 November 2017
Photo: David Randall

In November 2017 the band headlined HRH Prog an early festival outing for new band members Benton (keys) and Lee Morris (who replaced Harry James now increasingly occupying Thunder’s drum stool). Pete Whalley wrote: “If there was a complaint, it could only be that it was a somewhat restrained, soft rock, singularly paced – almost AOR set – with ‘Your Dreams Won’t Die’ almost in Traveling Wilbury/Jeff Lynne territory.”

Whalley’s next meeting with Magnum came at Giants Of Rock in January 2018 when the band appeared briefly on stage but left beaten by technical issues. “The loss of beef from the dining menu may have been as significant as the loss of 20 minutes from Magnum’s set but fortunately we needn’t have worried: steak was on. Magnum were off.”

MAGNUM - Lost On The Road To Eternity 

 

‘Lost’ will appeal to the die-hards (who will surely hail the return of the early eighties logo) as well as the lapsed.  Forty years after their album debut, ‘Lost On The Road To Eternity’ is an absolute triumph. 

***** Review by David Randall

Album review (Lost On The Road To Eternity, 2018) 

In 2018 the band appeared for the first time at arguably Birmingham’s finest music venue Symphony Hall. It was like a real homecoming and captured on a CD/DVD release in 2019. Our review noted that Rick Benton in particular was a great addition and the historic keyboard parts were reproduced with great attention to detail. Benton was also key in creating the orchestration of the impressive title track of the latest studio album.

A year later Darren Griffiths reviewed the band’s South Wales gig confirming that “the band seems refreshed and better than I have seen them in years. Bob’s voice is in fine fettle and reaffirms that there is only one guy who could and should sing these songs.” The set closed with the ten-minute opus from ‘Wings Of Heaven’ “Don’t Wake The Lion”.

Completing the current Magnum line-up Dennis Ward (Pink Cream 69) joined on bass in 2019 when Al Barrow decided to emigrate to the States. Barrow still keeps in touch with the band and is still involved with their album design.

In terms of former band members during this period we sadly lost original drummer Kex Gorin (2007) and Jimmy Copley (2017).


Tony Clarkin chatted to David Randall for Get Ready To ROCK! Radio.  First broadcast 20 December 2020.  


Tony Clarkin should be considered proper prime minister material – a deft ability to deliver on promises and always providing a certain quality resolve based on creative skill and experience. 

David Randall

MAGNUM - The Serpent Rings 

 

The Serpent Rings continues the high standard and renewed vigour not least down to the addition of a relatively new keyboard player and drummer and – now – a new bassist   

**** Review by David Randall

Album review (The Serpent Rings, 2020)

A further compilation was released during early Lockdown (2020) picking out some of the band’s “heavier” tracks. Covid robbed the band of the immediate promotion of their next studio album and UK punters had to wait until March 2022 for the band’s postponed promotional tour.

Magnum 2023

MAGNUM - The Monster Roars 

 

The best that can be said about ‘The Monster Roars’ is that it simply tops up a very fine back catalogue

***1/2 Review by David Randall

Album review (The Monster Roars, 2022)

In March 2022 a major feature at Get Ready to ROCK! celebrated the band’s 50th anniversary. This brought together original contributions from the review team and reflected our coverage over the years. We also invited recollections from fans.

MAGNUM - Here Comes The Rain. 

 

.. each album, for fans, is a matter of weighing up relativity if not similarity to predecessors.  The album does repay repeat listens, always a good sign of solid songwriting and musicianship.

 **** Review by David Randall

Album review (Here Comes The Rain, 2024)


Jason Ritchie’s comments, in contributing to that extensive retrospective, still ring true: “Magnum, the kings of pomp and splendour, long may they continue…”

To celebrate Magnum’s 50th anniversary as part of “Magnum Month@GRTR!” in March 2022 a two-hour special was broadcast on Get Ready to ROCK! Radio.  This includes archive material and interviews plus tracks from throughout the band’s history.


Story coordination by David Randall.
Contributors: Simon Dunkerley, Pete Feenstra, Joe Geesin, Darren Griffiths, Andrew Lock, Andy Nathan, Ian Pollard, David Randall, Jason Ritchie, Keith Thompson, Pete Whalley, Dave Wilson

Feature: An Introduction to Magnum, 2020
Feature: Magnum @50 (March 2022)

Official website


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 11 May 2026

BREITLER Sentinel (El Puerto Records)
FIRE IN HER EYES Too Late To Change (indie)
KING FALCON Wait (indie)
BEAUTIFUL SKELETONS Come What May (indie)
KARIN PARK Shadow (Size Records)
HARSH Don’t Mess With Me (indie)

Featured Albums w/c 11 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 : LAIBACH – Nova Akropola (3 CD set)

Cherry Red [Release date : 01.12.23]

It was only when Slovenia gained independence from Yugoslavia in 1991, that avant garde, politically aware metal band, Laibach gained wider acceptance in the country of their birth.

Culturally, Yugoslavia was already the most “westernised” of the communist Eastern Bloc countries. Despite that, Laibach’s music had been banned for being “industrial and anti authoritarian” (They were championed by John Peel in The UK). That attitude gradually softened. Slovenia shared a border with Austria and Italy and gained EU membership in 2004.

Laibach is often quoted as being a key influence on the sound of Germany’s Rammstein, and Neue Deutsche Harte in general. A sometimes intense verbal exchange goes back and forth between the two bands. And yet, despite the “rivalry”, they do a fabulous cover of Rammstein’s satirical classic, ‘Amerika’, featured on a recent Cleopatra compilation.

The band’s seminal album, Nova Akropola (The New Acropolis), was first released in 1986. This version sees that original album revisited and expanded, adding two CDs of live versions of the album. One recorded in London around the time of its original release, and one curated from the band’s interminable tour of Eastern Europe, 1997-2002.

The eighties were dark days in the Balkans. The music reflects that.
Ironically, the sinister, dissonant title track sounds like the musical score from a piece of German Expressionist cinema.
Tracks ‘Die Liebe’ and ‘Drzava’ are not for the faint hearted. The “shards of glass” vocals and screaming sounds – the death throes of an empire – are laced with poetry and politics. If you listen carefully you can hear the origins of Death Metal in the spoken word growls.

In among this heavily percussive, all out atonal assault, a couple of songs, ‘Vojna Poema’ and ‘Vade Retro’, rise above the music’s murky waters of tunelessness.
They’re not exactly FM Radio friendly, but still, they might well find favour in the extremities of power metal, among bands like maybe Morbid Angel and the late, great Type O Negative.

It’s clear from the live stuff that the band live and breathe their controversial philosophy. It’s also clear that this is shared by many thousands of fans.

Should further light be needed, the sleevenotes, written by cultural theorist, Alexei Monroe, is all the primer you might need. ****

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 11 May 2026

BREITLER Sentinel (El Puerto Records)
FIRE IN HER EYES Too Late To Change (indie)
KING FALCON Wait (indie)
BEAUTIFUL SKELETONS Come What May (indie)
KARIN PARK Shadow (Size Records)
HARSH Don’t Mess With Me (indie)

Featured Albums w/c 11 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)


News: SPINAL TAP, PROG FOR PEART, MARTYN JOSEPH (December 2023)

SONS OF APOLLO - Manchester Academy, 1 October 2018

News - Album News

Big Big Train will release their 15th studio album ‘The Likes Of Us’ on March 1 via InsideOut Music.

Founding Crimson Glory members Ben Jackson (guitar), Jeff Lords (bass) and Dana Burnell (drums) are being joined by new vocalist Travis Wills and guitarist Mark “Borgy” Borgmeyer. Two new singles, ‘Triskaideka’ and ‘Indelible Ashes’, are due in early 2024.

Doro releases a five song digital EP ‘Conqueress – Extended’ on March 1 via Nuclear Blast. The songs have previously only been available on physical products.

Ferocious Dog release their latest album ‘Kleptocracy’ on 17 May through Graphite Records.

Ace Frehley will release his new solo album ’10,000 Volts’ on February 23 via MNRK Music Group.

David Gilmour is currently working on new music with a possible release sometime in 2024. Musicians involved so far include Guy Pratt (long-time touring bassist with Pink Floyd) and Roger Eno.

Head East release their first album in over forty years, ‘Full Circle’, on December 29 CD and digitally, with a vinyl edition to follow on January 12.

Honeymoon Suite release their new album ‘Alive’ on February 24 through Frontiers.

It Bites FD (Francis Dunnery version) release their new album ‘Return to Natural’ on January 6, with a vinyl edition to follow in March.

Martyn Joseph releases his latest album ‘This Is What I Want To Say’ on January 12 through Pipe Records.

Korpiklaani will release their new studio album, ‘Rankarumpu’, on April 5 via Nuclear Blast.

Kula Shaker have announced a new album, ‘Natural Magick’, which reunites their original line-up for the first time in 25 years. It will be released on January 26 on Strange Folk Records via Absolute.

Magnum release their second single ‘The Seventh Darkness’ on January 3 of their new album ‘Here Comes The Rain’, which is due on January 12.

A 50th anniversary edition of Paul McArtney and Wing’s ‘Band On The Run’ album is released on February 2.

Metal Church aim to enter the studio and record their next album in late 2024.

Pearl Jam have completed their latest album for release next year.

The Pineapple Thief will release their latest album ‘It Leads To This’ through the Kscope on February 9.

Rage have announced their latest studio album ‘Afterlifelines’ which is released on March 29. The new double album includes classical orchestral arrangements.

Revolution Saints release their latest album ‘Against the Winds’ on Frontiers on 9 February.

ABKCO Records will release ‘The Rolling Stones Singles 1966-1971′ on February 2. The limited edition set includes reproductions of 7” vinyl singles and EPs as originally released by Decca, London Records and ABKCO Records.

Rod Stewart will release a new album, ’Swing Fever’,  recorded with Jools Holland, on February 23.

Sum 41 release their final full-length album (a double) as a band, ‘Heaven :x: Hell’, will arrive on March 29 through Rise Records.

Tigertailz have released a new single ‘A Little Bit of Christmas’ that features Verden Allen (Mott the Hoople) guesting on piano.

Walter Trout releases his latest album ‘Broken’ on March 1 and it features a guest appearance from Beth Hart.

Whom Gods Destroy is a new band featuring Dino Jelusick, Bumblefoot and Derek Sherinian (pictured). They are currently working on their debut album.

XYZ‘s classic line-up of lead vocalist Terry Ilous, bassist Pat Fontaine, guitarist Mark Diglio and drummer Paul Monroe are back together working on new song ideas.

News - Tours and Gigs

Newly announced UK tours (2024 unless stated):

Bryan Adams, the Almighty (2024 + 2025), Creeper, Sheryl Crow, Five Finger Death Punch (May 23 Wembley Arena), Noel Gallagher’s High Flying Birds, Simon Godfrey, Avril Lavigne, Jane’s Addiction, the Jesus and the Mary Chain, Leave’s Eyes, Limp Bizkit, Lindisfarne, Lordi, New Order, Nickelback, Quiet Riot (Mar 10 London), Scorpions + Extreme (Jun 8 Wembley Arena), Slipknot, Ten, Ugly Kid Joe, ZZ Top (Jul 11 Wembley Arena),

Upcoming (Gigs – UK)

Newly announced US & European tours (2024 unless stated):

Amon Amarth (US), Armord Saint (EU), Avenged Sevenfold (US), Battle Beast (US), Big Big Train (US), Black Stone Cherry + Saint Asonia (US), Black Veil Brides (US), Blind Guardian (US), Boom Crash Opera (AU), the Damned (farewell tour AU), Danko Jones (EU), Def Leppard + Journey (US), Samantha Fish & Jesse Dayton (AU), Five Finger Death Punch (EU), Peter Frampton (US), Girlschool + Alcatrazz + Lillian Axe (US), GWAR (US), Kissin’ Dynamite (EU), KK’s Priest + LA Guns (US), Korn (EU), Lacuna Coil (US), Limp Bizkit (US), Mammoth VH (US), Manowar (US), Metal Church (US), Nickelback (EU), Steel Panther (US), the Jesus and the Mary Chain (EU), Red Hot Chilli Peppers (US), Saxon + Uriah Heep (US), Scorpions (EU), the 69 Eyes (US),  Slipknot (EU), Styx + Foreigner + John Waite (US), Corey Taylor (US), James Taylor (AU), Tesla (US), The The (AU, NZ), Voivod + Prong (US), ZZ Top (EU),

Upcoming (USA/ROW)

Tom Jones, Bryan Adams, Madness and Sting have been announced as headliners for the inaugural Plymouth Summer Sessions festival between June 13-16 at The Plymouth Hoe. The Lightning Seeds and Blondie will also appear as support at the shows.

Galahad and IO Earth have been announced as headliners for 2024′s Prog For Peart on July 12 and 13 at The Northcourt in Abingdon, Oxfordshire. The charity event will raise money to help combat Glioblastoma Multiforme, the rare form of brain cancer that Rush drummer Neil Peart died from. Also confirmed are Comedy Of Errors, Rain, League Of Lights, Hats Off Gentlemen It’s Adequate, IT and Drifting Sun.

Hellfest have announced their line-up for next year which includes Metallica, Machine Head, Avenged Sevenfold, Foo Fighters, Heart, The Prodigy, Saxon, Black Stone Cherry, Extreme, Tom Morello, Fear Factory, Mammoth WVH, The Dead Daisies, Steel Panther, Rival Sons, Cradle of Filth, Emperor, Dimmu Bogir, Satyricon and Sodom. It takes place in Clisson, France 27-30 June 2024.

Rick Wakeman, Trevor Horn, Big Big Train, Focus, DeWolff, Kathryn Tickell and The Darkening, Eddi Reader, Baskery, Black Water County, Elles Bailey, Richard Digance, Feast of Fiddles, Ranagri, Spooky Mens Chorale and SilverBlues are all set to appear at next year’s Cropredy Festival between Thursday 8 to Saturday 10 August 2024.

Sheryl Crow, Deacon Blue and Nile Rodgers & Chic are amongst the headliners at next June’s series of concerts at Hampton Court.

Ugly Kid Joe will support Scorpions at their Las Vegas residency next year.

Connor Selby will support Joanne Shaw Taylor on her UK dates in February.

Postponed/cancelled gigs & tours

Voyager have postponed their Australian tour from February to June 2024

Skid Row have postponed recent gigs due to illness within the band.

Motley Crue have cancelled their “Crüe Year’s Eve” concert on December 31 in Palm Springs due to “issues beyond [the band's] control.”

Magnum have cancelled all their planned 2024 tour dates as Tony Clarkin has been diagnosed with a rare spinal condition. As Tony states, “Over the past year or so I’ve been
bothered by increasingly bad pains in my neck and head. For a long time the
docs couldn’t work out why, but now they’ve found out and it’s gonna mean
some changes.

This is not gonna be the end of Magnum, but the future might have to be a bit
different, so please bear with us while we try and figure out what I can and can’t
do moving forward.”

Other Stuff

A sequel to ‘This Is Spinal Tap’ starts filming in February and will once again be directed by Rob Reiner, with the original cast set to return and cameos from Elton John and Paul McCartney.

‘Queen Rock Montreal’ will be released in over 450 IMAX locations globally for four days beginning January 18. The concert was originally recorded back in 1981.

KISS may have stopped touring, however, on their final show at New York’s Maddison Square Gardens they unveiled KISS avatars. Created by the same company as the Abba Voyage, the band plan for these to be used in shows worldwide, starting in 2027.

Tidal have laid off 40 members of staff across multiple departments, amounting to 10 per cent of its total workforce. Spotify announced they were laying off 17% of their staff worldwide in order to save costs.

Funeral For A Friend have announced that vocalist Matthew Davies-Kreye has decided to leave the band, whilst keyboards player Jordan Fish has left Bring Me The Horizon.

Moles in Bath has closed with immediate effect. Artists who have appeared there include Blur, Supergrass, Oasis, Radiohead and many more during the course of the venue’s 45 year existence. Petition to save the venue can be found here.

News - RIP

Mars Williams, sax player with the Psychedelic Furs

Shane McGowan of the Pogues and the Popes

Myles Goodwyn, singer, guitarist and main songwriter for April Wine

Chad Allan, founding member and original lead singer of the Guess Who and a founding member of Bachman Turner-Overdrive

Denny Laine, a co-founder of both the Moody Blues and Wings

Former guitarist and singer with Steeleye Span, Bob Johnson

Original AC/DC drummer Colin Burgess


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 11 May 2026

BREITLER Sentinel (El Puerto Records)
FIRE IN HER EYES Too Late To Change (indie)
KING FALCON Wait (indie)
BEAUTIFUL SKELETONS Come What May (indie)
KARIN PARK Shadow (Size Records)
HARSH Don’t Mess With Me (indie)

Featured Albums w/c 11 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: WIZZARD – The Singles

Cherry Red [Release Date : 1.12.23]

Roy Wood’s Wizzard, a singular seventies’ UK pop phenomenon, burned brightly for 5 hugely entertaining years. A band immortalised (whether they liked it or not) by perennial seasonal hit, ‘I Wish It Could Be Christmas Every Day’.

This double album, Wizzard, The Singles, comprises 22 tracks. All the A sides and the B sides from the band’s moment in the sun. A timely reminder that Roy Wood created an incomparable track record as a successful songwriter and imaginative musician (with Wizzard, The Move and ELO). A fact often overshadowed by that Christmas best seller.

Wood’s songs have been covered by everybody from Status Quo and Cheap Trick to Nancy Sinatra and Graham Bonnett.

He wore his influences on the sleeve of his voluminous stage outfits, from the Phil Spector styled wall of sound of ‘See My Baby Jive’ and ‘Angel Fingers’ to the fifties’ big band rock’n’roll pastiche ‘Are You Ready To Rock’, to the strutting boogie of ‘Ball Park Incident’. They are all here, them and more.

It was immediately evident that behind the greasepaint, this lover of fifties and sixties pop was in his creative element.
And then, by 1977’s ‘The Stroll’, ‘Indiana Rainbow’ and ‘Jubilee’, we can hear the artist in Wood stretching out into Jazz Rock territory.

Effectively, ‘This Is The Story Of My Love (Baby)’ was the trailer for Wizzard’s subsequent album, Main Street. We reviewed the Cherry Red reissue of this 1976 release in 2020, noting that the music ranged “from lightfooted lounge jazz to catchy powerpop”.

It’s no wonder that another pop music giant, Brian Wilson of the Beach Boys, was such a huge fan. He invited Wood to sit in with band during their gig in Birmingham, in 2016. It was reported that their joint performance of ‘Fire Brigade’ was a moment to remember. *****

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 11 May 2026

BREITLER Sentinel (El Puerto Records)
FIRE IN HER EYES Too Late To Change (indie)
KING FALCON Wait (indie)
BEAUTIFUL SKELETONS Come What May (indie)
KARIN PARK Shadow (Size Records)
HARSH Don’t Mess With Me (indie)

Featured Albums w/c 11 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 : WARREN HAYNES PRESENTS – The Benefit Concert, Vol 20

Warren Haynes - The Benefit Concert, Vol.20

Provogue [Release date 08.12.23]

‘Warren Haynes Present: The Benefit Concert Volume, 20′ comprises 31 live track of cross genre jams that are infused with a ‘can do spirit’ in keeping with jam band fraternity.

A penchant for jamming has long separated the wheat from the chaff in straight music circles.

You can go all the way back to the 40’s when the Be-Bop era cut up rough against the big band tradition to trace a lineage to the contemporary jam scene.

The late 60’s West coast scene, the Chicago blues scene (with Paul Butterfield), the cross genre extemporisation of Frank Zappa, and the much more formalized Dave Matthews-led 90’s jam band scene all represented the need to explore the textural possibilities of music.

The various jam scenes were also glued together by an essential communality of purpose in sharp contrast to the machinations of the music business. And perhaps that explains the charitable foundations of Warren Haynes long standing Christmas jams.

But being an American phenomenon, the jam band scene has always been something big, from the numbers of performers to the set length, which Govt Mule have long extended.

In that context, it’s perhaps no surprise that the 20th anniversary of Warren Haynes Christmas Jam clocks in at 8 minutes shy of 4 hours, spread over 3 cd’s (also available on vinyl).

It asks a lot of both the listener and the people at the show. Indeed, when deep into the night Jim James shout out: “How You Doing?”, it’s almost as if to check everyone is still along for the ride.

Happily there’s enough musical variety and spark here to keep everyone interested, from the rock-blues antecedents through fusion, electro, country, Americana, acoustic, funk, prog and hard rock.

The album impressively charts its course from keyboard experimentalist Marco Benevento’s ‘Green Point’ – an uplifting 80’s sounding instrumental and ‘Pepper’, an unlikely meeting of bass led funk and rap – through to Govt Mule’s closing 3-song Pink Floyd set, which acts as a cathartic release to an intense musical evening.

There’s very much a sense of inclusiveness here, exemplified by the expressive baritone vocal of Jamey Johnson who captures the crowd’s rapt attention with ‘In Color’.

Grace Potter And The Nocturnals add stomping electronics on ‘The Lion The Beast, The Beat’, but she overstays her welcome on the edgy ‘Good Times, Bad Times Paris (Ooh La La)’.

The latter opens as a gargantuan rocker, but becomes wearisome on an over extended workout between the otherwise excellent sax player Ron Holloway and an unknown drummer.

Phish’s Mike Gordon recalls The Grateful Dead on the funky fusion of ‘Sweet Emotion’, while Jim James from My Morning Jacket evokes Neil Young on ‘A New Life’. It’s a style he later revisits alongside the ubiquitous Warren Haynes in acoustic mode on ‘Captured’.

Homeboy Eric Church impresses on the southern rock influencedAin’t Wasting Time No More’, which features a lovely combination of electric piano and slide.

CD 2 finds Joe Bonamassa getting heavy on Beck’s ‘Spanish Boots’, and he revels in Zeppelin’s riff driven ‘Tea For One’ and the bluesy ‘I Can’t Quit You Baby’.

His guitar work is exemplary, full of squalls, volume swells, cool dynamics and shot through with real intensity, the perfect combination for a jam band.

However, it’s Dave Grohl who steals the show with ‘Play’, a 30 minute suite which explores rock, prog, space-rock, fusion, metal, ambient drones and staccato percussion with an extended finale.

His use of changing tempos, different textures and moods is everything you would want in a lengthy piece of instrumental improv.

And so to Gov’t Mule, they open the lyrically spiky ‘Revolution Come, Revolution Go’ with a funky bass intro and some spell binding interplay.

A sudden lumbering tempo change and a drum break then leads to the kind of jazzy rebuild typical of a jam band who love the challenge of overcoming self imposed musical obstacles.

They rock hard on a reflective song ‘Million Miles From Yesterday’ and then segue Neil Young’s ‘Rockin’ In The Free World’ into Hendrix’s vitriolic ‘Machine Gun’, which they fill it with coruscating solos.

Kevin Kinney’s two song contribution is notable for his nasal vocal timbre, which is well suited to the gloriously ragged ‘Honey Suckle Blossom’, complete with a guitar avalanche.

And just when the evening needs a fresh shot of adrenalin, it comes from Band of Horses singer songwriter Tyler Ramsey, who fills a meditative instrumental called ‘1000 Blackbirds’ with lovely jangling notes which resonate and fill the room with fresh oxygen.

Planet of The Apts rock hard with a heavy growled guitar sound on ‘I’m Telling You’, while Warren Haynes and Dave Grohl change the dynamic again on the very poignant ‘Times Like These’ and the Foo Fighters love song ‘Everlong’.

Govt Mule and Jim James skip the opening verse to Pink Floyd’s ‘Them & Us’ and go straight for the sax solo, which is repeated after a reedy vocal is rescued by the ensemble’s bv’s.

‘Any Colour You Like’ hits new heights with a gnawing guitar and synth interplay over a powerhouse rhythm section.

Vocalist T-Bone Anderson does his best to nail the closing ‘Comfortably Numb’, which drags a little until a sparkling harmony guitar break flanked by bv’s leading to a manic crescendo.

As on this song, so with the album as a whole, nothing is done by halves. ****

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 11 May 2026

BREITLER Sentinel (El Puerto Records)
FIRE IN HER EYES Too Late To Change (indie)
KING FALCON Wait (indie)
BEAUTIFUL SKELETONS Come What May (indie)
KARIN PARK Shadow (Size Records)
HARSH Don’t Mess With Me (indie)

Featured Albums w/c 11 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)


News: Melodic pomp rockers MAGNUM enter The GRTR! Grotto of Greatness (December 2023)

Magnum 2023

Melodic pomp rockers Magnum are the latest inductees in “The GRTR! Grotto of Greatness” a year long promotion to celebrate 20 years of the popular rock website Get Ready to ROCK!

The Midlands-based band have figured prominently in the website’s coverage over the past two decades and were celebrated, in 2012, for their 40th anniversary and again in 2022 for their 50th with an extensive special feature.

A new retrospective will be published on 1 December reflecting specifically the website’s coverage in terms of gig and album reviews.  There will also be a competition to win various formats of the new album.

Magnum release their 23rd studio album in January 2024 to be followed by a European tour in April.

News and Reviews Editor Jason Ritchie comments “I became a fan of the band following their appearance at Monsters Of Rock (Donington) in 1985 which I attended with sometime GRTR! scribe and friend Phil Berisford.  Since 2003 when we established Get Ready to ROCK! the band have produced consistently good albums and live shows.”

Managing Editor David Randall adds: “The band’s nomination concludes our major promotion this year and reflects again the wide consensus of opinion amongst our review team.

In 2020 during Lockdown we took the opportunity to re-purpose some of our historic content and this led to the anniversary tie-in for 2023.  It demonstrates the depth and quality of our coverage over the years.

The Grotto feature may provide a useful opportunity for readers to get up to speed on a newly-discovered band, or fill in the gaps for existing fans.  We have been heartened by the response from many of the artists who have promoted via their social media.  In some cases the retrospective features offer a unique resume of their progress over the past 20 years.”

The latest artist in “The Grotto” was announced on Get Ready to ROCK! Radio on Sunday 26 November.

EDITOR NOTE

The equivalent of the “Hall of Fame” the Grotto honours selected artists who have been covered consistently at rock website Get Ready to ROCK! over a period of 20 years. The promotion is part of the website’s 20th anniversary celebrations and will feature a different artist or band each month in 2023.

The GRTR!@20 promotion celebrates 20 years of the popular rock website Get Ready to ROCK! The website’s archive of reviews and interviews will be highlighted as well as new features celebrating 20 years of activity.

So far this year “The Grotto” has welcomed The Darkness (January), Chantel McGregor (February) , Eleanor McEvoy (March), Joe Bonamassa (April), Walter Trout (May), FM (June 2023), Marillion (July 2023),  Cats In Space (August 2023), Steve Hackett (September 2023), Thunder (October 2023) and Saxon (November 2023).

Feature


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 11 May 2026

BREITLER Sentinel (El Puerto Records)
FIRE IN HER EYES Too Late To Change (indie)
KING FALCON Wait (indie)
BEAUTIFUL SKELETONS Come What May (indie)
KARIN PARK Shadow (Size Records)
HARSH Don’t Mess With Me (indie)

Featured Albums w/c 11 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 : LILLIAN AXE – The Box Volume One Resurrection

Cherry Red / HNE [Release Date : 24.11.23]

Lillian Axe is the thinking man’s heavy metal band.

Even if you hadn’t heard the music, mainman Steve Blaze (writer/guitarist/producer) writes a cracking set of liner notes.

Here is just a glimpse: “I believe there is great beauty in the growth and expansion of ideas and creativity by artists who truly create from the depths of their soul. I have always wanted to experience and share new ideas and realizations.”

Blaze realised early on that he did not want him or his band to take on the identity of a Motley Crue or a Ratt. And so he abandoned their initial foray into the Sunset Strip sound. Which explains why the band’s first two albums do not appear here. We join the Lillian Axe story on album no.3, Poetic Justice, the first title in the Box, Volume 1 – Resurrection.

This is an ambitious, carefully curated, seven CD package of the band’s studio and live albums released 1992 – 2009. And that’s not the whole story. Each CD has anywhere from 2 to half a dozen rare bonus tracks, primarily demos, many previously unreleased.

CD1: Poetic Justice (1992)
CD2: Psychoschizophrenia (1993)
CD3: Live 2002, pt 1
CD4: Live 2002, pt 2
CD5: Waters Rising (2007)
CD6: Sad Day On Planet Earth (2009)
CD7: Random Acts Of Blindness (Steve Blaze “solo” album, 2004)

Plucking songs almost at random from the boxset gives us a satisfying taste of the metal band they transitioned to. ‘Living In The Grey’ from Poetic Justice, and ‘Nocturnal Symphony’ from Sad Day On Planet Earth typically ramp up the dramatic lyrical and musical intensity, before breaking out into more familiar metal territory.

Then there’s ‘Fields Of Yesterday’ from Waters Rising, and ‘Bridge Of Azealeas’ from Random Acts of Blindness. Each is a 6 minute plus, multipart metal epic. In each case, Blaze uses the music as an emotional power, disturbing, lyrically provocative, technical, dark in places and light in others. He makes it all work.

Notably, among the bonus material, the acoustic versions of ‘Ghost Of Winter’ and ‘Promised Land’ are powerful tracks, revealing a deeper unease, only just hinted at on the electrified versions. Only two of many bona fide bonus tracks.

It’s also interesting and informative to hear stage versions on the live discs of songs from the pre Poetic Justice albums. Night and day, really.

For metal fans, Resurrection is a genuine “must have” anthology. ****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 11 May 2026

BREITLER Sentinel (El Puerto Records)
FIRE IN HER EYES Too Late To Change (indie)
KING FALCON Wait (indie)
BEAUTIFUL SKELETONS Come What May (indie)
KARIN PARK Shadow (Size Records)
HARSH Don’t Mess With Me (indie)

Featured Albums w/c 11 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: KLARK KENT

Klark Kent

Kryptone Records/BMG [Release date 17.11.23]

Best known as the drummer for the rock/reggae/punk band The Police, Stewart Copeland has had a long and successful career. Aside from Curved Air and The Police, he has released several solo albums and composed a number of film soundtracks.

Kark Kent was a pseudonym Copeland used for some of his solo work, including is debut release, the 1980 EP, Klark Kent: Music From The Kinetic Madness (originally released as a 10” on green vinyl, reissued as a 12”). So it’s release was in the shadow of Zenyatta Mondatta, the very successful third album The Police.

The opening track, Don’t Care, Copeland had originally written for The Police, but Sting turned it down so Stewart issued it as a single in 1978.

The Klark Kent studio material (the EP and various other single tracks and previously unreleased songs) has been previously issued as Kollected Works, which has long been out of print.

These tracks are nicely presented on a solid feeling double LP, in a gatefold sleeve, as well as the first disc of the 2CD set.

With Copeland handing all vocals and instruments, opening track It’s Gonna Rain is quite upfront and in-your-face, post-punk and pre-indie, a quite angular and almost deliberately disjointed sound. The drumming showcases Stewart’s unique drumming style. Then Don’t Care, which kicks off the original 10” EP, this an uptempo new wave pop track that hints of Hawkwind’s Quark Strangeness & Charm. Away From Home has an upbeat and jolly reggae offbeat reggae touch, very much a party mood kinda touch.

The instrumental tracks show the depth in the music, as the vocals (not to everyone’s taste) have an off the wall humour, and at times sarcasm and arrogance, both lyrically and in presentation. Throughout there is a hit of The Police (including the reggae influences) but the pop, new wave and solo oddity tangents pull the music forward.

The set also includes the Ho Ho Ho, originally released on an IRS compilation (the label IRS founded by Copeland’s brother).

This is a solid collection of music that is not just an offshoot of The Police, one of Britain’s most iconic new wave pop bands, but there are of plenty of moments of interest to the off tangential music fan. The 2LP and looks and feels fantastic, while CD features a second disc of demo recordings, which are always great in showing sound and song development.

Some good touches for the fan and collector.

Review by Joe Geesin


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 11 May 2026

BREITLER Sentinel (El Puerto Records)
FIRE IN HER EYES Too Late To Change (indie)
KING FALCON Wait (indie)
BEAUTIFUL SKELETONS Come What May (indie)
KARIN PARK Shadow (Size Records)
HARSH Don’t Mess With Me (indie)

Featured Albums w/c 11 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)


Gig review: DEAD WRITERS – The Camden Assembly, Tuesday 21 November 2023

Dead Writers

Warming up a cold November night in the twilight zone between the edge of Camden and Chalk Farm, Dead Writers are lighting up the stage on the first night of a short tour opening for South Carolina guitar-slinging sensation Hannah Wicklund. Given the headliners Summery Blues stylings, it seems to be an odd mix on paper but the London quintet’s Goth Glam is shot through with bright colours and shards of light, all souped up into something that sparkles like a diamond on a dirty barroom floor.

After an extended intro tape, the Bowie-ish Glam of ‘Meet The Shadow’ kicks off the set, frontman Paul Shine’s stylishly bohemian wastrel look complimenting his keening and distinct vocals. The whole band exude cool and ‘Lisa’ typifies the rollocking Music Hall ethos the outfit have, its mix of high end rock and sensuality as intoxicating as a bottle of Absinthe.

With Shine on the piano and the dual guitars of Filippo Faustini and Alex Anthony bringing a cut and thrust dynamism, the song rolls along and its hook filled chorus is cause for instant singalongs as Nik Shiva and the enigmatically named Näo drive its grand, shuddering rhythms.

In a brave move, the band unleash new track ‘Perfect Portrait’ live for the first time, its bleeding heart and ragged cry into the darkness setting it out as a key to the outfits growing reputation as songwriters of stadium filling bedsit songs.

Following this big statement, the shimmering Goth of ‘December’ is an evocative and subtly dark switch that hits an atmospheric height with its classic 1970’s rock ‘n’ roll guitar solo. Another key to the attraction Dead Writers hold is this chameleon-like ability to seamlessly switch from one mood to another and its something that may seem showy when brought by less sure hands than these but fits perfectly here.

A surprise in the set, their take on The Waterboys visceral ‘Be My Enemy’ is played like Motorhead are covering it, the full-pelt rush and Shine’s feral vocals untamed as the singer gyrates and throws shapes like Mick Jagger at his most rampant.

Throwing himself into the audience for ‘She’s All The Animals’ retro rock, the mic is passed from audience member to audience member, each getting the chance to bellow or sweetly sing along to the irresistible chorus.

The whole is done in celebratory style and the evening an undoubted triumph for the band, the potentially partisan audience won over and a raft of new fans added to their growing numbers. Hot, sweaty rock music played with more than a little style that stayed the right side of flamboyant, the Dead Writers are masters of their craft and are certainly heading in absolutely the right direction.

Review by Paul Monkhouse

Photo: www.deadwritersband.com


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 11 May 2026

BREITLER Sentinel (El Puerto Records)
FIRE IN HER EYES Too Late To Change (indie)
KING FALCON Wait (indie)
BEAUTIFUL SKELETONS Come What May (indie)
KARIN PARK Shadow (Size Records)
HARSH Don’t Mess With Me (indie)

Featured Albums w/c 11 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)


Gig review: THE ANSWER – Islington Assembly Hall, London, 16 November 2023

THE ANSWER- Islington Assembly Hall, London, 16 November 2023

It’s been quite a year for The Answer after breaking their five year hiatus to regroup and record a new album ‘Sundowners’. At a 100 Club gig in the Spring that largely showcased the new album I was initially unimpressed, but they went down a storm in their return to the summer festival circuit. Their performances at Firevolt and Stonedead persuaded me I still wanted more, so faced with one of those annoying gig clashes, them or Brave Rival, I went for seeing the Northern Irishmen for a fourth time this year.

One of the other incentives was that the support were another band I’ve got into this year in Kira Mac. However during opener ‘Save Your Whiskey’ my attention was rather distracted by noticing that since seeing them at Stonedead, one of their guitarists Alex Novakovic was now absent leaving Joe Worrall to handle all duties by himself. With a bass intro from Bret Barnes, ‘Dead Man Walking’ had a serious bottom end worthy of Black Stone Cherry.

THE ANSWER- Islington Assembly Hall, London, 16 November 2023

Eponymous singer Kira, as well as being a striking visual presence, is an accomplished communicator, even if she did slightly her Northerner schtick, and had no trouble during ‘Chaos is Calling’ in getting a crowd chant  of ‘hey-hey’ going after the ‘take it to the level below’ line. There were some excellent but concise solos from Joe on the likes of ‘Play the Game’ and ‘Mississippi Swingin’ while I was glad that a gig companion who had not heard them before shared my view that ‘Scorned’ is Shania Twain gone rock!

The great thing about the band is how quickly their hooks and choruses cut to the chase and a couple of songs from the forthcoming album in ‘Farewell’ and ‘Climbing’ had a heaviness to them yet never lost that commercial edge. An all too short 40 minute set ended with ‘One Way Ticket’, and though they could certainly work on the variety of a rather samey set of numbers, they won a number of new friends, setting them up nicely for a second album and tour in 2024.

 THE ANSWER- Islington Assembly Hall, London, 16 November 2023

Disappointingly the crowd at the Assembly Hall was sparse, maybe inevitably with the sheer volume of tours at this time of year, but had filled to around half full when The Answer came on stage.

They opened with one of the new songs in ‘Blood Brother’ with an almost tribal beat from drummer James Heatley and hints of the Black Keys, before  ‘Nowhere Freeway’, among their best songs but the melodies slightly dulled by the admittedly excellent work of bassist Mickey Waters being too high in the mix.

THE ANSWER- Islington Assembly Hall, London, 16 November 2023

Cormac Neeson, looking dapper in a cream jacket and long mane held in place by a trilby, as usual mixed his booming singing voice with gentle bonhomie between songs, However this was a night for surprises. Not only was ‘New Horizon’ in the set for the first time in a long while, but for the first time ever the band had added a keyboard player in Cara Bruns- who also received the accolade of a round of happy birthday! The usual forceful ‘Under the Sky’ seemed even better with the added organ flourishes which as a member of a Deep Purple tribute act Diva Purple she was well qualified to provide.

She combined well with guitarist Paul Mahon and despite literally lurking in the shadows for much of the set the guitarist produced some great slide work on a resonator guitar during ‘Sundowners’. It was the perfect illustration of the type of song I was initially not too keen on  but have warmed to the way they have experimented with fresh sounds and textures. ‘Keep Believing’ seems to have had a new lease of life while ‘Want You To Love Me’ extended into a jam.

THE ANSWER- Islington Assembly Hall, London, 16 November 2023

A full length set, at a generous hour and 35 minutes, allowed the band to change the mood with some more reflective and atmospheric songs in ‘Comfort Zone’ and even the title track of the controversial Gaelic influenced album ‘Solas’ with some great wah-wah infused guitar from Paul. ‘Spectacular’ restored the tempo, then in yet another surprise they premiered  a brand new song ‘Wild Heart’: even at first listen it was one of their most commercial songs in a while with an almost danceable feel.

Going from last to first, ‘Brother Paul’, as Cormac called him, whipped up a storm of heavy riffs on ‘Come Follow Me’ which saw many of us punching the air. At this point one of my gig buddies and I agreed that they bottled a rare magic on their debut album ‘Rise’ which maybe we didn’t fully appreciate at the time. I wonder whether in hindsight it was a millstone they could never quite match in their subsequent career.

 THE ANSWER- Islington Assembly Hall, London, 16 November 2023

While the new album was not as prominently featured as at that ‘100 Club’ show, they still played one of the best tracks in ‘Livin’ On The Line’ though it still has me thinking of the Black Crowes’ ‘Sting Me’. Then another ‘Rise’ classic in ‘Preachin’’ saw Cormac’s party piece, diving into the crowd, getting us to crouch on our ageing middle aged knees and rise up with him.

A couple of encores presented a nice contrast – ‘Always Alright’ had a mellow feel to it before growing into life then another unexpected blast from the past was the hard hitting ‘Demon Eyes’, again those earlier blues rockers sounding all the better for the unexpected addition of keyboards.

THE ANSWER- Islington Assembly Hall, London, 16 November 2023

The Answer have always been solid concert performers so I knew this would be a good night out, but it proved to be one where the surprises made it one of my favourite Answer gigs.

Review and Photos 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 11 May 2026

BREITLER Sentinel (El Puerto Records)
FIRE IN HER EYES Too Late To Change (indie)
KING FALCON Wait (indie)
BEAUTIFUL SKELETONS Come What May (indie)
KARIN PARK Shadow (Size Records)
HARSH Don’t Mess With Me (indie)

Featured Albums w/c 11 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: BERNIE MARSDEN – Working Man

Bernie Marsden - Working Man

Self release [Release date: 24.11.23]

Bernie Marsden’s ‘Working Man’ is a song driven blue collar rock and roots album.

There are plenty of guitar flourishes, counterweighted by a Nashville friendly Americana songwriting sensibility which makes it a worthy, but unexpected swan song.

He apparently started writing the album during lock down which is probably explains its reflective nature, though he still revels in what he does best, writing strong narratives with good hooks brought to life by his sparkling guitar playing.

The 12 tracks provide the perfect update of where Bernie was at, while the 10 bonus tracks include several gently rearranged Whitesnake favourites.

It’s 9 years since his last and best solo album ‘Shine,’ during which time he’s cut a trio of well received blues albums for Conquest.

There’s the same sort of feel and quality here, but with a much broader musical sweep.

He opens in muscular style on the ironically titled ‘Being Famous’. The densely layered sound, vibrant bv’s and a Transatlantic vocals could have come from any of Bonamassa’s recent albums, which says more about JB than Bernie, who patented this stuff decades ago.

It’s said that Nashville is the last refuge for song writing guitar players, and Bernie certainly makes a decent pitch for the roots market on the mid-tempo ‘Midtown’, as we find him moving: “into the heartland searching for dream, dust on a highway, riding with the wind, nothing last for forever, time takes care my friend.”

Then there’s the contemplative ‘Longtime’, filled with jangling guitars, rich David Crosby style harmonies and a narrative which apparently shifts its focus to London, on a classic opening line:  “Just saw a friend of mine, on a broken down train on the Northern line.”

He also seems to get autobiographical on the ‘Son I’ve Never Known’:

“40 years I picked up a microphone, lost count of whiskey and beer, four devils and more, I got the same guitar, but now the colours changed, put my 20 dollars down for a life on the stage.”

There’s an array of several timeless signifiers including a “honky-tonk highway’, “a long lonesome road”, “Cadillac’s & pure rock & roll”, “too many beers in the backroom and Elvis Presley on the record machine” etc, which add to the wistful feel.

And whilst the above song hints at Nashville as a musical destination, he veers directly into country on ‘Savannah’, a small town song with big backing vocals.

But there’s plenty of variety here, from the sultry groove of the title track (which all but serves as the core concept of the album), to the very commercial ‘Invisible’ which is an object lesson in songcraft.

It’s co-written by Jaime Kyle who handles the lead vocals on a riff-driven piece with a very catchy hook which is surely destined for the self affirmatory Taylor Swift market.

“Look at me now this little girl’s unshakeable, open your eyes I’m no longer invisible.”

He slips into mid-tempo rock on ‘Valentine’s Day’ and nearly matches ‘Invisible’ with ‘You Know’, an acoustic into electric love song with a lovely tremulous guitar and heartfelt lyrics: “and now we’re grown older, I want this to go on and on.”

He reverts to being an old school rocker on ‘Bad Reputation’, a stripped down gnarled funky arrangement on which the vocal and guitar is pushed up in the mix and offset by a big ‘call & response’ on the hook.

And just to balance things out there are two instrumentals. The short ‘Steelhouse Mountain’ opens with a synth line and acoustic harmonics, as part of a lush sound bathed in a slight echo. The guitar playing reminds me of early career Roy Harper track.

The album finished on the melodically strong ‘The Pearl’ which radiates optimism and light. Bernie conveys real feel as he locks in with some snappy percussion and a languid organ line to evoke the glow of the title.

The 10 bonus tracks will delight long-time Marsden fans, especially the reworked signature guitar and keyboard riff ofWhose Fooling Who’, complete with booming bv’s.

There’s also an acoustic into electric ballad version of ‘Here I Go Again’ and a surprisingly cool cover of ‘Ain’t No Love In The Heart Of The City’.

Best of all, is the very poignant ‘Til The Day I Die’, with its ethereal intro and Tom Leary’s Celtic sounding violin-led swirl which perfectly complements the poetic lyrics.

And almost as if to reaffirm the strong song writing focus, Bernie surprises us with the cool funk groove of ‘Midnight Believer’, which could be a mid-career Dave Mason song.

For good measure he adds two beautifully conceived love songs, of which the acoustic ‘Just Don’t Have The Time’ finds him at his emotive best:

“’Cos I know exactly who I am, and I know that you do not give a damn”, but I just don’t have the time to help you change your mind.” 

And then there’s the uplifting ‘Time is Right for Love’; full of double violin and guitar lines and real percussive snap.

In sum, these 22 vibrant tracks are a potent reminder of the craft of Bernie Marsden, a great heritage rocker who in the evidence of this album always looked to push on. It makes you wish he’d spent more time on his own material. ****

Review by Pete Feenstra

The Best of 2023


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 11 May 2026

BREITLER Sentinel (El Puerto Records)
FIRE IN HER EYES Too Late To Change (indie)
KING FALCON Wait (indie)
BEAUTIFUL SKELETONS Come What May (indie)
KARIN PARK Shadow (Size Records)
HARSH Don’t Mess With Me (indie)

Featured Albums w/c 11 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)


Gig review: SUZI QUATRO – London Palladium, 15 November 2023

SUZI QUATRO-London Palladium, 15 November 2023

Celebrating a remarkable 50 years as a trailblazing woman in rock since ‘Can the Can’ became her first hit single and reached  No 1, Suzi Quatro followed up last year’s superb one off Royal Albert Hall gig with a longer UK tour including this near sell out at one of London’s equally prestigious venues.

After a brief intro film, the Suzi from those days stared out from an orange backdrop as the current version, an object lesson in how to age well but gracefully, came on stage in sequinned double denim. She opened with ‘The Wild One’, with a pregnant pause after the ‘I wanted to be somebody and here I am’ lyric.  Actually, while the Palladium has only recently put on rock acts again, she did have previous here, telling us that on her last appearance she was ambushed by Michael Aspel and his ‘This Is Your Life’ red book.

 SUZI QUATRO-London Palladium, 15 November 2023

It was the start of an opening quartet of her seventies hits, with ‘I May Be Too Young’, ‘Daytona Demon’- a particular favourite- and ‘Tear Me Apart’, delivered by a band augmented by a three man brass section and a pair of girl backing singers. However this was far, far more than one of those easy nostalgia sets. She introduced a series of songs from recent years, with the relevant artwork helpfully beamed onto the screen behind. The first was from this year’s ‘Face to Face’ collaboration with KT Tunstall and indeed ‘Shine A Light’ was a masterclass in simply written pop rock.

Suzi then mentioned she would bring on a couple of guests to help out with ‘Stumblin’ In’. While founder Pistol Glen Matlock, sporting a fine silver head of hair, took over bass duties,  I secretly hoped her vocal duet partner might be Chris Norman, a name on my bucket list, but was in a minority as Boy George was rapturously received and to be fair did a sterling job. However, frustratingly, even a classic glam hit in ‘48 Crash’ failed to tempt anyone in an admittedly older audience to their feet.

SUZI QUATRO-London Palladium, 15 November 2023

Moving back to the newer material, there were a couple of songs written by son Richard, a slightly indie rock sounding ‘No Soul/ No Control’ and ‘The Devil In Me’. Then on ‘Slow Down’, the absence of collaborators Don Powell and Andy Scott who had graced the RAH show was compensated for by some lively instrumental work from pianist Jez Davies and sax player Tommy Schneller, who seemed to particularly enjoy his moments in the spotlight. Likewise a cover of ‘Rockin’ in the Free World’ was a rare chance for tidy guitarist (and Bryan Adams lookalike) Tim Scott to rock out and show his paces, amidst some audience participation. The first half ended with a very personal moment as Suzi turned to piano, paying tribute to her late parents before playing ‘Can I Be Your Girl?’

After a half hour break, she returned in trademark leather jumpsuit and the second set also began with newer material, from ‘The Devil in Me’. ‘Motor City Riders’ came complete with a video backdrop of scenes of her native Michigan, from auto plants to Motown while ‘I Sold My Soul Today’ had a dark sixties sounding psychedelic and soul vibe. She introduced it with the quip of the night when describing a man who had wronged her as ‘now singing soprano’. From a recent covers EP she ripped through ‘Bad Moon Rising’ (with the link that CCR popularised the song ‘Suzi Q’) which, though enjoyable, didn’t really add anything to the original.

SUZI QUATRO-London Palladium, 15 November 2023

After she gave a speech with a potted autobiographical history recapping her rich and varied life, ‘She’s In Love With You’ was a personal favourite: as one of the relative youngsters in attendance, too young for glam first time round, this was one of her first songs I remembered, its new wave style keyboards complemented this time by some more brass work.

There had been a few changes from last year’s RAH setlist and another of the KT collaborations ‘Overload’ was one such then the R and B flavoured workout ‘Too Big’ was a vehicle to introduce the band. ‘Glycerine Queen’ was proof that her glam era had more to it than hit singles, and showcased a bass solo, then, showing she is a true renaissance woman, she went round the back of the stage to join in on drums.

 SUZI QUATRO-London Palladium, 15 November 2023

My biggest gripe at this stage had been that despite an energetic display from both her and her band, a muted audience stayed resolutely seated. Fortunately she ushered people belatedly to their feet to dance to her best known hits, the aforementioned ‘Can The Can’ and a ‘Devil Gate Drive’ extended for the audience participation it was built for.

After going straight off and on stage again, I was relieved when she played one of my favourites and the first song of hers I really recall in ‘If You Can’t Give Me Love’, her voice at its huskiest and with a muted but sensitive guitar backing from Tim, before a change of pace in a cover of ‘Sweet Little Rock and Roller’, Suzi leaving the stage as the band played on and chanted ‘go Suzi go’.

SUZI QUATRO-London Palladium, 15 November 2023

Fortunately there was one final sighting of her as she returned on a stool, towel draped boxer-like around her shoulders, for a heartfelt cover of ‘Desperado’. Accompanied only by some keyboards in the latter stages by Jez, it also showed off what a versatile voice she has as raunch gave way to delicacy. There was even an unusual coda as she left the stage to a video backdrop of another ballad in the Elvis tribute ‘Singing With Angels’.

Her remarkable life was so brilliantly captured on that Suzi Q documentary. This evening could be seen as a companion live music piece, showcasing not just those much loved seventies hits but a half-century and counting of a musical career of surprising depth.

SUZI QUATRO-London Palladium, 15 November 2023

 Review and Photos 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 11 May 2026

BREITLER Sentinel (El Puerto Records)
FIRE IN HER EYES Too Late To Change (indie)
KING FALCON Wait (indie)
BEAUTIFUL SKELETONS Come What May (indie)
KARIN PARK Shadow (Size Records)
HARSH Don’t Mess With Me (indie)

Featured Albums w/c 11 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: MICK RALPHS – On The Run 1984-2013 (4 CD Clamshell)

Cherry Red [Release date : 24.11.23]

Few musicians can claim to have been part of one world straddling rock band, never mind two.

Mick Ralphs, guitarist and songwriter, recorded seven albums with Mott The Hoople, and six with Bad Company.

Lifted from Bad Company’s self titled debut album, his song, ‘Can’t Get Enough’ was the one that broke the US single charts for the band. The album went to sell over 5 million copies.

Few pedigrees can compare. You would have thought this Seventies Hard Rock template would have been the model for his subsequent solo career.

But no, the four solo albums that comprise this boxset, spanning the years from 1984 to 2013, see Ralphs clearly looking to plough his own distinct furrow.

CD1 : Take This (1984)
CD2 : It’s All Good (2001)
CD3 : That’s Life : Can’t Get Enough (2003)
CD4 : Should Know Better : Live At The Musician (2013)

There’s a sense of musical freedom to Take This. No longer did Ralphs have to maintain the hard nosed Arena Rock for which Bad Company became famous.

But too often it seems like a pale imitation of his successful past. He doesn’t have the vocal chops nor the production nous to give strong songs the bluesy rock sheen that tips the balance (‘On The Run’ is a notable exception).

In its favour, this CD includes ten bonus tracks (and these are genuine bonuses.. previously unreleased gems that make the album feel like more of a double).

Seventeen years later, Ralph released an all instrumental album, he certainly knew how to toy with fame and success.

It’s All Good confounded the critics, who were expecting a continuation of his solo debut. The material is very detailed, very musical, with Ralph’s deploying a much more descriptive musical style. His old bandmates, Simon Kirke and Boz Burrell help him find the groove in among an endless panorama of arching melody. ‘S.E.X.’, ‘Don’t Need Money’ and ‘Large’ are eminently classy tracks.

Once again his past got in the way. The public and press let the album drift on by.

Two years is a long time in the music business. 2003’s That’s Life : Can’t Get Enough revisits the bluesy, harder rocking style that most music fans know him for. Unlike his first two solo albums, this one got considerable music media acclaim: “packed with earthy, blues based tunes”. “in keeping with his blues rock roots”. “inspired guitar playing” and so on.

He reinforced the content by including ‘Budgie’, a previously unreleased Bad Company track, and a demo version of ‘Can’t Get Enough’, the song that started it all.

Almost ten years later, Ralphs formed the Mick Ralph’s Blues Band, primarily designed to perform “funk oriented” blues rock to live audiences. They released Should Know Better : Live At The Musician in 2013. His son, Maxwell proved to be a talented vocalist. He needed to be to find his way around classic blues’ songs like Booker T Jones’ ‘Born Under A Bad Sign’ and Jimmy Reed’s ‘Shame Shame Shame’, as well as father’s self penned material.

It’s a fine album, it sounds like Ralphs senior found his third home at last. ***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 11 May 2026

BREITLER Sentinel (El Puerto Records)
FIRE IN HER EYES Too Late To Change (indie)
KING FALCON Wait (indie)
BEAUTIFUL SKELETONS Come What May (indie)
KARIN PARK Shadow (Size Records)
HARSH Don’t Mess With Me (indie)

Featured Albums w/c 11 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: WILL PIKE – Under A Delphic Moon



Pete Feenstra chatted to Will Pike about his music.  First broadcast on Get Ready to ROCK! Radio, 26 November 2023

Will Pike - Under A Delphic Moon

Self release [Release date : 05.11.23]

Will Pike is a rock guitarist, ambient synth player and solo artists, who also works with the anthemic rockers Spin Out UK and an ambient project called Thudweil.

Both musical elements are to be found in this magisterial instrumental solo album called ‘Under A Delphic Moon’, which places the emotive power of music at the centre of his work.

While the album title points us in the direction of the mysterious and possibly mystical, musically he is quite the opposite, building his layered sound on precisely constructed textures and cohesive elements.

There’s never a wasted note and tone colour is sacred. Each musical element finds its space in an ethereal musical journey that spans space-rock, ambient-rock, prog, funk, fusion, psychedelia and electronica.

The fact that at times its hard to separate a guitar tone from a synth drone might probably be regarded as a triumph for someone like Will, who realises his own musical vision by writing, playing and producing his own music.

From the phased opening chunky guitar figure, rumbling bass, eerie backdrop and intense solo of ‘Skull Faced Monk’, we’re dropped into an album on which the guitar and synthesisers beautifully coalesce to create a filmic landscape.

The eclectic song titles say much about his cerebral music. He taps into the subconscious through a mesmerising combination soundscapes, drones and fleet fingered guitar playing, all subtly framed by an aching production.

In many ways this is the kind of album that the innovative ECM record label should have picked up. Pike gives full substance to his unfettered imagination, innovation and the occasional subtle catalytic influences such as Pat Metheny, Steve Hillage and Robert Fripp.

And Fripp is very much an influence on the repeated robotic riff of ‘Android Dream’, a perfect example of music evoking the song title.

It’s a mix of feverish percussion and fusion, with ever presence eerie drones, chiming chords and swirling synths, in just over 5 minutes of sonic delight.

‘Cloudburst’ lightens the intensity with an understated funky opening, significant drones and a trumpet bathed in echo and reverb.

Apart from his musical ability Will Pike is also sculptor, which might explain his meticulous use of a layered sound with programmed drums and plug-ins.

His real art lies in the way he can draw us in (no pun intended) to an audio landscape which connects both viscerally and emotionally.

One moment he’s dabbling in big portentous sounds, and then by contrast he might  explore a tremulous solo that evokes vulnerability.

The aptly titled ‘Transcend’ is an example of the latter. It’s a celestial piece with a warm guitar tone, nuanced notes and an embedded synth, albeit it’s punctuated by occasional crashing cymbals.

It fills the room with an intricate tapestry of sound, born of interwoven guitars and nuanced electro tones.

‘The Fez’ is a muscular percussive stomp soaked in ethereal tones. It creates a subtle tension between the restless rhythm track and the faux psychedelic squalls on a song that borrows its exotic title from Steely Dan.

A heavy tabla-led percussive intro announces the dark unrelenting ‘Devil’s Maestro’. It subtly builds to embrace a sludgy Zeppelin style drone, topped by a cluster of ethereal Pat Metheny style jangling tones.

Pike’s craft lies in the free flowing emotion of his playing. He locks into a groove and fully explores its possibilities by weaving his way through the track as if wandering through the darkest night with a torch.

This is music that transcends genres. It flows like a river, cascading through the undergrowth until its finds a new course.

It also has a whiff of music of the spheres, in which everything is proportion. Listen for example, to ‘Hope Horizon’, on which the crunching drum sound, pulsating bass and dirt sounding Hammond is counterweighted by his boldest guitar tone so far, with which he generates the hope to be found in the song title.

Having established the groove he fires off repeated riffs bathed in subtle echo, before a tough and yet eloquent solo which ultimately gives way to a Hammond outro.

As an uplifting penultimate track, it reaffirms the sense of proportion and balance that gives the album its impact.

‘Party For One’ delivers an almost spiritual finish to an exhilarating one man musical journey, which opens with real intensity and works towards a more meditative ending.

A beautifully Hawaiian toned solo hovers over the track like a bird surfing in the vortex of a slipstream. It’s primal, exhilarating and stirs the soul.

The perfunctory ending is the only time he metaphorically takes his paint brush off the canvas, safe in the knowledge that his work is done.  ****

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 11 May 2026

BREITLER Sentinel (El Puerto Records)
FIRE IN HER EYES Too Late To Change (indie)
KING FALCON Wait (indie)
BEAUTIFUL SKELETONS Come What May (indie)
KARIN PARK Shadow (Size Records)
HARSH Don’t Mess With Me (indie)

Featured Albums w/c 11 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: BRICK BRISCOE – Found Footage

the beat

Facebook [Release date 20.04.26] Brick Briscoe, what a great discovery. Hands up who’s heard of him. One or two at the back yeah. So I’d never heard of him either, but I’m damned glad I’ve been hipped to him now. … Continue reading

Book review: On track…THE BEAT, DEPECHE MODE

the beat

On Track…The Beat, General Public & Fine Young Cannibals by Steve Parry Sonicbond Publishing [Publication date 30.06.23] A fascinating read into how the Beat led to the creation of General Public (who many may ask and they once supported Queen!) … Continue reading

Book review: On track … BOB DYLAN, HAWKWIND, YES, LOU REED, THE JAM (Sonicbond Publishing)

On track...Bob Dylan 1962-1970

“For the fan a chance to revisit songs and albums and for newcomers a roadmap to hopefully enhance their listening habits. Of course in an age of renewed vinyl interest these books may be the perfect complement.” We catch up … Continue reading

Album review : FIFTH NOTE – Here We Are

kohima Fifth note 150

Frontiers [Release date : 08.12.2023] Frontiers world wide scouting system unearthed Fifth Note in Kohima, a town in the north of India. Originally a Christian Rock band (although India is a predominantly a Hinduism/Islamism country, almost 30 million Christians live … Continue reading

Gig review: ULI JON ROTH- The Garage, London, 28 November 2023

ULI JON ROTH- The Garage, London, 28 November 2023

A regular on the gig circuit before the pandemic, this was Uli Jon Roth’s first UK tour since, and a particularly welcome return to the stage as he has recovered from major surgery earlier this year. Coming on relatively late … Continue reading

Album review : CASSIDY PARIS – New Sensation

cassidy paris new image 150

Frontiers [Release Date : 08.12.23] Check out Cassidy Paris’s album promo, ‘Walking On Fire’ on You Tube. it’s surrounded by like minded videos: from Europe, Gotthard, White Lion and The Warning, among others. You can judge a rock artist by … Continue reading

Gig review: MICHAEL SCHENKER GROUP – Shepherd’s Bush Empire, London, 30 November 2023

Gig review: MICHAEL SCHENKER GROUP – Shepherd’s Bush Empire, 30 November 2023

After various ‘Fest’ and ‘Temple of Rock’ incarnations, Schenker revived the original MSG monicker for a couple of recent albums and has been on a 50th anniversary tour for over two years now. It is something of a divine resurrection. … Continue reading

Album review: RICHARD ROZZE – Lion

Richard Rozze - Lion

Pete Feenstra chatted to Richard Rozze for his show on Get Ready to ROCK! Radio, playing tracks from ‘Lion’.   First broadcast 10 December 2023. Waterbound [Release date 29.09.23] Richard Rozze’s ‘Lion’ album finds the Kent based story teller counter balancing … Continue reading

Gig review: THE NEW ROSES- Downstairs at the Dome, London, 26 November 2023

THE NEW ROSES- Downstairs at the Dome, London, 26 November 2023

Despite rave reviews, German rockers The New Roses have yet to achieve the success they deserve in the UK. We can speculate about the reason for this- one being that though they defy pigeonholing, their sound is totally un-German! Hopefully … Continue reading

Album Review: THEA GILMORE – Thea Gilmore

THEA GILMORE

Mighty Village Records  [Release date: 17.11.23] Twenty one albums into a career that has set the bar so high in the singer/songwriter genre, Thea Gilmore has, at last, had the self-confidence and artistic freedom to release an eponymously titled set … Continue reading

Album review: STEELEYE SPAN – The Green Man Collection

steeleye span the green man

Park Records [Release date 01.12.23] Steeleye Span went into the studio in September of this year to record four new tracks for inclusion on this collection, which also includes two newly recorded studio tracks from 2019, six songs selected from … Continue reading

Album review: MAGNUM – Here Comes The Rain

MAGNUM - Here Comes The Rain

David Randall chatted to Bob Catley and Lee Morris playing tracks from the new album. First broadcast on Get Ready to ROCK! Radio, 24 December 2023. SPV/Steamhammer [Release date 12.01.24] Magnum celebrated their 50th anniversary in 2022 when they finally … Continue reading

Feature: The GRTR! Grotto of Greatness – MAGNUM (December 2023)

The GRTR! Grotto of Greatness

Photo: Darren Griffiths They nearly folded in 1983, played the arenas in the late 1980s, and nose-dived in 1995. But – fifty years on – Magnum remain magnificent Magnum have figured prominently in our coverage at GRTR! since 2003. This … Continue reading

Album review : LAIBACH – Nova Akropola (3 CD set)

Laibach-Nova-Akropola 150

Cherry Red [Release date : 01.12.23] It was only when Slovenia gained independence from Yugoslavia in 1991, that avant garde, politically aware metal band, Laibach gained wider acceptance in the country of their birth. Culturally, Yugoslavia was already the most … Continue reading

News: SPINAL TAP, PROG FOR PEART, MARTYN JOSEPH (December 2023)

GRTR!@20

Big Big Train will release their 15th studio album ‘The Likes Of Us’ on March 1 via InsideOut Music. Founding Crimson Glory members Ben Jackson (guitar), Jeff Lords (bass) and Dana Burnell (drums) are being joined by new vocalist Travis Wills and guitarist Mark “Borgy” Borgmeyer. Two new singles, ‘Triskaideka’ and ‘Indelible Ashes’, … Continue reading

Album review: WIZZARD – The Singles

Wizzard-The singles 150

Cherry Red [Release Date : 1.12.23] Roy Wood’s Wizzard, a singular seventies’ UK pop phenomenon, burned brightly for 5 hugely entertaining years. A band immortalised (whether they liked it or not) by perennial seasonal hit, ‘I Wish It Could Be … Continue reading

Album review : WARREN HAYNES PRESENTS – The Benefit Concert, Vol 20

Warren Haynes Presents - The Benefit Concert, Vol.20

Provogue [Release date 08.12.23] ‘Warren Haynes Present: The Benefit Concert Volume, 20′ comprises 31 live track of cross genre jams that are infused with a ‘can do spirit’ in keeping with jam band fraternity. A penchant for jamming has long … Continue reading

News: Melodic pomp rockers MAGNUM enter The GRTR! Grotto of Greatness (December 2023)

The GRTR! Grotto of Greatness

Melodic pomp rockers Magnum are the latest inductees in “The GRTR! Grotto of Greatness” a year long promotion to celebrate 20 years of the popular rock website Get Ready to ROCK! The Midlands-based band have figured prominently in the website’s … Continue reading

Album review : LILLIAN AXE – The Box Volume One Resurrection

LillianAxe_Resurrection 150

Cherry Red / HNE [Release Date : 24.11.23] Lillian Axe is the thinking man’s heavy metal band. Even if you hadn’t heard the music, mainman Steve Blaze (writer/guitarist/producer) writes a cracking set of liner notes. Here is just a glimpse: … Continue reading

Album review: KLARK KENT

Klark Kent

Kryptone Records/BMG [Release date 17.11.23] Best known as the drummer for the rock/reggae/punk band The Police, Stewart Copeland has had a long and successful career. Aside from Curved Air and The Police, he has released several solo albums and composed … Continue reading

Gig review: DEAD WRITERS – The Camden Assembly, Tuesday 21 November 2023

Dead Writers

Warming up a cold November night in the twilight zone between the edge of Camden and Chalk Farm, Dead Writers are lighting up the stage on the first night of a short tour opening for South Carolina guitar-slinging sensation Hannah … Continue reading

Gig review: THE ANSWER – Islington Assembly Hall, London, 16 November 2023

THE ANSWER- Islington Assembly Hall, London, 16 November 2023

It’s been quite a year for The Answer after breaking their five year hiatus to regroup and record a new album ‘Sundowners’. At a 100 Club gig in the Spring that largely showcased the new album I was initially unimpressed, … Continue reading

Album review: BERNIE MARSDEN – Working Man

Bernie Marsden - Working Man

Self release [Release date: 24.11.23] Bernie Marsden’s ‘Working Man’ is a song driven blue collar rock and roots album. There are plenty of guitar flourishes, counterweighted by a Nashville friendly Americana songwriting sensibility which makes it a worthy, but unexpected … Continue reading

Gig review: SUZI QUATRO – London Palladium, 15 November 2023

SUZI QUATRO-London Palladium, 15 November 2023

Celebrating a remarkable 50 years as a trailblazing woman in rock since ‘Can the Can’ became her first hit single and reached  No 1, Suzi Quatro followed up last year’s superb one off Royal Albert Hall gig with a longer … Continue reading

Album review: MICK RALPHS – On The Run 1984-2013 (4 CD Clamshell)

MickRalphs_HNEBOX210

Cherry Red [Release date : 24.11.23] Few musicians can claim to have been part of one world straddling rock band, never mind two. Mick Ralphs, guitarist and songwriter, recorded seven albums with Mott The Hoople, and six with Bad Company. … Continue reading

Album review: WILL PIKE – Under A Delphic Moon

Will Pike - Under A Delphic Moon cover

Pete Feenstra chatted to Will Pike about his music.  First broadcast on Get Ready to ROCK! Radio, 26 November 2023 Self release [Release date : 05.11.23] Will Pike is a rock guitarist, ambient synth player and solo artists, who also … Continue reading