Showing posts with label list. Show all posts
Showing posts with label list. Show all posts

Tuesday, 16 January 2018

The Best Of 2017

I was far from diligent in reviewing new releases in 2017; that much is evidenced from the serious lack of posts doing just that. With all of the "top releases of 2017" lists coming out in December, and my difference of opinion from most of them, I wanted to share my top picks of last year. Keep in mind that these are my FAVOURITES, highly subjective to my own personal taste in metal.

Top Five (from well-known bands):

Belphegor - Totenritual
Blackened death metal (Austria)




Entrails - World Inferno 
Death metal (Sweden)




Cut Up - Wherever They May Rot
Death metal (Sweden)





Kreator - Gods Of Violence
Thrash metal (Germany)



King Of Asgard - Taudr
Viking metal (Sweden)




Local Picks:
My favourite releases from bands I've had the opportunity to see live and watch grow over the last few years. If you're into the style of metal they play, I'd recommend checking out these albums. Admittedly, there are a few of my Canadian favourites from whom I failed to pick up albums from in 2017. 

Körperlose Stimme
Blackened death metal (Canada)




Forsaken Rite 
Folk metal (Canada)































Saturday, 13 August 2016

Twelve Hair Metal & Classic Rock Albums That Have Stuck With Me

Again, this list was inspired by a Facebook post that circulated a little while ago. Instead of doing a dozen albums that have stuck with me, I've decided to break it down by sub-genre to create a more extensive set of lists. This one features classic rock, classic metal, and hair metal. Sticking with the original rule, I've only included one album per artist.

1. Guns N' Roses - Appetite For Destruction
2. Motley Crue - Shout At The Devil
3. Alice Cooper - Love It To Death
4. Dio - Holy Diver
5. The Doors - The Doors
6. Iron Maiden - The Number Of The Beast
7. Skid Row - Skid Row
8. W.A.S.P. - The Last Command
9. L.A. Guns - Cocked And Loaded
10. Cinderella - Night Songs
11. Faster Pussycat - Faster Pussycat
12. Ratt - Out Of The Cellar


Tuesday, 26 July 2016

Twelve Thrash Albums That Have Stuck With Me

This list was spawned by a post circulating Facebook regarding the ten albums (of any genre) that have stuck with you, for whatever reason. A friend suggested creating one consisting of just thrash albums, and this is mine in no particular order:


  1. Metallica - Kill 'Em All
  2. Annihilator - Alice In Hell
  3. Destruction - Day Of Reckoning
  4. Kreator - Pleasure To Kill
  5. Slayer - Reign In Blood
  6. Sodom - M16
  7. Tankard - A Girl Called Cerveza
  8. Overkill - The Electric Age
  9. Death Angel - The Dream Calls For Blood
  10. Possessed - Seven Churches (more of a mix of death and thrash)
  11. Aggression - The Full Treatment
  12. Nervosa - Agony


Thursday, 13 August 2015

10 Albums That Introduced Me To Metal

Some of the following albums can’t necessarily be considered in the sense that most of us think of, but they served to pique my interest in the genre that I subsequently delved deeply into. In order to provide some background for this list it’s probably best that I explain how I got into metal. I ended up taking a bit of a roundabout path for someone my age. I grew up listening to country; that was all that was played in my home although there was constantly music in the background. I feel fortunate to have grown up in a rural setting. Not isolated by any means, but rural enough that I only had access to dial-up internet until I was well into my first year of university. 

Dial up internet wasn’t exactly conducive to discovering music. Most people the same age were discovering (and downloading) music at the time, but it wasn’t really an option for me. I started listening to classic rock due to a friend’s dad having a massive collection of classic rock albums with a few metal albums in the mix. I found radio stations that occasionally played a metal song or two. I quickly discovered re-runs of Power Hour on MuchMusic. (A TV show that aired in Canada from 1986 to 1991in its original form, featuring hair metal, hard rock and metal music videos). Every once in a while I’d catch an episode of Loud, which featured heavier music and also aired on the MuchMusic channel. 

From that point, I started buying CDs of bands that interested me, or that I had read about in magazines or on the internet. I’m not sure about the availability of online ordering for CDs at that time, as I had very little idea of what was even on the internet. Most of my CDs came from A&B Sound, which ceased to exist in 2008. HMV was the next option. CDs cost a hell of a lot more then than they do now, especially for a kid. Album purchases were few and far between, and each album I did buy got listened to a lot. 

While it was a bit of a pain to discover metal, I think it made each discovery that much more exciting. I imagine this was akin to how people felt in the tape trading days, or when vinyl was the only readily available format. Access to music has certainly changed quite a bit, even in the relatively short time that I’ve been seriously listening to and buying albums, but that’s a different discussion for a different day. That being said, these are the first albums that formed my introduction to something a little heavier than classic rock:


Iron Maiden - The Number Of The Beast

Released in 1982, The Number Of The Beast still remains my favorite Maiden album. ‘Hallowed Be Thy Name’ is the first metal song that I recall truly taking notice of. ‘Run To The Hills’ has been (horribly) attempted at drunken karaoke more than once. The Number Of The Beast is one of those classic albums that every metal head should listen to from start to finish at least once. 

W.A.S.P. - W.A.S.P & The Last Command

Naming two albums is a bit of a cheat, but I somehow managed to acquire a vinyl of WASP’s debut, self titled album at roughly the same time that I got my hands on The Last Command. I would still love to see them live. I almost managed to sneak into a bar underage years ago to catch them, and missed them live by a single day both trips I made to Finland. (Which I’m still kicking myself for). WASP always seemed a bit more sinister than other similar bands. They have catchy songs and I still like the uniqueness of Blackie’s vocals.  





Metallica - Kill ‘Em All

Out of all of the Metallica albums I could have chosen as the first album to buy, I ended up with Kill ‘Em All. Until that point, it was probably the hardest, most aggressive I had ever heard. When I still played a little bit of bass as a young teenager, I thought it would be a brilliant idea to learn “(Anesthesia) - Pulling Teeth”. Considering lack of any kind of natural musicianship and my neglectful attitude towards practicing, that would have been quite a feat. Needless to say, it definitely didn’t happen. 

Black Sabbath - Paranoid

I think it would be difficult to call oneself a metal head without having at least some knowledge, or having to have listened to, some Black Sabbath. After listening to a fair bit of classic rock, Sabbath seemed like a logical step. While I’m not much of a doom metal fan, it’s difficult to deny Black Sabbath’s influence on the subgenre. 


Alice Cooper - Love It To Death & Killer

In hindsight, these may have been strange Alice Cooper albums to start my collection with as there are certainly more well known releases. ‘Ballad Of Dwight Fry’ (from Love It To Death) is still one of the most chilling songs I can think of, detailing a narrative descent into madness. I listened to both of these albums over and over again. Especially during class when I probably should have been listening to the teacher. 


Mötley Crüe - Shout At The Devil

Shout At The Devil, to me, is Mötley Crüe’s most metal album when taken into consideration the time that it was released and the fact that Mötley Crüe tends to fall more into the spectrum of ‘hair metal’ than the metal I listen to now. Admittedly I used to be a huge Mötley Crüe fan. When I was young, this band (and album) offered the perfect amount of sleaze, and a touch of danger. 


Guns N’ Roses - Appetite For Destruction

Appetite For Destruction remains as one of the most solid albums from start to finish that I’ve listened to. There isn’t a weak song on this album. At one point, I probably had all of the lyrics memorized. Appetite For Destruction is a fitting name as this is an angry album, full of attitude. 

Children of Bodom - Hate Crew Deathroll


Hate Crew Deathroll was one of the first ‘metal’ albums that I bought. Metal in the sense of not being able to really be categorized into any other genre (hair metal, classic rock, etc). This album really kickstarted my foray into a lot of the bands and metal subgenres that I listen to now. It still remains as one of my favorite albums and Angels Don’t Kill is still one of my favorite COB songs. Hate Crew Deathroll was a lot heavier and faster than much of the stuff I’d previously listened to and I was hooked. 



Sunday, 31 August 2014

Favorite Pagan Metal Bands


        Without giving any precedence to the various arguments about what exactly constitutes folk, pagan and/or viking metal bands, the following is a list of my top ten favorites. I’m not a big fan of pointlessly debating the nuances of sub-genres, therefore these are what I consider pagan-themed metal bands. In no particular order (other than alphabetical), here are my top ten picks:


Amon Amarth
From: Sweden


Finntroll
From: Finland





Heidevolk
From: The Netherlands




Korpiklaani
From: Finland






Månegarm
From: Sweden






Moonsorrow
From: Finland






Thyrfing
From: Sweden






Unleashed
From: Sweden






Waylander
From: Ireland






Wolfchant
From: Germany







The musical influences and sounds between these bands are widely varied. There are also several other pagan-themed bands that I listen to on a semi-regular basis. Ensiferum and Turisas were left off this list due to some fantastic early albums and some not-so-great later ones. Bathory was left off for the simple reason that not all of their albums are pagan-themed.