Album review: THE DEAD DAISIES – Light ‘Em Up

THE DEAD DAISIES - Light 'Em Up

SPV [Release date 06.09.24]

One of my musical regrets in recent years is that I didn’t get to see The Dead Daisies UK tour with Glenn Hughes in December 2022 . As he does, Hughes sprinkled his gold dust over the band’s last two albums both vocally and in the songwriting department.

Fast forward to ‘Light ‘Em Up’ and it sees the band retreating to a more predictable classic rock ‘n’ roll approach. Frankly it’s all a bit underwhelming.

The band’s “supergroup” gloss offers much more potentially but there is a certain predictable quality to time-worn songs like ‘Times Are Changing’, ‘I Wanna Be Your Bitch’ and ‘Take A Long Line’.

Whether this is because it better suits the band’s returning vocalist John Corabi is food for thought. But we also have a lack of consistency over the years in the drum and bass department. And, sadly, Doug Aldrich is somewhat restrained throughout. All power chords and little flash.  It’s all rather economical like the album overall which times out at a convenient two sides of vinyl.

If you like balls-out hard rock, and are not too discerning, this will tick your box.  But with one exception (the turgid ‘Love That’ll Never Be’) the high-energy quotient provides no respite, not least to provide much-needed balance and contrast.  And maybe some more flamboyant playing.

Aside from the stand-out title track – and ‘I’m Gonna Ride’ – there is nothing that really grabs the less committed listener, and it certainly doesn’t match the band’s pre-Hughes output.

“Light ‘Em Up”? Overall more a disappointing flicker than anything more enlightening. ***

Review by David Randall

Light ’Em Up World Tour 2024
THE DEAD DAISIES + The Treatment + The Bites

September 2024

6th BRIGHTON – Chalk
7th TORQUAY – The Foundry
8th SOUTHAMPTON – The 1865
10th HOLMFIRTH – Picturedrome
11th GLASGOW – SWG3
13th NOTTINGHAM – Rock City
14th WOLVERHAMPTON – KK’s Steel Mill
15th NEWCASTLE – Boiler Shop
17th MANCHESTER – O2 Ritz
18th SWANSEA – Patti Pavilion
20th BRISTOL – O2 Academy
21st LONDON – O2 Shepherd’s Bush Empire

Album review (Radiance, 2022)


Featured Artist: JOSH TAERK

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

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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 on 7 December 2025.


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 25 November 2025

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Power Plays w/c 1 December 2025

We feature all the artists selected in this sequence in 2025.

Featured Albums w/c 1 December 2025

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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Book review: REMEMBERING LIVE AID by Andrew Wild

live aid

Sonicbond Publishing [Publication date 30.08.24]

Although the fortieth(!) anniversary of Live Aid is next July, this book by Andrew Wild gets in early on any anniversary events/books and is a great way to jog the memories of those who were lucky enough to be either at Wembley or Philadelphia, or like this reviewer watching all day on the BBC. Another good reason in invest in this book is that all author royalties and publisher profits from the sale of this book will go to The Live Aid Trust.

On Saturday, 13 July 1985, just before noon in London, 7 am in Philadelphia, and around the world, it was time for Live Aid. This pair of huge concerts had been arranged in fewer than four months by Bob Geldof of The Boomtown Rats. The day would feature sixteen hours of music, seventy-plus artists and close to two hundred songs. These concerts were watched by a huge global audience and raised millions of pounds for the starving in Ethiopia.

The author goes through the whole day on both sides of the Atlantic, detailing the acts and which songs they performed and adds in archive interviews with the artists in some cases, plus those of the presenters Mark Ellen and Andy Kershaw. He also adds a little bit of what happened post-Live Aid for each act.

There were also concerts happening that day in Moscow, Blegrade, Cologne, Graz, the Hague (which featured blues icon BB King), Tokyo and Norway’s Live Aid song ‘Stavanger For Africa’, whose contribution the author surmises with a deadpan sentence, ‘It’s for a good cause’. Indeed, these one liners surmise the likes of the Thompson Twins ‘they do win the prize for the biggest haircuts’, who had a less than successful set at Live Aid, to great and witty effect.

The show stealing set by Queen is covered, as are the day’s other big winners on stage including U2 and David Bowie. You can even find out who performed first at Live Aid, and no, it wasn’t Status Quo (Francis Rossi and Rick Parfitt crop up throughout the day and the book). The less said about the ramshackle Led Zeppelin the reunion the better!

Shame we rock fans had to stay up late here in the UK to catch the likes of REO Speedwagon, Rick Springfield, the Hooters and Judas Priest, who were shown late into the night from performances recorded earlier in the day in Philadelphia.

Andrew Wild has written a perfect reminder of a momentous day in both musical and fundraising terms.  ****

Review by Jason Ritchie


Featured Artist: JOSH TAERK

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

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






David Randall presents a weekly show on Get Ready to ROCK! Radio, Sundays at 22:00 GMT, repeated on Mondays and Fridays), when he invites listeners to ‘Assume The Position’. The show signposts forthcoming gigs and tours and latest additions at getreadytorock.com. First broadcast on 7 December 2025.


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 25 November 2025

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 1 December 2025

We feature all the artists selected in this sequence in 2025.

Featured Albums w/c 1 December 2025

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.

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Recent (last 30 days)


Album review : RING THE BELLS AND SING – Progressive Sounds of 1975 (4 CD boxset/Remasters)

Cherry Red [Release date : 30.08.24)

Ring The Bells And Sing is one more in a carefully (and imaginatively) curated series of Progrock sounds from the Cherry Red label.

This one focuses exclusively on 1975.

Always good to have some context:-
1975 : Led Zeppelin at No.1 in the album charts. Sex Pistols first public performance. Iron Maiden founded in London by Steve Harris. North Sea oil pumped ashore for the first time. Thatcher defeats Heath to become Conservative Party leader. Unemployment tops a million. Miners accept a 35% pay rise (wouldn’t you?).

1975 was also four years into The Old Grey Whistle Test, which was to play a key role in promoting the Progrock genre. Renaissance (Trip To The Fair & Ocean Gypsy), Hawkwind (Assault & Battery/The Golden Void), Yes (Soon), Bebop Deluxe (Maid In Heaven & Music In Dreamland), Caravan (The Show Of our Lives), Gentle Giant (Just The Same) and Manfred Mann’s Earthband (Nightingales & Bombers), among others, all appeared on Whispering Bob Harris’s late evening show.

The genre was gaining traction in the media and in reputation, and so it turned out to be a significant year for Progrock album releases: Chris Squire, Steve Hackett, Barclay James Harvest, Procol Harum, Druid, Steve Hillage and Wigwam all released what were arguably career best recordings in 1975, and all have at least one track appearing on Ring The Bells.

Nektar are an English Prog band who were hugely popular in the USA before their first major label release in the UK. 1975 was a good year for them. ‘It’s All Over Now’ (from Recycled) appears here. It was used more recently on the “Devil’s Domain” movie soundtrack, cheek by jowl with major contributions from Die Krupps supremo, Jurgen Engler.

It’s a good example of the cross fertilisation of musical styles and musicianship. Carmen Rojas, bass player with Nektar, toured the world in David Bowie’s band for 5 years (that’s all we’ve got), and was Rod Stewart’s Musical Director from 1988 to 2003.

The Remastered Boxset – 4 CDs and 46 tracks – also includes many Prog artists whose profile was high in genre circles, but flew a smidgen under the popular music radar.
Like Hatfield And The North, Van Der Graaf Generator, String Driven Thing, Soft Machine, Stackridge, Greenslade, Fruup, Baker Gurvitz Army and others. They’re all here.

So, if you’re a Prog fan and want to relive the seventies for 3 hours or more, immerse yourself in Ring The Bells...And Sing. (singing optional) ****

Review by Brian McGowan


Featured Artist: JOSH TAERK

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

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






David Randall presents a weekly show on Get Ready to ROCK! Radio, Sundays at 22:00 GMT, repeated on Mondays and Fridays), when he invites listeners to 'Assume The Position'. The show signposts forthcoming gigs and tours and latest additions at getreadytorock.com. First broadcast on 7 December 2025.


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 25 November 2025

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 1 December 2025

We feature all the artists selected in this sequence in 2025.

Featured Albums w/c 1 December 2025

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


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

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

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

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Recent (last 30 days)


Gig review: FIREVOLT FESTIVAL – Whitebottom Farm, Stockport, 9-11 August 2024

Kira Mac - FIREVOLT FESTIVAL- Whitebottom Farm, Stockport, 9-11 August 2024

I will freely tell anyone who will listen that Firevolt has, within a very short space of time, become my favourite festival in the UK. The festival is in beautiful surroundings, on a farm at the end of a delightful country park with woods and a waterfall, yet also accessible enough for hotel dwellers like me to get back to Stockport by bus afterwards.

The two stages, a western style saloon (the Trooper stage) and a tent (the Big Top stage) are a minute’s walk from each other and the camping experience has grown with more bands and entertainment laid on. It is the most laid back of atmospheres and a perfect chance to switch off from our busy lives- indeed the poor mobile  reception there makes that a necessity! 

Then there are the line  ups, heavily reflecting  the favourites from the thriving New Wave of Classic Rock, but this year in particular including some slightly more left field choices, albeit still within the hard rock field, that you would not normally associate with similar festival line ups.

Day 1- VANDENBERG, STONE BROKEN, DARREN WHARTON’S RENEGADE, THE TREATMENT, SOUTH OF SALEM, TRUCKER DIABLO, THE KARMA EFFECT,  RANSOM, WE THREE KINGS

 We Three Kings - FIREVOLT FESTIVAL- Whitebottom Farm, Stockport, 9-11 August 2024

The third edition was the most successful yet crowd wise without losing any intimacy, with minimal tweaks to last year’s format. That meant nine bands a day with no stage clashes, and two spots for battle of the band winners, beginning at the main Trooper Stage with We Three Kings. The name was slightly ironic as there were only two of them in the mode of the Virginmarys or Picturebooks, though the mic stand where a bassist might be was occupied by a skeleton nicknamed Bonesy!

Guitarist and singer Rich and drummer Pete made quite a noise and after some metalised earlier numbers in ‘Edge Of Death’ and ‘Buried Alive’, as the set wore on the songs became catchier, notably ‘Give It To Me Go’ and ‘Get Back’. They already seemed to have quite a few fans in attendance and the chat was they had made several other new ones.

Ransom - - FIREVOLT FESTIVAL - Whitebottom Farm, Stockport, 9-11 August 2024

First up in the Big Top were Ransom, though they were already familiar to many having played a covers set to early arriving campers the night before. That is their bread and butter on the pub circuit not that far from me in the home counties, but apparently during the pandemic they decided to make original material inspired by eighties rock and metal.

Opening with ‘Strap Yourself In’, songs like  the Van Halen-esque ‘Even Nuns Watch Porn’(!), ‘Lil Green Eyed Monster’, the heavier ‘Enter the Dragon’ and ‘Locked Down in London’ were decent and addressing some fresh lyrical themes, if hardly musically original. Singer Matt Fielder was an engaging old school frontman and mentioned how huge an influence Bon Scott was before a sole cover in a fine version of ‘Riff Raff’, though their roots rather showed as ‘Back To The Boozer’ ended an enjoyable set.

The Karma Effect - FIREVOLT FESTIVAL- Whitebottom Farm, Stockport, 9-11 August 2024

The growing strength of the festival and indeed the current state of British rock was epitomised by the fact that The Karma Effect, who had a top 20 album earlier this year, were down in seventh on the bill, meaning a 430am start for them. Unlike the black t-shirt and jeans sported by too many of their NWOCR contemporaries, they go for more dandyish clobber – guitarist Robbie Blake even sporting a cravat!

Opening with one of those new songs in ‘All Night Long’, ‘Wrong Again’ had a beefy groove and a soaring chorus, and ‘Doubt She’s Coming Back’ even more of an early Aerosmith groove. After the bigger riffs of the title track from said album, ‘Promised Land’ and ‘Wild Honey’ a keyboard intro led into ‘Living It Up’, and both that and ‘Steal Your Heart’ reminded me a little of Skin, particularly in the powerful throatiness of charismatic singer Henry Gottelier. An impressive set ended as it usually does with ‘Testify’ with solos from both Henry and Robbie, and when the former reminded us they were touring in the autumn with Austin Gold, my first reaction was ‘count me in’.

Trucker Diablo - FIREVOLT FESTIVAL- Whitebottom Farm, Stockport, 9-11 August 2024

Something a bit heavier was going on in the tent on the Big Top with Northern Irishmen Trucker Diablo. I’ve been aware of their name for several years, though this was the first time I had seen them. As they opened with ‘The Rebel’, in his baseball cap gruff singer and guitarist Tom Harte reminded me of Black Stone Cherry’s Chris Robertson, and indeed my overall impression was of BSC with added Metallica and Lizzy influences. The latter were particularly present on ‘Lets Just Ride’ with its harmony guitars and even a ‘dancing in the moonlight’ lyric.

Stand out songs included ‘Rock Kids Of The Eighties’ off their last album and recent single ‘Kill the Lights’, one of a number of new songs played including ‘Stop the Bleeding’ and a brutal sounding ‘Dig’. They ended with a heavied up cover of ‘Rosalie’- not the first of the day as it turned out. It was a decent enough set from this hard working band with a good sense of humour, only suffering by comparison with what was going on elsewhere on the day.

South Of Salem - FIREVOLT FESTIVAL- Whitebottom Farm, Stockport, 9-11 August 2024

Two years after their appearance at the inaugural Firestorm as it was then, South of Salem made a return having built a growing following. Indeed you could argue they deserved to be higher up the bill as the Trooper stage was unusually heaving with fans of all ages, many showing their devotion by painting (I assume, rather than tattooing) crosses on their faces. Their heroes did not let them down with a trademark set of high on stage energy and guitar hero poses (and the occasional twin guitar routine), a debauched image and a raw sound yet still with enough earworm hooks to draw in those of us of a more melodic persuasion.

Openers ‘Let Us Prey’ and ‘Jet Black Eyes’ with its catchy ‘monsters under the bed’ refrain were good songs, only let down by a bass heavy sound, then ‘Made To Be Mine’ had singer Joey Draper leading crowd participation. Unlike two years ago several songs were taken from the current album ‘Death of the Party’ including ’Static’, with its positive message to seize the day, which saw Cody lead a massive chorus of arm waving. A lively ‘Death Of the Party’, heavy yet hooky ‘Left For Dead’ and ‘Cold Day in Hell’, still their best song, ended a superb set which had flown by, and they must be candidates for future headliners.

The Treatment - FIREVOLT FESTIVAL- Whitebottom Farm, Stockport, 9-11 August 2024

Another band returning two years on were The Treatment. They have finally found the stable line up that eluded them for so long so the changes were only superficial, Tagore Grey’s hair somewhat shorter and singer Tom Rampton in a natty jacket and hat borrowing from the style of the Answer’s Cormac Neeson. They also opened with a couple of songs from new album new in ‘Lets Wake Up This Town’  and ‘Back To The 1970s’, which would have been impressive but suffered particularly badly from sound issues that were to affect many bands in the tent, especially on the first day, with Tom’s vocal far too quiet.

Most of the rest of the set was now established favourites- ‘ Let It Begin’, the lolloping groove of ‘Eyes On You’, ‘Vampress’, and ‘On the Money’ (with a looser bluesier 12 bar rhythm). Newie ‘When Thunder and Lightning Strikes’, with its catchy ‘who oahs’, was excellent.

The Treatment - FIREVOLT FESTIVAL- Whitebottom Farm, Stockport, 9-11 August 2024

They have a lean sound with brothers Tao and Tagore Grey reeling off one solo after another and pulling some great poses, yet never getting in each other’s way. Among some more melodic songs like ‘Wrong Way’, AC/DC influences  are never too far away with ‘Bite Back’ s particularly DC-ish.  After another impressive newer song in ‘This Fire Still Burns’, ‘Get Your Party On’ was extended substantially by crowd participation before the set ended with the great riffery of oldie ‘Shake the Mountain’. The Treatment are fast becoming a guarantee of reliable excellence.

Renegade - FIREVOLT FESTIVAL- Whitebottom Farm, Stockport, 9-11 August 2024

There was then a repeat visitor of sorts, as Mancunian Darren Wharton returned with his Dare bandmates, but in a different guise as Renegade, doing a Thin Lizzy set to recognise the band he served his apprenticeship with back in the day, hardly surprising given the affectionate remarks he makes about Phil Lynott at every Dare show.

I’m a huge fan both of Dare and of Lizzy so will not mind admitting it was my most eagerly anticipated set of the weekend. It had an unusual start,  Darren fiddling in rather fussy manner with a keytar to play the opening synth line to ‘Angel of Death’, an appropriate opener being the first song he ever co wrote for the band.

Renegade - FIREVOLT FESTIVAL- Whitebottom Farm, Stockport, 9-11 August 2024

However the bulk of the set was then standard Lizzy hits with  ‘Jailbreak’, ‘Are You Ready’ and ‘Don’t Believe a Word’ following in quick succession and ‘Emerald’ and ‘Chinatown’ seeing a trading of solos between Dare guitarists past and present in Vinny Burns and Andy Moore.

But while the former stuck closely to a classic Lizzy sound, the latter had a less melodic but flashier style closer to John Sykes, making him ideally suited for the solos on ‘Cold Sweat’. That took the number of Lizzy songs from Darren’s time in the band to three, but after that point it was all classic seventies numbers with those great twin guitars in ‘Waiting For An Alibi’, ‘Massacre’ and ‘Suicide’.

Considering his uniquely breathy, almost whispered vocal style with Dare his voice was remarkably powerful without needing to resort to any Lynott like affectations. The difference from Dare was he now had three colleagues out front, not just two to put his arms around!  A greatest hits set ended with the 1-2 punch of ‘Cowboy Song’ and ‘The Boys Are Back In Town’ (lyric cheekily changed to ‘down at Firevolt baby grill’) and an encore of, yes again, ‘Rosalie’. I enjoyed every single second of it.

Renegade - FIREVOLT FESTIVAL- Whitebottom Farm, Stockport, 9-11 August 2024

Back at the Big Top, given the size of their ‘Broken Army’ I was surprised they were not there more in force for Stone Broken. Once again the sound did not do them any favours but the ever personable West Midlanders songwriting quality shone through with ‘Revelation’, albeit with rather too many taped effects, ‘Stay All Night’, ‘Heartbeat Away’ which I was surprised did not generate a livelier response and the grunge lite of ‘Doesn’t Matter’.

‘Black Sunrise’ was excellent and followed by ‘Let Me Go’ with some Metallica like riffing from Chris Davis (looking a tad uninterested) .So far the set had been very similar to their 2022 headline here, so shock horror they previewed a new song in ‘Remedy’, a little heavier and grungier than previous but with a good chorus. I liked it on first hearing.

Stone Broken - FIREVOLT FESTIVAL- Whitebottom Farm, Stockport, 9-11 August 2024

‘Let Me See It All’ was preceded by an amusing anecdote from Rich Moss how this most wholesome of bands ended up no 1 in the US strip club chart then after one ballad with some modern pop overtones in ‘Over the Line’, when Rich switched to acoustic guitar it could only be ‘Wait For You’, delivered mainly solo. The sentiments are simple but have struck a chord with their many fans who were waving their arms or, in the case of a lady at the front, crutches.

‘Stronger’ was all the more impactful for Rich admitting it was about his mental health struggles before they returned to more rocking fare on  ‘Worth Fighting For’, ‘The Devil You Know’ and ‘Not Your Enemy’, though there didn’t seem to be as many people jumping to the latter as at previous shows.

Stone Broken - FIREVOLT FESTIVAL- Whitebottom Farm, Stockport, 9-11 August 2024

They are a band I love and have perfected the radio friendly post-grunge sound associated with the likes of Nickelback, Theory, Daughtry, and 3 Doors Down. However I feel a little anxious that they have reached a plateau with nowhere further to go with that sound and a somewhat flat atmosphere seems to suggest others felt the same.

Finally back in the barn at the Trooper stage, a big name to headline but a gamble. Adrian Vandenberg is known less for his own material than his many years as one of David Coverdale’s most loyal collaborators in the ever changing Whitesnake line ups, albeit with a slim body of recorded work. The other warning sign was their most recent festival experience at Stonedead in 2022 was universally seen as a disappointment.

Vandenberg - FIREVOLT FESTIVAL- Whitebottom Farm, Stockport, 9-11 August 2024

A new song in ‘Hit the Ground Running’ from last album ‘Sin’ was mediocre but surprisingly only two songs in, ‘Fool For Your Lovin’ provided the crowd with the familiarity they craved even if Adrian’s solo didn’t bear that much resemblance to the original

A Vandenberg oldie in ‘Your Love Is In Vain’ was a bit average till a keyboard solo, yet I found myself warming to curly haired Swedish veteran singer Mats Leven. He was very personable filling in some technical delays with details of how he discovered Vandenberg and acts like Wrathchild and  Mama’s Boys through copies of Kerrang! being sent over.

When they played ‘Give Me All Your Love Tonight’ it was clear that this would be a Whitesnake heavy set, though the more recent ‘Freight Train’ showed that Adrian can still wrote a killer riff. At 70 he has aged well too with those strong cheekbones regularly breaking into a reserved smile.

Vandenberg - FIREVOLT FESTIVAL- Whitebottom Farm, Stockport, 9-11 August 2024

There was a double of the two best songs he co- wrote but didn’t get to record on ‘Slip Of the Tongue’ in ‘Sailing Ships’, Mats sitting at the foot of the drum kit hitting the killer notes that eluded him at Stonedead and the Zep-ish ‘Judgement Day’. ‘Wait’ from Vandenberg’s debut (with its most un-Dutch ‘shit hits the fan’ lyric) trotted along at a sedate and bluesy pace before morphing into a solo slot from Adrian which shows that he is both a technical guitarist and an original one who defies any obvious comparisons.

After ‘Shadows Of the Night’. I thought their version of ‘Crying In the Rain’ superior to that of the latter day Whitesnake incarnations. It helps that Mats did a fine vocal approximation of late eighties Coverdale throughout.

There was a final Vandenberg song in the magnificent ‘Burning Heart’ (hard to believe this now obscure song was actually a US top 40 hit) with Adrian shining with a beautiful acoustic intro and a sweet solo; and to end the two best known Whitesnake classics on a pretty authentic ‘Still of the Night’ and ‘Here I Go Again’ with the expected audience singalong. Such familiar songs were perfect for a rowdy Friday night crowd and I had to admit my initial scepticism was wrong as Vandenberg proved a perfect first night headliner.

Vandenberg - FIREVOLT FESTIVAL- Whitebottom Farm, Stockport, 9-11 August 2024

DAY 2 – PHIL CAMPBELL AND THE BASTARD SONS, CRASHDIET, FLORENCE BLACK, VINTAGE CARAVAN, XANDER AND THE PEACE PIRATES, DEAD MAN’S WHISKEY, THE HOT ONE-TWO, WHITE TYGER, JAYLER

Jayler - FIREVOLT FESTIVAL- Whitebottom Farm, Stockport, 9-11 August 2024

The second day was opened by Jayler, the impossibly young band who have already impressed many including on tour earlier in the summer with Kira Mac. ‘When You Go’ was quite some opening statement including curly haired singer James Bartholomew playing the harmonica and tasty slide work from Tyler Arrowsmith. The latter is a guitar hero in the among and on ‘Getaway’ delivered a great solo standing on a raised podium.

My biggest problem with this otherwise promising band is quite how influenced by Led Zeppelin’s first two albums they are and ‘Love Maker’ and to an extent ‘The Mountain’ overdid the copying. Though to be fair given their age a more personable and approachable version of Greta Van Fleet might be nearer the mark. James as well as being a talented singer is also a more than decent guitarist in his own right and during the six minute ‘The Rinsk’- about a Viking warrior no less- played guitar behind his back.

White Tyger - FIREVOLT FESTIVAL- Whitebottom Farm, Stockport, 9-11 August 2024

First up in the tent on the Big Top stage were White Tyger (not to be confused with a covers band Tyger who were part of the Friday after show). The Midlanders covered similar ground to Ransom albeit rather younger,  and songs like ‘Heartbreak Hotel’, ‘Midnight Lovers’ and most recent single ‘Runaway Bride’ were inspired by the glam metal scene of the late eighties.

Their approach was varied though with ‘We All Die Young’ boasting quiet/loud dynamics and a slight alternative feel, and ‘Speed Demon’ fast paced with twin leads. ‘This Is The Life’- announced a song too soon-  featured a singalong before the Skid Row-like ‘No f***s Given’ ended an enjoyable if hardly ground breaking set.

The Hot One-Two - FIREVOLT FESTIVAL - Whitebottom Farm, Stockport, 9-11 August 2024

Last year the Firevolt powers were so impressed when they saw a show by The Hot One Two that they created a one off ‘ones to watch party’ to add them after the bill had been finalised. They were good talent spotters as they returned this time as a band building a substantial name for themselves.

Their sound is heavier and more uncompromising than many of their contemporaries though not without melody, especially in Simon West’s vocals and there is plenty of movement in their stage show. This includes a distinctive figure in rhythm guitarist Kev Baker pulling a series of gurning facial expressions, some of them quite scary. An entertaining diversion to give us all a laugh or a clownish distraction from an otherwise heavyweight band? I felt a bit ambivalent.

The Hot One-Two - FIREVOLT FESTIVAL - Whitebottom Farm, Stockport, 9-11 August 2024

The set was mainly taken from their debut album Superbia with songs such as opener ‘Playing with Fire’ and  ‘The Fray’. There was a big crowd to watch them, enthusiastically joining in on the  singalong to ‘Rolling Stone’. ‘Demon Daze’ was excellent while ‘You’ve Got It’ and ‘Feeling Good’ were both more commercial. ‘Is It Hot?’, and ‘Tie Me Down’, with a forest of fists punching, ended an impressive set.

This year the Hot One Two won the fan vote to open Stonedead festival. Back in 2021 that prestigious accolade had gone to Dead Man’s Whiskey. With a few personal challenges and ill-fortune they have gone rather quiet since so it was good to re-establish contact with them. After a bit of a slow start their show really first caught fire with ‘This Fight’, about being bullied for being a metaller. It was an example of how singer Nico Rogers is not afraid to address personal themes and indeed he was proudly promoting neuro diversity initiatives.

Dead Man's Whiskey - FIREVOLT FESTIVAL - Whitebottom Farm, Stockport, 9-11 August 2024

‘War Machine’ and ‘Last Train’ impressed though ‘Fighting to Survive’ was not as good. They ended with the two songs I most remembered from before, Nico’s tribute to his mother in the ballad ‘Make You Proud’ and in contrast ‘Racing Bullet’ with a bit of a jam and crowd participation session. Hopefully a set that will help them regain lost ground.

On probably the heaviest of the three days, after four acts playing no holds barred rock, it was time for something a little mellower in the afternoon sun at the Trooper Stage. I only vaguely remembered seeing Xander and the Peace Pirates, fronted by the eponymous Keith, at Ramblin’ Man many years ago.

However I was impressed with a more laid back sound inspired by country rock and blues, with his brother Stu adding an extra dimension on acoustic guitar and the cowboy hats of two of the band members a giveaway, including Mike Gay who played some mean slide. Keith’s prosthetic claw was not only a tribute to the good science can do, but helped make his own languid guitar work very distinctive, and the two worked in tandem very pleasingly.

Xander And The Peace Pirates - FIREVOLT FESTIVAL- Whitebottom Farm, Stockport, 9-11 August 2024

‘Fire’ opened the set and ‘Rain’ epitomised their gentle sounds, not a million miles from Crosby Stills and Nash. ‘Dance With The Devil’ was particularly impressive, as was ‘Let Go’, but the absolute highlight was ‘Searching For the Light’, a typically soulful ballad with Keith’s Glenn Hughes or Stevie Wonder style falsetto. ‘Dancing In The Light’ ended the set, though the length of the band intros almost meant they could have slipped in another song.

He also came over as a lovely man, albeit overdoing the ‘peace’ message and though a slightly left field choice, the band were one of my revelations of the festival. I made a note to pay more attention to future live dates than I have done hitherto.

Those same hippy-ish sentiments were also expressed in more musical form by Vintage Caravan who were one of the few international acts on the festival, all the way from Iceland! Again they have been on the scene some years, but this was my first sighting. They were a power trio led by guitarist and vocalist Óskar Logi Ágústsson whose long hair, drooping moustache and bat winged sleeves were a visual complement to an unashamedly retro late sixties/early seventies style, though I would fall short of describing them as full on stoner rock as some people mentioned.

Vintage Caravan - FIREVOLT FESTIVAL- Whitebottom Farm, Stockport, 9-11 August 2024

The only issue with much of the set as most of the set which included  ‘Reflections’ and ‘Crystallized’ was a lack of variety or hummable hooks. However, ‘Innerverse’ was a welcome change of pace with a slow and dreamy intro before rocking out, and ‘Can’t Get You Off My Mind’ and ‘On The Run’ had more commercial hooks. They were great musicians and frequently the rhythm section of Alexander Örn Númason and Stefán Ari Stefánsson would  jam impressively and encourage Oskar to play ever faster. An impressive set was good enough to get an encore, a Stevie Ray Vaughan instrumental.

Since appearing here further down the bill two years ago Florence Black have built a major following, definitely winning an unofficial poll of the most number of band T-shirts. So, a bit like South of Salem, they could easily have been higher up the bill and I don’t think I saw the Trooper stage as packed all weekend. There is an elephant in the room to address which is that I found myself in a small minority, as coming from a more melodic standpoint they are a band I have struggled to warm to, and I find them a little bit of a dull watch.

Florence Black - FIREVOLT FESTIVAL- Whitebottom Farm, Stockport, 9-11 August 2024

But their many fans were lapping up the gruff vocals of guitarist and singer  Tristan Thomas and occasionally drummer Perry Davies – and their uncompromising power, which it is hard to imagine can come from just three men, on the likes of opener ‘Bed of Nails’, ‘Start Again’,  ‘Solid Nine’ and ‘Taxman’.

There were a couple of slower ones mid-set – ‘Warning Sign’ and ‘Back To The End’ with an alternative rock feel- while they progressively ended with their best known songs, in particular ‘Bird On A Chain’, ‘Zulu’ and ‘Sun And Moon’: whatever my own reservations the reception they received fully deserved an encore of one of their other signatures, their cover of Budgie’s ‘Breadfan’. Definitely future headline material.

Get Ready to ROCK! - The Best of 2024

Unfortunately many of their fans needed a break or didn’t fancy something different, as the crowd in the Big Top (though reflecting that attendances have even lower there ever since Firestorm started) was pitifully low for headliners Crashdiet, a particular shame as again they were one of the more original selections and had come over from Sweden.

Crashdiet - FIREVOLT FESTIVAL- Whitebottom Farm, Stockport, 9-11 August 2024

After opening with ‘Knokk Em Down’ it was an ominous sign that just two songs in, one of their best known songs ‘Riot in Everyone’ received a lukewarm response. Their image was less debauched than I remembered them from many years ago and the music closer to mainstream Swedish melodic rock acts like H.E.A.T. or the Poodles (RIP) while recent new singer John Eliot (sic) could have been from Scandi rock central casting and looked and sounded the part.

There was the occasional trace of their edgier past on songs like  ‘Cocaine Cowboys’, but generally the material was more melodic on ‘Together Whatever’ off latest album ‘Automaton’, ‘Rust’, ‘Native Nature’ and ‘Its a Miracle’.

‘Breakin The Chainz’ and ‘Falling Rain’  were impressive, and ‘Queen Obscene’ one of the more hard driving numbers. ‘We Die Hard’ led into the closing moment and one I’d been waiting for ever since I last saw them play it at HEAT festival on Germany just before the pandemic, as I punched the air to easily their best song, ‘Generation Wild’, ranking alongside Crazy Lixx’s ‘21 Till I Die’ as one of the anthems of the newer wave of glam rockers.

Crashdiet - FIREVOLT FESTIVAL- Whitebottom Farm, Stockport, 9-11 August 2024

There was absolutely nothing wrong with their performance, yet even a strong set of songs seemed to fall flat. Maybe they were more suited to a genre specific glam festival like HRH sleaze and a bit too niche for the Firevolt audience.

Such accusations could not be made of the Trooper Stage headliner in Phil Campbell and the Bastard Sons. They are a proven and popular live act who played the original Firestorm, plus Phil provides virtually the only surviving link to the distinguished history of Motorhead. Their own material is perfectly respectable but was put aside for this one evening in favour of a Motorhead-only set- after a fashion.

Phil Campbell And The Bastard Sons - FIREVOLT FESTIVAL- Whitebottom Farm, Stockport, 9-11 August 2024

Once again, as with the Whitesnake- heavy Vandenberg set, it was an inspired decision to give people something familiarly vintage among all the newer acts. I was never even a Motorhead fan in the day, quite the opposite, but grew up on all those songs in the early eighties and memories flooded back as I punched the air and shouted along to ‘Iron Fist’.

Singer Joel Peters is a brilliant frontman who looks nothing like Lemmy and doesn’t sound like an identikit  but – just as Darren Wharton had done the previous day – made the songs his own while staying true to their original spirit.

Highlights included the souped up rock and roll of ‘Going to Brazil’ with Phil asking the women to shake it about, ‘Born To Raise Hell’ with left versus right audience participation and ‘We Are the Road Crew’.

But there were also deeper cuts- ‘Orgasmatron’ reminded me of the days when a Motorhead obsessed university housemate (from the Stockport area ironically) would play that album to death and ‘Lost Woman Blues’ was something totally different, and showing off the immaculate and classic guitar tone of both Phil and Todd, one of the three sons, as they traded some longer solos. Including the Pistols’ ‘God Save the Queen’ seemed unnecessary (though I understand Motorhead covered it).

Phil Campbell And The Bastard Sons - FIREVOLT FESTIVAL- Whitebottom Farm, Stockport, 9-11 August 2024

The gruff and gum chewing band leader even permitted himself a few smiles and dryly witty remarks. The best moment of all though was when he invited a chant of ‘f– you Tyla Campbell’ before another son played the unmistakable thudding bass intro  to ‘Ace Of Spades’- the atmosphere as people shouted out one of rock’s most universally loved songs was one of the moments of the weekend.

Joel seemed to prematurely announce the set was over but it couldn’t be, not at least until they played ‘Killed By Death’ which all those years ago marked Phil’s introduction to the band. Indeed there was time for a trio of encores and two more timeless headbangers in ‘Bomber’ and ‘Overkill’, either side of a more unlikely cover version in David Bowie’s ‘Heroes’. Again it was exactly the right set to close a second memorable day.

Phil Campbell And The Bastard Sons - FIREVOLT FESTIVAL- Whitebottom Farm, Stockport, 9-11 August 2024

DAY 3 – GUN, THE LAST INTERNATIONALE, KIRA MAC,LAURENCE JONES, DOOMSDAY OUTLAW, LOZ CAMPBELL, UNKNOWN REFUGE, THIEVES OF LIBERTY, REVENANT

Revenant - FIREVOLT FESTIVAL- Whitebottom Farm, Stockport, 9-11 August 2024

The final day boasted the best weather and was opened by Revenant, one of the battle of the bands winners. Singer Sugarman Sam (Lay) and guitarist Matthew Hudson looked like twins in their matching plaid shirts and Les Paul guitars. As they opened with ‘Public Service Announcement’, ‘Best Medicine’ and ‘Rolling On My Back’ I was highly impressed as they married the passion of Scarlet Rebels with a real southern feel in their melodic guitar solos.

However mid set they went into a series of mash ups- of ‘War Pigs’ and ‘Whole Lotta Love’, ‘Back in Black’ and  ‘We Will Rock You’, ‘Sad But True’ and ‘Superstitious’, and ‘Billie Jean and ‘Smells Like Teen Spirit’! The crowd were entertained but I thought that was better suited to a night in the pub and their own material which concluded with ‘The Masquerade’ and ‘Coming Back To Life’ should have been left to stand on their own considerable merits.

Thieves Of Liberty - FIREVOLT FESTIVAL- Whitebottom Farm, Stockport, 9-11 August 2024

This time last year it was Thieves of Liberty in that slot as battle of the bands winners. Firevolt is providing a clear progression path for rising bands so they moved up the bill this time, in the Big Top where the sound had finally improved. Their dapper besuited dress sense stands out from their contemporaries and their stage movement is also becoming more polished. They are also up for a laugh including referring to alice band wearing on stage announcer Paul Cash as ‘Jack Grealish’s dad’!

With the gritty vocals of James Boak and a hint of blues their sound is also a little different to the norm, though at times reminding me of the late Temperance Movement. The title track of upcoming album ‘Shangri La’ with its strong ‘show me the way home’ chorus hit home with me, as did ‘Rabbit Hole’ and ‘Smoke in the Air’. The lack of big choruses and James’  thick Geordie accent while introducing them made it hard to correctly pick out song titles correctly- suffice to say I was impressed with the way a sweet ballad was followed by a closing number of high intensity.

Unknown Refuge - FIREVOLT FESTIVAL- Whitebottom Farm, Stockport, 9-11 August 2024

Back in 2022 Boltonians Unknown Refuge had won the Battle of the Bands and they too had progressed up the bill for a return visit. Theirs was a heavier and more modern take on metal and one of the few on this bill that would be equally suited to Download.

A continued impression was the rapid yet effortless shredding style of bare chested Jack Tracey on a headless guitar, which made him  one of the guitarists of the weekend. Songs  I remembered from last time like ‘Battle Hymn’ and ‘Drop a Gear’ sat alongside a brand new song ‘Shell Shock’ which featured more shredding  and ’Bewitched’ which singer Alex Mancini dedicated to his girlfriend. ‘The Journey’ and ‘To The Light’ both had something of that (galloping) rhythm patented by Iron Maiden, either side of a bass intro to the Pantera-ish ‘Shadows’. They wouldn’t normally be my scene but I actually found myself enjoying them.

Wars of the Roses style we went from a Lancashire act to a Yorkshire one in the petite Loz Campbell, handpicked apparently after promoter Stret watched one of her live performances. For some reason (use of her own name rather than a band perhaps) I had wrongly assumed she was a blues rock guitarist in the mould of Chantel MacGregor.

Instead she was primarily a rhythm guitarist in a four piece band playing some fairly basic pop punk. I didn’t think the songs were particularly memorable – best of them being opener ‘Evil’ and ‘Beautiful Liar’ – and neither did her voice have a distinctive character. A cover of AC/DC’s ‘Shot Down In Flames’ was equally ordinary (Ransom did theirs better).

Loz Campbell - FIREVOLT FESTIVAL- Whitebottom Farm, Stockport, 9-11 August 2024

But she certainly had a gutsy attitude shown on songs like the punky  ‘My Motivation’ and ‘World Was Made To Destroy You’,  and late in the show she took a trip into the crowd, then quite thrillingly clambered astride her bandmates to form a Scorpions-like human pyramid. Music wise though I’m afraid I thought she was one of the least impressive acts of the weekend.

At the Trooper stage I looked forward to Doomsday Outlaw after an impressive rediscovery of them supporting the Dust Coda last autumn. They’ve been around a long time – a friend raved about them and gifted me their ‘Suffer More’ debut some six or seven years ago- but line up changes and sheer bad fortune have made for halting progress.

The majority of the set was from last year’s ‘Damaged Goods’ comeback including ‘In Too Deep’ and ‘Turn Me Loose’ which  got a few people going. Phil Poole was an engaging frontman looking more at ease with himself than when I recall first seeing the band, and excelled on ballad ‘If This Is The End’, that also featured a  great solo from lead guitarist Alez De Elia, who in both style and appearance had the air of Cinderella’s Tom Keifer about him. On ‘Blues For A Phantom Limb’ his slide work was breathtaking.

Doomsday Outlaw - FIREVOLT FESTIVAL- Whitebottom Farm, Stockport, 9-11 August 2024

‘One More Sip’- with a jokey remark from Phil it had to be retitled from ‘drink myself to death’- also featured him prominently and was very Quireboys- esque. After ‘Runaway’, ‘Bring You Pain’ hinted at their heavier past with both guitarist taking a solo each. An excellent set whose 45 minutes flew by very quickly.

There was relatively little blues rock across the weekend compared to some other festivals but one of the finest was here in Laurence Jones. Over the last couple of years the one time young blues prodigy has subtly distanced himself from the movement and is now as likely to be seen at hard rock as blues festivals with a stripped back power trio, also featuring Jack Alexander Timmis and Alan Taylor.

Laurence Jones - FIREVOLT FESTIVAL- Whitebottom Farm, Stockport, 9-11 August 2024

On songs like ‘Bad Luck And The Blues’ his playing was immaculate and vocals more than decent but the material a bit one paced while the  trio seemed rather lost on a big stage. Things looked up with the slower blues of ‘Don’t You Leave Me This Way’, Laurence winning friends by coming to the front of stage to mouth the lyrics while ‘In Too Deep’ was somewhat  more commercial.

Oddly, given how overplayed it is, it was his cover of ‘Voodoo Chile’ that lifted the gig with improvised middle section and playing the guitar with his  teeth. ‘Woman’ and ‘Stuck In The Night’ showed the heaviness that demonstrated he belongs on rock bills, and a well received encore of ‘What’s It Gonna Be’ ended an ultimate triumph after a slow start.

I joined a healthy crowd back at the barn for Kira Mac on the Trooper stage, unsurprisingly as within a short space of time they have built quite a following. Singer Rhiannon Kira Hill certainly stood out from anyone else in a bright lime green top, while a changed line up that was just bedding in when I saw her on tour in May is certainly more heavy and contemporary than before, which  was apparent from opener ‘Dead Man Walking, indeed Kira was rather drowned out before the sound was sorted. As usual ‘Chaos Is Calling’ featured a singalong and the set flew by rapidly with ‘Playing The Game’, ‘No Way Out’ and ‘Scorned’, now much heavier these days.

Kira Mac - FIREVOLT FESTIVAL- Whitebottom Farm, Stockport, 9-11 August 2024

A cover of ‘You Oughta Know’ went down well. and was another built for participation, before a lively ‘Hit Me Again’. Prior to ‘Mississippi Swinging’, Kira reminded us of her past and that she and guitarist Joe Worrall had actually played the ‘Buckles And Boots’ country festival here. Actually the song didn’t sound particularly country but she does have a clear and honeyed voice that complements a straight ahead modern rock sound in a way that makes the band quite unique.

Its slightly odd to hear Kira talk about new songs as most of them described thus have been in the set ever since I first saw them 15 months ago including a couple of supposedly heavier, yet still hooky, songs in ‘Farewell’ and ‘Climbing’. However ‘Monster’ was a genuinely new song and on first listening very impressive after a halting start, with a greater sense of space in the arrangement.

Kira Mac - FIREVOLT FESTIVAL- Whitebottom Farm, Stockport, 9-11 August 2024

I thought  ‘Downfall’  with its catchy hooks and ‘One Way Ticket’ would normally be the end but they were called back for an improvised encore- a rather ragged if enjoyable cover of ‘Tush’, even with Alex playing an excerpt from the solo to ‘Freebird’. So a couple of curveballs among the usual set from one of my favourite bands on the circuit right now who will be touring with Gun this winter.

Headlining the Big Top was another interesting choice, outside the Firevolt comfort zone in The Last Internationale who again came personally handpicked by Stret. I was certainly familiar with the name from coverage in ‘Classic Rock’ magazine but little more, though at least I recognised the opener in a cover of ‘Kick Out The Jams’. The New Yorkers had a slightly different dynamic, with the flamboyant performance art of a band like Scissor Sisters. They are also a very ‘political’ band but wisely read the room with the lyrics deemed not to need any further preaching.

The Last Internationale - FIREVOLT FESTIVAL- Whitebottom Farm, Stockport, 9-11 August 2024

In a stylish jumpsuit, Singer Delila Paz was a striking figure who reminded me a little of Grace Slick while curly haired right hand man Edgey Pires unleashed some concise solos and looked like a missing member of the Strokes.

The songs like ‘1984’ and ‘Hero’ were not immediately obvious though. However the gig then took a different dimension when a piano was wheeled on for Delila to sing some songs, including ‘Running For A Dream’, in a passionate and very personal style which a photographer next to me rightly likened to Beth Hart. Even a brief power outage could not stop her.

Proving there was no end to her talent she switched on ‘Wanted Man’ to bass, Andres Malta moving to keyboards, and sang in falsetto. ‘Hard Times’ was rockier in a psychedelic way but the best was yet to come when she came into the crowd and got us to all sit down before her campfire style, then not only invited various fans onstage  but encouraged them to stay during an encore and I thought a health and safety incident was waiting to happen. It was a spectacular end to a unique set and unlike Crashdiet the night before, it could be safely said that the gamble to book them had been an inspired one.

The Last Internationale - FIREVOLT FESTIVAL- Whitebottom Farm, Stockport, 9-11 August 2024

While Firevolt tends to focus on the newer generation of classic rock bands, older faces like FM and Dare have gone down a storm on the past so no one could complain that Gun were the headline band to close the festival. In fact they represented both new and old having released their most critically acclaimed album in years in ‘Hombres’ and opened with one from it in ‘Lucky Guy’, followed by ‘Here’s Who  I Am’.

Gun - FIREVOLT FESTIVAL- Whitebottom Farm, Stockport, 9-11 August 2024

Giuliano, one of the Gizzi brothers in their matching caps, launched some clinical riffing to ‘Don’t Say Its Over’, matched by many of us at the front jumping up and down. Sandwiched by the first single from new album, ‘All Fired Up’, and the U2-ish ‘Falling’, ‘Welcome To the Real World’ was perhaps the  nearest to an unexpected cut and saw the first solo from new guitarist the long haired Ru MacFarlane.

Dante Gizzi is an engaging and laddish frontman with a casual nonchalance  who you suspect cannot believe his luck both that the band is still thriving and that he has in recent years assumed the lead singer role with ease. There was a glint in his eye as he asked the crowd to ‘wave your hands in the air’ before breaking into ‘Word Up’, to a storming reaction  yet a final new song in the instant ‘Take Me Back Home’ did not lose much by comparison.

Gun - FIREVOLT FESTIVAL- Whitebottom Farm, Stockport, 9-11 August 2024

However it was those classic early hit singles we wanted to hear for some singalongs and the band obliged with ‘Better Days’ and  ‘Inside Out’  as Dante said they would go back to 1989. Sadly there was no time in the set for other greats like ‘Money’ and ‘Taking On the World’, but it reached its usual climax with the crowd increasingly rowdy to ‘Steal Your Fire’ with some sharp lead guitar work from Ru and ‘Shame On You’.

The band did seem a little more raw and ragged around the edges than usual- and the sound at the front was rather loud but few were complaining. Indeed, normally I despair when they encore with a cover of ‘Fight For Your Right To Party’, preferring to hear their own material, but on this occasion, as Dante went right to the edge of the crowd and punched the air, it was exactly the right choice for the right atmosphere.

Gun - FIREVOLT FESTIVAL- Whitebottom Farm, Stockport, 9-11 August 2024

After 27 bands Gun closed Firevolt in style, leaving the husband and wife promoting team of John ‘Stret’ and Bev Stretford to give speeches of thanks and invite the volunteer crew to take the applause on stage, confirming this is a festival with the most personal and family of feels. After another successful Firevolt, they can look forward to further growth, as once you attend, you are hooked for good.

Review and Photos by Andy Nathan


Featured Artist: JOSH TAERK

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

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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 on 7 December 2025.


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 25 November 2025

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 1 December 2025

We feature all the artists selected in this sequence in 2025.

Featured Albums w/c 1 December 2025

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.

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Recent (last 30 days)


Album review : THEN JERICO – Before The Future: 1984-89, 4 CD Boxset

Cherry Red [Release date : 23.08.24]

If ever a band deserved recognition it was Then Jerico.
And it still does.

Having performed a few acoustic gigs this year, founder member Mark Shaw has put together an electric show for the masses, and will be touring England’s O2 Academies later in 2024.

Meantime, as you would expect from Cherry, this is a comprehensive, extensively researched collection of the band’s material from the eighties. But more than that, the liner notes tell the story of the band’s inception.

It’s almost as entertaining and interesting as the music, describing how untrained musician/vocalist, Mark Shaw, auditioned musician after musician, formed bands, dissolved them, started again, auditioned again etc etc. Always searching, as if his dream line up remained just slightly out of reach.

Eventually, the band took shape, with Jasper Stainthorpe, Steve Wren and Scott Taylor, on bass, drums and guitar, and Shaw up front of course, and recorded the debut in 1987, First (The Sound Of Music), produced by Owen Davies and Shaw.

This 4 CD boxset :
CD1 : First, The Sound Of Music (1987).
CD2 : Bonus tracks, edits and extended 12” mixes of key tracks from First.
CD3 : Big Area (1989).
CD4 : From The Vaults, 11 previously unreleased tracks, demos and remixes (including the long missing ‘Big Area’ remix).

The band’s music, an energising mix of socio-political ideology and melodic dance rock confused some. Yet NME, Sounds, Kerrang and Melody Maker had nothing but praise.

The hit single, an anti apartheid polemic, ‘Muscle Deep’ is here in all its splendour. It’s not an easy lyric to vocalise effectively, but Shaw’s vocal confidence makes the song. It sounds powerful and not especially pop.

‘The Motive’, the first single from the album broke the UK (and several other) Top Twenty charts. Three different mixes of this song appear on CD2. Shaw’s underrated vocals work to expand this song from inside out. Exactly the style that remixers like.

The Big Area album came in 1989. Produced by Rhett (Eno/Roxy Music) Davies and Rick (Stevie Nicks/John Waite) Nowels.

As you would expect then, it’s burnished to an attractive shine, with the title track something of an aural panorama, a big anthemic pop song, laced with drama.

Second single ‘Sugar Box’ also got a lot of positive reviews at the time, and is featured here in the form of the original plus several imaginative remixes.

All that plus those “couldn’t make it up” liner notes.

Great value. ***1/2

Review by Brian McGowan


Featured Artist: JOSH TAERK

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

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






David Randall presents a weekly show on Get Ready to ROCK! Radio, Sundays at 22:00 GMT, repeated on Mondays and Fridays), when he invites listeners to ‘Assume The Position’. The show signposts forthcoming gigs and tours and latest additions at getreadytorock.com. First broadcast on 7 December 2025.


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 25 November 2025

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 1 December 2025

We feature all the artists selected in this sequence in 2025.

Featured Albums w/c 1 December 2025

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


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

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

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

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


Recent (last 30 days)


Album review : FANNY – The Reprise Years 1970-1974 (4 CD set)

Cherry Red [Release date : 23.08.24]

Signed by Reprise Records (owned by Frank Sinatra) in 1970, all girl group, Fanny, recorded and released 4 albums between then and 1974.
Formed by sisters June and Jean Millington, on guitar and bass, with Nickey Barclay on keys, and Alice DeBuhr on drums, they knew it would be an uphill struggle for any band, but a girl band …

Truth is, there’s been no female rock band to touch them since. The Runaways, Vixen and others who came later got close, but no cigar. According to Allmusic: “Fanny was one of the best and most underappreciated American rock bands of the ’70s.”

Photographed by Candice Bergen and David Bailey for their album covers, Fanny cut a cool sound, nodding to the sixties pop explosion just exited, and the leaner hard rock sound of the seventies.

They had a reputation for maintaining an unwavering focus on expanding their songwriting and recording craft. The Millingtons and DeBuhr were all on the same wavelength. Each new album was a progression on the one before.

On their self titled debut, together with Producer/ manager, Richard Perry they explore clean living funky sounds, salted with post summer of love pop sensibilities. ‘I Just Realised’ and ‘Take A Message’ standout, with a cover of Cream’s ‘Badge’ raising a few eyebrows, not just for being there. There’s a familiarity to their own songs, but the band’s confident delivery and Perry’s production pacing overcome that.

Follow up Charity Ball saw the band step up to another level. The songwriting is sharper, the delivery harder hitting, and every single track is as lean as it needs to be.

Third album, Fanny Hill shows off the band’s music in a more sophisticated form now, with melodies, bass lines and chord progressions tightly controlled. They’re clearly on a roll.

Fourth album Mothers Pride (produced by Todd Rundgren) has the band excavating a rich seam of hard rock, with their pop influenced past disappearing in the rear view mirror.
‘I Need You Need Me’ and ‘Summer Song’ are fine additions to the band’s fast growing cannon, amplifying their unspoken claim to be included in lists of the best rock bands of the seventies.

This exhaustive box set includes multiple bonus tracks – single edits, b-sides and live stuff as well as the original albums, plus liner notes written by the Millington sisters and Alice DeBuhr.
As comprehensive a boxset as comprehensive gets. ****

ps The label claimed that the band name had no sexual connotation, but instead denoted a female spirit.
That made me laugh too. Even Gilbert & Sullivan were using that titilating trick in their 19th century comic operas.

Review by Brian McGowan


Featured Artist: JOSH TAERK

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

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






David Randall presents a weekly show on Get Ready to ROCK! Radio, Sundays at 22:00 GMT, repeated on Mondays and Fridays), when he invites listeners to ‘Assume The Position’. The show signposts forthcoming gigs and tours and latest additions at getreadytorock.com. First broadcast on 7 December 2025.


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 25 November 2025

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 1 December 2025

We feature all the artists selected in this sequence in 2025.

Featured Albums w/c 1 December 2025

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


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

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

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

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Recent (last 30 days)


News: Rest In Peace – MICK UNDERWOOD

GRTR!’s Joe Geesin penned a tribute to musician and friend Mick Underwood…

Drummer Mick Underwood, best known for his work with Ian Gillan in Gillan, died on 28 July, after a long illness.

underwood1

Pictured left to right: Pete Robinson, John Gustafson, Mick Underwood

Born in the mid 40s, Mick started recording in the mid 60s, with some sessions and work with The Outlaws crossing paths with guitarist Ritchie Blackmore. A short tenure with The Herd overlapped with Peter Frampton’s stint with the band, before he joined Episode Six, which then featured singer Ian Gillan and bassist Roger Glover.

In 1969, when he heard that Deep Purple were looking for a new vocalist, Mick recommended his then colleague Ian to his former colleague Blackmore, who took both Ian and Roger to Purple.

That move essentially broke Episode Six, and Mick then formed the prog rock band Quatermass, with pianist Peter Robinson and bassist John Gustafson. Their sole LP was recorded at Abbey Road in 1970, in the studio next door to where Pink Floyd would have been recording Atom Heart Mother, with my dad Ron Geesin.

Mick later played in Peace, with former Free vocalist Paul Rodgers. Paul soon went back to a reformed Free, who would rework some of the Peace tracks, but one track by Peace did appear on The Free Story, and a track recorded live at the BBC on a rare compilation album.

Mick then recorded an album with Sammy, produced by Ian Gillan, and then joined Strapps. By then, former Quatermass bassist Gustafson was playing in the Ian Gillan Band.

In 1979, Mick, alongside guitarist Bernie Torme, replaced Pete Barnacle (touring drummer who’d replaced Liam Genocky) and guitarist Steve Byrd in Ian Gillan’s more rock oriented Gillan Band.

His audition with them included a track called Swifty, which would later be reworked into Vengeance. Mick’s debut with Gillan was their second album Mr Universe, released on Acrobat in 1979. Sadly the label went under, and the band moved to Virgin for 1980’s Glory Road. By now Gillan were an established rock band who mixed classic rock with touches of blues and punk, and they had several hit singles.

My personal intro to Gillan was an episode of Top Of The Pops in 1981, also on the bill was Graham Bonnet, featuring Cozy Powell.

Mick released a solo single Earthquake At The Savoy/Redwatch in Germany (featuring other Gillan members).

Gillan were always rumoured to struggle financially, it was too easy to blame Ian, but one rarely mentioned factor was the death of (either Ian’s or the band’s, I’m not sure) accountant in 1980, and various holes in the accounts were uncovered, which would explain why the band were always on a wage rather than a royalty.

Mick once told me that Bernie had seen the light and that was one reason he left the band after 1981’s Future Shock.

The band recorded two more albums with guitarist Janick Gers, before splitting. A number of quality period live sets have since been released, including several of the band’s appearances at Reading. All are well worth checking out.

Pictured left to right: Mick Underwood, Joe, Jeff Summers

I first met Mick in 1997, in a pub in Wallington, Surrey, while we were both working for Angel Air (I was writing sleevenotes, Mick was recording an album as Quatermass II, with Don Airey and former Deep Purple bassist Nick Simper)

Mick and I became good friends, and we met again at a gig at the Purple Turtle in London, his band Raw Glory were playing with Paddy Goes To Holyhead (Danny Hynes, featuring Praying Mantis’ Tina & Chris Troy). We’d work together again early 2010s, when Cherry Red reissued the Quatermass album, with a bonus DVD (5.1 surround sound mix), and a special playback at the Metropolis Studios in Chiswick, west London. I wrote a feature on Quatermass for Record Collector magazine that year. Check out that feature here

After that I’d make regular trips to Twickenham to catch up with Mick, over a pint or three, and this continued whenever possible even after I moved to Worcestershire. Occasionally his wife would join us; Mick was very much the family man and never the rock star.

Mick is survived by his wife Sue and daughter Lauren.

Words & photos by Joe Geesin

Further reading:

What Gillan Means to Me

Gig review (Mick Underwood’s Glory Road, 2012)
Gig review (Mick Underwood’s Glory Road, 2014)


Featured Artist: JOSH TAERK

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

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






David Randall presents a weekly show on Get Ready to ROCK! Radio, Sundays at 22:00 GMT, repeated on Mondays and Fridays), when he invites listeners to ‘Assume The Position’. The show signposts forthcoming gigs and tours and latest additions at getreadytorock.com. First broadcast on 7 December 2025.


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 25 November 2025

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 1 December 2025

We feature all the artists selected in this sequence in 2025.

Featured Albums w/c 1 December 2025

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


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

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

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

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Recent (last 30 days)


Album review: STEAL THE CITY – Road To Nowhere

STEAL THE CITY - Road To Nowhere

Facebook  [Release date 20.09.24]

Sheffield-based hard rock 4-piece outfit Steal the City have emerged in the UK-Rock scene with the sharpest hooked riffs and chorus lines this side of the Atlantic.  While individual influences range from the heavy rock, punk, metal circa 2000’s to country music from the deep South; Steal The City’s story began way back in the school classroom and has continued successfully due to their shared passion, drive and commitment to the band.

Steal the City channel the likes of A Day to Remember and While She Sleeps. Their lyrics resonate with the audience on many personal levels, evoking an intense reaction to each and every song they produce and perform.  Their sharp dressed image completes their visual impact on stage and makes them and their united performance impossible to forget.

Touring consistently, Steal the City have created a loyal following who travel the breadth of the country to support and get their fix of the band. Whilst their career began with festivals such as Tramlines Fringe, Mapfest and Womfest, since being hand-picked to play alongside bands like Heaven’s Basement, Glamour of the Kill and Skindred there is no doubt that they have evolved into heavily sought-after performers.

‘Road To Nowhere’ was recorded and produced by guitarist James Kirkham at STC HQ, with mastering duties courtesy of Ste Kerry (Sleep Token/While She Sleeps/Malevolence).

I first saw these guys back at Hard Rock Hell in Great Yarmouth. I was impressed then so was really looking forward to listening for the first time, and I certainly wasn’t disappointed.

This album came out swinging! Powerful percussion added with bass pedal set to full throttle drumming, bad ass bass line. Great guitar riffs which were executed with immaculate precision. Superb.

Vocally on point and showcased great range. I could feel the passion and emotion behind each track with the vocals being at the forefront of storytelling and the musical accompaniment bringing it all together in an epic symphony and feast for the eardrums.

I love how this band has progressed from seeing them live those few years ago.

I loved the overall tone of the album and that it was dynamic in the change of pace, with high energy from the offset grabbing the listeners attention and ending on a powerful slower note filled with raw emotion. It was an epic rollercoaster ride I didn’t want to get off.

I honestly loved every single track however there was one track that I could not stop listening to which was ‘You Don’t Define Me” it was gritty, raw, passionate and had the metal edge that I absolutely love! I shall briefly summarise the songs message of not letting people stop you being who you are. Just wow!

It’s is pretty much what I advocate as a person as I’m very expressive, alternative and proud of it and it’s something that I will stand for until I’m on my deathbed. So this is a track that gets my complete seal of approval!

With ‘Road to Nowhere’ being an absolute knockout. I would be very interested in seeing these guys live again.

If you’re also interested you can catch them live on the 27 September at Yellow Arch Studios, Sheffield for their Album Launch Show. ****

Review by Lucy Parr


Featured Artist: JOSH TAERK

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

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






David Randall presents a weekly show on Get Ready to ROCK! Radio, Sundays at 22:00 GMT, repeated on Mondays and Fridays), when he invites listeners to ‘Assume The Position’. The show signposts forthcoming gigs and tours and latest additions at getreadytorock.com. First broadcast on 7 December 2025.


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 25 November 2025

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 1 December 2025

We feature all the artists selected in this sequence in 2025.

Featured Albums w/c 1 December 2025

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


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

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

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

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


Recent (last 30 days)


Album review: FAST EDDIE CLARKE – Make My Day The Rock ’n’ Roll Story Of…

fast eddie

BMG [Release date: 06.09.24]

Guitarist Fast Eddie Clarke came to prominence as the guitarist for Motorhead, playing on Motorhead (1977, Chiswick), and Bomber, Overkill, Ace Of Spades, No Sleep ‘Till Hammersmith and Iron Fist (1979-82, all on Bronze), and a number of retrospective live albums and compilations. Outside of Motorhead he’s had a longer career than maybe most realise, and this box dips into various segments, giving a good overview.

Disc 1 is Clarke’s early years, with several tracks from the two albums her recorded with Curtis Knight’s Zeus (the same Knight who recorded with Hendrix in the mid 60s), some lovely bluesy prog.

There’s also a few tracks by Continuous Performance, and then uptempo work (and a little punky) from The Muggers (a few fans may already have The Muggers Tapes set).

Disc 2 is the Motorhead years, not something you can do justice to on one disc but there’s a couple of standards and some rarities too (alternate takes with Eddie’s lead vocals). Wonderful music but you know it, a fine sampler to an excellent catalogue most will be largely familiar with.

More interesting is Disc 3, the Fastway years. Intentionally wanting to move away from the Motorhead sound, Fastway were more a straight heavy metal band with a strong blues influence. Here’s a catalogue that really needs investigating, you only need a few tracks to realise that. Additional are a live track, some demos with Pete Way, and some remixes. Clarke’s guitar stands out, proof that he didn’t need to play second fiddle to Lemmy.

Finally Disc 4 is the Solo years, and some more excellent music. Enlightening too as it’s SO good yet few will be aware of the solo material (i.e. outside of Motorhead/Fastway). This is probably the most enjoyable disc of the set. Many tracks are catchy, solid, heavy, a touch of blues, outstanding guitar, all good foot tapping stuff.

In addition, the 4 discs come in a nice fold out set and packaged with that, in the box, is a book, a biography which is a good read.

Much as I love the music and found the music and book enlightening, there a few missed opportunities. The CDs are a little short, the very brief (2 page) insert doesn’t enlighten a great deal as to where the tracks came from; more info such as album, year and line-up should be fairly obvious info to include. But sadly no. On those counts, I think BMG might need to re-visit the price point.

And, as a fan, collector and music lover in general, this may have been good to include (tracks from, or in full), Naughty Old Santa’s Christmas Classics, an album Eddie recorded with Philthy Animal Taylor back in the day.

Price aside, there are definitely more plusses than minuses (there’s a lot here that’s new to me), and it’s well worth checking out. ****

Review by Joe Geesin

Get Ready to ROCK! - The Best of 2024


Featured Artist: JOSH TAERK

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

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






David Randall presents a weekly show on Get Ready to ROCK! Radio, Sundays at 22:00 GMT, repeated on Mondays and Fridays), when he invites listeners to ‘Assume The Position’. The show signposts forthcoming gigs and tours and latest additions at getreadytorock.com. First broadcast on 7 December 2025.


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 25 November 2025

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 1 December 2025

We feature all the artists selected in this sequence in 2025.

Featured Albums w/c 1 December 2025

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


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

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

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

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


Recent (last 30 days)


Album review: BRAVE RIVAL- Fight or Flight

    BRAVE RIVAL- Fight or Flight

Independent (Release Date 16.08.24)

Brave Rival have become one of my favourite live bands over the past 18 months, with brilliant dual female vocals, excellent musicianship and a warm hearted stage show. 2022’s impressive debut album ‘Life’s Machine’ was a favourite among many colleagues at GRTR!, and fortunately with the help of a successful Kickstarter campaign which even saw pledgers add backing vocals, this sophomore effort is finally here. It feels a little strange to consider this as a new album as many of these songs have been in the live set since I started following them, with some already released as singles.

One of the established live tracks, ‘Bad Choices’ opens with fuzz guitar from Ed ‘The Shred’ Clarke and a most immediate chorus. Both that and the heavier ‘Seventeen’ have an unexpectedly modern rock feel, and the soaring chorus could be from the first (and best) couple of Halestorm albums.

One of the great myths, perpetuated by various awards they have won, is that Brave Rival are a blues act. They have a much broader canvas, though ‘Stand Up’ is certainly a little bluesier with the  raunchy vocals of Lindsey Bonnick and Chloe Josephine and a bit of harmonica playing from guest Will Wilde.

Those opening three songs are very direct in their approach, but the rest of the album takes a more adventurous and less instant approach, beginning with ‘Insane’:  the vocals and arrangements have some of the trippiness of 1970’s Heart allied to an incredible wah-wah infused solo from Ed.

On another of those established live favourites, ‘Fairytale’, Lindsey’s pure vocal intro leads into a heavier rock out combined with some dark lyrics.  ‘Heavy’ actually is far from that in musical terms but a soulful ballad with more beautiful sounding lead vocals and harmonies, which cries out for exposure on stations like Radio 2. The mellow mood is continued on the folk-influenced ‘All I Can Think Of Is You’- with some great harmonies until half way through it kicks up a gear with Chloe’s soaring vocals and a short but very sweet guitar solo.

One of the singles, ‘Five Years On’ rocks hard with a little of a swampy southern groove and a feisty venom in the lyrics, and ‘Unravelling’ is a surprisingly straight ahead melodic rocker with a crunchy riff before a return to more adventurous sounds.

‘Sink or Swim’, from whose lyrics the album takes its title, again starts slowly with a bass intro from Billy Dedman and beautiful vocal harmonising, but boasts quite an angry sounding chorus and an unconventional arrangement.  ‘Blame the Voices’, as its gentle opening gives way to some dark guitar tones and ferocious drumming from Donna Peters, is another surprise which by the end is verging on symphonic metal.

The album ends with the near seven minute ‘Stars Upon My Scars’ which is probably the bluesiest of all the songs, including  lengthy solos from Ed and a emotion drenched vocal display, one of many inspired by band members own past mental health and relationship struggles.

It’s an album impossible to pigeonhole- with influences across musical genres everywhere from the late sixties to the present day. It rocks a lot heavier than expected in places, yet I also love the way many of the songs build into something not always obvious at their start. With the wheel already invented, it is particularly hard to be original in the classic and blues rock field. It is therefore a rare treat to come across something as refreshing and imaginative as this masterpiece of an album.  *****

Review by Andy Nathan

Get Ready to ROCK! - The Best of 2024

Gig review (Staines, February 2024)


Featured Artist: JOSH TAERK

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

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






David Randall presents a weekly show on Get Ready to ROCK! Radio, Sundays at 22:00 GMT, repeated on Mondays and Fridays), when he invites listeners to ‘Assume The Position’. The show signposts forthcoming gigs and tours and latest additions at getreadytorock.com. First broadcast on 7 December 2025.


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 25 November 2025

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 1 December 2025

We feature all the artists selected in this sequence in 2025.

Featured Albums w/c 1 December 2025

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


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

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

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

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


Recent (last 30 days)


Album review : JON ANDERSON AND THE BAND GEEKS – True

Frontiers [Release date : 23.08.24]

An almost 80 year old Jon Anderson, and the Band Geeks will be finishing off their second annual US tour in September. Just about when their first album, True, is being released by Frontiers. Quite a coup for the label.

Social media plays a huge part in the transmission and circulation of music nowadays, so to find Anderson teamed up with The Band Geeks as a result of seeing them cover ‘Heart Of The Sunrise’ online is not the surprise it may once have been.

One telephone call from Anderson to Richie (Blue Oyster Cult) Castellano, Band Geek’s leader, bass player and producer set it all in motion.

“Yes, Epics And Classics – featuring Jon Anderson and the Band Geeks” toured in 2023 and was a huge success.

The relationship evolved into a songwriting partnership. This from Artsfuse website: Anderson: “I had about half a dozen songs in my computer. I sent them to Richie, and he developed them on a major level to make them sound like Yes. I don’t know how he did it, but he did.”

The trailer single, ‘Shine On’ is a surefire crowd pleaser. It’s as if a Brian Wilson pop symphony is jump starting a prog pop classic. A bit like being at the movies and a scene comes on that you’re sure you’ve already watched, and you think “this is where we came in”. That’s ‘Shine On’, a rebirth of Yes Music.

Anderson’s call and response interchange with the backing vocals is so clever, so propulsive, continually refreshing the music’s momentum.

Just like he did with Yes, Anderson often sounds absorbed in his own intricate reverie. The lyrical spirituality of tracks like ‘Build Me An Ocean’ and the 16 minute ‘Once Upon A Dream’ – a new classic – could only have been created by one man.

Last word, ‘Counties and Countries’ is perhaps the best song Yes never wrote. ****1/2

Review by Brian McGowan

Get Ready to ROCK! - The Best of 2024


Featured Artist: JOSH TAERK

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

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






David Randall presents a weekly show on Get Ready to ROCK! Radio, Sundays at 22:00 GMT, repeated on Mondays and Fridays), when he invites listeners to ‘Assume The Position’. The show signposts forthcoming gigs and tours and latest additions at getreadytorock.com. First broadcast on 7 December 2025.


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 25 November 2025

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 1 December 2025

We feature all the artists selected in this sequence in 2025.

Featured Albums w/c 1 December 2025

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


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

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

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

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


Recent (last 30 days)


Album review: HEALTHY JUNKIES – Listen To The Mad

Banana Castle Records [Release date 22.11.24] www.healthyjunkies.co.uk

With the success of the 2024 Olympics the French must be feeling rather proud. A band with a French female singer might now have a distinct advantage. But Nina Courson is no Celine Dion.

Healthy Junkies are psych pop punkers of the first order. At times it feels like being back in CBGB’s c.1979. In truth all fourteen songs might be a contemporary re-tread of times (and bands) past but there is enough energy (and variety) here to impress. The band have previously released three albums and several EPs.

The band are now veterans of the annual ‘Rebellion Punk Festival’ (where they have appeared since 2012) but have also brought their high energy pop punk to The Whitby Goth Festival (2017) and Corrosion Festival supporting Toyah (2024).

‘Self Conscious’ is a great example of their art whilst ‘Desire’ has a grungey goth/psychedelic feel which offers tasty respite from the frenetic. Ditto ‘Media Whore’ and ‘World On Fire’. The goth vibe is also reflected on ‘Dead Souls’ which brings to mind early 1990s All About Eve and Gene Loves Jezebel.

The band do mix things up with ‘Son And A Daughter’ having a reggae-style backbeat and a memorable chorus. ‘Julie’s Got A Job’, ‘Now Or Never’, ‘Tinnitus’ and ‘Lion In A Circus’ return the band to the straight-ahead pop post-punk.

With the echo-ey vocals and psychedelic undertow, ‘Listen To The Mad’ might even appeal to fans of Blues Pills or followers of the Fruits de Mer record label who we regularly promote on our radio station. Guitarist Phil Honey-Jones was formerly in a psychedelic rock band which may explain the band’s approach. On this album they are joined by “new”drummer David Gaut with original bassist Dave Whitmore completing the line-up.

Party like its 1980. ****

Review by David Randall

Healthy Junkies launch the album at The Dublin Castle, Camden, Wednesday 20 November.


Featured Artist: JOSH TAERK

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

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






David Randall presents a weekly show on Get Ready to ROCK! Radio, Sundays at 22:00 GMT, repeated on Mondays and Fridays), when he invites listeners to ‘Assume The Position’. The show signposts forthcoming gigs and tours and latest additions at getreadytorock.com. First broadcast on 7 December 2025.


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 25 November 2025

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 1 December 2025

We feature all the artists selected in this sequence in 2025.

Featured Albums w/c 1 December 2025

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


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

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

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

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Recent (last 30 days)


Gig review: MAID OF STONE FESTIVAL – Mote Park, Maidstone, Kent, 20 July 2024

Those Damn Crows - MAID OF STONE FESTIVAL- Mote Park, Maidstone, Kent, 20 July 2024

Over its five years Ramblin’ Man Festival in Kent established itself as one of the festivals of choice for us middle-aged rockers with a relaxed atmosphere and selection of bands from variety of classic rock genres, both old and new. The 2019 version was one of my favourite  festivals ever and the line up for the abortive 2020 version had promised to be even better, but sadly the organisation disappeared under a cloud post-pandemic.

However there is an established history of music events in Mote Park and last year a new festival, Maid of Stone, picked up the baton with a similar music policy albeit on a somewhat smaller scale.

While last year’s line-up did not quite have enough names for me that weren’t also touring that year, this year’s was stronger. However unlike in those better funded Ramblin Man days, no extra trains were laid on from Maidstone so only the Saturday was commutable for me from the far side of London.

My FOMO on the Sunday was dampened by the fact I didn’t think the overall line up that day was as strong and that of the two headliners, Mr Big I’d seen in the Spring at Shepherds Bush Empire, and I’d caught Larkin Poe at Guns’n’Roses Hyde Park gig.

The format was a three band warm up on Friday headlined by Gun, followed by two full days of wall to wall action on two stages – with none of those annoying stage clashes –  plus a third stage to showcase the endless number of emerging new bands, which unfortunately I never got time to visit.  While the entry was familiar, the original sprawling site had been squared off into a much more manageable and regularly shaped area.

Daxx And Roxanne - MAID OF STONE FESTIVAL- Mote Park, Maidstone, Kent, 20 July 2024

After a quick look round and a trip to the beer tents I was in time for Daxx and Roxane opening proceedings on the second (Phoenix) stage which bizarrely had the banner of headliners Those Damn Crows already in place for most of the earlier bands.

The Swiss quartet got things off to a lively start with their simple but effective high octane 12-bar rock’n’roll,  on the likes of ‘Evil Eye’  and ‘Ticket To Rock’. There was plenty of onstage movement with guitarists Cal Weimann and Simon Golaz trading places and the latter sometimes playing harmonica while the slower ‘Lust And Love’ made for a welcome change of pace in a mildly enjoyable set.

Scarlet Rebels - MAID OF STONE FESTIVAL- Mote Park, Maidstone, Kent, 20 July 2024

With Mason Hill sadly pulling out with no replacement singer yet in place, the Inferno stage was opened by Scarlet Rebels, with perfect timing as from the singles released so far I am convinced the South Walians are on the verge of a major breakthrough with their brand new third album ‘Where The Colours Meet’.

Indeed they opened with one such in ‘Divide And Conquer’ with topical political messages  and ‘I’m Alive’  before ‘Grace’ had plenty of catchy ‘who-oahs’ , ‘I’m Alive’ got a few fists punching, and the bridge on ‘Take Me Home’ had a bigger hook than most choruses from other acts.

Scarlet Rebels - MAID OF STONE FESTIVAL- Mote Park, Maidstone, Kent, 20 July 2024

Their passionate hard hitting sound is different from many of their contemporaries – and I see influences in Wayne Doyle’s singing and songwriting from  the early and best work of fellow countrymen Manic Street Preachers and Stereophonics. Yet they also have a secret weapon in guitarist Chris Jones whose crisp and rapid fire solos, all delivered while pulling some great poses tilting his Les Paul skywards, provide a complementary hard rock element.

‘Take My Breath Away’ and ‘Streets Of Fire’ were not quite of the same quality, but another of those singles in ‘Secret Drug’ was really catchy. I even detected some of U2’s widescreen influences in ‘Let Me In’ which saw an audience clap along and old favourite ‘Heal’ concluded a mighty impressive set. I marked down that I just have to see them on their autumn headlining tour.

The Commoners - MAID OF STONE FESTIVAL- Mote Park, Maidstone, Kent, 20 July 2024

Canadians The Commoners seem to have been investing a lot of effort in breaking the UK recently, indeed they came from a by all accounts  hot and sticky headline the night before in London. Other than singer Chris Medhurst who looked the metaller in his long hair, black vest and tattoos, they were also devotees of retro seventies style with guitarist Ross Citrullo and bassist Ben Spiller reminding me of Walter Becker and David Byron respectively.

From openers ‘Shake You Off’ and ‘Who Are You?’, the music was right up my street, classic rootsy rock with a good balance between piano and organ, though the Black Crowes were probably too dominant an influence.

The Commoners - MAID OF STONE FESTIVAL- Mote Park, Maidstone, Kent, 20 July 2024

I was thinking all that was missing was a second guitar so was delighted when Chris picked one up on an Allmans-style instrumental intro to the Planet Rock playlisted ‘Devil Teasin’ Me’, while ‘Body And Soul’ allowed the band to stretch out in a lengthier, languid fashion. , lengthy. ‘The Way I Am’, ‘Fill My Cup’ where Chris even sounded a little like Steven Tyler and ‘Find A Better Way’ ended an impressive set, even if one that fell a little short of the hype building around them.

Over the past couple of years South Coast rockers South Of Salem have built quite a name for themselves and a big crowd was at the Inferno Stage. As well as a sleazy, debauched Black Veil Brides type image they have a taste for the macabre with a couple of coffins forming part of their impressive stage set along with pyrotechnics and dancers for a couple of songs.

South Of Salem - MAID OF STONE FESTIVAL- Mote Park, Maidstone, Kent, 20 July 2024

However they are not just show ponies and the strength of their songs have made me an unlikely convert. The pace was unrelenting from the openers ‘Let Us Prey’ and ‘Jet Black Eyes’ with its ‘monsters under the bed’ chorus. ‘Made To Be Mine’ saw smoke rising from the stage and the first but not the last of singer Joey Draper’s audience participation, and ‘Hellbound Heart’ had the gothic feel of bands like HIM especially with the taped keys.

He emphasised we only had one shot at life in introducing ‘Static’ then it was a frantic end to a fine set with the title track of latest album ‘Death Of the Party’, ‘Left For Dead’ which combined some thrashy riffing with a catchy chorus, and their strongest song in ‘Cold Day In Hell’ (even if it always reminds me of Wasp’s ‘Wild Child’), Joey going into the crowd and picking out a youngster on their dad’s shoulders, fortunately wearing industrial strength ear defenders.

South Of Salem - MAID OF STONE FESTIVAL- Mote Park, Maidstone, Kent, 20 July 2024

One of the big draws for me was When Rivers Meet. I’ve got steadily more into their original take on blues rock, led by husband and wife Aaron and Grace Bond, and was frustrated I missed their London headline with one of these pesky gig clashes with Midnite City.

Sadly fate intervened as a technical gremlin delayed their arrival by 25 minutes compere Pete K Mally having to draw on his stand up comic expertise to fill in before a patient crowd, and even during ‘Did I Break The Law’ they still seemed to be working on Aaron’s guitar set up.

When Rivers Meet - MAID OF STONE FESTIVAL- Mote Park, Maidstone, Kent, 20 July 2024

After a couple of decent numbers in ‘Seen It All Before’ and ‘Play My Game’ and ‘Perfect Stranger’, ‘Never Coming Home’ saw Grace slipping effortlessly into a powerful falsetto, though frustratingly Aaron’s vocals were inaudible.

One of their trademarks, the variety of unusual instruments was largely absent till Grace picked up a tiny mandolin, complemented by Aaron belatedly cranking up some dirty slide for ‘Walking On The Wire’, seguing into ‘Free Man’.

Unfortunately a festival cannot run late or reduce other sets without punishing everyone so sadly their set had to be chopped by half. Ah well, there’s another gig at Dingwalls in the autumn – subject to gig clashes, of course.

It did also mean I didn’t have to worry about a stage clash for the next act Tyketto, one of the biggest draws for me. With only 50 minutes to play with I expected a set very tightly drawn around their best known numbers, so was surprised they started with a Danny Vaughn harmonica intro and the bluesy, almost southern-tinged slow burner ‘Remember My Name’, admittedly with an impressive chorus when it finally got there.

Tyketto - MAID OF STONE FESTIVAL- Mote Park, Maidstone, Kent, 20 July 2024

In more familiar territory were ‘Meet Me In The Night’ and ‘Wings’, one of the holy trinity from ‘Don’t Come Easy’ with new-ish guitarist Harry Scott Elliott playing the solos with aplomb. Among songs like ‘Strength In Numbers’ and ‘Rescue Me’, ‘Reach’ showcased the abilities of players from Danny playing acoustic to Harry’s guitar flourishes to some powerhouse drumming from Johnny Dee.

Quite apart from a voice that mixes power and precision, Danny has a magnetic personality as an articulate frontman which even a 12 hour flight delay could not dampen.

After the audience broke out into a round of ‘Happy Birthday’ the set closed with more ‘Don’t Come Easy’ classics in ‘Burning Down Inside’ and the grooves of ‘Lay Your Body Down’ even allowing Chris Childs a mini bass solo.

And of course the one that the most casual fan night know or would remember in ‘Forever Young’, Danny saying he was proud of what it means to people and asking them to jump if their knees would stand the strain.  A remarkable number of people were Tyketto first timers (where have they been for 34 years?) but surely won over.

Tyketto - MAID OF STONE FESTIVAL- Mote Park, Maidstone, Kent, 20 July 2024

After a year or two on hiatus Maid of Stone marked a welcome return for Wayward Sons. The same ingredients were all there – the big smile and flowing hair of Les Paul wielding guitarist Sam Wood, Nic Wastell’s nonstop bass antics and Toby Jepson’s songwriting on a series of songs infused with a degree of punchy power pop to distinguish them from some of their contemporaries.

However the bass-heavy sound was not good at all for openers ‘Big Day’ and ‘Feel Good Hit’ and it was only with ‘Don’t Wanna Go’ that people really engaged as Toby leaned forward to encourage them to sing the ’to be a rock’n’ roller’ line.

Wayward Sons - MAID OF STONE FESTIVAL- Mote Park, Maidstone, Kent, 20 July 2024

Having recently seen his quite inspiring songs and stories show, the insight I gained into Toby’s life and songwriting enhanced my enjoyment of the likes of ‘Punchline’, ‘Bloody Typical’, and ‘Land Of The Blind’ with the oh so correct observation that in the land of the blind the one eyed man is king. He also generously thanked the organisers and stressed the importance of the role of what he called boutique festivals in supporting new acts.

The slow start was forgotten with a strong closing run of WS‘s best known songs in  ‘Crush’ with audience participation  ‘Ghost’, a hard driving  ‘Until The End’ and ‘Joke’s On You’.

Wayward Sons - MAID OF STONE FESTIVAL- Mote Park, Maidstone, Kent, 20 July 2024

The real leftfield choice in this line up was The Warning. When announced they were totally unfamiliar to me and yet the power trio of three young Mexican sisters have built such a large following they are already announcing shows at the likes of Brixton Academy. They were certainly tight and can play bit I found both the vocals – which veered from girl band to a harsher style – and guitar style of dyed blonde frontwoman  Dany Villareal a little grating on my ears.

The Warning - MAID OF STONE FESTIVAL- Mote Park, Maidstone, Kent, 20 July 2024

In a set largely in English but with a few diversions into their native tongue only opener ‘Sick’, ‘Choke’ and ‘Six Feet Deep’. made an impression on me, though in a lengthy queue for a superb curry, I was not fully listening. That said, there were a large number of people predominantly the younger fans who really enjoyed them and were raving on the ‘socials’- it’s just they weren’t really for me.

In contrast, Those Damn Crows as Phoenix stage headliners was a major draw for me and many others as – having been solidly on tour for a couple of years, including some recent high profile support slots – their headline shows  are limited to two this year, this festival and a home nation gig in Cardiff that was regularly plugged during the show.

Those Damn Crows - MAID OF STONE FESTIVAL- Mote Park, Maidstone, Kent, 20 July 2024

The sound issues on this stage were miraculously sorted and the atmosphere was really cooking as at the right moment there was a big forest of hands and shouting to the chorus of ‘Who Did It’ before ‘Man On Fire’ and ‘Send The Reaper’ maintained the momentum. Both recent single ‘Let’s Go Psycho’ (with its ‘Don’t Go’ chorus hook) and ‘Wake Up’ combined some quite hard alternative rock riffery with big hooks in the choruses.

The band have honed their stage show and presence even further and Shane Greenhall remains a magnetic frontman. The majestically melodic choruses of ‘Find A Way’ were a brilliant illustration of how lean their sound has become. ‘Takedown’ was more raw, but ‘ I Am’ and the statelier ‘Lay It All On Me’ both had a widescreen anthemic feel to them.

Those Damn Crows - MAID OF STONE FESTIVAL- Mote Park, Maidstone, Kent, 20 July 2024

Even better was to follow as Shane’s piano intro to ‘Blink Of An Eye’ could have come from the Journey ballad playbook: he switched to going out front and back again in a revised arrangement which even featured the briefest of twin guitar passages.

Back to heavier stuff, ‘Kingdom Of Dust’ gave way to ‘Sin On Skin’ which sparked jumping  as a prelude to their anthem ‘Rock and Roll Ain’t Dead’, which had people chanting along the moment they recognised it. The one disappointment was that Shane, who famously loves a balcony, was relatively tethered to the stage area this time rather than go on his wanderings.

In days of old that would have been the last song but since last year’s ‘Inhale/Exhale’ album their songs have taken on a grander scale and the final two epitomised this in the power balladry of ‘This Time I’m Ready’ with Shane strapping on a guitar and ‘See You Again’ with its taped keys.

Even more than Tyketto, for me they were band of the day. They would have been worthy main stage headliners, indeed more than that, in a parallel world these modern rock anthems with mainstream appeal would be destined for arenas or even stadia.

Get Ready to ROCK! - The Best of 2024

Once again though, credit to Maid of Stone for a somewhat leftfield choice of headliner in Wolfmother, or at least one whose recent profile has been low, though they did tour last year apparently. Again the Aussies were a personal draw, in the sense of not having seen them since my first Download on 2007, a year or two after their debut album provided such a big hit and gave impetus to a revival of retro classic rock.

Wolfmother - MAID OF STONE FESTIVAL- Mote Park, Maidstone, Kent, 20 July 2024

In contrast to bands lower down the bill like South of Salem, it seems every expense had been spared on a minimalist stage set up. There was no backdrop, the trio looked a bit lost on stage and at one point the lighting was more on the drummer than frontman Andrew Stockdale, bathed in blue and purple light. Still, with his trademark curly hair the singer and guitarist was also a taciturn presence barely speaking between songs.  .

Another downside was that the keyboard player who used to give their songs the feel of vintage Uriah Heep has long gone. However they  could not go too wrong with a setlist from which four of the first five songs were from that classic debut in ‘Dimension’,  ‘Woman’, the mystical feel of ‘White Unicorn’ and a frantic ‘Apple Tree’.

After trawling their back catalogue for songs like ‘Midnight Train’ and ‘California Dream’, the set sagged for a while, though not for those rowdies who turned the centre of the viewing area into an unlikely mosh pit. As it wore on though I was impressed with their supply of killer riffs on the likes of ‘Victorious’, ‘New Moon Rising’ and ‘Gypsy Caravan’.

Wolfmother - MAID OF STONE FESTIVAL- Mote Park, Maidstone, Kent, 20 July 2024

Though most often compared to Led Zeppelin, not least with Andrew’s voice reminiscent of Robert Plant’s early howls, ‘Rock And Roll Survivor’  was a reminder that their sound is also reminiscent of other underrated early seventies bands such as Stray and Budgie. The riff to ‘Colossal’ did what it said on the tin before they closed with perhaps their best known song in  ‘Joker And The Thief’.

Up against the 10:30 pm curfew they still got in their version of ‘Rock And Roll’, yes the most overplayed cover in rock history but if anyone can own a Zeppelin cover, they are one of the prime contenders. Despite their presentational deficiencies it ended up being a really enjoyable set to put me on a good mood heading back on the half hour walk for the last train back into London.

Indeed it had been a near perfect day of festival food and ales, catching up with gig buddies in a relaxed atmosphere and ten bands, one after the other, and all with some merit. The organisation was brilliant and the site exactly the right siz e- I could easily add this to the list of festivals worth doing and hopefully make a full weekend of it next year.

Review and Photos by Andy Nathan

Album review (Scarlet Rebels, 2024)
Gig review (The Commoners, July 2024 )
Album review (South Of Salem, 2024)


Featured Artist: JOSH TAERK

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

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






David Randall presents a weekly show on Get Ready to ROCK! Radio, Sundays at 22:00 GMT, repeated on Mondays and Fridays), when he invites listeners to ‘Assume The Position’. The show signposts forthcoming gigs and tours and latest additions at getreadytorock.com. First broadcast on 7 December 2025.


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 25 November 2025

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 1 December 2025

We feature all the artists selected in this sequence in 2025.

Featured Albums w/c 1 December 2025

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


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

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

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

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


Recent (last 30 days)


Album review: MICK PINI – Papa Voodoo

Pete Feenstra chatted to Mick Pini and Craig Marshall for his show on Get Ready to ROCK! Radio, playing tracks from the new album.  First broadcast 18 August 2024.

MICK PINI - Papa Voodoo

Audio 54 Records/Cadiz [Release date 15.08.24]

‘Papa Voodoo’ is another collaboration between Germany-based guitarist Mick Pini and Craig Marshall (Audio 54). Our own Pete Feenstra is both an advocate and active participant supplying the title to album opener ‘Duck Soup’.

If you want a laid-back groovy summer soundtrack (for what’s left of it) look no further. That opener is all wah wah and chill with Marshall’s brass interjections. Like something you might have read about in late-1970s ‘Record Mirror’ review pages.

Most of the tracks are free-form, with Pini setting the dials to stun and letting his expansive guitar figures take him on his journey. It’s all about the groove. The title track reminds me of the late John Campbell – all gruff vocal and swampy vibe with the Hammond/organ sound adding spice.  Dr.John might be another reference.

‘Funky Delicatessen’ is exactly what it says on the tin, a perfunctory funk workout “You love the taste, you love the smell. You love the bass, as funky as hell”. Right.

More conventional jazz blues is displayed on ‘Mornington Crescent 69′ with nice keyboard accompaniment, urban jazz on ‘Gotta Get My Way Home”. The title track actually appeared on the duo’s previous ‘Way Ahead’ when Pete Feenstra commented “blues is at its best as a catalyst rather than simply a genre in itself.”

Sometimes the vocals are embedded in the tune as an effect, such as the Latin-vibe of ‘Spark’ but the highlights are the instrumentals including ‘Make It Last’ with a Stevie Wonder patented keyboard shuffle and the orchestrated ‘Theme From Icarus’ which apparently is a 30 year old tune given a new lease of life.

By ‘Memphis Jazztronica’ with its hypnotic Lonnie Liston Smith electric piano vibe, some listeners may be as weary of Pini’s vocal as he himself sounds. This is a “bonus track” which references the album’s standout – if derivative -  ballad ‘A Cold Day In Memphis’.

This album should really be heard in a well-oiled  late-night club situation but I am sure as background to a fading summer it will work just as well. ***1/2

Review by David Randall

Album review (Way Ahead, 2023)


Featured Artist: JOSH TAERK

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

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






David Randall presents a weekly show on Get Ready to ROCK! Radio, Sundays at 22:00 GMT, repeated on Mondays and Fridays), when he invites listeners to ‘Assume The Position’. The show signposts forthcoming gigs and tours and latest additions at getreadytorock.com. First broadcast on 7 December 2025.


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 25 November 2025

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 1 December 2025

We feature all the artists selected in this sequence in 2025.

Featured Albums w/c 1 December 2025

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


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

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

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

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


Recent (last 30 days)


Album review: LEON ALVARADO – The Changing Tide

LEON ALVARADO - The Changing Tide

Melodic Revolution Records  [Release date: 31.05.24]

Leon Alvarado is an American multi-instrumentalist who started his recording career in 2009 with an album called ‘Plays Genesis And Other Stuff’ and has progressed (see what I did there?) to Pink Floyd on album number five ‘The Changing Tide’.

Now, before the cognoscenti start screaming “Oh God, not another ‘Floyd clone”, let me say from the outset that this is so much more, with many passages that sound distinctly his own.

And why not a Pink Floyd sounding album anyway? All we are getting from them these days are remasters of remastered remasters and expensive vinyl presses and “reduxes” of every live gig they’ve ever played.

Why not listen to something, yes, unashamedly ‘Floyd influenced, but with new tunes?

The nearest touchstone here is ‘The Endless River’ and the title and cover design suggest as much – the musical similarities being that it is entirely instrumental with just one vocal track – in this case a rather fine cover of ‘Brain Damage’, just as ‘The Endless River’ had ‘Louder Than Words’.

‘The Changing Tide’ is a classic progressive rock album – six tracks, two ten-minute epics, two seven minute work-outs and musicianship that’s just off the scale.

Opener ‘The Equilibrium Of Time’ (how prog is that?) sets the scene with its swirling keyboard intro backed up with the sound of a heartbeat, before setting off on its own course – cellos and violins are in there together with some very tasty guitar work, and the follow-up ‘A Day Of A Different Sort’ is the ‘Wish You Were Here’ track, with piercing, Gilmouresque stabs of guitar courtesy of Edoardo Scordo (Brit Floyd) which manages to stay the right side of mere imitation.

Tinkling piano introduces ‘A View From A Different Room’ before some wonderful sax from Supertramp’s John Helliwell and more sparkling guitar work confirm these guys know what they’re doing on one of the album’s best tracks – it even concludes with a clanging bell, redolent of ‘High Hopes’ from ‘The Division Bell’.

‘Dance Of The Pink Elephants’ has a somewhat spooky intro seguéing into pounding drums and funky bass work, whilst the title track has classic ‘Floyd guitar and keyboard tropes throughout.

Things are rounded off nicely with a great cover of ‘Brain Damage’ (replete with manic laughter) which gives Alvarado a chance to exercise his vocal cords to a background of arpeggio guitar and tasty backing vocals.

‘The Changing Tide’ very much stands on its own two feet, but if you like playing ‘Spot The Tune’ they’re all in there somewhere and it’s interesting to drag them to the front of your mind – but plagiarism it most certainly is not.

The best album Pink Floyd will never make.   *****

Review by Alan Jones

Get Ready to ROCK! - The Best of 2024


Featured Artist: JOSH TAERK

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

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






David Randall presents a weekly show on Get Ready to ROCK! Radio, Sundays at 22:00 GMT, repeated on Mondays and Fridays), when he invites listeners to ‘Assume The Position’. The show signposts forthcoming gigs and tours and latest additions at getreadytorock.com. First broadcast on 7 December 2025.


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 25 November 2025

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 1 December 2025

We feature all the artists selected in this sequence in 2025.

Featured Albums w/c 1 December 2025

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


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

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

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

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


Recent (last 30 days)


Album review: JOE MEEK’S TEA CHEST TAPES – From Taboo To Telstar (3CD Anthology)

Cherry Red [Release date 16.08.24]

Legendary British Music producer, Joe Meek, cut his electronics’ teeth in the 1950s, operating and maintaining the complexities of the RAF’s radar equipment.

His transition to recording studio maestro led to a groundbreaking series of record releases from the years 1962 to 1966. The fact that his studio was his living room, kitchen, hall and bathroom is well documented online.

Meek took DIY music recording to a new level, inventing techniques that were initially derided, eventually becoming common practice.

This anthology is an ambitious, indeed commendable step by UK label, Cherry Red, in anthologising Meeks considerable body of work chronologically, year by year.

“The Joe Meek” movie (2009) was described in the UK press as a “dizzying whirl of sex, drugs and rock’n’roll”.

We can’t quite paint that picture, so we’ll just focus on the music.

We begin in 1962. It was different then. Publicity was hard to come by. Pop music didn’t have a multiplicity of radio stations waiting for the next big release. Post-war pop was still very much finding its way.

Meek had an aptitude for discovering talent. In the previous year he had produced two massive selling hits for John Leyton, ‘Johnny Remember Me’ and ‘Wild Wind’. Both written by another Meek protege, Geoff Goddard (Goddard and Ray Dexter – artists in their own right – were Meek’s “go to” songwriters). Leyton’s less high flying hit singles (both top 40), ‘Lonely City’ and ‘Lone Rider’, are here.

He was backed by talented UK band, The Outlaws, who had some UK chart success as Mike Berry’s backing band. Both have been given significant airtime, deservedly, in this anthology.

And of course, The Tornados and ‘Telstar’, a worldwide phenomenon, a 5 million selling no.1 hit in the UK and the USA.

Written and produced by Meek, it was the apotheosis of his songwriting talent and DIY studio prowess.

Two different versions are here.

And for those who think Meek’s success was confined to Leyton and The Tornados, there are many here whose single releases hit the charts a glancing blow, like Billie Davis, Cliff Bennett and The Rebel Rousers, Peter Jay and The Jaywalkers, Danny Rivers, Neil Christian and Michael Cox (in fact, Cox had two Top Forty hits in the early sixties).

These artists might just scrape into “household names” category back then. Equally, many still resonate today with anyone who has an interest in UK Pop history.

What might catch the eye of afficionados are the many previously unreleased songs, spread across these 3 discs, from Meeks’ musical family.

As is the way of things, Meek’s personal life cast a shadow over his unique abilities as a writer and producer.

His music should have been nothing less than a cause for celebration.

This Anthology goes a long way to confirming that. ***

Review by Brian McGowan


Featured Artist: JOSH TAERK

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

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






David Randall presents a weekly show on Get Ready to ROCK! Radio, Sundays at 22:00 GMT, repeated on Mondays and Fridays), when he invites listeners to ‘Assume The Position’. The show signposts forthcoming gigs and tours and latest additions at getreadytorock.com. First broadcast on 7 December 2025.


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 25 November 2025

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 1 December 2025

We feature all the artists selected in this sequence in 2025.

Featured Albums w/c 1 December 2025

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


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

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

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

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


Recent (last 30 days)


Quick plays: AUTUMN KILLERS, PETE LAMBERT, DELICATE STEVE

Autumn Killers - Making Waves

AUTUMN KILLERS Making Waves [Release date 12.09.24]

Autumn Killers are Rob Reece (vocals, bass), Duncan Richardson (guitar, keys, synths & backing vocals) and Graeme Hoy (drums, percussion & backing vocals). They are a bit different as they mix dance beats with classic rock riffs and the odd prog wig out.

The single ‘Bounce’ does just that, having the listener bouncing up and down! Little wonder it has picked up airplay on rock radio. ‘Alive’ is in a similar vein and could well be s single.

Autumn Killers are a bit like Depeche Mode and OMD having a jam with Die Krupps, none more so than on the effects heavy ‘Death Trap’. The choral effects and synths meld to marvellous effect on here.

The band’s progressive influences come through on ‘Still/Higher’. The keys/synths intro on this one is immense!

Not your usual rock band, however, Autumn Killers have that certain ‘something’ that draws the listener back for more. If you like to step outside your rock comfort zone let Autumn Killers lead the way… ***1/2 

PETE LAMBERT I Told You A Story Broken Chair Records [Release date 30.08.24]

Debut album from York based songwriter Pete Lambert, who reflecting on the album’s creation said, “Writing and recording this record has been an eye-opening experience for me. Each song is a piece of my journey, from the deeply personal to the universally relatable. It’s been incredibly freeing to bring these stories to life and share them with the world.”

This Stoke City fan did a double take as the inlay photo of Pete looks uncannily like Stoke manager Steven Schumacher!

Pete Lambert is aided by a top notch list of musicians including Joshua Burnell (who is on a quest to headline the Royal Albert Hall) and Bella Gaffney. Alex Victoria is a perfect vocal accompaniment on four songs, including the album’s superb opening song ‘Every Time’.

A tune like ‘Drink to the End’ has that universal appeal and one for the Spotify playlists, with ‘High Horizons’ a more traditional affair, aided by the fiddle playing of Emily Lawler.

One thing that stands out is his smoothly addictive vocals. He excels on ‘Long Shadow’, an assured piece of laid back country/Americana…all the way from York!

The musical world is awash with singer songwriters and it is difficult to get yourself known, or even a niche in the live scene, yet Pete Lambert has the voice and songs to succeed. A decent set of live dates should see his musical star rise higher. ****

ds

DELICATE STEVE Delicate Steve Sings [Release date 16.08.24]

Steve Marion, the guitarist known as Delicate Steve, has released five critically acclaimed albums of instrumental music, plus worked with artists such as Miley Cyrus, Paul Simon, Amen Dunes, Tame Impala and The Black Keys.

Inspired by the Willie Nelson covers album ‘Stardust’, Marion was inspired to make a record on which he takes aspects of iconic music from the past and reinterprets them in a way that carries his own distinctive mark. However, not content to simply record covers, he took a unique approach, blending a handful of faithful reworks with several new compositions on which he channels the voices of other artists.

Much of ‘Delicate Steve Sings’ was recorded with Jonathan Rado (bass), Kosta Galanopolous (drums), Renata Zeiguer (strings) and co-writer Elliot Bergman.

Picks of the album? His interpretation of the Beatles classic ‘Yesterday’ is sublime, whilst ‘Medieval Eyes’ recalls the Shadows. ‘Stay With Me’ whisks the listener off into a sunnier frame of mind. His guitar playing you need to hear for yourself as it seems so effortless, yet such a high degree of talent is required to make it sound like this.

It is a rare talent that allows their guitar playing to sing and become the lead ‘vocal’ on an album. Delicate Steve is one such rarity and this is an album to be enjoyed over and over again. ***1/2 

Reviews by Jason Ritchie


Featured Artist: JOSH TAERK

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

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






David Randall presents a weekly show on Get Ready to ROCK! Radio, Sundays at 22:00 GMT, repeated on Mondays and Fridays), when he invites listeners to ‘Assume The Position’. The show signposts forthcoming gigs and tours and latest additions at getreadytorock.com. First broadcast on 7 December 2025.


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 25 November 2025

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 1 December 2025

We feature all the artists selected in this sequence in 2025.

Featured Albums w/c 1 December 2025

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


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

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

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

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


Recent (last 30 days)


Album review : MIKE TRAMP – Songs Of White Lion Vol 2

Frontiers [Release date 23.08.24]

Few musical artists get the chance to rerecord their old material.

Still fewer improve upon the originals.

White Lion’s material usually had more to say than your average rock song, lyrically it was more illustrative in its themes and concepts.

Back in the eighties, while their peer group were pouting and swaggering around them, singer/songwriter Mike Tramp was talking up issues, large and small. From war dead (All The Fallen Men) and apartheid (Cry For Freedom), both featured on Volume 1 last year, to more war dead (El Salvador) and even more war dead (Road To Valhalla) here on Volume 2.

Worthy, yes, but unlikely chart material you would have ventured.

The remaining tracks on this second volume focus on what goes on inside our head rather than outside.

To begin with though, the album bursts into larger than life with Tramp’s more considered version of ‘Lights & Thunder’, a song allegedly inspired by Led Zeppelin’s ‘Achilles Last Stand’.

Tramp partners with guitarist, Marcus Nand, in recreating a soft centred hard rock song, then adding to it. Something that is both melodic and muscular, a version with a greater sense of range and depth than the original.

Then there’s your actual upbeat love songs, ‘Til Death Do Us Part’ and ‘You’re All I Need’, both of which might have sounded dated, but now, creditably, sound fresh and new. Thanks to Nand’s sympathetic axework and the maturity that has grown into Tramp’s vocals.

Of course, the socially marginalised and the weightier issues of loneliness and grief have their moments, like ‘Out With The Boys’, ‘Lonely Nights’ and the very personal tribute to Tramp and bandmate Vita Bratta’s youthful friendship, ‘Farewell To You’.

Tramp walks an emotional tightrope, knowing that the years have loaned his voice an edge, adding heft and clarity to his songs, and perhaps more importantly, the ability to convey this to the listener.

You can almost imagine his audience leaning in closer. ***1/2

Review by Brian McGowan


Featured Artist: JOSH TAERK

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

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






David Randall presents a weekly show on Get Ready to ROCK! Radio, Sundays at 22:00 GMT, repeated on Mondays and Fridays), when he invites listeners to ‘Assume The Position’. The show signposts forthcoming gigs and tours and latest additions at getreadytorock.com. First broadcast on 7 December 2025.


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 25 November 2025

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 1 December 2025

We feature all the artists selected in this sequence in 2025.

Featured Albums w/c 1 December 2025

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


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

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

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

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


Recent (last 30 days)


Gig review: MALMO MELODIC – Plan B, Malmo, Sweden, 27-29 July 2024

Perfect Ploan - MALMO MELODIC- Plan B, Malmo, Sweden, 27-29 July 2024

Scandinavia, and Sweden in particular, is the undisputed epicentre of the melodic rock community with a seemingly endless stream of bands emerging. There have been festivals in Malmo pre-pandemic (Melodic Rock Fest and the Swedish AOR Convention) so when last year a new three-day festival was announced in Malmo Melodic, it was a very tempting proposition, mixing many of the new Swedish generation with some of the most enduring greats of the genre.

It was held in Plan B, a converted warehouse with decent  space if a tad dark, a side room for merch and meet and greets, and plenty of outside areas to make the most of the pleasant weather between bands, and the atmosphere was very relaxed.

MALMO MELODIC- Plan B, Malmo, Sweden, 27-29 July 2024

There was a very respectable attendance for the first year- I would guess averaging 500 a day – with the biggest number from a large travelling contingent being my fellow British fans.  Part of the attraction was that (to adapt a famous Murray Walker-ism) the chances of most of these Swedish acts coming over, which were nil before, are now absolutely zero, post-Brexit.

However the UK has also been an unlikely AOR stronghold having held festivals like Firefest and Rockingham for so many years. Indeed a number of key members of the original Firefest crew were present, including Kieran Dargan whose stentorian tones introducing acts over the PA generated a warm sense of nostalgia.

Although not formally part of the show, there was also a warm up the night before in the restaurant of the official festival hotel, with Houston singer Hank Erix and bandmate Erik Modin, their voices and acoustic guitars.

Over two sets, the show mixed some of Houston’s best songs (of which more later) and the odd Hank solo song (‘Way To Go’) with some choice covers, with the set bookended by Danger Danger songs- opener  ‘Feels Like Love’ and closers ‘Don’t Walk Away’ and an improvised ‘Beat The Bullet’.

These included rarely attempted songs like Richard Marx’s ‘Angelia’, Survivor’s ‘I See You in Everyone’ and even FM’s ’That Girl’. What was not to like? Only the fact I could hardly hear many of these above the chatter – some people’s natural enthusiasm in getting together spilling into rudeness when it comes to shouting over a performer.

DAY 1- PERFECT PLAN, ROMEO’S DAUGHTER, HOUSTON, GRAND, NUBIAN ROSE, ALICATE

The honour of being the first band to play a Malmö Melodic was Alicate. I knew nothing about them and assumed from the band name they may be sleaze rockers, but on opener ‘Are You Ready’ lead singer and guitarist Jonas Erixon, wielding a Eddie Van Halen ‘5150’ guitar, had the deep and bluesy tones  of vintage David Coverdale, as so many Scandinavians seen to do. Keyboards were also prominent on the intro to ‘My Last Goodbye’, and ‘Under The Gun’.

Alicate - MALMO MELODIC- Plan B, Malmo, Sweden, 27-29 July 2024

There was a good mix of songs, from the ballad ‘Butterfly’ where he sang the opening alone,  to a fun rocker in ‘Done For The Weekend’ while the heavy pomp keyboards of the title track from latest album ‘Heaven Tonight’  and ‘Rise Up Again’ reminded me of Shotgun  symphony). ‘I Can Run’ closed a pleasantly impressive set.

Next up was Nubian Rose who I saw for the only previous time way back in 2013 at HRH AOR. One thing has not changed in that time, the soaring voice and visually striking figure of Sofia Lilja, with her cascade of curls and painted face, but much of the music was much heavier than I remembered, verging on symphonic metal with some added progressive touches at times.

 Nubian Rose - MALMO MELODIC- Plan B, Malmo, Sweden, 27-29 July 2024

I did find ‘Higher’ more accessible, while ‘How Am I’ with Sofia on keys was a melodramatic ballad. A couple of songs off their debut in ‘Will I Ever See Your Face’ and another heavy one in ‘Mountain’ closed an eclectic set, if one perhaps slightly out of place for this festival.

One of the unique opportunities this festival offered was to hear quite so many of the younger breed of Scandinavian acts that have made an impact in recent years, the first of them being Grand who have released two very well received albums on Frontiers in the past couple of years.

Singer Mathias Olofsson has a somewhat  higher register which allied to his floppy hair reminded me a little of Airrace’s  Keith Murrell.  Among a couple of fairly average songs early on, the elegiac ‘When We Were Young’ impressed .

Grand - MALMO MELODIC- Plan B, Malmo, Sweden, 27-29 July 2024

‘Out Of The Blue’ had a smooth west coast feel but on the likes of rockier songs such as the dirty grooves of ‘Rock Bottom’ and ‘Sweet Talker’, what was impressive was how Mathias’ voice still hit the notes in controlled fashion; on ‘Johnny on the Spot’ he was even reminding me of Von Groove’s Michael Shotton.

‘Too Late’ boasted a synth solo (and with such an able keyboardist was there really a need for so many backing tapes?) although ‘Lily’, about his daughter, was rather saccharine.

An already impressive set really hit its stride in the closing stages with a series of catchy hooks in ‘Make It Grand’, ‘Caroline’ and ‘Kryptonite’. Their enthusiasm was also engaging so they achieved the rare feat of being brought back for an encore in ‘Leave No Scar’, with lyrics from which latest album ‘Second to None’ borrows its title.

Houston have a rather more chequered history, and indeed singer Hank Erix always reminds us Classic Rock raved about them when they emerged in the scene in 2010, before moving on to the next big thing.

From those early days (the cheese factor of the UK debut show at the Borderline with the white sporting outfits and female guitarists came up more than once with friends), a line-up with Hank the only remaining member has refined their sound to the super smooth sounds as epitomised by opener  ‘She Is The Night’.

Houston - MALMO MELODIC- Plan B, Malmo, Sweden, 27-29 July 2024

They’ve made seven albums, and though the trio of ‘Relaunch’ are nominally covers albums, the choices have become so obscure that a pair in ‘Live Forever’ and the West coast-ish  ‘Slipping Away’ felt like new songs to me, Calle Hammar bending the notes in his solos in a fashion as smooth as his white t-shirt and trousers.

‘You’re Still The Woman’, ‘On The Radio’ and ‘Hero’ all boasted some marvellous melodies and ‘A Lifetime In A Moment’ grew on me as a great song, with Hank’s wonderfully smooth vocal tone.

Rather boldly they saved those statement first album songs till last and there was a great surprise as Sofia Lilja appeared unannounced mid song to do the female duet part on ‘Truth Slips’, prior to ‘Hold On’.

Boasting it was their signature song (even if originally a cover) with over 2 million You Tube hits, ‘Runaway’ perfectly epitomised the Houston sound  with the guitars and Richard Hamilton’s keys in perfect balance, before ‘1000 Miles’ ended an AOR masterclass of melodic bliss that was definitely one of my favourites of the weekend.

While I’ve seen them more times than I care to remember, both back in the day and post reunion, Romeo’s Daughter were one of the bands most hotly anticipated by the natives, as surprisingly this was their first ever show on Swedish soil.

 Romeo's Daughter - MALMO MELODIC- Plan B, Malmo, Sweden, 27-29 July 2024

It was not without its challenges though, as the heat was stifling both in the front of the crowd and on stage itself, momentarily disturbing the usual affable serenity of ageless singer Leigh Matty.

Sound problems also undermined ‘Heaven In The Back Seat’ (with guitarist Craig Joiner sharing the vocals and one of two openers, along with ‘Attracted To The Animal’ that show off their early Mutt Lange influence).

Beginning with the urgent power pop of ‘Fake’ from last year’s album ‘Slipstream’, the focus for a while was on post reunion  songs and I have now got to the stage where I enjoy these at least as much as the oldies.

Whether ‘Radio’ with its swaying hookline, ‘Alive’ with its bouncy chorus or ‘Enemy’, I’ve said it before that these are simple songs on first hearing but it takes real class to make them sound so effortless and natural.

A sandwich of ‘Trippin’ Out’ in between a pair of new songs in ‘Over You’ and ‘Inseparable’ represented a rockier side of their repertoire with the rhythm section of Steve Brennan and Andy Welsford (didn’t he used to go by the Wells surname?) excelling themselves.

Romeo's Daughter - MALMO MELODIC- Plan B, Malmo, Sweden, 27-29 July 2024

After the pop rock bliss of ‘Bittersweet’ with its ‘who-oah’ outro, ‘Have Mercy’ saw Craig allowing himself a guitar solo of unusual flash.

From there on in it was debut album favourites in ‘Inside Out’, complete with singalong, ‘Don’t Break My Heart’ with an improvised intro that sounded like ‘Won’t Get Fooled Again’  and ‘I Cry Myself To Sleep At Night’ concluding with a marvellously tasteful Craig solo.

Band and crowd rocked out together to ‘Wild Child’, famously taken on by Heart, to end a set which for me was just more of their reliable excellence but was hopefully a revelation to the home crowd.

Oddly enough the obverse was true for headliners Perfect Plan. The seasoned Swedes are firm favourites of mine that I have longed to see since their debut album came out in 2018, but when they pulled out of last year’s Rocknytt Cruise through singer Kent Hilli’s illness I thought I was jinxed.

Perfect Plan - MALMO MELODIC- Plan B, Malmo, Sweden, 27-29 July 2024

In particular 2020’s ‘Time For A Miracle’ album  is among my two or three favourite albums  of the past decade, period, so it was with an even greater sense of anticipation hearing the military style intro to the big arrangement of the title track.

There was therefore a slight anti climax as once again the opening song saw the band and Kent in particular struggling to find the right sound balance.

After the Whitesnake-ish ‘Bad City Woman’, they really hit their stride with a trio of melodic rock classics from the said ….’Miracle’ album, in ‘What About Love’, ‘Better Off Alone’ and above all a power ballad for the ages in ‘Fighting to Win’.

Just as I was thinking at that point Kent Hilli was Jimi Jamison reincarnated, not just as a singer but in his stage moves and even tinted glasses and black jacket, right on cue they played a flawless cover of Survivor’s ‘Didn’t Know It Was Love’.

Perfect Plan - MALMO MELODIC- Plan B, Malmo, Sweden, 27-29 July 2024

It was impossible to maintain that quality all set long and not quite at that level was the bluesy classic hard rock of the likes of ‘Nobody’s Fool’, ‘Never Surrender’ and ‘Heart To Stone’, particularly songs such as ‘Gotta Slow Me Down’ from their third album ‘Brace For Impact’ which is more in that style.

Kent made a joke about  songs with girls names introducing ‘Emilie’ while the band were tight with Rolf Nordstrom the star of the show: a more than tidy guitarist he also pulled poses with a grin on his impish face and even entertained us with Freddie Mercury’s trademark call and response.

Perfect Plan - MALMO MELODIC- Plan B, Malmo, Sweden, 27-29 July 2024

The set had to be slightly shortened with the festival overrunning. However it ended on a high with a couple from their debut album – ‘Heaven In Your Eyes’ concluded with some spot on vocal harmonies before the crowd joined in the song where it all started, the classy ‘In And Out Of Love’. While their set fell slightly short of the consistency of Houston and Romeo’s Daughter, it had nevertheless been well worth that long wait.

Day 2- DARE, ROULETTE, WILDNESS, TRANSATLANTIC RADIO, JD MILLER,BOYS FROM HEAVEN,  7TH CRYSTAL

One of the perks for the VIP package was early access to catch an additional band on two of the days. I wondered if this might be a low key acoustic affair but no, these were full performances on the main stage before ‘ordinary’ ticket holders arrived and on the first day the ‘Brucie bonus’ was 7th Crystal, who have released a couple of well received albums, with singer Kristian Fyhr also gaining songwriting credits for other bands.

7th Crystal - MALMO MELODIC- Plan B, Malmo, Sweden, 27-29 July 2024

I remember them being another decent addition to the endless line of Scandi melodic bands, but from the opening ‘Wonderland’, ‘Silence’ and ‘Higher Ground’ were something different to how I remembered them, with a full on metallic sound, almost verging on prog metal at times. Whether this was a natural evolution in the live environment or a conscious change in sound I am not sure.

What I do know is that they played some unreleased songs in the discovery themed ‘Mayflower’ and ‘Versus’, with its metal twin guitars, and set closer ‘Blinded By the Light’, alongside more established ones like ‘Say What You Need To Say’.

However though the music was heavy, almost brutally intense, the vocals of Kristian, sporting a Viking like blonde mane under his baseball cap, were sharp and crystal clear (excuse the pun) and keeping the overall sounds just the right edge of melodic.

Proving that the melodic rock genre, often decried for sameiness,  is actually a very broad church, the rather dubiously titled Boys From Heaven could not have been more of a contrast with 7th Crystal. Their sound mixed a west coast smoothness akin to Michael McDonald era Doobies or even Steely Dan, with at times the supple rhythms of a Go West or Level 42.

Boys From Heaven - MALMO MELODIC- Plan B, Malmo, Sweden, 27-29 July 2024

They had not one but two keyboard players and Opener ‘I’ll Wait’ included a synth solo from Jonas Klintstrom Larsen. Yet on the proggy ‘The Dream Is Gone’ he switched to the saxophone (always a Marmite instrument in the melodic rock world) and his flamboyantly delivered sax solos were prominent on songs like ‘Sarah’ and closer ‘Sailing On’.

They were the highlights from a set which cherry picked their two albums to date together with a new song in ‘How Long’. Dandyish singer Chris Catton had an impressive voice though I was puzzled when he said he was from Copenhagen, in a distinctly English accent! While this would not normally be quite my scene, I and others came away highly impressed.

Sadly all female band Emotional Fire who had shown great promise on last year’s Rocknytt Cruise had to pull out through illness at short notice. However rather than leave a gap in the schedule JD Miller - a band and not to be confused with any other famous JDs, from whisky distillers to English pub chains to vice presidential candidates- stepped in to save the day with a second set, already having been scheduled for the final day.

They style themselves as ‘the heaviest AOR band’ around, which is almost a contradiction  in terms. Certainly the sound was very different to most of the other bands with the drumming relatively dominant, allied to liberal use of backing tapes. (I’m afraid the overall evidence of the weekend is that my view that every sound should come from the players on stage is now considered old-fashioned).

Shinedown or current day Kris Barras was probably the nearest comparison of a modern rock act that can appeal to melodic rockers- but is definitely not AOR! Neither were the Weiland-like mannerisms of singer Peter Hallden who swiftly discarded his shades and leather jacket and strutted around topless (and also spoke largely in Swedish).

JD Miller - MALMO MELODIC- Plan B, Malmo, Sweden, 27-29 July 2024

To their credit, they played two totally different sets – this one was largely based around their previous album, 2019’s ‘Afterglow’. During the semi-ballad ‘In the Afterglow’, there was a touching scene as Peter brought on stage a young girl with industrial level ear defenders who I assume was his daughter to sit on his shoulders for a moment to treasure.

The commercial ‘The Desire’ with its catchy ‘can’t live without your love’ chorus was way more to my tastes among more brutal fare like ‘Burned Alive’, ‘The Answer’ and ‘Inside a Dream’. While grateful for their short notice efforts, I can’t honestly say they were really my thing.

Another new name to me, Transatlantic Radio stood out for two reasons. One, in common with their name, that they featured the only Americans to break the Scandi-UK monopoly of the festival- including people with high-profile musical accomplishments in the wider worlds of pop and the TV and movie industry.

The other was they were the newest act on parade with only four singles to date an album not released until later in the year, and the bare minimum of in person rehearsal time. To add to the challenge their regular guitarist had caught COVID, yet you would never have known from the way Pelle Holmberg stood in, with his highly fluent playing.

Transatlantic Radio - MALMO MELODIC- Plan B, Malmo, Sweden, 27-29 July 2024

‘The Good Times’, ‘My Runaways’ (at least that’s what it sounded like) and ‘Against All The Odds’ were all top class slices of mainstream AOR with the pedigree of the players shining through.

However I had reservations about the raspy and at times slightly wheezy tones of singer Mathias Osback (a Swedish naval officer, no less!) which did not really seem to fit the smoothness of the music.  On the other hand I suspect I was in a minority with a friend on the way out observing that he liked the vocals for exactly the same reason!

In the absence of sufficient original material they showcased their talent with covers of some AOR classics in Starship’s ‘Its Not Enough’ and (with a spoiler alert from the crowd) Stage Dolls’ ‘Love Cries’. However we were treated to a couple of songs being aired to the world for the first time ever in ‘All For You’, with fine synth work from Fred Kron and a great ending, and  ‘First To Be The Last’.

 Transatlantic Radio - MALMO MELODIC- Plan B, Malmo, Sweden, 27-29 July 2024

Former Mitch Malloy bassist Victor Broden acted as the chief frontman in the most transatlantic of accents, fittingly enough, and described ‘Fever Dream’ as their synthwave influenced song though I found it a little too lengthy and a little repetitive.

He then introduced what he said was the best AOR song ever made (few of this discerning audience would quibble) in a very authentic cover of Signal’s ‘Arms Of A Stranger’. Debut single ‘That’s What You Get For Falling In Love’ ended an impressive debut by a band we will be hearing a lot more of.

One of the younger Swedish bands Wildness were familiar to me, though their UK appearance at Rockingham in 2018 was overshadowed by singer Gabriel Lindmark overdoing the partying and panting his way through the set.  He has long since been replaced by Erik Forsberg who had a good vocal range (well supported by backing from drummer Erik Modin, doing double duty over the weekend) yet totally different from his very considered speaking voice!

They were also far heavier than I remembered, even at last year’s Rocknytt cruise, and tight but aggressive in the mould of bands like early Skid Row and Heavens Edge – plus more than any other band this weekend, they looked the part of rock stars with guitarists Pontus Skold and Adam Holmstrom and bassist Marcus Sjosund tossing their flowing hair back and pulling some great shapes together.

Wildness - MALMO MELODIC- Plan B, Malmo, Sweden, 27-29 July 2024

From opener ‘Die Young’ through songs such as ‘Renegades Of Love’, ‘Tragedy’, and ‘My Hideaway’, the pace had been unrelenting but I found the somewhat more melodic ‘Borderline’ and ‘Nightmare’ even more satisfying. Belatedly going back to some older favourites, ‘Turning The Pages’ and ‘Cold Words’ ended in style an hour-long  set that had flown by and was exhausting to watch.

Way up second on the bill were some fellow countrymen who bridged the old and new. Roulette were hopefuls back in the late eighties who never got a record deal. Those unreleased songs sneaked out much later, followed by an all-new album ‘Now’ in 2019, though I was unfamiliar with the music before the festival and only knew them by reputation.

Openers  ‘Ready For Friday Night’ and ‘Never Enough’ were both somewhat average but the hooks of  ‘Another Night’ suddenly turned my initial impressions around and ‘Keep On Dreaming’ was infectious. ‘Secret Room’ was a brilliant ballad with singer Thomas Lundgren accompanied in the main solely by keyboards and ‘Love’s The Drug’ was a good new song.

Roulette - MALMO MELODIC- Plan B, Malmo, Sweden, 27-29 July 2024

None of the songs would win marks for distinctiveness or originality, but the band scored top marks for sheer likeability. The likes of Thomas and extrovert bassist  Hansi Fellbrink showed the conviviality that saw them hanging out seemingly all weekend  at the venue and the festival hotel, and the between song chat and upbeat lyrical messages showed an inspiring optimism we all desperately need at the moment, the fun ‘Summer Day’ and ‘We Can Make It’ being prime examples. The mid pocket ‘Only the Strong’ with great harmonies, particularly on the intro, and crowd favourite ‘Right By Your Side’ concluded a highly enjoyable set.

From a new band to me to one only too familiar in headliners Dare. Unlike their fellow Brits Romeo’s Daughter, they gig regularly in Sweden and Darren Wharton regularly spoke of their love for the country and expressed ‘tusen tack’ to his hosts. The current line-up has finally successfully fused the various moods and styles of Dare history and the band were on top of their game.

‘Born In The Storm’ was a suitably rocky opener before some mellower moments, featuring Darren’s whispered tones, which are quite unique in the world of melodic rock, on the warmth of ‘From The Cradle To The Grave’ and the stirring gaelic- influenced anthems ‘Home’ and ‘Until’. After the ballad ‘I’ll Hear You Pray’, ‘Road To Eden’ was cheekily retitled ‘Road to Sweden’ to win over the home crowd even more and ‘Fire Never Fades’ saw guitarist Vinny Burns rocking out.

Dare - MALMO MELODIC- Plan B, Malmo, Sweden, 27-29 July 2024

I didn’t warm to their Celtic folk influenced 2000s phase at the time, and yet I now heard ‘Sea Of Roses’ with the same affection I used to reserve for the ‘old stuff’. However after ‘Silent Hills’ I was ready to go back to those classics – from the full on ‘Blood On Stone’  rockouts of ‘Wings Of Fire’ and the Lizzy-esque ‘We Don’t Need A Reason’, to perhaps the most glorious 1-2 of opening songs on an AOR album in ‘Abandon’ and ‘Into The Fire’.

Then atmospheric ‘The Raindance’ taking the pace down a notch before Darren’s tribute to mentor Philip Lynott in ‘King of Spades’ with some beautifully tasteful lead work from Vinny, especially on the extract from Black Rose – whetting the appetite for when I see the same players in the ‘Darren Wharton’s Renegade’ project. They were the usual six songs that close this rather static setlist, but they all have a special vibe to them.

There was a slightly unusual if lyrically appropriate encore in ‘Every Time We Say Goodbye’ but fortunately time for a more familiar closer in ‘Return The Heart’. As Darren conducted a mass swaying and chanting, in between putting his arms around Vinny and bassist Nigel Clutterbuck, I looked from my position in the wings near the front across a sea of fellow fans and the atmosphere was very special indeed, concluding a contender for my favourite set of the weekend.

 Dare - MALMO MELODIC- Plan B, Malmo, Sweden, 27-29 July 2024

DAY 3 – RONNIE ATKINS, CHEZ KANE, REMEDY, JD MILLER, STREETLIGHT, GAELERI, CARE OF NIGHT

A Monday is an unusual day for a festival but there was a good turnout of VIP fans for an exclusive performance by Care of Night. On my previous two sightings of them either side of the North Sea, they had a rather diffident stage presence but this time band members seemed more extrovert and singer Calle Schonberg more confident, no longer sporting his thick glasses.

Care Of Night - MALMO MELODIC- Plan B, Malmo, Sweden, 27-29 July 2024

‘Street Runner’ showed a slightly beefed up though no less melodic  feel as the majority of the first half of the set was taken from new album ‘Reconnected’ including ‘Tonight’ and ‘Stay With Me’.

This was AOR at its most mainstream with clean guitars and keyboards nicely balanced and Calle’s perfectly pitched upper range tenor. Particularly flufftastic were a pair of those songs with girls names in ‘Cassandra’, the anthem that first got them signed, and ‘Melanie’, while on the faster closer ‘Hearts Belong’ that confidence was reflected in the way the singer took a trip into the crowd then proudly displayed a banner  on stage.

gaeleri (sic) were a new name to me but I was surprised to learn their four albums actually go back over 30 years. A wonderful opener in ‘Blue Town’ was very different from the weekend’s mainstream, a mellow song with the acoustic guitar and deep baritone of Anders Vidhav, looking the old school rocker with his long hair and waistcoat over a bare chest.

Sadly, it was an outlier as beginning with ‘Ready Or Not’, a band that looked to have heavier influences notably Flying V wielding guitarist Niklas Rollgard played some workman-like blues rock such as new song ‘Loving You Is Killing Me’ and ‘Navigate Me’.

gaeleri - MALMO MELODIC- Plan B, Malmo, Sweden, 27-29 July 2024

‘Maybe My Eyes’ was a rare return for the acoustic/electric combo, while ‘Welcome to Judgement Day’ saw a guest appearance from Chris Laney, of whom more anon, on guitar.  The set did end well with ‘Time Has Come’ which was quite catchy, and ‘Wannabe’ though in front of one of the smaller crowds of the weekend it lacked the excitement of some of their younger contemporaries.

One of those that I was eager to see was Streetlight whose self titled album last year was enough for me to pick them out as a band to watch in GRTR!’s end of year selection. They had a clean cut and casual look to them but again a warm stage manner.

After opening with ‘Awake’, ‘Caught Up In A Dream’ featured a classic AOR keyboard intro from John Svensson, then ‘Hit The Ground’ was followed by an impressive and brand new song in ‘Late Night’.  I was puzzled when singer Johannes Hager said they would go in the other direction to one 40 years old but a cover of ‘Endless’ was very well done, hardly surprising as the short-lived Fergie Frederiksen incarnation of Toto is a good reference point for them.

 Streetlight - MALMO MELODIC- Plan B, Malmo, Sweden, 27-29 July 2024

‘Chutes And Ladders’ was a blissful piece of Scandi AOR of the type patented by Street Talk and Urban Tale and more recently Work Of Art, and ‘Closer’ a ballad. Yet there were rockier numbers by their standards  like ‘Fire Burning’ and the faster paced ‘Love Riot’, the latter reminding me of Joe Lynn Turner’s Rainbow.

The Americanised ‘Malibu Pier’, complete with synth and even organ solos ended a very good set, just as on their album, even if they didn’t quite make the impact on me that some of the other young bands did on me during the weekend.

Now it was time for JD Miller’s second set in their original spot. There were a few changes- singer Peter Hallden remembered to speak in English this time and the album they showcased was the brand new ‘Empyrean’. The theme was arguably even more modern rock oriented than the day before, although ‘Inside the Night’ and ‘Out of Control’ (with its chorus ‘this is how I choose to live’) still had catchy hooks.

JD Miller - MALMO MELODIC- Plan B, Malmo, Sweden, 27-29 July 2024

A series of quite aggressive sounding songs were watched by a noticeably smaller crowd of confirmed fans including family and friends. Nevertheless ‘Enemy’ was quite brilliant, during which the young girl was again brought on stage, even adding a mini gymnastics display to her repertoire. A good band, but I cannot help think they were out of place at this particular festival.

One Swedish band who did buck the trend and make it to the UK this year were Remedy, who were one of the bands of the Tower of Fire festival In Manchester just a month earlier only whetting my appetite for more.

The first part of the set was similar to that night with the classic melodic rock choruses of ‘Living On The Edge’ and ‘Marilyne’ complete with classic stabbing keyboard intro from Jonas Ojvall, then the heavier ‘Crying Heart’ and ‘Sin For Me’ with some great guitar arpeggios from Roland Forsman.

Both his sweet solo  and the high pitched vocals of Robert Van Der Zwan graced the ballad ‘Sunday At Nine’ (with ‘I forgot to charge the ipad in the room’ the most unusual lyric of the weekend)  while the catchy chorus of ‘Moon Has The Night’ had your correspondent and a few others bouncing.

Remedy - MALMO MELODIC- Plan B, Malmo, Sweden, 27-29 July 2024

There were two slight differences from that Manchester show – one a longer, hour-long set so they could play other songs including ‘Poison’, albeit not my favourite. The other was that in front of a home crowd they seemed fired up to produce an even more dynamic and energetic show than before.

That fed back to the crowd as a packed front grew ever more raucous to the likes of ‘Thunder In The Dark’ (though it sounds to me virtually the same song as ‘Living On The Edge’!), ‘Emelina’, ‘I Wanna Have It All’ and ‘Girl’s Got Trouble’.

There was a final treat that time constraints had put paid to in Manchester – encore ‘My Devil Within’ had so much going on, from a Gregorian chant intro, Robert singing falsetto, Roland playing guitar behind his back and the two of them wielding their guitars in synchronised  fashion. It was the icing on the cake of one of my favourite shows.

Remedy - MALMO MELODIC- Plan B, Malmo, Sweden, 27-29 July 2024

In contrast to Dare and Romeo’s Daughter I’d not seen enough of the third British act Chez Kane on home soil – just the once supporting Crazy Lixx, after in the worst possible timing her debut a London show was the same night and in the same complex as Dare.

Her chief songwriter (and Crazy Lixx lead singer)  Danny Rexon was in the crowd as the petite singer, sporting a black and leopard print outfit, opened with one of her strongest songs in the big chorus of  ‘Too Late For Love’, and it was clear that her line up (including a remarkably youthful looking new bassist in Lewis Watkins) had come on in leaps and bounds in terms of confidence and stage presence.

‘All Of It’ was an anthem made for fist punching live, while there was a generous selection from her sophomore ‘Powerzone’ album, including first single ‘I Just Want You’, a perfect blend of muscle and melody and ‘Nationwide’.

 Chez Kane - MALMO MELODIC- Plan B, Malmo, Sweden, 27-29 July 2024

While other singers may hold back or drop the odd octave live, if anything her live vocals had a range and power only hinted at on album. She also had an engaging stage manner and gave a special shout out to her many fellow Welsh in attendance.

Of the two hirsute guitarists, it initially felt to me that Harry Scott Elliott, now playing with distinction in Tyketto, was playing the more technical material with James Ready focusing on pulling the most rock and roll shapes imaginable. However the latter took ‘Better Than Love’, reminiscent of the great female fronted AOR artists of the eighties into a fresh dimension  with a great solo. After ‘Things We Do When We’re Young In Love’, ‘Love Gone Wild’ was a showcase for more remarkable solos, especially from James.

 Chez Kane - MALMO MELODIC- Plan B, Malmo, Sweden, 27-29 July 2024

It was exhausting just watching the sheer energy of Chez and her band and even the supposedly mellow ‘Defender Of The Heart’ had a much sharper edge live before stepping on the gas even further for a series of anthems. She even leapt deep into the crowd during ‘Ball And Chain’ – my attention wandered as I was trying to place which Desmond Child co-write it most reminded me of!

After ‘Get It On’ and the Def Leppard- like ‘Rock You Up’ stirred the pot further, ‘Powerzone’ turned into a furious guitar jam and saw James and Harry pull more classic poses.

There could only be one encore in one of the other songs that launched her solo career in the ultra catchy ‘Rocket On The Radio’. If I was agnostic before, I was definitely a confirmed fan after this whirlwind of a dynamic and energetic show was one of my favourites of the weekend.

 Chez Kane - MALMO MELODIC- Plan B, Malmo, Sweden, 27-29 July 2024

After a farewell speech from Kieran Dargan and a lengthy changeover, not least as the headliner had brought in their own sound, the weekend closed with Ronnie Atkins, making the short journey from Denmark across the iconic Oresund bridge. As well as a rare solo show from the Pretty Maids frontman who has released a trio of albums under his own name in quick succession, it promised to be an emotional one, as some while ago he was diagnosed with Stage 4 lung cancer.

Opening on a more brutal fashion than we’d seen for most of the weekend with ‘Rising Tide’, ‘I prophesize’  and ‘If You Can Dream It’ were also heavy yet at the same time quite melodic. Apologising that his Swedish was poor and he would be speaking in English, he said the set would mix solo material with some Pretty Maids material and ‘We Came to Rock’ made fans of the former happy.

‘Make It Count’, the title track of his second album  benefited from the piano of fellow Pretty Maid Chris Laney, switching between guitar and keys on what I think of as the Paul Raymond role, while latest album ‘Trinity’ was represented by ‘Paper Tiger’ and ‘Soul Divine’, written about his granddaughter.

Ronnie Atkins - MALMO MELODIC- Plan B, Malmo, Sweden, 27-29 July 2024

‘Godless’ and ‘Unsung Heroes’ were also heavy, with a ferocious band including some neo classical guitar flourishes from Marcus Sunesson. However the sound engineering for me did the melodic side no favours.

He did not dwell on his mortality, other than through some of the lyrics, and indeed looked not much different from before- though his style has always been very physical, sweating and straining his voice and body to their fullest extent. There was only the odd sign of his illness such as occasionally pausing to catch his breath between songs.

 Ronnie Atkins - MALMO MELODIC- Plan B, Malmo, Sweden, 27-29 July 2024

An unexpected deep Pretty Maids cut in ‘A Place In The Night’ from debut ‘Red Hot and Heavy’, impressed me and as the gig reached a climax, ‘One Shot’ had a poignant and anthemic lyrical message. However impressive those recent solo albums are, it was always going to be the Pretty Maids songs that hold a special place in people’s hearts and the last song, ‘Little Drops of Heaven’ saw the crowd take over the singing.

Then on a pair of contrasting encores, the guitar keyboard battle intro heralded a storming ‘Future World’. The crowd had thinned a little but a packed knot of fans at the front were punching the air before Marcus cranked out one final riff and I could not help myself bouncing to the chorus of ‘Rodeo’. May this great old warrior enjoy the best health he can for as long as possible.

 Ronnie Atkins - MALMO MELODIC- Plan B, Malmo, Sweden, 27-29 July 2024

By all accounts Malmö Melodic was a stunning success, reflecting great credit on Johan Nylen and Wind Up Productions, to whom, to borrow the words of Darren Wharton, we owe ‘tusen tack’. Plans are already being hatched for next year, and with luck it will become a regular event.

Review and Photos by Andy Nathan


Featured Artist: JOSH TAERK

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

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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 on 7 December 2025.


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 25 November 2025

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 1 December 2025

We feature all the artists selected in this sequence in 2025.

Featured Albums w/c 1 December 2025

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.

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Recent (last 30 days)


Album review : RICHARD PINHAS / HELDON – Le Plan and Winter Music

Other Side Music [Release date 02.08.24]

It somehow seems right that “avant garde” is a French language term for something that is aesthetically innovative, especially a “work of art”, which these pieces of music from French musician, Richard Pinhas surely are.

Pinhas’s band, Heldon , known for its Progressive Electronic Rock, dates back to the 70s. A huge gap then to the year 2000, and the release of new album material, Only Chaos Is Real. Another jump cut to now, and the remixed (by Pinhas) 4 track abbreviation, called Le Plan, taken from Only Chaos…. Now released on the US based, Other Side label, along with the 22 minute Winter Music.

This industrial strength, 21st century material is darker than the stuff from the 70s. No surprise there. Times change. Not often for the better.

Musique Concrete, Progressive Electronica, call it what you will, has been the foundation stone of Pinhas’s music since his days studying postmodern philosophy.

His discovery of Tangerine Dream and Kraftwerk during that time feeds into all of these 4 tracks.

‘Le Plan’, the instrumental title track has the kind of lo-fi, tuneful abandon that we remember from Syd Barret’s solo material. There’s a kinetic energy to the piece’s expansive range of sci-fi sounds.

The shouty urgency of ‘Next Level’ has a lot in common with Thrash surprisingly, a promise of something far more daring than we get.

Pinhas, no doubt nudged by the label, proves he can write accessible, vaguely commercial material with the propulsive third track, ‘Ubik’.

In parallel, Other Side has released Pinhas’s two part ‘Winter Music’, a stripped down, minimalist slice of electronica, exploring the use of repetion, an unused 22 minute offcut from his 1979 album, Iceland. Think “Blade Runner” and Vangelis’s timeless, often bleak score. Doesn’t hit you in the face, but wow, how it gets under your skin.

Pinhas’s aim, no doubt. ****

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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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 on 7 December 2025.


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 25 November 2025

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 1 December 2025

We feature all the artists selected in this sequence in 2025.

Featured Albums w/c 1 December 2025

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.

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

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Recent (last 30 days)


Album review : GERRY AND THE PACEMAKERS I Like It (3 CD Anthology)

Cherry Red [Release date 16.08.24]

As the sixties’ “Merseybeat” pop explosion recedes further into the past, ten album, multiple hits band, Gerry And The Pacemakers seem less and less likely to get the credit they deserve.

And so this anthology comes at the right time to remind us that the Gerry Marsden written ‘Don’t Let The Sun Catch You Crying’ (1964), and ‘Ferry Cross The Mersey’ (1965), were No.1 hit singles on both sides of the Atlantic.

Until the sixties it was unusual for artists to write their own material. Both of the band’s first two no.1 singles, ‘How Do You Do It’ and ‘I Like It’ (both 1963) had been written by professional song writer, Mitch Murray.

In between times, the band recorded their most memorable hit song ‘You’ll Never Walk Alone’ (1964), from the Rodgers and Hamerstein musical, Carousel.

It became the band’s signature tune, and indeed the song most associated with Liverpool Football club. No, not a song, an anthem. Sung with religious intensity. Once heard, never forgotten.

No exaggeration to say that this song immortalised Gerry Marsden.

CD1 includes all the tracks from the band’s debut album, mainly covers of songs that influenced the Liverpool sound in the early sixties, live staples like ‘What’d I Say’, ‘Summertime’, ‘Maybelline’ and ‘Jambalaya’ got an inevitable airing.

In addition, it comprises material written by Goffin& King, Mann& Weil, and Stephens& Reed, plus Larry Williams and Bobby Darin (who both started life as songwriters) and others who were fast becoming the usual “go-to” suspects for budding UK pop artists.

CD2 : Managed by Brian Epstein and produced by George Martin, the band were stablemates of the Beatles. The “Ferry Across The Mersey” movie came out a year after the Fab Four’s “A Hard Days Night”. Anything you can do etc etc.

Apart from the chart topping title track, the CD includes ‘It’s Gonna Be Alright’, a US top 40 hit, plus a suite of what would nowadays seem to be an unlikely choice of covers.

Ray Charles, Hank Williams, Chuck Berry, Willie Dixon, Pomus & Shuman, Charlie Rich all loom large as the originators, with the band giving all they’ve got to ‘Reelin’ and Rockin’ (A US Billboard hit for the Dave Clark 5 in 1965), ‘A Whole Lotta Shakin Goin On’ and ‘Skinnie Minnie’, to name but three.

CD3 : It gets even more interesting now.

Going back to ‘You’ll Never Walk Alone’, it was clear that Marsden knew how to tease out and power up the emotion in a song. And so his covers of two standards, previously recorded by Sinatra, ‘The Way You Look Tonight’ and ‘Strangers In The Night’
might at first seem unusual choices until you hear them.

Same goes for his selection of songs from Musicals, “West Side Story”, and ‘The Roar Of The Greasepaint.

Rounding out this third CD, The Pacemaker’s gig at California’s Oakland Auditorium is here in full. The audience response is testament to the band’s popularity in the USA at that time. It came shortly after the band’s appearance on the Ed Sullivan Show.

Gerry and The Pacemakers’ star burned brightly for those mid sixties years, leaving behind many memorable songs, but unlike the Beatles and others in their peer group, to their loss, they failed to move on. ***1/2

Review by Brian McGowan


Featured Artist: JOSH TAERK

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

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






David Randall presents a weekly show on Get Ready to ROCK! Radio, Sundays at 22:00 GMT, repeated on Mondays and Fridays), when he invites listeners to ‘Assume The Position’. The show signposts forthcoming gigs and tours and latest additions at getreadytorock.com. First broadcast on 7 December 2025.


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 25 November 2025

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 1 December 2025

We feature all the artists selected in this sequence in 2025.

Featured Albums w/c 1 December 2025

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


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

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

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

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


Recent (last 30 days)


Album review : DANIELLE MORGAN AND FRIENDS – Explore The Layers

Danielle Morgan - Explore the Layers

Self Release [Release date : 07.03.24]

‘Explore The Layers’ is essentially a double album of catchy pop-rock songs with a reggae and funky influences.

Helpfully subtitled ‘Songs About Life & Love’, it’s a concept album of love songs of which she contirbutes to 14 of the 16 songs.

And if at times they feel like the pages of a diary, they are sublimely illuminated by Danielle Morgan’s ability to hit a note, extend a vowel and get inside the emotion of a lyric.

Mostly reflective and spanning the full spectrum of optimism to the opposite, ‘Explore the Layers’ is potentially a very good solo album in search of better sequencing and a decent production.

6 tracks come from her 2 EP releases, while presumably the rest is newer material.

The album opens in the celebratory count-in of ‘I’m Coming Home’, a melodic tune with an uplifting universally relateable lyric.

‘I’m In Love With You’ is a historic love story with an enchanting melody with a country rock feel and a killer opening line: “The harbour it’s our place, the first time I saw your face. The kisses you gave me would they be enough to save me.”

And yet the song doesn’t get beyond the titular declaration of love, with a repeated opening verse and, strong musical bridge, perhaps reflecting the fact it was originally part of a theatre piece.

The album cleverly balances some uplifting moments with some meditative introspection.  However, it is robbed of making a bigger impact partly due to the sheer number of songs, and more particularly a lack of sharper sequencing.

The most glaring example of that is the fact that the best track on the album comes last.

The Dave Barbour penned ‘Selfish Girl’ is a stomp led groove and radio friendly pop song, which you could imagine Tom Petty or Graham Parker might have covered.

It also benefits from a ‘live in the studio’ finish with John Merrigan’s vibrant percussion, a fiery guitar solo and Danielle’s ad lib “I think that a rap,” which probably explains its placement as the closing track.

At times the album feels like an aggregate of songs rather than a coherent work of art, but we’re never more than a half-step away from Morgan’s beguiling voice.

She’s at her best on ‘It Doesn’t Matter’, on which her delicate phrasing is matched by cool dynamics, Rob McCann’s lyrical harp playing and Dave Barbour’s crafted solo.

Her expiatory rhythms suggest an unresolved emotion, while the gentle finish evokes the pathos of the closing lyric: “It doesn’t matter anymore, just walk away.”

They opt for a soulful reggae arrangement onVera’, built round a catchy titular hook with an accented rhythm guitar.

They extend the joyful Caribbean feel on ‘Right A Wrong’, with a bass, and snare driven wah-wah groove fattened by what sounds like steel pans.

The track serves to lift the album as a whole by bringing musical versatility to bear on the different lyrical perspectives of love.

The band rocks harder on the reflective ‘Stay Proud’, though in truth it sounds a tad under produced.

A Dave Gilmour style guitar figure gives ‘On The Path’ a much warmer feel,  but the song is all about Morgan’s expansive phrasing and her ability to connect with a lyric: “Stay here a while and I wont object, gives me the time to pause and reflect.”

‘Love Me Hold Me’ is all about the potency of a repeated hook, while the fragile lyrics of ‘What About Me’ showcase another fine vocal on an emotive love song: “Where will I go, where have I been,  how can there be, a world without him. Why did you leave, what did I do, what did I learn, what do I know?”

The lyrical conclusion is fashioned by a cathartic vocal swoop which takes the song into an accapella finish: “Time to move on, time to let go, time to explore, this world on my own.”

‘Explore The Layers’ rises above its numerical density with lilting melodies, fine band interplay and Morgan’s consistent husky timbre and effortless range.

The band excels on ‘Magpie Song’, a jazzy groove on which she gives part of the old ‘One For Sorrow’ nursery rhyme a Rickie Lee Jones treatment, with Brian Hughes subtle piano accompaniment.

The album also gains momentum from the tightly arranged ‘So Long Ago’,  which is a perfect vehicle for Morgan’s animated vocal.

It’s a good story telling narrative with great phrasing in which she extends her powerful vocal into the chorus.

The band finally jams out on ‘Blame It On Your Youth’, a drifting wah-wah tinged reggae groove which provides dreamy backdrop to more mellow reflections.

‘Explore The Layers’ is well worth your attention and with so much on offer there’s something for everyone. ***½ 

Review by Pete Feenstra


Featured Artist: JOSH TAERK

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

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






David Randall presents a weekly show on Get Ready to ROCK! Radio, Sundays at 22:00 GMT, repeated on Mondays and Fridays), when he invites listeners to ‘Assume The Position’. The show signposts forthcoming gigs and tours and latest additions at getreadytorock.com. First broadcast on 7 December 2025.


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 25 November 2025

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 1 December 2025

We feature all the artists selected in this sequence in 2025.

Featured Albums w/c 1 December 2025

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


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

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

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

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Recent (last 30 days)


Book review: ULTRAVOX – Every Album, Every Song by Brian J Robb

Ultravox - Every Album, Every Song

SonicBond Publishing [Publication date: 26.07.24]

Ultravox had 17 UK top 40 singles between 1981 and 1984, yet never had a number one single. ‘Vienna’ was famously kept of the top spot by Joe Dolce’s ‘Shaddap You Face’ (a song that also topped eight other nation’s charts!). They continued up until 2013 in various guises but never matched those early to mid 80′s chart and touring success.

Ultravox formed back in 1973 with John Foxx at the mic stand and the three album released under his time with the band are given a good and fair appraisal by the author.

Right from the start Ultravox worked with many top name producers including Brian Eno, Steve Lillywhite, George Martin and Conny Plank. Each had an effect on the band’s sound at that time and Robb gives credit to this, as well as the band’s own production and writing talents.

Reading this had me listening again to the two 90′s albums from Ultravox with Billy Currie the only member from the original and classic 80s line-ups. 1994′s ‘Ingenuity’ featured Dare guitarist Vinnie Burns and vocalist Sam Blue, who recorded the Burns Blue album with Vinnie Burns. You can’t go wrong with any album by Ultravox, bar the rightly panned ‘U-Vox’ which this fan has no desire to listen to again even after reading about it. Midge Ure stated in his memoir it should have been titled ‘U-Bend’!

However, there is not much mention of the solo output of each band member. Even a brief overview would be appreciated by the casual reader, especially as Midge Ure continues to tour and has had a successful solo career.

One of the best ‘On Track…’ books I have read as Brian Robb gives an informative history of the band, backed by various archive interviews from the various band members, and gives a fair appraisal of each album. Makes for a perfect introduction to the band and their wonderful music.  ****

Review by Jason Ritchie


Featured Artist: JOSH TAERK

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

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






David Randall presents a weekly show on Get Ready to ROCK! Radio, Sundays at 22:00 GMT, repeated on Mondays and Fridays), when he invites listeners to ‘Assume The Position’. The show signposts forthcoming gigs and tours and latest additions at getreadytorock.com. First broadcast on 7 December 2025.


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 25 November 2025

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 1 December 2025

We feature all the artists selected in this sequence in 2025.

Featured Albums w/c 1 December 2025

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


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

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

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

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


Recent (last 30 days)


News: Albums of the Month (April – June 2024)

Atlantic - Another World

ATLANTIC Another World (Escape Music)

This summer’s AOR album has arrived! Lush keys, harmonies, plenty of lovestruck lyrical themes, soaring guitar solos and the vocals of Mark Grimmett, who adds that extra bit of class to the whole musical proceedings. ****

Review by Jason Ritchie

BLACK COUNTRY COMMUNION V (J & R Adventures)

V is a solid reminder of a great band that remains a definitive conduit between classic rock’s past and present. ****

Review by Pete Feenstra

NESTOR - Teenage Rebel

NESTOR Teenage Rebel (Napalm Records)

Close run thing between Nestor and Remedy for Scandi flavoured melodic rock album of the year. Over to you Eclipse… Until then, this one will be on repeat play for many a melodic rock lover. ****

Review by Jason Ritchie

THESE WICKED RIVERS - Force Of Nature

THESE WICKED RIVERS Force Of Nature (Fat Earth Records)

This is a perfectly formed second album from Derby’s finest. Formed in 2014, the band combine elements of southern, classic and heavy rock….

Derby isn’t a million miles from Castle Donington and this band should show up there sooner than later. ****1/2

Review by David Randall

BIG BIG TRAIN - The Likes Of Us

BIG BIG TRAIN The Likes Of Us (Inside Out)

…this is the sound of a band moving on, and, rather like AC/DC’s enforced change following Bon Scott’s passing, you can still move forwards with one eye in the rear-view mirror.

Exceptional.   *****

Review by Alan Jones

Son Of Man - Gaslight

SON OF MAN Gaslight (Esoteric Antenna)

They’ve morphed into a powerhouse rock band with traces of AOR and symphonic edges, built on muscular grooves, keen dynamics and real intensity. ****

Review by Pete Feenstra

Albums of the Month (January-March 2024)


Featured Artist: JOSH TAERK

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

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






David Randall presents a weekly show on Get Ready to ROCK! Radio, Sundays at 22:00 GMT, repeated on Mondays and Fridays), when he invites listeners to ‘Assume The Position’. The show signposts forthcoming gigs and tours and latest additions at getreadytorock.com. First broadcast on 7 December 2025.


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 25 November 2025

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 1 December 2025

We feature all the artists selected in this sequence in 2025.

Featured Albums w/c 1 December 2025

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


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

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

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

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


Recent (last 30 days)


Album review: SCARLET REBELS – Where The Colours Meet

SCARLET REBELS – Where the Colours Meet

Earache Records [Release date: 16.08.24]

I was excited to get to review the latest offering from Scarlet Rebels, I have long been a fan of their music and even better I got the opportunity to discuss ‘Where The Colours Meet’ with their frontman, Wayne Doyle.

You may recall that Scarlet Rebels previous album ‘See Through Blue’ got into the UK Top 10, well ‘Where The Colours Meet’ takes these Welsh rockers to a whole new level and surely will spotlight them in the mainstream.

Let’s take a look at the album that I think puts them firmly on a stellar trajectory. From the Album opener “Secret Drug” the bar is set, this foot stomper pays homage to the band’s influences and the catchy chorus has sing-a-long qualities that will surely add more when played live.

Doyle comments: ”We’re incredibly excited to show the world what we’ve been up to. “Secret Drug” is the first chapter from our new story and we’re so happy that we can finally unleash it on the world. It marks a new era for the band. With ‘Where The Colours Meet’, we made an album of unity, a call for togetherness in a world gone mad. I genuinely feel it’s the best set of songs we’ve written.

The band’s performance is superb and Colin [Richardson] and Chris [Clancy] brought totally new ideas and focus to our music. We hope you enjoy this album as much as we enjoyed making it.”

With Scarlet Rebels’ live sets coming to life too, as “Let Me In” and “Practice Run”, are now heard on a proper studio recording for the first time, we chatted about the forthcoming tour, with intimate album launches in Swansea and Exeter happening ahead of a wider tour of venues across the UK in October, before diving deeper into ‘Where the Colours Meet’…

A track that instantly stood out to me was ‘Declining’, can you tell me about the inspiration behind it?

“This is the first song I wrote for this album, it’s a raw outpouring and a reflection on my feelings at that moment.

Having being offered a deal to continue with Earache Records, the pressure to follow on from a top 10 album and produce songs that were going to be good enough felt overwhelming at times and it sent me into a bit of a spiral.

There I was sat in Wales, it was dark and raining, it matched how I felt at the time. This song just flew out of me, the lyrics have quite dark content, when we got into the studio the track became upbeat, so the song is almost like the opposite in terms of contents, it’s quite a conflicted song, happy tune, dark lyrics.”

Personally, this is one my favourite songs on the album for the story telling narrative almost clashing with that upbeat musicality.

Can you tell me more about your songwriting process?

“I write about what I’ve experienced, what I felt or what I’ve seen and then try to create another narrative and maybe embellish it into a story and then into a frame for a song. I don’t want to write about things that I haven’t experienced”.

The lyrics are heartfelt and you can hear the emotion that is poured into Wayne’s songwriting, this is a masterclass in lyrical narratives, there’s not a song without meaning on this album. Let’s talk about ‘Out of Time’ which was co-written with Elles Bailey, how did that come about?

“I was asked if I was interested in collaborating with other song writers on the album, Earache’s, Tim Bailey-Kidd thought that mine and Elles Bailey’s styles matched and would compliment each other. Elles is brilliant. The collaboration with Elles Bailey was a fascinating, crazy time, we met up in a studio in Bristol where she was working on her album ‘Beneath the Neon Glow’ (out 9th August).

We started just trading single sentence lyrics, that we had captured as possible song ideas, and one of my lyrics struck a chord with Elles, who dug deeper into the meaning and ‘Out of Time’ was the result.

The lyrics are a two-way conversation, the song was written within an hour and a rough cut recorded. After we had recorded it properly, I didn’t hear it again until the early mixes of the album, I was just blown away by it, got total goosebumps. I’m so grateful to Elles to making the time and for the song to be on our album.”

This is a really beautiful song perfectly delivered, a duet that is surely a power ballad of this decade, the vocals and lyrics showcase the absolute quality of the songwriting and the perfection of Wayne and Elles voices.

Scarlet Rebels also collaborated with Ricky Warwick (Black Star Riders, The Almighty) for the writing of the album closer ‘My House, My Rules’ which is huge track – what a way to sign off this stellar album.

“You can hear Ricky’s influence all over the song, a rip-roaring, highoctane rocker. My take on it lyrically was the dues you have to pay as you make your way in the world and having to bow down to the rules of the house… It always wins! Again, having the chance to write with someone of Ricky’s calibre, talent and reputation, was such a boost in confidence for us. He was so generous with his time and his ideas with me, we’ll forever be grateful to Ricky for that.”

‘How Much is Enough’ and ‘Divide and Conquer’, resonates with your social economic impact as a band with food bank donations at live shows and now donating 100 early vinyl pressings of ‘Where the Colours Meet’ to charity shops, where does that stem from?

‘These Days’ from ‘See Through Blue’ was triggered by the government voting against providing school meals to those who desperately needed it during the pandemic, we decided to turn this into a positive rather than taking a negative stance, so we set up food bank collection points on our merch tables at venues.

This went really well and I had lots of people bringing food and lots of people delivering food to venues, which meant we needed extra transport to deal with it all. We contacted food banks locally to where we were playing and arranged for the foodbank to collect directly from the venue at the end of the gig.

This contribution continues with around 100 initial presses of ‘Where Colours Meet’ vinyl sleeves being donated in charity shops, using social media with their followers to treasure hunt for these rarities and supporting the charities.”

These tracks both offer powerful lyrics with huge riffs and a cracking drum solo on ‘Divide and Conquer’, every song on this album delivers! If you had to choose one song to introduce somebody new to Scarlet Rebel music what would it be?

“ ‘It was Beautiful’ as this song sums up the band, it’s nostalgic, it ramps up and it is encapsulates exactly what this band is about and how we want to present ourselves.”

This track starts off as a ballad and builds into showcasing all of the band, the harmonies and musicality is perfection and the song itself is another demonstration of great songwriting.

Having had the honour to review ‘Where Colours Meet’, I now can’t wait for the tour, to see these tracks played live.

These NWOCR bands have to work so much harder for the recognition they so richly deserve, no room for any ‘fillers’ on albums, every song has to be single quality to build out their following.

Scarlet Rebels have achieved that here and so much more, this is truly an album to be proud of. Scarlet Rebels are definitely on the ascendency and this album really showcases that, I’m confident this is another album to challenge the status quo of the mainstream charts and reaffirm that rock music is alive and kicking! Don’t take my word for it, get in on the action, grab a copy and see them live. *****

Review by Karen Clayton

Get Ready to ROCK! - The Best of 2024

Gig review (October 2024)

TOUR DATES

Outstore/Instore Tour

Fri 16 August – Bunkhouse – Swansea (SOLD OUT)
Sat 17 August – Bunkhouse – Swansea
Sun 18 August – Cavern – Exeter
Mon 19 August – Pie & Vinyl – Southsea
Mon 19 August – Vinilo – Southampton
Tues20 August – Banquet Records – Kingston
Wed 21 August – The Jacaranda – Liverpool
Thurs 22 August – Assai Records – Dundee
Thur 22 August – Assai Records – Edinburgh
Fri 23 Aug – Stonedead – Newark*

Headline Tour

Wed 2 Oct – Anarchy – Newcastle
Thu 3 Oct – The Live Rooms – Chester
Fri 4 Oct – KK’s Steel Mill – Wolverhampton
Sat 5 Oct – Cathouse – Glasgow
Sun 6 Oct – Deaf Institute – Manchester
Mon 7 Oct – Thekla – Bristol
Tue 8 Oct – Garage – London
Wed 9 Oct – Craufurd Arms – Milton Keynes
Thu 10 Oct – Rescue Rooms – Nottingham
Fri 11 Oct – The Key Club – Leeds

*Festival date


Featured Artist: JOSH TAERK

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

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






David Randall presents a weekly show on Get Ready to ROCK! Radio, Sundays at 22:00 GMT, repeated on Mondays and Fridays), when he invites listeners to ‘Assume The Position’. The show signposts forthcoming gigs and tours and latest additions at getreadytorock.com. First broadcast on 7 December 2025.


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 25 November 2025

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 1 December 2025

We feature all the artists selected in this sequence in 2025.

Featured Albums w/c 1 December 2025

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


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

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

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

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


Recent (last 30 days)


Single review: THE MOTHERZ – Sweat

THE DEAD DAISIES - Light 'Em Up

Facebook With a name like The Motherz you’re not going to expect Abba are you. And how right you would be. To me they sound like the illegitimate offspring of Metallica and The Stooges. They claim to draw their influences … Continue reading

Album review: THE DEAD DAISIES – Light ‘Em Up

THE DEAD DAISIES - Light 'Em Up

SPV [Release date 06.09.24] One of my musical regrets in recent years is that I didn’t get to see The Dead Daisies UK tour with Glenn Hughes in December 2022 . As he does, Hughes sprinkled his gold dust over … Continue reading

Book review: REMEMBERING LIVE AID by Andrew Wild

live aid

Sonicbond Publishing [Publication date 30.08.24] Although the fortieth(!) anniversary of Live Aid is next July, this book by Andrew Wild gets in early on any anniversary events/books and is a great way to jog the memories of those who were … Continue reading

Album review : RING THE BELLS AND SING – Progressive Sounds of 1975 (4 CD boxset/Remasters)

RING THE BELLS Image 150

Cherry Red [Release date : 30.08.24) Ring The Bells And Sing is one more in a carefully (and imaginatively) curated series of Progrock sounds from the Cherry Red label. This one focuses exclusively on 1975. Always good to have some … Continue reading

Gig review: FIREVOLT FESTIVAL – Whitebottom Farm, Stockport, 9-11 August 2024

FIREVOLT FESTIVAL- Whitebottom Farm, Stockport, 9-11 August 2024

I will freely tell anyone who will listen that Firevolt has, within a very short space of time, become my favourite festival in the UK. The festival is in beautiful surroundings, on a farm at the end of a delightful … Continue reading

Album review : THEN JERICO – Before The Future: 1984-89, 4 CD Boxset

then_jerico boxset 150

Cherry Red [Release date : 23.08.24] If ever a band deserved recognition it was Then Jerico. And it still does. Having performed a few acoustic gigs this year, founder member Mark Shaw has put together an electric show for the … Continue reading

Album review : FANNY – The Reprise Years 1970-1974 (4 CD set)

FANNY image 150

Cherry Red [Release date : 23.08.24] Signed by Reprise Records (owned by Frank Sinatra) in 1970, all girl group, Fanny, recorded and released 4 albums between then and 1974. Formed by sisters June and Jean Millington, on guitar and bass, … Continue reading

News: Rest In Peace – MICK UNDERWOOD

underwood1

GRTR!’s Joe Geesin penned a tribute to musician and friend Mick Underwood… Drummer Mick Underwood, best known for his work with Ian Gillan in Gillan, died on 28 July, after a long illness. Pictured left to right: Pete Robinson, John … Continue reading

Album review: STEAL THE CITY – Road To Nowhere

STEAL THE CITY - Road To Nowhere

Facebook  [Release date 20.09.24] Sheffield-based hard rock 4-piece outfit Steal the City have emerged in the UK-Rock scene with the sharpest hooked riffs and chorus lines this side of the Atlantic.  While individual influences range from the heavy rock, punk, … Continue reading

Album review: FAST EDDIE CLARKE – Make My Day The Rock ’n’ Roll Story Of…

FAST EDDIE CLARKE - Make My Day

BMG [Release date: 06.09.24] Guitarist Fast Eddie Clarke came to prominence as the guitarist for Motorhead, playing on Motorhead (1977, Chiswick), and Bomber, Overkill, Ace Of Spades, No Sleep ‘Till Hammersmith and Iron Fist (1979-82, all on Bronze), and a … Continue reading

Album review: BRAVE RIVAL- Fight or Flight

BRAVE RIVAL- Fight or Flight

    Independent (Release Date 16.08.24) Brave Rival have become one of my favourite live bands over the past 18 months, with brilliant dual female vocals, excellent musicianship and a warm hearted stage show. 2022’s impressive debut album ‘Life’s Machine’ was … Continue reading

Album review : JON ANDERSON AND THE BAND GEEKS – True

JON ANDERSON BAND GEEKS image 150

Frontiers [Release date : 23.08.24] An almost 80 year old Jon Anderson, and the Band Geeks will be finishing off their second annual US tour in September. Just about when their first album, True, is being released by Frontiers. Quite … Continue reading

Album review: HEALTHY JUNKIES – Listen To The Mad

hjunkies_lttm1a

Banana Castle Records [Release date 22.11.24] www.healthyjunkies.co.uk With the success of the 2024 Olympics the French must be feeling rather proud. A band with a French female singer might now have a distinct advantage. But Nina Courson is no Celine … Continue reading

Gig review: MAID OF STONE FESTIVAL – Mote Park, Maidstone, Kent, 20 July 2024

MAID OF STONE FESTIVAL- Mote Park, Maidstone, Kent, 20 July 2024

Over its five years Ramblin’ Man Festival in Kent established itself as one of the festivals of choice for us middle-aged rockers with a relaxed atmosphere and selection of bands from variety of classic rock genres, both old and new. … Continue reading

Album review: MICK PINI – Papa Voodoo

MICK PINI - Papa Voodoo

Pete Feenstra chatted to Mick Pini and Craig Marshall for his show on Get Ready to ROCK! Radio, playing tracks from the new album.  First broadcast 18 August 2024. Audio 54 Records/Cadiz [Release date 15.08.24] ‘Papa Voodoo’ is another collaboration … Continue reading

Album review: LEON ALVARADO – The Changing Tide

LEON ALVARADO

Melodic Revolution Records  [Release date: 31.05.24] Leon Alvarado is an American multi-instrumentalist who started his recording career in 2009 with an album called ‘Plays Genesis And Other Stuff’ and has progressed (see what I did there?) to Pink Floyd on … Continue reading

Album review: JOE MEEK’S TEA CHEST TAPES – From Taboo To Telstar (3CD Anthology)

JOE MEEK Taboo Telstar 150

Cherry Red [Release date 16.08.24] Legendary British Music producer, Joe Meek, cut his electronics’ teeth in the 1950s, operating and maintaining the complexities of the RAF’s radar equipment. His transition to recording studio maestro led to a groundbreaking series of … Continue reading

Quick plays: AUTUMN KILLERS, PETE LAMBERT, DELICATE STEVE

Autumn Killers - Making Waves

AUTUMN KILLERS Making Waves [Release date 12.09.24] Autumn Killers are Rob Reece (vocals, bass), Duncan Richardson (guitar, keys, synths & backing vocals) and Graeme Hoy (drums, percussion & backing vocals). They are a bit different as they mix dance beats with … Continue reading

Album review : MIKE TRAMP – Songs Of White Lion Vol 2

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Frontiers [Release date 23.08.24] Few musical artists get the chance to rerecord their old material. Still fewer improve upon the originals. White Lion’s material usually had more to say than your average rock song, lyrically it was more illustrative in … Continue reading

Gig review: MALMO MELODIC – Plan B, Malmo, Sweden, 27-29 July 2024

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Scandinavia, and Sweden in particular, is the undisputed epicentre of the melodic rock community with a seemingly endless stream of bands emerging. There have been festivals in Malmo pre-pandemic (Melodic Rock Fest and the Swedish AOR Convention) so when last … Continue reading

Album review : RICHARD PINHAS / HELDON – Le Plan and Winter Music

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Other Side Music [Release date 02.08.24] It somehow seems right that “avant garde” is a French language term for something that is aesthetically innovative, especially a “work of art”, which these pieces of music from French musician, Richard Pinhas surely … Continue reading

Album review : GERRY AND THE PACEMAKERS I Like It (3 CD Anthology)

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Cherry Red [Release date 16.08.24] As the sixties’ “Merseybeat” pop explosion recedes further into the past, ten album, multiple hits band, Gerry And The Pacemakers seem less and less likely to get the credit they deserve. And so this anthology … Continue reading

Album review : DANIELLE MORGAN AND FRIENDS – Explore The Layers

Danilelle Morgan - Explore the Layers

Self Release [Release date : 07.03.24] ‘Explore The Layers’ is essentially a double album of catchy pop-rock songs with a reggae and funky influences. Helpfully subtitled ‘Songs About Life & Love’, it’s a concept album of love songs of which … Continue reading

Book review: ULTRAVOX – Every Album, Every Song by Brian J Robb

Ultravox - Every Album, Every Song

SonicBond Publishing [Publication date: 26.07.24] Ultravox had 17 UK top 40 singles between 1981 and 1984, yet never had a number one single. ‘Vienna’ was famously kept of the top spot by Joe Dolce’s ‘Shaddap You Face’ (a song that … Continue reading

News: Albums of the Month (April – June 2024)

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ATLANTIC Another World (Escape Music) This summer’s AOR album has arrived! Lush keys, harmonies, plenty of lovestruck lyrical themes, soaring guitar solos and the vocals of Mark Grimmett, who adds that extra bit of class to the whole musical proceedings. … Continue reading

Album review: SCARLET REBELS – Where The Colours Meet

SCARLET REBELS – Where the Colours Meet

Earache Records [Release date: 16.08.24] I was excited to get to review the latest offering from Scarlet Rebels, I have long been a fan of their music and even better I got the opportunity to discuss ‘Where The Colours Meet’ … Continue reading