Heep join a select bunch of veteran bands (including close contemporaries Deep Purple) who are sounding as good as ever. Indeed classic heavy rock does not come much better than this. **** 3/4
Despondency never sounded this good – ever, and yet I would defy any metal / progressive rock fan to finish listening to it with anything other than a smile on their face and a knowing nod to the brilliance within.
…this is a damn fine album with great songwriting and playing throughout topped off with Robin’s fantastic vocal. Come the end of the year list, this will be vying for the top spot without a doubt. *****
The change of tempo between bluesy rock and slower ballads makes for a really interesting listen, as the changing pace and musical structures vary so much. The lyrics are accomplished, the musicianship is superb, frankly the album is a masterclass from start to finish – don’t take my word for it , give it a listen! *****
I can hardly be described as a die-hard Nightwish fan. Never in a million years did I expect to become so impressed, mesmerized…no, absolutely captivated. ****1/2
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.
Quick plays: CHRIS DUARTE, THE FLYING SYMBOLS, SANSOME & QUINN
CHRIS DUARTE Ain’t Giving Up Mascot Records [Release date 07.04.23]
Blues-roots guitarist Chris Duarte releases this, his 15th studio album. It also marks the first time in 22 years Duarte has worked with producer-guitarist Dennis Herring (Buddy Guy, Modest Mouse, Elvis Costello). “I am so grateful to be signed to Provogue and to work with Dennis again—it’s been a dream come true,” Duarte enthuses. “I have been so fortunate to play music and do my thing for almost 30 years, and I couldn’t ask for a better life.”
You can’t knock the playing, however, the rather long (to these ears at least!) guitar solos do seem overegged at times. That said, ‘Weak Days’ is a wonderfully slow blues workout and ‘Bye, Bye, Bye’ is a rip snorting bit of rocking blues.
If you liked any of his previous albums you’ll doubtless love this, just can’t see it winning over many casual blues and roots fans. ***
THE FLYING SYMBOLSOn Our OwnFacebook [Release date 15.04.23]
The Flying Symbols are a four piece rock band based in the Hertfordshire/Essex border who formed in 2o21, although the various band members have plenty of experience in other bands. The line-up consists of vocalist Pete Cornell, bassist John Clements, guitarist Joe Boutell and drummer Mat Drewing.
Their debut single ‘Serial Killer’ is a decent hard rocker complete with an amusing video on YouTube. ‘Blue Skies’ is a blues rocker with some serious soloing from Joe Boutell, whilst ‘Stalker’ is a creepy little song and the stand out track. Bizarrely Pixies vocalist Frank Black came to mind on this one!
Touch of southern rock on ‘Veins’, with a punk feel to ‘Magic Roundabout’ (that does include the chidren’s TV programme’s theme tune as the main riff!) and perhaps there lies their issue, the need to hone a sound they are happy with. Both are good tunes though and sure to be live staples.
The production lacks a bit of punch, sounding subdued in places (‘Joker’ being a prime example) and the vocals don’t quite do it for this listener. A solid debut by the Flying Symbols. **1/2
GEORGE SANSOME & MATT QUINN Sheffield ParkBandcamp [Release date 28.04.23]
George Sansome (Granny’s Attic, Queer Folk) and Matt Quinn (Dovetail Trio) have teamed-up for this album of traditional folk tunes from the British Isles. The album was recorded live at the Keystone, Sheffield by Tom Wright (who weaved his sound & production magic on the recent Lizzy Hardingham album).
The album works best when they sing as a duo as can be heard on ‘Tyne Of Harrow’ and ‘I Live Not Where I Love’. For some reason ‘The Fox and the Grey Goose’ doesn’t seem to flow naturally, which is a shame as it is a folk staple. Worth investigating to hear their take on the epic ‘The Death of Andrew’, a traditional song adapted by Martin Carthy.
With just added mandolin and guitar on some tracks it is a stripped back to basics affair.
Traditional folk that will delight folk traditionalists and Sansome & Quinn work well as a vocal duo. Unlikely to trouble the album charts but this fine duo will be a hit on the folk clubs and festival circuit. ***
Reviews by Jason Ritchie
Featured Artist: JOSH TAERK
Since early 2020 Josh has been entertaining us with exclusive monthly live sessions,
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.
The Young’uns are never one to shy away from a major musical undertaking as their last album, ‘The Ballad Of Johnny Longstaff’, proved. How do the Young’uns follow that? With this album ‘Tiny Notes’ which takes its title from messages tied to the railings of a bridge in Sunderland. 22-year-old Paige Hunter had written those tiny notes and left them tied to the railings at Sunderland’s Wearmouth Bridge, a location that has tragically been the scene of many suicides.
However, Paige’s messages have saved lives – as many as thirty people have been pushed back from the brink by these notes. Three of these tiny notes are performed by Karine Polwart, Anne Lamb and Lucy Farrell.
The album is a collection of songs that find hope and humanity in grief and despair. From the London Bridge attack to Lockerbie, from Derry to Aleppo, the Young’uns – Sean Cooney, David Eagle and Michael Hughes – entertain and educate the listener throughout the course of the album.
The Young’uns do a capella so beautifully as ‘Roseberry Moon’ and the jaunty opening tarck, ‘Jack Merritt’s Boots’ ably demonstrate. The latter based on Jack Merritt who died in the London Bridge terror attack in 2019. That is part of the album’s magic, that despite the sad stories many of the songs are based on, the music and lyrics give hope and countless stories of humanity.
Piano and strings (arranged by Jon Boden) add that extra bit of musical magic to the likes of ‘The Surgeon’, based on trauma surgeon David Nott who saved the life of a young ISIS fighter. Fair to say this is a song that brings a tear or two to the eyes.
‘Three Dads Walking’ is based on the charity 3 Dads Walking, who each lost a daughter to suicide. 3 Dads Walking want to continue to highlight the fact that suicide is the biggest killer of young people across the entire UK and are walking between the parliaments of the 4 nations to highlight by raising awareness. They hope they can help prevent other families from being devastated by suicide.
One of the finest folk albums that will be released this year. ****1/2
Review by Jason Ritchie
08/04 LIVERPOOL Philharmonic Hall
09/04 EDINBURGH Summerhall
10/04 SHREWSBURY St Mary’s Church
11/04 NORWICH Arts Centre
12/04 SHOREHAM Ropetackle
13/04 SANDWICH St Mary’s Arts Centre
14/04 LONDON Union Chapel
15/04 ALDEBURGH Jubilee Hall
21/04 SHEFFIELD Firth Hall
20/05 DUBLIN Pavilion Dun Laoghaire
26/05 GATESHEAD The Sage
27/05 CLECKHEATON Town Hall
28/05 BRISTOL The Redgrave Theatre
30/05 OXFORD North Wall
31/05 CARDIFF Acapela
01/06 LINCOLN Drill Hall
02/06 MANCHESTER The Stoller Hall
Featured Artist: JOSH TAERK
Since early 2020 Josh has been entertaining us with exclusive monthly live sessions,
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.
News: Get Ready to ROCK! reviewers name their Best of 2003-2023 – Top Albums and Live Acts
As part of the rock website Get Ready to ROCK! 20th Anniversary year, the review team has named their favourite albums and live acts.
An extensive feature is published on 5 April which reflects the interests and insight of the review team over two decades.
Melodic Rock Editor Andy Nathan has coordinated the listing.
Andy says “As the website covers such a wide range of music, and each contributor naturally gravitates towards their preferred genre, there was never going to be a wide consensus.”
Five albums were named twice, three from veteran classic bands and two from a newer generation. Step forward: Rush, whose final album of their distinguished career, 2012′s ‘Clockwork Angels’, was nominated by Dave Atkinson and Brian McGowan.
Marillion with their most recent effort ‘An Hour Before Its Dark’ (the choice of Dave Atkinson and David Randall) and Journey, whose career-reviving 2008 album ‘Revelation’ got the nod from melodic fans Jason Ritchie and Andy Nathan. Rush and Marillion win the countback as another album also received a nomination.
The album that arguably kick started the classic rock revival in the year of GRTR!’s launch, – ‘Permission To Land’ by The Darkness – won the votes of Jason and Karen Clayton. And finally, to prove GRTR’s reach beyond the big names, Chasing The Monsoon‘s 2019 debut ‘No Ordinary World’ won the votes of David Randall and Pete Whalley for its ambient, world music-influenced prog.
Five other acts received more than one nomination, but the critics differed on which album to pick. So honourable mentions to another great mix from metal to singer-songwriter, old to newer in Thunder, Metallica, Volbeat, Tina Dico and Cats in Space, the latter edging it with three different albums selected.
In terms of Live Acts this was a category where perhaps inevitably the older acts with a legacy catalogue dominated. Two guitarists share the honours with three nominations – evergreen former Genesis mainstay Steve Hackett, and the man who spearheaded a blues rock revival, Joe Bonamassa.
The latter probably edges it if only because our contributors (Pete Feenstra, Alan Jones and Dave Atkinson) were able to identify three specific shows, 13 years apart.
Prog acts were heavily rated again with Camel and Marillion among those to receive two votes, as were AOR giants REO Speedwagon on their rare UK visits and Michael Schenker who has successfully revived a career that was in the doldrums when GRTR! was in its infancy.
Selections from the listing will be played on Sunday 9 April in ‘Assume The Position’ on Get Ready to ROCK! Radio (22:00 GMT)
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.
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.
Feature: GRTR!@20 – Top Albums, Top Live Acts – reviewer choices 2003-2023
Get Ready to ROCK! celebrates its 20th anniversary in 2023. Since 2003 it has been at the forefront of online rock music review and is one of the most visible and enduring rock websites. The review team is one of the most knowledgeable and readable, either online or in print. Significantly, for much of the time the reviewer roster has remained constant.
What makes for a good review? News and Reviews Editor and GRTR! co-founder Jason Ritchie says: “The reviewer needs to know his or her subject and genre but the hallmark of a worthy review is comparative analysis putting the review in context with previous activity and signposting related works that the reader can investigate.
Based on unrivalled knowledge and insight, our reviews are both fair and balanced, occasionally slightly irreverent, but always informative.
And no AI !!”
Managing Edtor David Randall adds: “We have never claimed our review listings are comprehensive, we respond in the main to the albums that we are sent by artists, labels and/or PR companies. However, our genre coverage is wide and eclectic so readers will be frequently introduced to less familiar artists who often escape mainstream media attention. In this respect, also, we have been champions of new music.”
Every year since the start the review team has been canvassed for their end of year “best of” choices. This annual listing has built into an indispensible guide to worthy albums and live acts and has informed our 20 year ‘Best of’ selection.
Like the history of Get Ready to ROCK! itself, choosing favourite albums and live acts from two decades has been quite a journey. The list reflects the impact and impression certain artists and albums have made over an extended period.
With the benefit of hindsight some albums feted at the time of release pale with passing years whilst others can be re-evaluated and given new prominence. Some were never originally reviewed, explaining a few missing links in the listing. The live act selections are usually those artists who left an enduring impression either with a specific gig or sustained over several.
Early live reviews did not always feature exclusive photography, but from around 2007 photos are a regular addition and over the years we thank our pro-shot togs Noel Buckley, Steve Goudie, Simon Dunkerley, Lee Millward and Andrew Lock. Current photographers include Darren Griffiths and Paul Clampin.
Our thanks to Andy Nathan for coordinating the reviewer returns.
For me this band kick started the resurgence in rock music being fun again and appealing to a wide cross section of music lovers. Riffs and anthems galore.
Feature (The GRTR! Grotto of Greatness, January 2023)
Second album by the reformed It Bites fronted by John Mitchell. They moved the band’s sound on with classic songs like ‘Cartoon Graveyard’ and ‘Send No Flowers’.
One of the many musical discoveries in the past twenty years and not one duff song on here.
It happened in 2003: Over 500 original Beatles studio tapes, recorded during the Let It Be sessions are recovered by police in the Netherlands and London. Five people are arrested. The tapes had been used for bootleg releases for years.
A Rhode Island nightclub was engulfed by flames during a gig by Great White. The fire killed 100 people including the band’s guitarist Ty Longley.
The inaugural Download Festival takes place at Donington Park in Leicestershire, England. Iron Maiden and Audioslave headline the main stage.
A portent of the future? The Rolling Stones, AC/DC, Rush, The Guess Who and others headline a benefit concert in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, to prove that the city is safe from SARS.
STEELEYE SPAN Cambridge Folk Festival, 1-4 August 2019
Proved why they are one of the best live folk acts around and Maddy Prior is one of folk’s great singers.
LEGACY PILOTS A Different League
DAVID RANDALL Managing Editor (co-founder)
ALBUMS
Picking out albums over an extended period is difficult, some you thought were superb when first reviewed have not weathered so well, others may achieve new ascendancy. I have picked out albums that for me still resonate and subsequent re-visits will only reinforce early enthusiasm. This means that sadly some very strong recent albums don’t make the cut on the grounds of longevity.
This is a wonderful liaison evoking Hughes’ brief time with Sabbath but an altogether more contemporary vibe. Black Sabbath reformed for a tour shortly after release which scuppered any promotion. Iommi in particular proved there’s life in the old riff yet.
It followed the Audioslave/heavy rock template but grafted on Europe’s (and Joey Tempest’s) way with melody. This sounded less like their late eighties pomp and more like a band on a (new) mission.
Out of Toto and in cahoots with new collaborator CJ Vanston, Luke produced the best solo album of his career. Great songs and guitar-ing with an appealing darkness wrought from recent personal experiences.
Shamelessly overlooked by mainstream media but an album that entralled everyone else who encountered its irresistible charms. Any doubting hacks would end up salivating over the Iron Maiden meets Dream Theater meld of melody, metal and razor-sharp musicianship. A triumph also for Paul Logue (Eden’s Curse) whose more recent projects involve James LaBrie.
A decade or more in the making but certainly worth the toil (and wait!). Whilst freely referencing known progsters in parts (Yes, Floyd etc) still a convincing whole, and beautifully produced.
The best general description is “pop prog/AOR” of the sort purveyed by Alan Parsons Project. In other words, well constructed songs, highly accessible, and great musicianship. A truly wonderful album, one to restore your faith during these covid-constrained times.
I can only assume mainman Juho Myllylä had a very bad relationship breakup. But we can interpret his melancholy for the current modern malaise; reflection, remorse, and ultimately rebirth. All things must change.
Less “political” than its predecessor, although affected by the pandemic, Marillion return with a sumptuous album full of lusciousness and loveliness.
Feature (The GRTR! Grotto of Greatness, July 2023 )
It happened in 2004: The Darkness win a BRIT award.
Following the break up of Creed, guitarist Mark Tremonti, Drummer Scott Phillips and Brian Marshall (ex-bassist of Creed) were working on side project Alter Bridge with Myles Kennedy of The Mayfield Four. ‘One Day Remains’, their debut album, was released in August.
Eric Clapton sells his famous guitar “Blackie” at a Christie’s auction. He raised $959,000 to benefit the Crossroads drug rehabilitation center that he founded in 1998. Also this year he received a CBE.
Ioannis (John) Stefanis our Metal Editor chooses Fates Warning ‘X’ as his album of the year.
Photo: David Randall/GRTR!
LIVE ACTS
Whilst I’ve attended many almost “one-off” gigs and tours that merit a big mention (e.g. Love & Money, Argent, Renaissance, Winger, Zal Cleminson) I have listed those artists who have drawn (and repaid) repeated visits during a 20 year period.
1. CAMEL RNCM, Manchester, 21 October 2013 (and 2014, 2018)
A wonderful comeback, a personal triumph for Andrew Latimer, and the sheer novelty of seeing the band back in action. Latimer in particular had lost nothing in the hiatus, his exquisite guitaring always taking the listener on an emotional journey.
2. FOREIGNER Manchester MEN, 8 June 2011 (and 2014, 2018)
Any doubts about the band’s renaissance and the almost endless recycling of old material were put to rest with a simply fantastic and polished show. Nothing remotely cheesy, a catalogue deftly tweaked for modern ears, a band with momentum and a rather appealing heaviness. And Mick Jones’ appearance, after a two or three track time lag, sealed it.
3. JOE SATRIANI Manchester Apollo, 15 May 2008 (and 2010, 2013, 2015)
Unusual that a two-hour guitar-fest can hold the attention but this is a great reflection of Satriani’s consummate skills and strong catalogue, and not least due to his unfailing energy.
Joe Satriani plays UK dates 12-17 May
4. STEVE HACKETT The Lowry, Salford, 2 November 2014 (and 2013, 2015, 2017, 2018, 2019)
A musician whose renaissance in the millennium has been a joy to behold and seemingly now very comfortable in his authentic Genesis skin.
A solo album from the Alien singer that reflects the glory of prime time Journey, Giant etc, and the perfect example of Scandinavian AOR.
PRIDE OF LIONS (2003)
Survivor’s chief songwriter Jim Peterik returned to his AOR roots with dramatic arrangements showcasing young vocalist Toby Hitchcock, proving that melodic rock’s past could be married to its present.
In the Swiss hard rockers long career, this was when they hit a golden patch – a series of hard-hitting anthems topped off by the vocals of the much-missed Steve Lee.
DAUGHTRY (2006)
Chris Daughtry may have been rejected by American Idol but that was rock’s gain as his eponymous debut album was a classic slice of the modern rock that dominated American airwaves in the 2000s with its huge arrangements and big choruses.
David Randall chatted to Chris Daughtry for Get Ready to ROCK! Radio in August 2014.
After an unstable few years, Journey discovered Arnel Pineda and his Steve Perry-esque vocals, allowing them to return to their signature sound with a strong album that not only rocked but included two of their finest ever ballads.
H.E.A.T. have been the biggest standard bearers for a whole new generation of Scandinavian melodic rock bands. This third album, and first with new singer Erik Gronwall, has a swagger and a series of huge hooks to rival Bon Jovi in their heyday.
David Randall chatted to guitarist Eric Rivers for Get Ready to ROCK! Radio in March 2014.
Snarling with a healthily feisty attitude, Lzzy Hale’s finest moment with her band is just as notable for a state of the art production from Howard Benson and some memorably catchy songs.
One of the new generation of melodic rock songwriters, Eclipse’s Eric Martensson, helped the Survivor singer create a hook filled 80′s style AOR monster in the mould of his parent band or Journey- a fitting requiem beofre his sad passing a couple of years later.
These seasoned Swedes raised the bar on their second album. It drew on the glorious AOR influences of Survivor, Giant and others but was lifted to greatness by Kent Hilli’s vocals.
The seventies revivalists finest moment yet, an ambitious double album with Damien Edwards voice soaring, and the epic pomp elements dialled up.
It happened in 2006: Lordi wins the Eurovision Song Contest 2006 for Finland with the song ‘Hard Rock Hallelujah’ in Athens, Greece
The one billionth song is downloaded on iTunes (“Speed of Sound” by Coldplay if you’re asking).
The Who release Endless Wire, their first studio album for 24 years.
Photo: Steve Goudie
LIVE ACTS
DEF LEPPARD Carling Academy, Islington, 6 May 2008
A rare opportunity to see stadium rock icons do an intimate show showcasing new stuff, greatest hits and best of all rarely played songs from their first two albums.
MICHAEL SCHENKER The Twist, Colchester, 26 January 2008
Months after Schenker had hit rock bottom (pun intended) came the surreal but thrilling sound of a back-to=form Guitar Hero and his band tearing through old MSG and UFO classics in a one room pub, sparking the revival that continues to this day.
PAUL RODGERS Moondance Jam, Minnesota, 14-16 July 2011
The Voice of Rock has a back catalogue to die for and has vastly improved his stage act over the years. This show on a hot full moon night as darkness fell in the Minnesota countryside was extra special, even by the standards of all my jaunts to festivals in the USA.
Even by the Boss’s standards this 3 hour 20 minute marathon was special with a revamped line up paying tribute to Clarence Clemons and a very special atmosphere mixing revival and party. He even made the rain in Manchester stop. When we were asked to contribute ‘gigs of the millennium’ to GRTR! duringlockdown this one sprang to mind.
A very special invite-only show in the farmyard of a country house, graced by guest appearances from Wishbone alumni Laurie WIsefield, Ted Turner and Steve Upton. Given the enmity between Martin and Andy Powell, it was the nearest we will ever come to the reunion dreamed of by Wishbone fans.
A riff driven, masterpiece of relentless guitar driven intensity with a soulful undertow.
Imagine Chicago grit tinged with West Coast psychedelic rock blues, topped by a monster guitarist whose scintillating licks give you a natural high.
From the powerhouse opening of last ‘Train To Chicago’, via the earthshaking shuffle ‘Mulholland Drive’ to the honey dripping ‘Soul Love’, this is a classic rock/blues album.
The album that moves from subtle acoustic intricacies with Zep style heft, via cleverly chosen, well arranged covers – who would have thought of Chris Whitley and Micheal Kamen songs on the same album – and 4 self penned tracks of which ‘Dirt in My Pocket is an exemplar of the dynamics that serve him so well.
The title track is memorably re-arranged. ‘Ball Peen Hammer’ carries sledgehammer power, while Around the Bend’ is has a country feel.
I could have chosen his last two excellent albums, but went for a rock-blues album crammed full of emotional honesty, great songs – check out ‘Child of Another Day’ and ‘Welcome To The Human Race’- brilliant playing and a conceptual title track, all neatly wrapped up by the clarity of producer John Porter.
There’s characteristic power shuffles – especially ‘The Love Song Of J. Alfred Bluesrock’ – mellifluous grooves, big toned solos and great songs. When it comes to rocking the blues Walter is still the man!!
This is a glorious return to early 70′s rock. In the case of Glenn Hughes he even returns to his abrasive Trapeze days, while Bonamassa adds telling licks and an occasional song and lives the dream he was too young to enjoy first time round.
Check out the title track, ‘One Last Soul’ and ‘Song For Yesterday’.
This CD underlines all those reasons why their ardent fans have been extolling the band’s praises for a number of years. The Nimmo Brothers are simply one of the few bands that have all the key ingredient of real musical acumen, memorable songs and an unbridled burning passion for their rocking blues. Highlights include ‘All Because of You’, ‘Nothing In Chicago For Free’ and ‘Its Not About You’.
It’s so rare for any band to work up the kind of intensity levels that make this debut album such a fire cracker. The licks, the grooves, the songs and a lively, but a classy mix allied with Virgil’s subtle vocal style are breathes fresh life into a rock/blues genre.
Looking for some new rock/blues heroes? Look no further. Listen to ‘Working Man’, ‘Silver Giver’ and ‘Back Stabber’.
This album really rocks and is the real deal! It’s a celebration of Risager’s brusque baritone voice – a cross between Tom Waits, David Clayton-Thomas, Ray Charles and John Campbell – ably backed by a magnificent horn injected big band.
Check out the rocking ‘If You Wanna Leave’, the hypnotic ‘Back Seat Driver’ and the subtle rhythms and THAT voice on ‘Long Forgotten Track’.
If ever there was a case to be made for quality of European Blues, this is the band and this is the album.
A hugely original blues, soul, funk, and rock instrumental album built round the visceral urban energy of NYC.
It’s an old school album with coherent compositions that evoke moods, feelings and moments in time, on a musical journey that mirrors the ebbs and flows of the day.
Big Apple Blues features a bunch of blues vets - Admir “Dr. Blues” Hadzic on bass, Zac Zunis gtr, Barry “The Baron Of The Blues” Harrison on drums, Jim Alfredson Hammond & Anthony Kane harp + guests - who in their own words have: “spent a lifetime playing the blues.”
Check out the aptly named title track, the harp driven funky wah-wah of ‘I-278 Grind’ and big band style blues of ‘Remembering Eni’.
‘A Better Man’ is UK based, Detroit blues rocker Marcus Malone’s 8th album. It’s the latest impressive pit stop on a journey that’s taken him from being a West Coast Metal star, via Motown, to becoming a 5 star soulful blues/rocker.
‘A Better Man’ is a career best and is a classy song-led, blues-rock album with a soulful heart. Check out the hard rocking ‘House Of Blues’, the unexpected gospel lilt of the title track, the West Coast influenced”The Only One’ and the stonking ‘Too Long Gone’. Spot on.
MR. SIPP Knock A Hole In It (2017)
Castro Coleman aka Mr Sipp is also known as the self titled “Mississippi Blues Child”, is actually much more than simply the blues.
Originally a gospel singer, he’s plugged in his electric guitar to deliver a rip roaring rock/blues party full of soul, r&b, gospel elements and even a Hendrix Little Wing.
Highlights are the title track, the magnificent shuffle ‘Gotta Let Her Go’ and the celebratory ‘Juke Joint’.
This is an incendiary mix of lashing of guitar, exclamatory vocals and lots of feel. This guy put everything into an album that is a blues party master class.
It happened in 2005:Legendary blues-rock group Cream reunite for four shows at London’s Royal Albert Hall.
Motörhead celebrate their 30th anniversary with a concert in the Hammersmith Apollo.
Kate Bush releases her first new album since 1993.
The Darkness ‘One Way Ticket To Hell’ is described in our end of year poll as “the best rock album of 2005 by a mile.”
An absolute gem of an album building immensely on the nascent talent hinted at on her 2003 outing ‘Notes’.
Denmark’s finest singer/songwriter tears at the heartstrings on an album of self-penned songs detailing the usual themes of love and loss but never maudlin and always delivered with empathetic panache.
Killer track – ‘Room With A View’.
David Randall chatted to Tina Dico for Get Ready to ROCK! Radio in January 2008.
Following recovery from his well documented health issues, Andy Latimer rocked up at the Royal Albert Hall with Camel to perform one of their finest albums in its entirety together with a smörgåsbord of fan favourites.
Not only was it an amazing event in and of itself, but also a demonstration of how a progressive rock band spawned in the early seventies can still outplay most of those who followed.
With Peter Jones (Tiger Moth Tales) adding his outstanding vocals and musicianship and Latimer’s guitar work bringing tears to a glass eye, the album and accompanying DVD are an absolute must-have for all fans of the genre.
If you have ever caught Richard Thompson live with just his acoustic, the delights of these two albums will reinforce and remind you just what an incredible songwriter and guitarist he is.
Although these are studio recordings, there is a real ‘live’ feeling about them and the quality of the recording accentuates every nuance in his playing to such an extent that you can’t believe there’s only one guitar player performing.
Killer track – ’1952 Vincent Black Lightning’
STEVEN WILSON Hand. Cannot. Erase. (2015)
How do you select the ‘best’ Steven Wilson album? Everything he touches seems to turn to gold, be it Porcupine Tree, Blackfield, Storm Corrosion or his coruscating solo work, it all just shimmers with brilliance.
‘Hand. Cannot. Erase.’ gets the nod for its musical interpretation of a true story of a woman who lay dead in her flat for three years before being found. Upsetting subject matter for sure, but handled with care and sympathy on an album chock full of the sheer musicality that puts SW at the very heart of contemporary progressive rock.
Emerging from a marriage which proved to be a coercive relationship (who knew?) to a man that was her musical partner and muse, Thea Gilmore, one of this country’s finest singer songwriters, changed her performing name to Afterlight and set about putting the record straight.
Never one to hold back when something needs saying, Gilmore’s gift with words is front and centre here on an extraordinary album that details dark and, at times, sinister themes – but with songs and melodies to die for.
An absolute classic from one of the finest progressive rock bands to emerge from the ‘New Europe’ during GRTR!’s lifetime.
Riverside had been building towards this magnum opus for a number of years with albums such as ‘Second Life Syndrome’, ‘Rapid Eye Movement’ and ‘Shrine Of New Generation Slaves’ but hit musical Nirvana with L,F & TTM – an album blessed with stunning tracks but also drenched in sadness as this was the final album to feature original guitarist Piotr Grudzinski before his untimely death, aged just 41, within a year of the album’s release.
Great album from one of progressive rock’s less well-known bands featuring one of prog’s finest female vocalists, Anne-Marie Helder and one of the genre’s finest keyboard players in Jonathan Edwards.
Less well-known they may be (outside of their core fan-base – known as The Roomies) but ‘Satellite’ is right up there with the best when it comes to songwriting and killer musicianship.
Killer track – ‘Satellite’
RICHARD SHINDELL Thirteen Songs You May Or May Not Have Heard Before (2011)
Richard Shindell is, without fear of contradiction, one of the finest singer/songwriters to come out of America – and there’s a lot of competition.
A retrospective in a way, Thirteen Songs You May Or May Not Have Heard Before features thirteen of his best-known songs re-visited and re-recorded – stripping the songs down to their basic framework and rebuilding them with a more intimate feel.
This serves to emphasise Shindell’s stunning acoustic guitar work and expressive storytelling on a tracklist most contemporary songwriters would give their eye-teeth to say “I wrote that”.
Essentially a reinterpretation of the band’s stunning ‘Dead End Kings’ album from the previous year, Katatonia stripped out much of the inherent heaviness and injected massive swathes of melancholia – which enabled the band to explore a more ambient and progressive sound, creating new moods and textures while still staying truthful to the core of the original songs.
It turned out to be a thing of beauty and a highpoint for a band garnering more fans by the day with their genre-defining prog/metal melancholia.
Killer track – ‘The One You Are Looking For Is Not Here’.
A beautiful, beautiful album from Norwegian post prog/art rockers Dim Gray.
It is, by turns, anthemic, operatic, church-like and folky, but over-archingly spiritual – with a wide-screen cinematic sweep which I can only describe as ethereal melancholia for the soul.
There’s cascading guitars, dreamy keyboards and fragile vocals all over an album that genuinely sends those shivers down your spine.
A truly outstanding album, beautifully played and, as I said in my review, if the world really is getting you down, ditch the shrink and buy this – it’ll get you through.
Killer track – ‘Abalus / In Time’
It happened in 2006: 1,951 guitarists simultaneously play Jimi Hendrix’s song “Hey Joe” in the town square of Wroclaw, Poland, breaking a Guinness world record.
Guitarist Brian May announces on his website that Queen is returning to the studio for recording sessions. The new lineup, Queen + Paul Rodgers, features May, Paul Rodgers (the former lead vocalist of Free) and former Queen drummer Roger Taylor.
Popular albums of 2016 amongst GRTR! reviewers include Eleanor McEvoy (‘Out There’) and Nerina Pallot (‘Fires’) with David Gilmour making the live list promoting his ‘On An Island’ album (“With Richard Wright on keys, close your eyes and it could have been Floyd”).
Photo: David Randall/GRTR!
LIVE ACTS
STEVE HACKETT Philharmonic Hall, Liverpool, 11 November 2019
As part of Steve Hackett’s single-handed effort to keep the Genesis legacy alive and to mark the 40th anniversary of his iconic solo album the ‘Selling England By The Pound’/ ‘Spectral Mornings’ tour rolled into Liverpool – and at the best venue in town.
Hackett never disappoints (I’ve seen him countless times), but there was something extra-special about this tour – whether it was the fact that ‘Selling England’ is most Genesis fans’ favourite album or that ‘Spectral Mornings’ is also outstanding (although, personally, I prefer ‘Please Don’t Touch’.
I don’t know, but Steve and his band of consummate musicians absolutely gave it their all to a rapturous audience – and if he’s ever played the solo from ‘Firth Of Fifth’ better I’ll eat my own leg.
Y&TThe Tivoli, Buckley, North Wales, 8 November 2015
This was it! The chance to see one of my favourite guitar players in the flesh!
Dave Meniketti, original founder and main-man of Y&T, is one of the most underrated and criminally ignored guitar players in the world in a band that, had the cards fallen differently, could have been bigger than Kiss, Bon Jovi or any of the rest of them.
As a result of those cards, the band ended up playing at ‘The Tiv’, a small venue in North Wales, and, in all honesty, a bit of a shit-hole – but did they give a cursory performance and bugger off?
No, they didn’t – they played like their lives depended on it and the audience repaid them in spades, at one point chanting in unison, following the hair-raising guitar solo on ‘I Believe In You’, “One Meniketti, there’s only one Meniketti…”.
A chance to see one the finest progressive rock bands on the planet was a chance not to be missed, and, the way things turned out, I was lucky to catch them at the peak of their powers.
Ostensibly touring the fabulous ‘Love, Fear And The Time Machine’ album, such is the strength of their back-catalogue that they only played four tracks from it.
What struck me in an almost two and a half hour set was the juxtaposition of bowel-loosening raw power cut with passages of almost ethereal tranquility. Although I was expecting this, it still held me in thrall and testament to a band who can do it all.
I often think of this gig with sadness however, as, within four months, lead guitarist Piotr Grudzinski was dead, way before his time, aged just forty one.
RICHARD SHINDELL The Hive, Shrewsbury, 8 December 2019
One of the finest singer/songwriters to come out of America, ever, had a rather special relationship with Shrewsbury having played there numerous times.
I was lucky to catch him this time as, shortly afterwards, he announced he was giving up touring to concentrate on other projects.
His set was an absolute joy, with witty repartee and fascinating introductions punctuating a stellar clutch of songs drawn from over thirty years of writing and performing.
His guitar playing is exemplary, his songs a mix of the acerbic and the beautiful, and his stagecraft second to none – we must all hope he reverses his decision to quit, we need performers of this quality now more than ever.
I’m still slack-jawed whenever I think of this gig.
Here was Joe Bonamassa, probably the finest blues-rock guitar player on the planet, filling arenas wherever he goes, playing at the best known club in the world in front of an invited audience of three hundred or so as a thank-you to fans who turned up to his gigs on Merseyside when he was on his way up.
I have never seen a better gig before or since. The Cavern was full and steaming on a hot summer night and Bonamassa was at his absolute zenith on a precursor to his ‘British Blues Boom’ tour.
The band were just superb, with Reese Wynans (ex Stevie Ray Vaughan) a joy to see, but this was Joe’s show – starting up with (the late) Jeff Beck’s ‘Becks Bolero’ and signing off with the Fab’s ‘Taxman’, everything in between was at the very highest level, but his double guitar solo on John Mayall’s ‘Double Crossing Time’ just crossed the border into insanity – I was three rows from the front and my face just melted. No-one could believe what they had just heard.
AOR, Melodic Rock, Power Metal, Progmetal – Leverage are none of these yet they are all of these. On their fifth album now and the music gets harder to define and easier to admire.
MARTIN PAGE In The Temple Of The Muse (2008)
A bona fide, unreconstructed Adult Rock masterwork, full of subtle melodies, grown up sentiments and understated arrangements.
For a band who survived the hedonistic, life shortening heights of fame, a seen-it-all, done-it-all mindset would have been understandable. But the fact that they are still going strong, writing and recording truly great rock music is cause for quiet celebration.
MICHAEL SWEET I Am Not Your Suicide (2014)
Clearly an album that resolutely refuses to conform to any one particular style – Sweet has stretched himself artistically, like he’s walked out of the arena into the light – and is all the better for it.
RUSH Clockwork Angels (2012)
Heavy stuff, and still, after all these years, the music matches. It’s Rush at their best, carving huge, complex, melodicentric art rock edifices into the face of contemporary living,
TILES Pretending To Run (2015)
In today’s world, the very idea of a 2 CD, 21 track, 96 minute Progrock concept album is likely to make even a diehard fan want to curl up in the foetal position in a corner for, say, 96 minutes. But…
A note perfect assimilation of second generation power pop – jampacked with powerful, larger than life images that easily replicate the vital energy of the first two albums, and more.
CHICAGO Stone Of Sisyphus (2008)
The band delivered 11 tracks that sound fresh, exciting, powerful, overflowing with conviction and affection for their art.
MR MISTER Pull (2010)
This album is immense. It has a gravitas that few rock albums get anywhere near. A celestial marriage of the band’s 1987 album Go On and 1994′s Meanwhile, the album result of Richard Page’s collaboration with Pat (Trillion) Leonard, Third Matinee.
It happened in 2020: Glastonbury has been cancelled in what was the festival’s 50th anniversary year.
Canadian singer-songwriter Josh Taerk plays first live session for Get Ready to ROCK! in April. These sessions would become a regular (monthly) fixture.
Over 1500 musicians are lobbying the Government to take urgent action to help live music in Britain avoid collapse. A letter signed by artists such as Paul McCartney and The Rolling Stones called for a three-point strategy for restarting the live sector, including a clear timeline for reopening, a comprehensive support package and VAT exemption on ticket sales.
Around 64% of professional musicians are thinking of quitting music as a result of the coronavirus pandemic, according to a new survey carried out by British booking organization Encore Musicians. It concluded that artists had lost an average of £11,300 in income each with 87% fewer gigs booked for Aug – Dec 2020 than same period in 2019.
Widely influential guitarist Eddie Van Halen has passed away after fighting cancer. His band Van Halen was one of the most successful rock acts of the 1980s. The band reunited with original vocalist David Lee Roth in 2007 and for the 2012 album ‘A Different Kind Of Truth’.
THE BRONX Sore Throat
DAVE WILSON Live Editor (2013 – )
Twenty years is a long time in any business, but in the music world it’s a lifetime. In that period band careers have come and gone and musical tastes have changed and evolved as they have done since the first notes were struck back in the depths of time.
So, where to start with choosing my personal top ten albums of the last 20 years? A good trail back through the GRTR! review archives was a great starting point to reacquaint myself with the past two decades and remind myself of what had impressed.
The album choices below are all ones that made a lasting impression and that still get a regular spin years down the line and that to me is the mark of a great album.
The second album from Dragonforce and the one that introduced me to the band. I picked this album up after hearing the opening track, ‘Fury Of The Storm’, on a Metal Hammer cover mounted compilation CD and being blown away with the lightening riffs and relentless drumming. The album still sounds fresh and is power metal at its best.
No list would be complete without a Rush album! Snakes And Arrows found the band in a creative purple patch with the insistent, staccato riff of ‘Far Cry’ grabbing your attention from the off. The songs on this album tended to be on the heavier side of Rush which was fine with me, although it did have its softer moments to balance things out.
VOLBEAT Beyond Hell/Above Heaven (2010)
This was the album that helped step Volbeat up from a perennial Metallica support band to arena headliners in their own right. With catchy riffs and big, hook laden choruses this album set the musical course for the band which has seen them build up a huge following over the last 13 years.
This was an album that was rarely out of my car CD player for at least 12 months after release. After hearing the opening track ‘Lift Me Up’ on the radio, complete with the excellent Rob Halford on vocal duties, the album was purchased and FFDP became my new favourite band, a situation which hasn’t changed in the intervening years.
With harmony and melody in spades this album was a glorious, pent up ball of fury that exploded from your speakers and punched you squarely in the face!
THE BRONX V (2017)
My discovery of The Bronx is covered in my top gigs and this album, for me, was the band on a high. Hardcore punk shot through with melody and harmony proved to be a heady mix with Matt Caugthran spitting out the lyrics like a man possessed. Filled with angst but still accessible, it was the musical equivalent of an adrenaline shot to the arm.
Who says you can’t teach an old dog new tricks? When I heard that Quo were reworking their classics in an acoustic format I was a expecting a bit of a car crash, however the result couldn’t have proved me more wrong.
This was a refreshingly honest album with the addition of the string section adding a whole new layer to the Quo back catalogue and highlighting the song writing skills of Parfitt and Rossi. The follow up album and Aquostic tours also proved to be a huge hit with even the biggest cynics.
This album found Michael in great company with Doogie White on vocals, Wayne Findlay on guitars and keyboards and the old Scorpions rhythm section of Herman Rarebell on drums and Francis Buchholz on bass. Together they released one of the best classic rock albums of the modern age. Rarebell’s drumming is the beating heart of the record and coupled with Doogie’s great vocal and Schenker’s exceptional fretboard skills this was an album to savour.
Sabaton had rather passed me by until this album which was a major musical oversight on my part! Sweden’s finest take melodic power metal to a whole new level, add in the fact that they also educate the listener as well as entertain with their historic lyrical content and you have a package that’s hard to beat.
After my disappointment on hearing the previous ‘Book Of Souls’ album, I wasn’t holding out much hope for this album. Thankfully, Maiden had read my review (probably!) and seriously upped their game for Senjutsu. The album was harder hitting and although a number of the songs clocked in at over the 7 minute mark they never outstay their welcome. A Maiden classic in every sense.
This brings things bang up to date with Ghost’s best effort so far. Papa and the Nameless Ghouls were in stunning form on this one with Kaisarion being one of the best songs produced in the last 20 years!
The band have come a long way since my first (and rather scathing) live review when they played as the opening act on a three band bill headlined by Trivium. They have grown in both stature and musicality since then and are now a fully fledged arena headline act. This was my top album of 2022 and with good reason.
It happened in 2013: Black Sabbath release their nineteenth and final studio album, 13, the band’s first album release in 18 years.
In March, Alvin Lee (Ten Years After) dies at 68. Peter Banks (Yes) dies at 65.
In our end of year poll Code of Silence is named Top Album and Steve Hackett Top Live Act.
Black Star Riders release their debut album ‘All Hell Breaks Loose’, described by our reviewer as the next best thing to Thin Lizzy.
LIVE ACTS
Picking just 10 albums proved difficult enough but picking my 5 top gigs was almost impossible. The final list below had more line up changes than Rainbow and Whitesnake combined!
I was lucky enough to see Rush on six occasions in Glasgow, but this gig stands out as one of the best. The staging was excellent and the setlist was spot on, containing back catalogue classics interspersed with songs from the then new ‘Snakes and Arrows’ album. Any Rush show with both ‘Entre Nous’ and ‘Natural Science’ in the setlist is a winner in my book.
This show was one of those that I went along to with no real knowledge of the band or their music and no preconceptions of what to expect from the night. However, I left a few hours later completely gobsmacked by The Bronx in both musical guises.
The music was fantastic, the ever smiling Matt Caugthran spent most of the hardcore set in the pit and both performances were stunning. If ever I needed proof of the power of live music, this night affirmed that and then some.
Motorhead and Anthrax in one of the best theatre venues left in the UK, what’s not to like? Both bands put in great sets on the night and the show was one to remember. Lemmy was on good form although his health was starting to deteriorate at that point, however, they were still Motorhead and they most definitely played Rock ‘n Roll!
This was a short support set on the Status Quo ‘Last Of The Electrics’ tour, but as it had been 30 years since my last REO live encounter I was happy to take anything I could get! The band didn’t disappoint and their ten song set was the best hour of live music I have had the pleasure to watch. Forget the last 20 years, this is one of top sets of the last 40 plus years of gig going.
RAMMSTEIN MK Dons Stadium, Milton Keynes, 6 July 2019
When it comes to a live spectacle no one does it better than Rammstein. This show had everything, explosions, huge flames, burning prams and a fantastic soundtrack. Even if you are not keen on Rammstein’s music (weirdly, there are people in this category!) then I would still urge you to get along to one of their shows, you won’t be disappointed!
LAURA MEADE Never Remember
PETE WHALLEYSinger Songwriter Editor (2005-2022)
ALBUMS
A desert island discs of the GRTR! years isn’t an easy shout. But these releases all bear the hallmarks of longevity. So, in chronological order, here goes:
With an acoustic based delivery and heartfelt vocals, ‘Count To Ten’ cemented the promise of her previous releases. Accomplished and polished in equal measure. Little wonder it won her album and singer of the year awards in Norway, Denmark and Sweden.
Any number of the band’s studio albums in the GRTR! years could have made this list – not least the bookends of ‘Marbles’ and ‘An Hour Before It’s Dark’. But sometimes, as the title of this minimalist retrospective says …
A retrospective of sorts, but captured rehearsing alone in the studio between gigs, her wonderful songs and vocals have never sounded so good. Quite literally, breath-taking.
Feature (The GRTR! Grotto of Greatness, March 2023)
Has an instrumental album sounded this good since the 70′s? I don’t think so. It’s hard to think of another guitarist of his generation who could have pulled this off. Sublime from first note to last.
Pain, frustration, heartbreak, hope, and finally relief – it all came pouring out on a very beautiful album that comes from the heart. And you can’t ask for more than that.
A quite remarkable solo debut from the Izz vocalist. Individualistic, innovative and progressive – a work of considerable beauty shines like a beacon in a sea of has-beens, wannabes, and recycling.
Wearing its influences unashamedly, this highly melodic/mildly ambient rock album masterminded by Karnataka’s Ian Jones, spiced with just a soupçon of World elements and Lisa Fury’s sublime vocals, is a brilliantly produced record of tantalising beauty. Stunning.
After a couple of run of the mill blues/rock albums, ‘More Sinner Than Saint’ saw Downes drop a shoulder, and shimmy into the mainstream. And how. Brilliant songs, brilliant playing, brilliant singing, and brilliantly produced. A game changer.
Messrs Morley, Bowes and &Co. must have made a pact with the devil to be sounding this good at this stage of their career. Quite possibly the best album they’ll ever make.
In what was a master class of stagecraft, it was impossible to avert your eyes from Zal’s unhinged, macabre, and menacing stage persona. The band’s brutally heavy, and impenetrably dense wall of sound was unsparingly savage, but provided the perfect platform for an unforgettably charismatic virtuoso performance. Pure pantomime and one of the most memorable performances I’ve seen – ever.
2 DAVID GILMOUR Bridgewater Hall, Manchester, 26 May 2006
OK, he may have been majoring ‘On An Island’, but when your backing vocalists are David Crosby and Graham Nash, who cares? Strobes, smoke and lasers galore and a shed load of classic Floyd spread over 2 hours and 40 minutes. Utterly magnificent.
3 MARILLION Manchester Academy, 10 September 2012 (and various other dates)
It’s always a top draw performance from Marillion. And over a good number of gigs I’ve come to conclude they’re one of the few bands who are actually better live than on record. And in Steve Hogarth, have quite possibly the best frontman around.
4 STEVE HACKETT Philharmonic Hall, Liverpool, 29 October 2013 (and others)
When Hackett decided to re-visit the Genesis back catalogue, the genie was truly let out of the bottle. There was zero chance thereon he would be able to return to playing only his solo career material. But it’s kept a certain generation of gentlemen very happy and probably quadrupled (and more) his pension fund. And he’s done it with class and grace.
5 CAMEL Bridgewater Hall, Manchester, 7 September 2018)
Camel gigs are as rare as hens teeth, but they reminded us just how good progressive rock can be. And with Andy Latimer in full flight, nobody, absolutely nobody, does it better.
Special mention must also go to my favourite singer songwriter Eleanor McEvoy (35+ gigs over the GRTR! years), Magenta’s acoustic set at Peter Gabriel’s at Real World Studios, and for sheer entertainment value Fee Waybill/The Tubes.
THE TEMPERANCE MOVEMENT Only Friend
DAVE ATKINSON (2012 – )
ALBUMS
Compiling an end-of-year best of for GRTR! is one of the annual joys of this reviewing caper. But to pick out ten monster albums from two decades of releases to celebrate the site’s birthday is a quite challenge.
This list has been trashed, tweaked and teased so many times that there’s nothing left to do but submit the thing and weep over the fact that genre-definers, belters and bangers like The Darkness (Permission To Land), Thunder (Wonder Days) and Black Star Riders (Heavy Fire) didn’t make the final line-up. And no room for such legends as Whitesnake, Iron Maiden or Judas Priest… How can this happen?
In chronological order:
MOTORHEAD Inferno (2004)
The band’s 17th release. The latter day trio of Lemmy, Phil Campbell and Mikkey Dee delivered solid, trademark albums until the end. This one was a bit different though. Cameron Webb was brought in to twiddle the knobs and he managed to capture something of their blistering live intensity with an album of fresh material that never loses momentum, power or razor-sharpness. One of their finest.
GREEN DAY American Idiot (2004)
The moment when Green Day transformed from snotty pop-punk oiks to voice-of-a-generation disrupters. There’s a grandeur, almost rock-opera quality about the album and it elevated them to the big league. From the anthemic, punchy, protest-song of the title track onwards, every track is a bristling winner high on passion and sentiment.
UFO’s third album with Vinnie Moore on guitar was the band’s best in a long time, standing reasonable comparison with their finer heyday moments. Mogg was on fine form with vocals and usual off-beat lyrics; the guitars were chunky and often overtly bluesy; Parker was back on drums and Raymond penned a couple of good tunes and elbowed decent keyboard shapes into the mix.
No secret that I’m a fan of this band. Dynamic, clear and often melodic vocals allied to unashamedly metallic riffs and incandescent solos, all underpinned by top-notch songwriting and production. This third platter moved the band into classic album territory.
RUSH Clockwork Angels (2012)
A return to concept albums for this, the band’s 20th and final album. Peart at his lyrical finest in weaving a steampunk fantasy about which the music twists and turns to deliver a modern prog masterpiece. All the quality of everything we know about Rush, but in an atmosphere that seems to set the band free.
BLACK SABBATH 13 (2013)
There was nothing much wrong with most of the Sabbath albums after Ozzy left. But when the Prince of Darkness himself returned to the fold for a studio album after a ridiculous 35 years, the band served up a stone-cold classic of weighty doom crawls, crushing riffs and epic solos. Ozzy sounds great and ‘God is Dead?’ is amongst the best things Sabbath have ever done.
This was a superb debut album, cracking the top 20 and promising so much. Two albums later, gravel-voiced vocalist Phil Campbell had left the band and the future is uncertain at best. If nothing else, we have this record full of finely crafted hard-edged blues rock and gritty ballads, all beautifully played, sung and produced. ‘Midnight Black’ might be my favourite amongst a slew of belters.
METALLICA Hard Wired To Self-Destruct (2016)
The band lost their way for quite a while there. Complicated, uninteresting albums, personnel issues, public therapy, litigation… And then this. Maybe not back to the absolute glory days of ‘Master of Puppets’, but at least a good dose of old school thrash, plenty of grown-up metal and even a nod to the influence of Sir Lemmy of Kilmister on ‘Murder One’.
Blackberry Smoke are a very good band. It feels like they are a stone’s throw away from recording a monster album. ‘Find a Light’ was pretty close. A set of songs hewn from the southern bedrock of Georgia, but soaking up influences from various genres to create a multi-faceted, gritty-but-sharp, deeply impressive offering.
This was an excellent album is full of longform pieces of immersive, cinematic and lyrically conscious music. Marillion are on a roll right now, but this, for me, is better than its predecessor ‘F.E.A.R.’ in the way its moods and textures are given a jolt of power and energy on tracks that are engrossing and edgy with dollops of sparkle and shine.
It happened in 2012: Rush release their 19th and final album ‘Clockwork Angels’ prior to breaking up after 40 years of activity.
In July, Jon Lord – musician with Deep Purple and Whitesnake and classical composer – dies aged 71 after battling pancreatic cancer.
It was announced in january that Black Sabbath guitarist Tony Iommi has been diagnosed with lymphoma. Within a month, the band announced that drummer Bill Ward has decided to leave the band.
Amonst the Top Albums selected in our 2012 poll: Marillion (Sounds That Can’t Be Made’) and Shinedown (Amaryllis) whilst Michael Schenker headed Top Live Acts.
Photo: Paul Clampin
LIVE ACTS
This is even harder to nail down than the top ten albums. So many great gigs down the years. The only way to do this is to limit myself to gigs that I’ve reviewed for GRTR! since I joined their formidable ranks.
My first live review was Ministry at the Forum back in July 2012. In looking back over that period it came as a surprise to learn that I’d passed my own little GRTR! decade-of-reviewing anniversary.
Here is the top five, with apologies to near misses Neil Young and Crazy Horse, Rush, Black Sabbath, UFO, Black Country Communion and Scorpions. The following are all gigs that stood out for very special reasons and will live long in the memory.
A life affirming gig on a tour that Wilko thought would be his last after being diagnosed with terminal pancreatic cancer. The performance was typical Wilko: frenetic stalking of the stage, eye-popping mad-man stares and Telecaster strafing of the audience. But the emotion was through the roof. As life would have it, the cancer was operated on and we had another nine years of this legend before he sadly passed away in late 2022.
On an emotional night in Aylesbury, Fish played to an eager full house, exposing tenderness, passion and humour in a set of powerful songs, personal memories and local connections that meant a lot to both performer and audience. Fish’s emphatic rendition of Marillion’s ‘Misplaced Childhood’ was given special relevance in the town that provided sources and experiences for much of the concept album’s narrative. Not a dry eye in the house.
Sometimes a gig so good comes along that any meaningful comparisons are blown away. By every measure, Pearl Jam landed a three-hour monster on this night. The gig worked on so many levels. There is a searing honesty and indestructible credibility about this band, aside from the quality of the songs and the genius of the playing. It all connected with the audience and served up a memorable, complete, immersive experience.
My review declared that this was my final and best gig of 2019. Going further, I rashly declared that as also my last gig of the decade, it should easily make the shortlist of the best in those 10 years. So I’d better put it in this list! This was a gig of absolute class. Alter Bridge are simply unrivalled in what they do.
Bonamassa is getting better. Previously the songs could feel like they were mere platforms for another face-melting solo. At the Royal Albert Hall in May last year, the depth of material, thoughtful arrangements, quality of the musicians and respectful inter-play between them gave a rounded, intense and thrilling experience. Absolutely stunning.
Feature (The GRTR! Grotto of Greatness, April 2023)
JOE GEESIN (2004 – )
Joe is our reissue review king and has lent his liner notes to many reissues over the years. His listing includes retrospective sets as well as contemporary releases.
The first in a series of five following a fantasy concept, each featuring Christopher Lee (whom I interviewed for GRTR!). This Italian band billed as Symphonic but equally could be melodic operatic power metal. If Lord Of The Rings were a heavy metal opera, this’d be it. Wonderful album.
Every Saxon album since GRTR!’s formation could make this list (I nearly went for 2007′s Inner Sanctum), but Saxon have remained heavy, solid, blistering and consistent, cementing the post millenium purple patch that continues to this day. Saxon still going strong and as heavy as ever.
A double album, a concept, and a leaf out of Saxon and Iron Madien’s books nodding to progressive metal in places. A brave move, overlooked, underrated, and remarkably good.
For me, the Gillan/Aire/Morse era has not made a bad album, but this is definitely the best Purple album of any line-up in a LONG time. A number of both contemporary and retrospective live sets could have made the list also.
7 ALEX HARVEY The Last Of The Teenage Idols (2016)
This 14 CD box set took reissues to a new level, and is pretty definitive. Includes all the Sensational Alex Harvey Band material with a host of bonuses.
With the expanded albums, the Singles Collection and Triple Trouble Live also appearing, there’s no excuse for being au fait with the catalogue of this perfect British rock band.
And amongst there plethora of albums collections, more recent releases by Saxon, Focus, Cactus, Steppenwolf and Hawkwind, it’s a listeners’ dream out there.
32 CDs, 4LPs, 3 45s, and a book, all in a box, this was how to do career spanning box sets, and at a much better price than some out there. Room for more, but still an excellent template.
Bubbling under – new releases by Thunderstick, Praying Mantis, Thor, Freedom Call
Photo: Simon Dunkerley
LIVE ACTS
1 SAXON London Astoria, 2 October 2004 (and many others)
A no brainer – I’ve only missed one London show since 1999 (a PR f**kup) and every show could make this list. Britain’s best and most consistent live band, they put many to shame, and not just with the variation of the setlist.
Several shows, including at the Islington Academy in 2012, power metal build on vocal harmonies and a crowd full of (plastic) swords and helmets – wonderful metal entertainment.
Seen several times, and always entertaining. Quality music fronted by the ever grinning Mick Box, and an extended jam or two. Lovely.
5 BLONDIE Kew Gardens, Richmond-upon-Thames, 11 July 2011
A sunny afternoon on the lawn at Kew Gardens, with free champagne will get anyone’s vote, and a still on form Blondie performing the hits an added bonus.
Worth a mention – The High Voltage festivals 2010 and 2011, during which I undertook or arranged over 15 interviews for GRTR!
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.
Album review: MAGNUS KARLSSON’S FREEFALL – Hunt The Flame
Frontiers [Release date: 14.04.23]
Fourth Freefall album from rock’n’roll workaholic, Magnus Karlsson.
For this, Freefall’s fourth album, Karlsson’s rounded up 11 singers, all of whom offer something different, and we get a few tracks that show every sign that he is building further on a foundation established over 20 plus years of solo and band performance.
Opening and title track, ‘Hunt The Flame’, strikes a perfect pose. Karlsson’s dancing, pounding, hi speed symphonic metal sprint is skilfully slowed down by vocalist, Alexander (Crowne) Strandell’s considered melodic rock vocals, a clear sign of things to come.
A celestial choir intros ‘You Can’t Hurt Me Anymore’ in a chorale whisper, before Karlsson’s taut, high pressure guitar switches the music elegantly but emphatically into a hard rock song.
He cleverly deploys an adrenalised key change that takes us up into an arena rock chorus. Vocalist, Jakob (Poodles) Samuel’s scorched voice gains just enough traction to take it over the top. It’s an old fashioned approach, but it works every time.
Similarly, on ‘Break Of Dawn’ Kristian (Seventh Crystal) Fyhr’s vocals spark up up more kinetic energy than many vocalists do in a lifetime. Just as well, Karlsson has given him a melodic metal song that calls out for the singer to balance an unflinching toughness with compassion. Fyhr’s voice steps up.
Elsewhere, nothing quite matches up to these songs. That said, Karlsson’s sparkling orchestrations give each track a wonderful shine, especially ‘Nightbird’ which finds Mikael (Circus Maximus) Erikssen’s voice at its fiercest, investing heart and soul in a finely judged emotional performance.
‘Summoning The Stars’ too is worth investigating, if only – again – for the way in which Karlsson usurps the track’s balletic keyboard intro with frantic axework.
It’s not Freefall’s best ever album, but it confirms that Karlsson has never lost his musical vision. ***1/2
Review by Brian McGowan
Featured Artist: JOSH TAERK
Since early 2020 Josh has been entertaining us with exclusive monthly live sessions,
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.
On his second album now fronting Archon Angel, Zak Stevens probably couldn’t tell you how many albums he’s appeared on.
We’ll help him out: Since 1993, five as Savatage’s frontman, five up front with The TSO and seven with Circle II Circle. Plus one off appearances in bands like Machines Of Grace, Empires of Eden and a dozen or so more.
And yet that soaring tenor voice is still intact. In fact on this, his second album with Archon Angel, it sounds stronger than ever.
The band is essentially guitarist / writer / producer Aldo Lonobile’s melodic metal vehicle, and he couldn’t have wished for a better vocalist.
Stevens takes the fragile quality of the music (it’s there if you look for it) and amplifies it several fold, giving it the epic emotional weight the songs deserve.
The growth of ‘The Wake Of Emptiness’ from a monastic, prayer like beginning to an electrifying, exciting piece of rock opera, and ‘Quicksand’s quick change parade of spine tingling synth orchestrations might have misfired had it not been for Stevens.
It doesn’t matter that he doesn’t hit every note on the nose, because he pours his heart and soul into the music. His voice just soars.
Even the “ordinary” material, like ‘Away From The Sun’ and ‘One Last Reflection’ (which would probably shine on many other artists’ albums), comes to life because in Stevens hands, they are turned into dramatically thrilling pieces of theatre.
Inevitably, that makes the two genuine standout tracks, ‘Afterburn’ and ‘Lake Of Fire’ really, truly, especially good. ****
Review by Brian McGowan
Featured Artist: JOSH TAERK
Since early 2020 Josh has been entertaining us with exclusive monthly live sessions,
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.
Album review: KILLER – Hellfire (And The Best of Killer) 2 CD Edition
Cherry Red/HNE [Release date: 21.03.23]
Belgium: 1980 : 3 respected, experienced, died in the wool rock musicians split with their long time bands, and get together to share a different musical destiny.
Paul “Shorty” Van Camp, “Fat Leo” and “Spooky” on lead guitar, vocals, drums and bass respectively, had enjoyed an enviable, hard rock reputation as they moved through Belgium’s live music circles over the years, building a decent sized following as they went.
But their transition from rock into heavy metal was a decisive move, and the key to their longevity.
And now, 23 years later a smart label has released a simple but nevertheless cleverly constructed 2 CD package.
CD1 is the band’s brand new offering, Hellfire, and CD2 is a best off, a careful winnowing of a bumper crop of tracks taken from 7 albums over 30 years, leaving us with the truly heavy stuff to enjoy.
CD 2: The Best Of: As if they know better than us, the band have selected three tracks from the first two albums, and rerecorded them with the benefit of today’s cutting edge studio technology.
Those tracks ‘Backshooter’, ‘Secret Love’ from the debut Ready For Hell, and ‘Blinded’ from the follow up, Wall Of Sound, are among the best stuff they have written. Paradoxically, they now sound heavier and yet lighter on their feet, combining short, sharp punches with heavy metal haymakers. As was reported by the more enlightened music media, there are echoes there of Brit metal bands like Saxon and Iron Maiden and their many imitators, but Killer were making their own way.
CD1: Hellfire : Hellfire is a monster heavy metal album, wrenched screaming straight out of the last century. No wonder Killer were compared to single minded pathfinders like Motorhead and Metallica. Here, they’ve made a significant jump into the nineties.
Even among the standout tracks, ‘Cuts Like A Knife’ and ‘Rat Race’ are special, coaxing the muzzy tone of twin guitars into sludgy, stoner rock territory, or steamrollering down the heavy metal highway to the sound of raw, driven, downtuned guitars.
Makes you wonder why Killer never really “made it”. It’s only when you catch up on the band’s history that you discover what happened.
Building on a positive media reception across Europe and the US to their third album, Shock Waves (1983), the band signed with fledgling rock/metal label, Mausoleum. They readied a groundbreaking, double CD live album for release.
Stop me if you’ve heard this one: the label went bust and the album didn’t see the light of day. A familiar story. Obviously the band survived the setback but never truly found themselves on the same path to glory again. ***1/2
Review by Brian McGowan
Featured Artist: JOSH TAERK
Since early 2020 Josh has been entertaining us with exclusive monthly live sessions,
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.
Feature: The GRTR! Grotto of Greatness – JOE BONAMASSA (April 2023)
Photo: Simon Dunkerley
Bonamassa brings the blues to a new generation, at least until 2039…
“Let’s start by doctoring the immortal phrase, ‘He came, he saw, (he blinked twice, took a deep breath), and conquered”!
Joe Bonamassa and his gifted band took their first tentative steps into South London, and after an eventful anxious few minutes as the power supply vacillated, the band swept all before them to convert every single person in the venue, to the merits of the Joe Bonamassa band.”
The following year Feenstra was reporting Bonamassa’s gig at his Boom Boom Club venue in Sutton when he confirmed: “there is little doubt that he is a heavyweight performer in his own right, and right now the hottest ticket on the block.”
Four months later – in February 2007 – US correspondent Steve Jancowicz enthused: “I spoke to more than a few who attended and everyone was in agreement that it was a powerfully exciting show from a humble musician who signed autographs and took photos right out front after the show.”
Three years later Bonamassa was playing Hammersmith Apollo when Pete noted “In fact Joe is many things to many people, the polar opposite of some of his ego driven one dimensional musical contemporaries. He is a guitar hero for the new rock/blues generation as well as a major stylistic influence. And in a broader context he is also a commercial barometer of the times.”
And as Joe himself commented at this gig “the biggest crowd I’ve played to’.
Joe Geesin reviewing the 2004 album ‘Had To Cry Today’ opined “Blues guitarist Bonamassa has already been making a name for himself, and this collection of original and standards shows why.”
I think being a top player requires the both being highly technical, and natural talent. I also see players like BB King, who can play one or two notes and communicate volumes with a range of emotions that can bring a audience to tears in seconds. It was that very point that made me interested in Blues guitar in the first place. It was how they spoke words of joy and sorrow through their guitar.(Joe Bonamassa, 2005)
..the thing that originally made this album special in the first place was the way Bonamassa infused Brit rock blues staples such as the Ian Anderson penned Jethro Tull title track and Free’s ‘Walk In My Shadow’ with a fresh vitality and energy. Years later, he’s refined his original approach without losing the raison d’etre for the album’s original success. ***1/2 Pete Feenstra
Album review (A New Day Now, A New Day Yesterday 2oth Anniversary Edition, 2020)
Bonamassa had indeed come a long way since 1989 when he wowed seasoned pros like BB King. His rise and rise closely parallels the “Get Ready to ROCK! Years” – his European breakthrough didn’t happen until 2005. These days he plays short arena tours or prestigious residencies. In fact his first Albert Hall date took place in 2009 and was celebrated on CD/DVD.
At this event, the guitarist recalled the fact that it was barely 5 years since he made his UK debut to some 60 people and that he was now humbled to now be playing to 4,500. The 2015 set Live At Radio City Music Hall similarly reflected a career milestone when he played the 5500 capacity venue in his early home stomping ground of Syracuse, New York. And in 2017 his Carnegie Hall gig was celebrated on CD/DVD.
Photo: Steve Goudie
In between times we have reviewed him at smaller venues (Beard’s Blues!), at the BBC Maida Vale studios and Pacific Road, Birkenhead both in 2008 and a particularly memorable outing at the Cavern Club in June 2016 when Alan Jones salivated “He absolutely tore the place apart and served notice that the blues is not only still relevant in the 21st century, but, more to the point, still commands a fervent fanbase.”
‘Sloe Gin’ has many qualities but above all Joe has brought fresh life to the rock blues genre, via some deft acoustic outings and a consistently passionate vocal style which we will surely hear much more of in the future. **** Pete Feenstra
Stylistically Bonamassa has gone from the elevating the blues – and paying homage to his own heroes like Clapton, Green and Kossoff – to a sometimes more rock fuelled approach which has realised it’s greatest zenith in Black Country Communion the superband formed with Glenn Hughes in 2009. He even explored jazz funk styles with Rock Candy Funk Party in 2017.
Themed albums have also emerged, such as An Acoustic Evening at the Vienna Opera House (2013) , Muddy Wolf at Red Rocks (2015) and Live At The Greek Theatre (2016) whilst he has guest guitared on any number of albums. Here at GRTR! we’ve reviewed such albums by the likes of Eric Gales (2022), Dion (2020), Bernie Marsden (2017), Walter Trout (2017) and Ronnie Montrose (2017) and James Cotton (2013).
It’s very rare these days to talk about a genuine fast rising blues rock star. The UK has of course seen a few previous contenders such as Johnny Lang and Kenny Wayne Shepherd who never quite fulfilled their potential but in Joe Bonamassa you have an artist who not only fits the bill, but he looks like he is here for the duration.
(Pete Feenstra, August 2007)
Pete Feenstra has long been a supporter and early promoter. He interviewed Bonamassa in August 2007 around the time of the release of the landmark album ‘Sloe Gin’. He asked him “Were you surprised at how quickly you have achieved success in the UK?”
Very much so. I’m really honoured by the fact that the UK has been appraised of what I’m doing. I’m really happy about that. And it’s really been little more than over of a year since we have gone from playing 200 capacity clubs to filling the 2000 capacity Shepherd’s Bush Empire.
In fact it took about 7 years to achieve the same kind of level back in the States. We had already done some work in Europe building things up though festivals etc, but the UK has been a real surprise. The response to the new album has been good too, and I’m very grateful for that.
It all came together for me when I was a kid listening to my dad’s record collection. And now it seems to have stuck with me. I was totally into it from day one. The Jeff Beck Group got me going. In fact it was Jeff Beck’s ‘Truth’.
I was thinking, what is that sound? and the reverb, the Les Paul sound, the whole thing. And it all came from listening to my dad’s records. He had an old copy of ‘Beck-Ola’, some Led Zeppelin, Free’s ‘Fire & Water’, and John Mayall’s Blues Breakers album.
Joe seems to have the chops, the sense of place and a truckful of songs to back up the burgeoning fan and media interest in his take on the rebirth of rock-blues. ****Pete Feenstra
Following ‘Sloe Gin’ (the live tour CD was reviewed by Joe Geesin) Bonamassa released another commercially successful crossover album ‘The Ballad Of John Henry’ which Feenstra thought displayed “not just as a measure of the startling career development over the last 5 years, but simply as a window on the direction in which he is currently taking the blues. And if that really is the question to be asked of all blues practitioners, then this album answers in the best way possible offering a palette of differing hues and colours.”
Joe Bonamassa told Jason Ritchie in 2005, when asked who he would like to share the stage with: “Eric Clapton…is to me as Robert Johnson is to him…He was the one that introduced me to the blues. I heard John Mayall and the Bluesbreakers and was floored. I would love to share the stage with him just to show him what he taught me.”
Photo: Christie Goodwin
2009 was in fact capped by a guest appearance from his long-time idol Eric Clapton during his first visit to Royal Albert Hall. But the year also marked the formation of Black Country Communion together with Glenn Hughes, Derek Sherinian and Jason Bonham. The band’s debut album was released in 2010. It was a more rocky diversion for Bonamassa.
Pete Feenstra chatted to Joe Bonamassa following the release of Black Country Communion’s second album, and before their appearance at the High Voltage festival in 2011.
Keith Thompson’s extensive review identified the key selling points: well crafted songs, great playing and not least riffage aplenty. Over time, and with three more studio albums, the band drifted apart mainly due to Bonamassa’s solo commitments but there is talk of a new album in 2023.
Photo: Lee Millward
Reviewing the gig at Manchester Apollo in October 2010 David Randall noted “Looking round here tonight, there was a healthier number of younger faces in the audience and if a younger generation discovers Free and Led Zeppelin via a 33-year old New Yorker, that can only be good too.”
Two years later Randall underlined an increasing phenomenon and a certain irony: “The concomitant of bigger venues means bigger prices. It is a shame then that the bulk of the audience tonight were ‘of a certain age’ and that the £30 plus tariff may preclude younger fans witnessing a modern day hero live.”
David Randall chatted to Joe Bonamassa in May 2010 following the release of his ‘Black Rock’ album
Since 2006′s You And Me Bonamassa had been working with top producer Kevin Shirley who he credits with developing his style, arrangements, and introducing him to different material.
‘Black Rock’ again showcases Joe Bonamassa, as a restless talent in harness with his intuitive producer Kevin Shirley and between them they stand proudly at the very top of the Rock/Blues summit **** Pete Feenstra
In 2011 Pete Feenstra wrote that “Joe Bonamassa diversifies his musical palate, an album that explores rock, blues, roots.
“‘Dust Bowl’ probably doesn’t have the inherent musical coherence of its immediate predecessor ‘Black Rock’ and doesn’t, like ‘Sloe Gin’, offer the concise Bonamassa calling card. But when you’ve taken several giant career steps from cutting 12 solo albums before your mid 30′s to topping the Billboard Blues chart, then you set yourself new challenges along the way.
And in that respect this album is the next logical step in its exploration of different musical directions, different tones, different vocal approaches and above all the development of his song writing.
“‘Dustbowl’ is also an album shot through with musical history from the opening, timeless bluesy train-time rhythm of ‘Slow Train’ and the Jethro Tull style intro and Zeppelin bombast of ‘Black Lung Heartache’ to the trad blues filler ‘Watch Yourself’, the BB King styled ‘Sweet Rowena’ with Vince Gill, and the Bonamassa/Glenn Hughes duet on a reprise of Free’s ‘Heartbreaker’.”
During his tour in October 2011 he played two nights at the Hammersmith Apollo which Feenstra thought “was part of a significant step into arena level popularity…
“In short, Joe is every bit the new guitar hero for a generation of fans of a certain age. And while Heavy Metal provides the chops and visceral excitement for a younger generation, Joe pushes the retro button cleverly by reshaping rock-blues in his own post Zeppelin image.”
David Randall, reviewing a gig at Liverpool Echo Arena in October 2012 noted the setlist: “…with a very high proportion of covers, again satiating those who look back to the smoky clubs of the sixties for their blues inspiration.
Bonamassa has always openly paid his dues to his Brit-blues heroes but for me this set merely underlined that – like his albums – the true standout originals are thin on the ground. As if to reinforce that, and in a rare exchange with the audience, he joked that it is unlikely there’ll be a ‘hit single’ on his latest album as he proceeded to play the title track ‘Driving Toward The Daylight’.”
The album as whole still works well though in the context of another successful return to the late 60′s blues-rock era that has served Joe so well thus far. **** Pete Feenstra
For Joe, it’s all about the melody, and, as a singer, I feel so grateful to be working with someone who is so musically evolved. Beth Hart, 2012
Another live album appeared in 2012, Beacon Theatre Live From New York once again took Bonamassa back to his roots but this time spiced with contributions from Paul Rodgers and Beth Hart with whom he also released several joint albums.
In 2013 Pete Feenstra was back in the Royal Albert Hall when Bonamassa performed a four-gig, four-set and four-band career retrospective.
As Pete noted “he was entitled to look a little weary after completing his London residency, performed to a grand total of 14,000 people.” For that authentic feel the guitarist used a number of instruments once held by heroes such as Rory Gallagher, Peter Green, Gary Moore and Bernie Marsden.
Photo: Paul Rodgers
2015′s Different Shades Of Blue took Bonamassa to Nashville and is the first wholly self-penned by the guitarist. When Feenstra saw his gig at Eventim (Hammersmith) Apollo in October that year he commented that whilst it “reconfirms his position as the outstanding guitarist, vocalist, band leader and blues musician of his generation, even if it does feel as if he’s shoehorning too much diverse material into his two hour set.”
And in respect of large audiences amongst the festival events we have covered, the inaugural High Voltage in 2010 and Download in 2014 where Andy Nathan was slightly underwhelmed. Maybe it was bringing the blues to an essentially rock event but Andy’s comments echoed David Randall in 2012: “his unassuming stage presence lacks magnetism”.
Things didn’t get better for Andy at the Albert Hall gig in April 2019 (one of a three night residency) “No-one expects Graham Norton-style repartee from him but greater engagement with an audience that pay some of the most premium prices in the business would not go amiss and personally I would have enjoyed hearing him explain the context and inspiration around his choice of songs.”
Things were better for Simon Dunkerley, reviewing the gig at Nottingham’s Capital FM Arena in October 2015. Simon said: “he recounts his previous visits to the Nottingham area that included the 250 capacity Flowerpot in Derby and The Rescue Rooms, and thanks the 10000 capacity crowd this evening for their continued support.”
The album reinforces Joe’s own style through self penned songs, while harnessing some of his most fiery solos in recent times. As a guitarist, Joe proudly stands at the top of his own mountain to survey the great beyond, while refusing to believe that’s all there is. ****1/2 Pete Feenstra
And by 2016, reviewing Bonamassa’s ‘British Blues Explosion’ tour Live Editor Dave Wilson was in no doubt: “It is easy to see why Bonamassa is revered in blues rock circles, his guitar playing is jaw dropping at times, indeed Alan Nimmo of King King was sitting a few seats along from me no doubt taking some mental notes. It will be interesting to see if in 20 years time the up and coming blues fraternity will be doing a similar tour featuring Bonamassa songs, I wouldn’t bet against it.”
And, returning to the Royal Albert Hall in 2017, after a gap of three years, Dave Atkinson wrote: “Bonamassa’s sharp suit, slick hair and showbiz shaded eyes belie the passion and feeling he coaxes from his instrument. Nobody chucks such a high-spec ceramic kitchen sink at every solo like this guy.”
And Atkinson emphasised “The full-fat, high cholesterol Bonamassa experience in 3D. A performer at the peak of his powers. Long may it continue.” This tour was commemorated on a CD/DVD release in 2018.
His career so far has embraced rock, blues, soul, world music, jazz-funk and acoustic music. And the mission statement of this album seems to be to expand his rock/blues template further into related musical areas, though you suspect with producer Kevin Shirley at the helm, he will never let go of the Zeppelin fetish that has permeated much of his career so far.‘Redemption’ is built round song-led material that leaves plenty of room for big horn arrangements and significant solos that are always an essential part of the song.**** Pete Feenstra
By 2019 and on the eve of a two year interregnum due to Covid, Bonamassa was releasing his 17th live album Live At Sydney Opera House. It perpetuated the marketing strategy and close career management that developed over a 20 year period.
Pete Feenstra summed up: “If his strategy is to put out as much product as possible to retain media attention, he is obviously on track. And whatever the reservations about the avalanche of recordings this album leaves us in no doubt about the quality of the music.
Putting aside questions regarding “never mind the quality, feel the width”, Bonamassa has also worked hard to become a big ticket draw, and on the evidence of a performance like this, he’s worked equally hard on his own artistic development.
He’s teamed up seasoned industry song writers, and forged an ongoing writing relationship with James House (5 tracks feature here), while notably improving his vocals and testing his chops to the max in a big band setting.”
‘Time Clocks’ is infused with reflective songs – a function of a self proclaimed midlife crisis – but counterweighted by the kind of steely, restless determination that has projected him from being a child prodigy to international rock-blues stardom.**** Pete Feenstra
Aside from preparing his 15th studio album, during Lockdown Bonamassa embraced the trend for livestreams but as if to underline the need for reality and a grand stage he returned to the Royal Albert Hall in May 2022 when Dave Atkinson wrote: “For this reviewer’s money (and as a tight-arsed Yorkshireman, this is not said lightly), Bonamassa is getting better.
Previously the songs could feel like they were mere platforms for another face-melting solo. Tonight, the depth of material, thoughtful arrangements, quality of the musicians and respectful inter-play between them gave a rounded, intense and fully-immersive experience. 130 minutes had flown by. Absolutely stunning.”
It is Bonamassa’s versatility, his championing of the blues but venturing into other styles, that has characterised his work in the millennium allied to matured vocals and songwriting. But most of all he has revisited and reshaped the blues for a millennium audience, and not least been proactive with music schools via The Blues Foundation in the USA.
Bonamassa’s latest live album is released in April 2023 to be followed by a UK tour in May.
Bonamassa is active on social media in spite of trolls. But his Twitter description suggests soul searching and a realisation of artistic mortality: “There are two letters that separate infamous and famous, I am not sure what applies to me anymore. Sell by date: 11/08/2039”.
16 more years of blues/rock greatness ain’t too bad.
Story coordination: David Randall
Contributors: Dave Atkinson, Pete Feenstra, Joe Geesin, Alan Jones, Andy Nathan, Steve Janowicz, David Randall, Jason Ritchie, Keith Thompson
UK Tour dates
9 May Bournemouth BIC
10 May Blackpool Opera House
12 May Leeds First Direct Arena
13 May Newcastle Utilita Arena
14 May Birmingham Utilita Arena
Featured Artist: JOSH TAERK
Since early 2020 Josh has been entertaining us with exclusive monthly live sessions,
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.
News: RAVEN, THE FIERCE & THE DEAD, CRAZY LIXX (April 2023)
Fates Warning vocalist Ray Alder release his second solo album, ’II, on June 9 via InsideOut Music.
A 40th-anniversary super deluxe edition of Black Sabbath’s ‘Live Evil’ is released on June 2 through BMG.
Bonfire have re-recorded their ‘Point Blank’, ‘Fireworks’ and ‘Don’t Touch The Light’ as ‘MMXXIII’, which is released on 22 September through AFM Records.
Candlebox will release a new, live acoustic album ‘Live At The Neptune’ on June 23 via Pavement Entertainment.
Eric Clapton releases an extended box set edition of his 1991 live album ’24 Nights’, titled The Definitive 24 Nights, on June 23.
Crazy Lixx have renewed their deal with Frontiers which will include new albums, back catalogue and re-recordings.
Danko Jones release their new album ‘Electric Sounds’ on September 15 via AFM Records.
The Defiants have released ’Hey Life’ from their upcoming third studio album ‘Drive’, which will be released via Frontiers on June 9.
Drive-By Truckers will release a reissue of their 2004 album, ‘The Dirty South’, on June 16.
Envy Of None release a new EP, ‘That Was Then, This Is Now’, on June 9 via Kscope.
The Fierce And The Dead plan to release their new album ‘News From The Invisible World’ in late summer. They play an album launch show at Camden’s Black Heart on October 14.
Feuerschwanz will release their new studio album, ‘Fegefeuer’, on July 7 via Napalm Records.
Foo Fighters release their new album ‘But Here We Are’ on June 2 on Roswell/RCA. The single ‘Rescued’ was released on April 19.
Ghost release a five song covers EP ‘Phantomime’ on May 18.
Greta Van Fleet’s third studio album, ‘Starcatcher’, will be released on July 21 via Lava/Republic/EMI Records.
Whitesnake and Revolution Saints guitarist Joel Hoekstra releases his latest album, ‘Crash Of Life’, under Joel Hoekstra’s 13 name via Frontiers on June 16. Joining Hoesktra are Girish Pradhan (vocals), Vinny Appice (drums), Tony Franklin (bass), Derek Sherinian (keyboards) and Jeff Scott Soto (backing vocals).
Steve Lukather releases his new album ‘Bridges’ on June 16 with a new single, ‘When I See You’, out now. Fellow Toto members David Paich, Joseph Williams and Simon Phillips appear on the album.
Matchbox 20 release their new album ‘Where The Lights Goes’ on Atlantic Records on May 26.
Motley Crue are back in the studio working with producer Bob Rock.
The New Roses have extended their current record contract with Napalm Records, who release the band’s fifth studio album ‘Sweet Poison’ in October. Guitarist Norman bates has also re-joined the band.
Joe Perry (pictured) has released a new single, ’Fortunate One’, from his upcoming solo album ‘Sweetzerland Manifesto MKII’ (due on May 26), a reworked version of the original ‘Sweetzerland Manifesto’, which was released in 2018. The new version six new tracks, plus alternate vocal appearances and mixes and features special guests including Cheap Trick’s Robin Zander, Extreme’s Gary Cherone and David Johansen (New York Dolls).
The Pineapple Thief’s earliest years are covered in an eight-disc box set, ‘How Did We Find Our Way: 1999 – 2006′, which will be released through Kscope on June 26.
Rancid release their latest album ‘Tomorrow Never Comes’ is due for a June 2 release via Epitaph.
Ratt have a box set ‘The Atlantic Years: 1984-1991′ released on June 9 via BMG/Rhino.
Raven release their latest album ‘All Hell’s Breaking Loose’, their 15th studio album, on June 30 via Silver Lining Music.
Sevendust release their fourteenth studio album, ‘Truth Killer’, on July 28 via Napalm Records.
Paul Simon releases his new album ‘Seven Psalms’ on May 19.
Staind’s first new studio album since 2011, ‘Confessions Of The Fallen’, is due in September via Alchemy Recordings/BMG.
Bonnie Tyler is working on new music and also a memoir, which will cover her childhood up to her chart success in the 70s and 80s.
Vambo have signed with Pride & Joy Music , who will release the band’s second album later this year.
Weapon release their new album ‘New Clear Power’ via Pride & Joy Music on May 19. Vocalist Danny Haynes is the sole remaining original member and guests on the album include Steve Mann (MSG, Lionheart) and Tino Troy (Paying Mantis).
Lucinda Williams releases her latest album ‘Stories from a Rock n Roll Heart’ on June 30 through Highway 20 Records/Thirty Tigers. The album features guest backing vocals by Patti Scialfa, Bruce Springsteen, Buddy Miller, Angel Olsen, Margo Price, Tommy Stinson & more.
Newly announced UK tours (2023 unless stated):
Blink-182, The Cult, the Dust Coda, Greta Van Fleet, Lazuli, Limp Bizkit, Ian Moss (Cold Chisel), Graham Nash, New Order, Gary Numan, Public Image Limited, Queens of the Stone Age, Rival Sons, the Sisters of Mercy, Sweet, Wheatus,
Newly announced US & European tours (2023 unless stated):
Avenged Sevenfold (US), Blink-182 (US, ANZ, Eur), Clutch (US), The Cult (Eur), Dream Theater + Devin Townsend (US), Extreme + Living Color (Aus, US), Peter Frampton (US), Godflesh (US), Greta Van Fleet (US, Eur), Jethro Tull (US), Matchbox 20 (Aus), Steve Morse Band (US), Motionless In White + In This Moment (US), Mr Bungle (US), Ted Nugent (US), Carl Palmer (US), Parkway Drive (US), Pearl Jam (US), Quiet Riot (US), the Quireboys (US), Sting (US), Stratovarius (Mex), Geoff Tate (US), Tears For Fears (US), Volbeat + Halestorm (US), W.A.S.P. (US),
The Pretenders, The Darkness and Larkin Poe have been added as supports to Guns N Roses on their Hyde Park gig on June 30.
Power Trip takes place at Empire Polo Club in Indio, between October 6 and 8. The Friday will be headlined by Guns N’ Roses and Iron Maiden, with AC/DC and Ozzy Osbourne on Saturday, and Metallica and Tool on the Sunday.
Anneke van Giersbergen will support Floor Jansen on her upcoming European dates.
Nightwish have announced plans to take a break from touring and will not tour in support of the band’s next studio album, which is due next year.
Lynyrd Skynyrd have announced they will continue to perform live following the recent passing of Gary Rossington.
Ted Nugent has stated his upcoming US summer tour will be his last although he will still write and record new music.
Postponed/cancelled gigs & tours
Former Bauhaus frontman Peter Murphy has postponed his upcoming David Bowie US tribute tour with guitarist Adrian Belew. The dates have been moved back to October & November.
The Emerald Dawn have cancelled their April UK tour due to a band member with covid.
Machine Head have cancelled their US spring tour due to work visa issues.
George Thorogood and the Destroyers have cancelled Canadian and US tour dates from April 27 through to May 21 as Thorogood deals with an undisclosed “very serious medical condition.”
Sir Brian May has been named the greatest guitarist of all time by readers of Total Guitar Magazine.
Sly Stone has his memoir, ‘Thank You (Falettinme Be Mice Elf Agin)’, published in the UK on October 17 by White Rabbit and in the US by AUWA Books.
Midge Ure has sold his catalogue of music rights to investment company MusicBird.
Geddy Lee’s memoir ‘My Effin’ Life’ is published on November 14.
The John Farnham documentary ‘Finding The Voice’ is released in Australian cinemas on May 18.
In through the out door…line-up changes
Diamond Head’s guitarist Brian Tatler has joined Saxon as their touring guitarist.
Rhino Bucket have announced original bassist Reeve Downes is no longer in the band and will be replaced by Sean McNabb (Dokken, Great White, Quiet Riot, Lynch Mob)
Cinta is the new vocalist for the Hawkmen
Chris Dovis is the new drummer for Testament
Suicidal Tendancies have parted ways with drummer Brandon Pertzborn and have replaced him with Greyson Nekrutman
Former Accept bassist Peter Baltes joins U.D.O. replacing Tilen Hudrap
Keith Reid, Procol Harum lyricist and co-writer of John Farnham’s hit ‘You’re The Voice’
Gentle Giant bassist and songwriter Ray Shulman
Ryuichi Sakamoto of the Yellow Magic Orchestra
Seymour Stein, Sire Records founder
John Regan, former Frehley’s Comet and Peter Frampton bassist
Founding member of the Quireboys guitarist Guy Bailey
The Alan Parsons Project and Kate Bush guitarist Ian Bairnson
ABBA’s long-term guitarist Lasse Wellander
Paper Lace bass player Chris Fish
Featured Artist: JOSH TAERK
Since early 2020 Josh has been entertaining us with exclusive monthly live sessions,
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.
When we reviewed the previous Ally Venable album we suggested that whilst the young guitar slinger/singer/songwriter had made great progress the perfectly formed finish was yet to come. ‘Real Gone’ takes things a step further and shows a growing confidence certainly in the vocal department and perhaps less of a reliance on her main influence Stevie Ray Vaughan.
We saw Ally during the Blues Caravan tour in the UK not long before Lockdown when she also was part of a more integrated band whilst having her own solo showcase. She’s touring in Europe this year, again with Blues Caravan.
There’s no doubt that Ally is visually and aurally appealing to those of a certain age and I can’t help wonder whether she will stray off the blues circuit and ultimately crossover to a wider (younger) rock audience. At least she is then more likely to attract fans (both male and female) nearer her own age. On this latest release only ‘Hold My Ground’ really has this crossover potential.
In spite of their early blues roots her contemporaries such as Erja Lyytinen, Eliana Cargnelutti and even Joanne Shaw Taylor have slipped into a more “mainstream” offering in recent years.
For the moment this is solid southern blues rock from start to finish. The faster paced tunes are punctuated by Venable’s gritty guitar whilst several slower pieces introduce variety with a brass section for ‘Any Fool Should Know’. She’s actually at her most convincing on the more upbeat stuff such as the title track and ‘Kiss Your Ass’ whilst ‘Don’t Lose Me’ introduces a welcome element of southern funk and a brass section.
But it’s on ‘Gone So Long’ that Venable shows a direction that could be further explored, significantly without a modicum of the blues that otherwise permeates the album. Over far too quickly, it should have been expanded with a killer guitar coda. As it is, still a standout.
Production this time is from Tom Hambridge (who also plays drums and co-wrote several tracks) and the perhaps inevitable A-List guest appearances from Joe Bonamassa and Buddy Guy (both of whom have worked with the producer previously).
If anything it’s only the songs and the format’s predictability that might now hold Ally back but ‘Real Gone’ marks a further step in her musical maturity (she is still only 23!) and presages the inevitable arrival of Kevin Shirley. ***1/2
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.
Gig review: PIXIES – Roundhouse, London, 21 March 2023
The last time I saw Pixies live, they played the Forum in Kentish Town which was still called the Town & Country Club, and when the band’s brand of punky, indie, noisy alternative rock was still in its first flush. I loved them.
They split in 1993 for a decade to pursue other successful projects and came back bigger than before. This was the second night of a sold out Roundhouse stay on a lengthy European tour. Negligently, I had not seen them since those glorious days in the 1990’s.
Some things have changed. Kim Deal, bassist and singer, left in 2013 to concentrate on her other band The Breeders. A tough act to follow, she was replaced by Paz Lenchantin who seemed to fit in well here, though without Kim’s gravitas.
Some things have not changed. Black Francis remains the lead singer, rhythm guitarist and driving force. Joey Santiago is still the mercurial lead guitarist, throwing light and shade, sharp and smooth, dirty and clean, thick and thin. David Lovering, rock solid, is the original drummer.
Another thing that hasn’t changed: The band do not banter. The set was a full, intense two-hour sweep of their career and no-one on stage verbally engaged with the audience at all. It was ever thus. Don’t come to a Pixies gig and expect a toe-curling ‘let see which side of the hall can sing the loudest…’ experience.
There was a moment prior to the track ‘Hey’, when Black Francis said ‘Hey’ and we laughed knowingly, because it wasn’t an introduction, it was just the start of the song.
This eschewing of frivolities leaves room for the tunes. And we got 38 of them. Smashed out with efficiency, verve and a bit of anger. Everything from the new album ‘Doggerel’ was played. ‘Nomatterday’ a real standout with ‘Who’s More Sorry Now’ and ‘Dregs of the Wine’ also amongst the best of them. It is a strong album, maybe a touch more melodic than earlier outings, and I wondered if Francis’s voice had mellowed a little. But no. The caustic, coarse projection was there, when needed, on early tracks like ‘Bone Machine’ and ‘River Euphrates’ and others.
Tunes from that debut album ‘Surfer Rosa’ and follow-up ‘Doolittle’ featured prominently. Set openers ‘Gouge Away’ and ‘Wave of Mutilation’ set the pace and tone. At the close, it was ‘Dabaser’, ‘Vamos’ and ‘Where Is My Mind?’ that had the crowd dancing. A second, stripped back version of ‘Wave of Mutilation’ had us crooning the words in a beautiful melody, counter-pointed deliciously with the brutality of the lyric.
No ‘Gigantic’, which would have been the icing on the cake, but that was always Kim’s song and was never realistically going to be aired tonight. Instead a cover of Neil Young’s ‘Winterlong’ brought proceedings to a close, with the first and only extended solo of the night from Joey Santiago.
And no encores, of course. Antagonistic, influential, contrary, unsettling, brilliant. Pixies are one of a kind.
Review by Dave Atkinson
Featured Artist: JOSH TAERK
Since early 2020 Josh has been entertaining us with exclusive monthly live sessions,
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.
‘Born To Be Wild’ is what, at first look, is often called a novelty album. Bring together a one-time Hollywood (and musical) icon (of a certain era) and hook them up virtually with a whole cache of contemporaneous artists.
Ann-Margret was very much a fixation for pubescent males in the early sixties, along with French sex siren Brigitte Bardot and to a lesser extent Catherine Deneuve and Jane Fonda. Musically Ann-Margret duetted with Elvis in the 1964 film ‘Viva Las Vegas’ (and three others) giving her added credibility and screen presence but she also released several albums.
Cleopatra have now coordinated a veritable A list of contributors who grew up musically in the sixties and are old enough to have had her poster on their bedroom wall.
The music is based around rock/pop’s first two decades as you might expect, starting with a take on Bill Haley’s ‘Rock Around The Clock’ with Joe Perry (b.1950) and Jim McCarty (ex-Yardbirds, b.1943). Pete Townshend (b.1945) pays his respects with ‘Bye Bye Love’(Ann-Margret appeared in the ‘Tommy’ movie) and there’s even a “duet” with Cliff Richard (b.1940) on ‘Can’t Take My Eyes Off You.” Where he emotes in the closing refrains “I’m a fan…of Ann”.
Apparently Ann-Margret still rides a Harley Davidson so ‘Born To Be Wild’ is quite appropriate and here she is aided by The Fuzztones. Elsewhere there is the appearance of an old sparring partner (in the 1962 musical film ‘State Fair’) Pat Boone with a cameo from Rick Wakeman on ‘Teach Me Tonight’.
It’s a shame that this album didn’t revisit her 1961 single ‘I Just Don’t Understand’ which was covered later by The Beatles. It sounded pretty good back then and could have been nicely updated for a wider (rock) audience.
Vocally 81 year old Ann-Margret knows her range and whilst fairly monotone it’s certainly more listenable than – for instance – Marianne Faithfull and in terms of similar offerings infinitely superior to the likes of label-mate William Shatner.
Nostalgia and novelty combine in perfect harmony and the album may no doubt remind some of mis-spent youth and, frustratingly, a missing poster. ***
Review by David Randall
Featured Artist: JOSH TAERK
Since early 2020 Josh has been entertaining us with exclusive monthly live sessions,
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.
News: JOE BONAMASSA enters The GRTR! Grotto of Greatness in April 2023
The latest inductee to “The GRTR! Grotto of Greatness” is blues/rock guitarist Joe Bonamassa.
A major retrospective feature charting Bonamassa’s rise and rise in the millennium will be published on 1 April by rock website Get Ready to ROCK! and throughout the month Get Ready to ROCK! Radio will feature more of his music.
Says Managing Editor David Randall: “Bonamassa broke through the European market in 2005 and his progression over the next two decades coincides with coverage at Get Ready to ROCK! We’ve covered his gigs and albums including several interviews.
In preparing a major retrospective I’ve noted how many different reviewers have been involved in our coverage giving a healthy overview during an extended period.
Our Blues Editor Pete Feenstra has been pivotal in that coverage and back in 2005 promoted Bonamassa’s early UK gigs. The retrospective, on the eve of a new album release and UK tour dates, is a great reminder of Joe’s progress from child prodigy to arena filling artist.”
Bonamassa releases a new live album in April ahead of UK dates in May.
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) and Eleanor McEvoy (March).
The latest entrant in “The Grotto” was announced live on Get Ready to ROCK! Radio on Sunday 26 March.
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.
Tyler Bryant and the Shakedown’s ‘Shake The Roots’ album released last year was a real treat, mixing blues rock, southern rock, country and rock n roll to great effect. The EP features Tyler Bryant’s wife Rebecca Lovell (Larkin Poe) as a guest vocalist; Tyler recently co-produced Larkin Poe’s album ‘Blood Harmony’ in his Nashville studio.
Opening with the short instrumental ‘Strike’ allows Tyler Bryant to strut his stuff on the guitar, before the hard rocking ‘Burnin’ kicks in. A song that offers a positive lyrical message of persistence, despite obstacles — something that is the epitome of The Shakedown story. As drummer Caleb Crosby said in a recent interview,“We’ve had our music shelved by record companies. We’ve been stranded on highways trying to figure out how we were going to make shows. We’ve had times where we felt like we were banging our heads against the wall. But you keep your head down and keep going. It’s all part of the journey.”
The title track is complete opposite, a mellower affair featuring gentle guitar and Rebecca Lovell on backing vocals. ‘Sho Been Worse’ has a natty blues shuffle, complete with an instant chorus. Therein lies the strength of Tyler Bryant and the Shakedown, memorable tunes topped off with the impressive guitar playing of Tyler.
‘Thunder’ is a personal pick of the EP, a slow start before the storm, sorry, song kicks in. The sort of song the Answer or Robert Jon & the Wreck would love to have written I am sure. ‘Fire & Brimstone’ rounds the EP off with a nice ‘n’ easy bit of blues and the guitar is the star on the second part of this song.
Another rewarding and satisfying listen from Tyler Bryant and the Shakedown. More blues focussed than the ‘Shake The Roots’ album. They have plenty of good music in them and this EP just leaves you wanting more from them. Greedy I know but when artists are this good you can never get enough! ****
Review by Jason Ritchie
Featured Artist: JOSH TAERK
Since early 2020 Josh has been entertaining us with exclusive monthly live sessions,
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.
Album review: WARFARE – The Lemmy Sessions (3 CD Boxset)
Cherry Red/HNE [Release date : 24.03.23]
Late on in the last century’s timeline, around 1990, Co. Durham’s one and only anarchic metal band, Warfare, were outselling stablemates, Venom and Raven.
On stage and off stage they were living up to their “anarchic metal” label.
Their innovative approach included signing up with Hammer Horror to release an album of horror movie themes.
Their fan following just grew and grew.
Five years earlier :
In 1985, the band began their recording life with two EPs, Two Tribes and Total Death.
The band’s brutal, chaotic heavy metal immediately found a home. Storming versions of Frankie’s ‘Two Tribes’ and the direct, clanging, tightly torqued up axework of ‘Burning Up’ and ‘Destroy’ turned these EPs into best sellers in the Heavy Metal market.
Consequently, the band’s first full length studio album, Metal Anarchy, came less than a year later.
Band leader / drummer/ vocalist Paul Evo, better known simply as Evo, approached Motorhead’s Lemmy Kilminster to produce. The two bands had each other’s respect, and of both the Punk and the Metal community. It was the perfect decision. Both in idea and in execution.
Once again, the Cherry Red label’s research and development team have come with the goods.
This 3 CD boxset contains the original album, now dusted down and polished up. Plus the “Lemmy Mix” on a separate CD.
Evo had a very specific mindset as to how the music should sound. Consequently, Lemmy presented him with a cassette of his production for approval, prior to the final mix down. It’s a rough, raw presentation of elemental heavy metal. You can see why the label and its A&R team were excited to get it out on CD.
The big hitters, ‘Psycho Express’ and ‘Disgrace’ have been moved up to the front in the running order. ‘Living For The Last Days’ doesn’t sound hugely different and a much darker ‘Wrecked Society’ somehow seems a fitting finale.
These two versions comprise CD 1 and CD 2.
The two EPs make up CD3.
The Boxset features expansions of the original artwork, and new liner notes written by Evo and NWOBHM expert, John Tucker. ***1/2
Review by Brian McGowan
Featured Artist: JOSH TAERK
Since early 2020 Josh has been entertaining us with exclusive monthly live sessions,
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.
Yet another Steve Hillage live album? And again focusing on the “classic era”? One for the fans, definitely, for whom the main attraction will be three bonus tracks recorded in London in March 1977 and seemingly left over from the ‘Live Herald’ release.
The main event, though, is the January gig that year at L.A. Forum when he supported ELO on their U.S. tour. It reminds us of Hillage’s ascendancy at this time. All psychedelic guitar, magic mushrooms and flying teapots.
Hillage always had a good band and here he is accompanied by the likes of Colin Bass (bass), Miquette Giraudy (synthesiser, backing vocals) and Clive Bunker (drums). Only Giraudy remains in the current line-up that plays UK dates in March/April coinciding with this album release.
There is, therefore, a whiff of “cash-in” about this project. The real problem is that much of this set list has been recycled over the years in different shapes and forms, starting with Live Herald in 1979.
The recording quality, originally from cassette, is only let down by annoying sibilance on the cymbals and the drum sound in general. The individual track editing however is sloppy with, for example, the merciful ending of ‘Meditation Of The Dragon’ (essentially a demo of Hillage’s effects unit) truncated and the somewhat ramshackle ‘It’s All Too Much’ capturing the previous song’s final flourish.
When we get the hippie dippy lyrics/vocals out of the way the blend of jazz fusion and rock can be quite engrossing especially if under the influence of something.
The bonus tracks are ‘Aftaglid’, ‘Electrick Gypsies’ and the Buddy Holly cover ‘Not Fade Away (Glid Forever) and whilst there’s no information in the liner note/credits these are presumably outtakes from the Live Herald album and of course the sound quality is so much better.
Somewhat stuck in his classic time zone I personally would like to see him focus on an oft-overlooked late seventies sojourn ‘Open’ which offered up some real gems which were more accessible for most non die-hards. But of course demands for a more straight-ahead approach from his label Virgin evidently sent him into record production in the 1980s and into the arms of The Orb in the 1990s.
At best, this album should be categorised as “historic”. The uninitiated may also like to track down the BBC Live In Concert released in 1992 along with Rainbow 1977 (2014) and ‘The Glastonbury Experience (Live 1979)’ (2022) which all provide both alternatives and duplicates from the same period. ***
24.3.23 Nottingham Rock City
25.3.23 Manchester O2 Ritz
26.3.23 Glasgow SWG3
28.3.23 Southampton The 1865
29.3.23 Exeter Phoenix
30.3.23 Bristol O2 Academy
31.3.23 Birmingham O2 Institute
01.4.23 London O2 Forum Kentish Town
02.4.23 Brighton Concorde 2
Featured Artist: JOSH TAERK
Since early 2020 Josh has been entertaining us with exclusive monthly live sessions,
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.
‘The Fooler’ is the sixth album from Nick Waterhouse and his last album, 2021′s ‘Promenade Blue’ was a real find and musical highlight for this reviewer. Recorded in just a few days with Mark Neill – who is perhaps best known for earning a Grammy for his work on The Black Key’s album “Brothers” – the album sees Nick once again combining rhythm and blues, garage rock, radio soul and more into his own unique musical mix.
As regards the subject matter on the album Nick says, “Many of the stories in the record come from that feeling of plasticity. What is memory? What is time? What is love between two human beings like in this imaginary city? It’s Cubist.
A listener sees the angles of my life – and inexorably, my career – reflected in this work from all sides at once. I started thinking again about my university days, about modernist writers like Virginia Woolf, Christopher Isherwood, Hart Crane, or Ford Maddox Ford; about memory and how it betrays you; what you can see and what you can’t.”
‘(No) Commitment’ is a superb 1960′s trowback tune and one that would delight the listeners of Boom Radio – and that’s meant as a compliment, not a dig at the music for its old fashioned feel. The soul side of his music shows on ‘Are You Hurting’, whilst the title track is a vocal treat sung over a laid back backing, with piano and acoustic guitar to the fore.
Can’t quite love the slightly twee backing vocals on ‘Hide and Seek’, (‘Late In The Garden’ is another that doesn’t quite match the quality on the rest of the album) yet they redeem themselves on ‘Play To Win’, which also features a lovely bit of piano and trumpet.
Close your eyes and you can easily picture yourself in an American diner or coffee bar circa 1963. The music and singing of Nick Watershouse really do transport you back in time. ‘The Problem With A Street’ being a prime example. The care and attention that goes into the music is something to marvel at and it has that timeless feel, thanks to a sterling job on the production side of things.
Nick Waterhouse hits the mark again with another album full of variety and melody, all anchored in the musical sounds of the late 1950s/early 1960s. ***1/2
Review by Jason Ritchie
Featured Artist: JOSH TAERK
Since early 2020 Josh has been entertaining us with exclusive monthly live sessions,
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.
The pandemic has seen all sorts of creative ideas and music coming out, the latest being Blue Light Effect, a band composed of first responders, frontline workers, and a registered nurse. Hailing from Long Island, NY (home to another blue band, the legendary Blue Oyster Cult!), the band features Vinny Verzino (vocals), Craig Siegelbaum (guitars, piano), Justin Cellini (bass) and Joe Mignanelli (drums).
When listening to a new band you always try to think of similar sounding artists and in Blue Light Effect’s case it was a mixed bag that came to mind, including Cold, Collective Soul (particularly on ‘Cauterize’), Five For Fighting and Fall Out Boy.
They go all out rock on ‘Got Your Six’, which will certainly blow away any cobwebs, then there is the slow building ‘Soul Lost’. The latter shows the range and power of Vinny Verzino’s vocals. Mind you, Craig Siegelbaum lays down the solo of the album on this on too. ‘Goodbye’ has that pop crossover potential with its emotionally charge lyric and catchy riffs.
Two of the songs feature Gina Cutillo on vocals, namely ‘Tempered’ and ‘Save Us For Another Life’. Both are instant on the ears and hopefully Blue Light Effect and Gina Cutillo will work together again, as they complement each other perfectly and add an extra dimension to the band’s sound.
Blue Light Effect pack a lot of musical emotion into the album’s eleven songs, with a running time just short of forty minutes, no song outlasts its welcome.
Modern rock with a keen ear for melody, Blue Light Effect are a band to watch. In the meantime enjoy this refreshing album which stands up to repeated plays. ***1/2
Review by Jason Ritchie
Featured Artist: JOSH TAERK
Since early 2020 Josh has been entertaining us with exclusive monthly live sessions,
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.
Floor Jansen’s addition as a permanent member to the Nightwish family back in 2013 found most of the fans of the Finnish outfit in total agreement, as the three-octave ranged soprano was already a singer of a proven pedigree, having fronted successful symphonic metal bands such as After Forever and ReVamp in the past.
Her solid vocal performances on albums like “Endless Forms Most Beautiful”[2015] & “Human :II: Nature” [2020] and the great acclaim that followed their release further solidified her position in the band but could not mask the fact that Jansen would only reach a certain level of musical fulfilment under the Nightwish moniker.
That, I believe, is why the release of a solo album like “Paragon” is of paramount importance to both the Dutch singer and her thousands of fans around the globe.
Similarly to what Sharon den Adel did in the project “My Indigo” and the mighty Anneke Van Giersbergen in…well, every single solo album that was released following her departure from The Gathering, Jansen chose to significantly strip things down on her first solo effort and, in doing so, operate outside of what could be described as her ‘comfort zone’.
Rather than investing in the type of layered orchestrations and bombastic musical themes which define and describe her ‘day job’, the ten compositions which are on offer here are instead characterized by their simplicity, immediacy and richness of emotion. The end result? Stunning; a collection of ten songs that are more than capable of appealing to fans of Rock & Pop music alike.
The album gets off to a flying start with the up-tempo beat and high-energy mood of “My Paragon” – a three and a half minute composition which proves how successful Jansen’s ‘back-to-basics’ approach has been.
Perfectly ranged vocal deliveries, a rhythmical theme that one will find impossible not to dance along to…this little gem has it all and then some! The follow-up composition “Daydream”, on the other hand, is a more introspective affair – one that is dominated by Jansen’s smooth/emotional layered vocal delivery in the song’s captivating refrain.
Featuring simple orchestral themes and more stupendously catchy vocal melodies, “Invincible” is another composition that will win you over from the ‘go’ while comparisons with Jansen’s fellow countrywoman Anneke Van Giersbergen will undoubtedly be drawn when listening to the main theme, the sublime guitar work and smooth/moody vocal deliveries of “Hope”.
Choosing favorites is a very personal affair and, as far as this album is concerned, I am sure that most listeners’ choices will change as the weeks and months go by.
My personal vote, being an 80’s kid and all, will have to go to “Come Full Circle” as Jansen’s powerful vocal line in the refrain and the keyboard themes used throughout the song brought back memories from a time in my life when things were much more innocent and pure.
Choose any contemporary Pop diva and get her to perform a moving ballad like “Storm” and the end result will most likely leave much to be desired. Jansen, however, manages to navigate through the ‘dangerous musical waters’ of this deceivingly simple-sounding composition with an ease that shocks and impresses in equal measure.
The last part of what I can only describe as the ‘holy-triumvirate’ of this album is “Me Without You” – a four minute piano-lounge sounding composition whose James-Bond themed beat and dramatic vocal lines ooze of sex appeal.
The album concludes with three low key affairs, namely “The Calm”, “Armoured Wings” and “Fire”, all of which allow Jansen to further flex her vocal muscles and, by doing so, offering the listener with moments of sheer joy in the process.
I have to be honest with you; when I decided to undertake the review for this album I did so mostly out of curiosity, as I can hardly be described as a die-hard Nightwish fan. Never in a million years did I expect to become so impressed, mesmerized…no, absolutely captivated by what the singer/songwriter who wanted to become a Biologist as a child has so generously put on offer for us in “Paragon”.
Moody, powerful, intimate, disarming…I can use a hundred more such adjectives here and I will still fail to describe the sheer quality and value of Jansen’s first solo effort. What I can really only hope for is that “Paragon” will be the first of many such efforts, as I truly feel that beautiful singing ‘birds’ should be allowed to roam free and not remain locked behind ‘golden cages’! ****1/2
Review by Ioannis Stefanis
Featured Artist: JOSH TAERK
Since early 2020 Josh has been entertaining us with exclusive monthly live sessions,
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.
Album review: FOGHAT – Road Fever – The Complete Bearsville Recordings 1972-75 (6 CD boxset)
Cherry Red/HNE [Release date 24.03.23]
Britband Foghat clocked up a considerable number of tour miles after relocating to the USA in 1970, road testing their material, looking to kickstart their career. It worked a treat. It’s on the road that you establish the body of each song, then adapt and refine it, adding the details. Subsequently, all five of the band’s seventies’ albums went gold.
Their deceptively simple boogie has its roots in the American south. It’s basically delta blues with its serial number filed off, then turned up to eleven, and Foghat neatly underline the result by adding rhythmic gear changes and foot stomping slide guitar.
A solid line up helped: “Lonesome” Dave Peverett, Rod Price and Roger Earl were in the band from the beginning. Musician/producer Nick Jameson came on board for the fifth album.
Astute US label, Bearsville, snapped up the band and fast forwarded them through 5 albums. Every one went gold.
CD1: Foghat (1972)
CD2: Rock’N’Roll (1973)
CD3: Energized (1974)
CD4: Rock’n’Roll Outlaws (1974)
CD5: Fool For The City (1975)
CD6: The Singles (1972-75)
The band didn’t know it at the time, but the first four albums were simply preparing the way for 1975’s Fool For The City. This platinum selling album would stake their claim on eternal rock’n’roll fame.
The title track and ‘Slow Ride’ were career peaks, high energy, head bobbing rock, each displaying as much a foot stomping stamp of authenticity as genre giants, Creedence Clearwater Revival and Canned Heat.
But we shouldn’t minimise the quality of the earlier material.
The Dave Edmunds’ produced debut Foghat made a blistering version of Willie Dixon’s blues classic, ‘I Just Wanna Make Love To You’ into a fan and FM Radio favourite. Two special edits also lead off the Singles on CD 6.
From that moment on the band were knocking out mainly self penned albums like there was no tomorrow. Their exhausting tour schedule had two upsides. One, the opportunity to test out new material, and two, to maintain a high profile for the latest album when FM Radio was still in its infancy.
Rock & Roll, (so-called to differentiate from the debut), Energized and Rock N Roll Outlaws all squeezed their moments in the sun into a frantic 3 albums in 2 years release schedule. A fuller, more considered take on Big Joe Turner’s sexually suggestive ‘Honey Hush’ gave Energized a huge chart boost, and according to Allmusic, “‘Chateau Lafitte ‘59 Boogie’, from Outlaws, is one of the most exhilarating rockers in the Foghat catalogue”.
Then there was Fool For The City. That’s where we came in.
On CD6, for lifelong Foghat enthusiasts, there are a dozen or so mono and stereo edits of the band’s single releases. ‘Fool For The City’ and ‘Slow Ride’ get pride of place, but there’s room too for Rod Price’s classic blues boogie,’What A Shame’ and their cover of Buddy Holly’s ‘That’ll Be The Day’. From one class act to another. *****
Review by Brian McGowan
Featured Artist: JOSH TAERK
Since early 2020 Josh has been entertaining us with exclusive monthly live sessions,
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.
Book review: FLEETWOOD MAC IN THE 1980s by Don Klees
SonicBond Publishing [Publication date 27.01.23]
During the 1980’s Fleetwood Mac only released two albums, 1982’s ‘Mirage’, which topped the US album charts, and 1987’s ‘Tango In The Night’, which saw the band top the UK album charts with sales to date topping 2.5m alone in the UK.
There was a live album, but that aside, much of the book covers the solo careers of Stevie Nicks (who had a string of hit albums and singles in the 1980s), Lindsey Buckingham, Christine McVie and Mick Fleetwood. John McVie semi-retired from music when Fleetwood Mac weren’t active bar the odd appearance with John Mayall and the Bluesbreakers.
Don Klees gives a concise overview of Fleetwood Mac pre-1980 and the final chapter of the book whizzes through the band’s history from 1990’s ‘Behind The Mask’ album until the present day. Using quotes from interviews, with a heavy reliance on Mick Fleetwood’s two memoirs, Klees gives a fair appraisal of each band member’s solo work and the three albums released by the band.
He also covers underlying tension between the band members’ individual and group efforts – the truth that they worked best together but could only do so for limited periods. Although like a soap opera at times, Fleetwood Mac have only had massive success when Lindsey Buckingham, Christine McVie, Stevie Nicks, Mick Fleetwood and John McVie were together.
The book has the reader off to investigate oft overlooked albums like Mick Fleetwood’s Zoo album, which saw the drummer playing in tiny venues as the band never really took off. Good overview of Stevie Nick’s solo albums which again has the reader off to listen to these again or perhaps enjoy for the first time.
Fleetwood Mac still have ‘Rumours’ and a best of compilation in the UK album charts at the time of writing, however, any future activity by the band seems unlikely following the death of Christine McVie last year. It is more likely we will have new music and touring as solo artists as indeed Stevie Nicks has US live shows lined-up for the year.
An absorbing and informative overview of Fleetwood Mac’s second most popular decade after their ‘Rumours’ led 1970s. Perfect for the casual fan, of whom there must be many judging by the band’s album sales! ****
Review by Jason Ritchie
Featured Artist: JOSH TAERK
Since early 2020 Josh has been entertaining us with exclusive monthly live sessions,
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.
The 21st century has seen a huge number of young blues guitar prodigies emerge from the UK and then establish themselves to a greater or lesser degree- Joanne Shaw Taylor, Oli Brown, Virgil McMahon and Aynsley Lister to name but a few. Liverpool born, Warwickshire raised Laurence Jones is another, and it was a reminder of the expertise we will miss when Pete Feenstra hands over the reins after over 20 years at the Boom Boom, as he introduced him with a potted history going back to coming to Water Trout’s notice as an ambitious teenage hopeful over a decade ago.
First we had an unexpectedly good support band in Blue Nation, or more specifically just singer/guitarist Neil Murdoch and bassist Luke West doing an acoustic set. Some choice covers such as ‘While My Guitar Gently Weeps’ and ‘House Of the Rising Sun sat alongside originals- ‘Come Back Home’, ‘Innocent’ and ‘Cold Night’. The vocals were particularly excellent with some sweet harmonies and though I’m sure the format played a part, they had the feel of the. American West coast than the blues act I had been expecting.
There were also a couple of surprises, debuting a new song ‘Time That We Lost’, then ‘Down on the Riverside’ was given a fuller beat by a ponytailed guest drummer, none other than one Mr L Jones. Their earthy Brunmie humour also engaged the crowd, and ending with ‘Echoes’ with its anti suicide message, this was a very impressive set enough to have me hunting down the merch desk for a CD after the show.
Since my only previous sighting of him, supporting Glenn Hughes in 2018, there have been changes in Laurence Jones live act. Gone was the pinstriped suit and short hair, and more significantly the keyboard player and backing singers, leaving a classic power trio. As a lengthy instrumental intro led into ‘What’s It Gonna Be’, the music was to match, with the dominant strand those late sixties and early seventies days when the blues morphed into the birth of heavy rock.
The piledriving Anywhere With Me’ and a slightly boogiefied ‘Don’t Need A Reason’ had me drawing comparisons with the likes of Stray and Ten Years After. Mistreated (no not that one!) saw Jack Alexander Timmis laying down some funky bass, before the song that has long been his signature one, ‘Thunder in the Sky’ was a 10 minute epic, a slow blues concluding in a lengthy and emotion filled solo.
‘Destination Unknown’ had some interesting twists, including a vocal contribution from drummer Ash Sheehan before he previewed two new songs from a new album later in the year- and both ‘Don’t You Leave Me This Way’ and ‘Women’ were seriously heavy, while his voice has a more powerful rasp to it than I’d remembered from previous exposure to him.
Given the musical territory I was not overly surprised when a cover of ‘Purple Haze’ proved the latest vehicle for Laurence’s guitar pyrotechnics as well as Ash bashing away with a wicked glint in his eye, even before that rarity, an entertaining drum solo. The set ended with ‘Foolin Me’, even further away from his blues roots, reminding me of Ted Nugent or Pat Travers.
There were two encores however beginning with a supercharged version of the old Lead Belly standard ‘Good Morning Blues’. Finally Laurence told the story of his recent tour with Status Quo and Francis Rossi telling him that he had ripped them off on ‘Stop Moving The House’. It certainly had that chugging rhythm, leading to quite a few in the crowd shaking their thing, but in the mould of the early seventies Frantic Four, not the watered down later variety.
Indeed comparisons could be made to Quo’s post ‘Matchstick Men’ volte face at the end of the sixties in Laurence’s decision to dress down, go back to basics and pursue an uncompromising sound. It may disappoint some of his purer blues fans, or indeed those hoping he would maintain a more song-oriented direction but, in following his instincts, Laurence Jones is attracting a new audience, albeit for a rather retro sound, and may be guaranteeing himself a more sustainable long term future.
Review and Photos by Andy Nathan
Featured Artist: JOSH TAERK
Since early 2020 Josh has been entertaining us with exclusive monthly live sessions,
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.
Gig review: LUST FOR LIFE – The Lexington, London, 12 March 2023
This was a proper throwback gig melding pioneering punk, art rock, new wave and all points in-between, battered out by a scratch band pulled together specifically to celebrate the forty-fifth anniversary of Iggy Pop’s ‘Lust For Life’ album.
Tony Fox Sales, bassist on that landmark album, was due to front this tour, but had to pull out at short notice. However the band that eventually came together was steeped in myriad Iggy Pop collaborations and connections.
Most notably, Kevin Armstrong on guitar who worked with Pop on the ‘Blah! Blah! Blah!’ album and also brought a classy David Bowie/Tin Machine cv.
Drummer, Clem Burke is best known for his long-standing work with Blondie, but goes way back to the New York punk scene with Pop and others in the mid-70’s. He’s played with everyone in various guises (including briefly as Elvis Ramone in a line-up of the punk originals) and is one of my favourite drummers to watch.
Glen Matlock of Sex Pistols’ notoriety has written tracks for Iggy Pop and stepped up to this band on the defection of Tony Fox Sales.
On vocals, perhaps a surprise in the shape of broadcaster and Pet Shop Boys dancer, Katie Puckrik. The team was rounded out by the excellent Luis Correia on second guitar, who’s toured with Earl Slick and Florence Sabeva on keyboards, a classical pianist, composer, and touring member of Heaven 17.
The band is greeted enthusiastically by a sold-out Lexington and immediately the rhythm pairing of Matlock and Burke finds a groove on that signature ‘Lust For Life’ intro. Suddenly I have goose-pimples.
Then comes the chopping guitar lines, undercut with electric piano. And finally Puckrik delivers the vocals, maybe without the resonance of the original, but with plenty of verve and energy. At the risk of hyberbole, it’s hard to argue that this Bowie-penned track is anything other than iconic and the band do it full justice.
‘Sixteen’ finds the right slew of raw, edgy guitar crawling over the track, and it is also quickly apparent that Puckrik is gonna be a natural, ebullient front-woman.
‘Some Weird Sin’ features more brilliant guitar from Kevin Armstrong, ploughing a delicious tone, and complemented well by Glen Matlock who assumes an effortless demeanour between Puckrik and Correia on the tight stage.
There’s an early backing vocal work-out for the crowd on ‘The Passenger’ and the uplifting ‘Tonight’, another gilt-edged Bowie composition, follows. Clem Burke is hitting the tubs so hard on the intro that I’m almost wincing. This is the first track where Florence Sabeva’s keyboards really fly.
The band are not hanging about. There’s a bit of chat from Katie, but quickly we are in to the loose-limbed stomp of ‘Success’. It’s an enthusiastic version that connects with the audience and we can pass quickly over the raggedy backing vocals, comments about which have no place in this review.
‘Turn Blue’ is probably the track where Puckrik’s vocal style was likely to be most challenged, but she carries it off well, reigning in some of the histrionics a tad and letting the band take some of the strain.
Kevin Armstrong is absolutely the musical director on stage. Everyone is taking their cues from him and his playing is powerful and yet understated. ‘Neighborhood Threat’ is a case in point, sharing lead duties with Correia.
The album’s completion is reached in double-quick time with the snap and roll of ‘Fall in Love With Me’, replete with those descending keyboard tones that are so evocative of the whole Bowie/Eno Berlin era.
Only the briefest of pauses for video band introductions. And then the rest of the show continues the festivity with a string of tracks from Pop’s back catalogue, together with gems from the band members’ own roster.
I have to pinch myself that I’m hearing ‘Sister Midnight’, ‘Funtime’ and ‘I Wanna Be Your Dog’ played live in any shape or form. Let alone at a gig where cast-iron legitimacy is brought by a bunch of musicians who played, wrote or collaborated on the original recordings.
The highlights keep coming. ‘Nightclubbing’ is raucous and flat-out, and brings the crowd nicely to the boil. Blondie’s ‘Rip Her To Shreds’ is powerful and a pouting Puckrik is mesmeric. Tom Verlaine’s ‘Kingdom Come’ is spikey and charged; and much closer to the original than the cover that appeared on Bowie’s ‘Scary Monsters…’ album.
Glen Matlock acts like it’s all run-of-the-mill stuff, raising eyebrows, eye balling the punters, chatting with Luis Correia. Until he takes up the mic. Puckrik has gone off for a costume change and suddenly Matlock is all serious on his rendition of ‘Ambition’, a track he wrote for Pop’s ‘Soldier’ album and then a new one called ‘Head On A Stick’.
Katie is back for a helter-skelter run through of ‘Five Foot One’ and then Steve Norman from Spandau Ballet brings his sax on stage for a dose of audience participation on The Stooges’ ‘No Fun’.
It’s the last track of the main set. But the band are not away long, before Bowie’s ‘Be My Wife’ strikes a less frenetic opening to the encore. The final three tracks ramp up the party atmosphere with a thrash through ‘Wild One’ with added sax from Norman who is back on stage and then an electrifying ‘Pretty Vacant’ with vocals shared by Matlock, Puckrik and the packed-out Lexington.
This is the highpoint for me, but the band has a last-night-of-the-tour bout of mayhem up their sleeve in the shape of ‘Search and Destroy’. Frenetic stuff and the crowd lap it up.
This was a gig that exceeded my expectations. The show was not polished by any stretch of the imagination and maybe even a bit untidy at the climatic end. But as an instinctive demonstration of the celebratory and unifying power of dynamic rock ‘n’ roll, this night was right up there.
Review by Dave Atkinson
Featured Artist: JOSH TAERK
Since early 2020 Josh has been entertaining us with exclusive monthly live sessions,
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.
Album review : CROSS COUNTRY DRIVER – The New Truth
Frontiers [Release date: 17.03.23]
Rob (Riverdogs) Lamothe’s new bluesy, country, earthy rock music band is called Cross Country Driver. It consists of only him, his son Zander on drums, and old friend James Harper on guitar.
An impressive guest list, Mike (Dream Theater) Mangini, Greg (Badlands) Chaisson, Jimmy (Wallflowers) Wallace and Dug (Kings X) Pinnick help the trio stoke up the fires, guaranteeing that the music of The New Truth just crackles and sizzles, occasionally lighting up the sky, as on the most engaging songs in the front half of the album, ‘Wild Child’ and ‘Traces Of The Truth’.
The fact that Lamothe is still going strong is in itself cause for celebration. Thankfully, he is not attempting to reinvent his didn’t-quite -make-it AOR past, instead we find him reconnecting with the foundation that underpinned his music over the years.
A classy confection that shows off the mature grain of Lamothe’s voice, a spirited, spiritual, soulful sound that can be powerful provocative (‘I Won’t Look Back’, ‘Risen’) or sometimes just refuses to take prisoners (‘Man With No Direction’, ‘Long Gone’).
These experienced, talented artists are blessed with an electrifying understanding of country / blues / rock dynamics.
The songs seem to develop organically, avoiding the verse, bridge chorus straitjacket that constrains much of today’s popular music.
It’s great to see Lamothe still writing and recording glorious stuff that still packs a considerable punch. *****
Review By Brian McGowan
Featured Artist: JOSH TAERK
Since early 2020 Josh has been entertaining us with exclusive monthly live sessions,
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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)
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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 →
URIAH HEEP Chaos & Colour (Silver Lining Music) Heep join a select bunch of veteran bands (including close contemporaries Deep Purple) who are sounding as good as ever. Indeed classic heavy rock does not come much better than this. **** … Continue reading →
CHRIS DUARTE Ain’t Giving Up Mascot Records [Release date 07.04.23] Blues-roots guitarist Chris Duarte releases this, his 15th studio album. It also marks the first time in 22 years Duarte has worked with producer-guitarist Dennis Herring (Buddy Guy, Modest Mouse, Elvis … Continue reading →
Hudson Records [Release date 07.04.23] The Young’uns are never one to shy away from a major musical undertaking as their last album, ‘The Ballad Of Johnny Longstaff’, proved. How do the Young’uns follow that? With this album ‘Tiny Notes’ which … Continue reading →
As part of the rock website Get Ready to ROCK! 20th Anniversary year, the review team has named their favourite albums and live acts. An extensive feature is published on 5 April which reflects the interests and insight of the … Continue reading →
Get Ready to ROCK! celebrates its 20th anniversary in 2023. Since 2003 it has been at the forefront of online rock music review and is one of the most visible and enduring rock websites. The review team is one of … Continue reading →
Frontiers [Release date: 14.04.23] Fourth Freefall album from rock’n’roll workaholic, Magnus Karlsson. For this, Freefall’s fourth album, Karlsson’s rounded up 11 singers, all of whom offer something different, and we get a few tracks that show every sign that he … Continue reading →
Frontiers [Release date 14.04.23] On his second album now fronting Archon Angel, Zak Stevens probably couldn’t tell you how many albums he’s appeared on. We’ll help him out: Since 1993, five as Savatage’s frontman, five up front with The TSO … Continue reading →
Cherry Red/HNE [Release date: 21.03.23] Belgium: 1980 : 3 respected, experienced, died in the wool rock musicians split with their long time bands, and get together to share a different musical destiny. Paul “Shorty” Van Camp, “Fat Leo” and “Spooky” … Continue reading →
Photo: Simon Dunkerley Bonamassa brings the blues to a new generation, at least until 2039… “Let’s start by doctoring the immortal phrase, ‘He came, he saw, (he blinked twice, took a deep breath), and conquered”! Joe Bonamassa and his gifted … Continue reading →
Fates Warning vocalist Ray Alder release his second solo album, ’II, on June 9 via InsideOut Music. A 40th-anniversary super deluxe edition of Black Sabbath’s ‘Live Evil’ is released on June 2 through BMG. Bonfire have re-recorded their ‘Point Blank’, ‘Fireworks’ and … Continue reading →
Ruf Records [Release date: 24.03.23] When we reviewed the previous Ally Venable album we suggested that whilst the young guitar slinger/singer/songwriter had made great progress the perfectly formed finish was yet to come. ‘Real Gone’ takes things a step further … Continue reading →
The last time I saw Pixies live, they played the Forum in Kentish Town which was still called the Town & Country Club, and when the band’s brand of punky, indie, noisy alternative rock was still in its first flush. … Continue reading →
Cleopatra Records [Release date 14.04.23] ‘Born To Be Wild’ is what, at first look, is often called a novelty album. Bring together a one-time Hollywood (and musical) icon (of a certain era) and hook them up virtually with a whole … Continue reading →
The latest inductee to “The GRTR! Grotto of Greatness” is blues/rock guitarist Joe Bonamassa. A major retrospective feature charting Bonamassa’s rise and rise in the millennium will be published on 1 April by rock website Get Ready to ROCK! and … Continue reading →
Facebook [Release date 24.03.23] Tyler Bryant and the Shakedown’s ‘Shake The Roots’ album released last year was a real treat, mixing blues rock, southern rock, country and rock n roll to great effect. The EP features Tyler Bryant’s wife Rebecca … Continue reading →
Cherry Red/HNE [Release date : 24.03.23] Late on in the last century’s timeline, around 1990, Co. Durham’s one and only anarchic metal band, Warfare, were outselling stablemates, Venom and Raven. On stage and off stage they were living up to … Continue reading →
Madfish [Release date 17.03.23] Yet another Steve Hillage live album? And again focusing on the “classic era”? One for the fans, definitely, for whom the main attraction will be three bonus tracks recorded in London in March 1977 and seemingly … Continue reading →
Innovative Leisure/PRES [Release date 31.03.23] ‘The Fooler’ is the sixth album from Nick Waterhouse and his last album, 2021′s ‘Promenade Blue’ was a real find and musical highlight for this reviewer. Recorded in just a few days with Mark Neill … Continue reading →
Bandcamp [Release date 22.12.22] The pandemic has seen all sorts of creative ideas and music coming out, the latest being Blue Light Effect, a band composed of first responders, frontline workers, and a registered nurse. Hailing from Long Island, NY … Continue reading →
Pias/Revamp Music [Release date: 24.03.23] Floor Jansen’s addition as a permanent member to the Nightwish family back in 2013 found most of the fans of the Finnish outfit in total agreement, as the three-octave ranged soprano was already a singer … Continue reading →
Cherry Red/HNE [Release date 24.03.23] Britband Foghat clocked up a considerable number of tour miles after relocating to the USA in 1970, road testing their material, looking to kickstart their career. It worked a treat. It’s on the road that … Continue reading →
SonicBond Publishing [Publication date 27.01.23] During the 1980’s Fleetwood Mac only released two albums, 1982’s ‘Mirage’, which topped the US album charts, and 1987’s ‘Tango In The Night’, which saw the band top the UK album charts with sales to … Continue reading →
The 21st century has seen a huge number of young blues guitar prodigies emerge from the UK and then establish themselves to a greater or lesser degree- Joanne Shaw Taylor, Oli Brown, Virgil McMahon and Aynsley Lister to name but … Continue reading →
This was a proper throwback gig melding pioneering punk, art rock, new wave and all points in-between, battered out by a scratch band pulled together specifically to celebrate the forty-fifth anniversary of Iggy Pop’s ‘Lust For Life’ album. Tony Fox … Continue reading →
Frontiers [Release date: 17.03.23] Rob (Riverdogs) Lamothe’s new bluesy, country, earthy rock music band is called Cross Country Driver. It consists of only him, his son Zander on drums, and old friend James Harper on guitar. An impressive guest list, … Continue reading →
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***** Out of this world
**** Pretty damn fine
*** OK, approach with caution unless you are a fan of the artist or genre
** Instant bargain bin fodder
* Ugly, just ugly