Review: UFO – A Conspiracy Of Stars (2015)

After 45 years UFO keep hovering above the rest on 22nd studio album. Vocalist Phil Mogg perhaps puts it best on the album’s fifth track...

HAWK EYES: Everything Is Fine (2015)

Leeds rockers emerge from a dark place with album number four In the build up to this record, around the time it's lead single "Die...

PEOPLE ON VACATION: The Chronicles Of Tim Powers (2015)

Pop rock duo found the fun in a broken heart Lou Reed once said that something to the effect that you could could get...

Review: Gov’t Mule feat. John Scofield – Sco-Mule (2015)

Two irresistible forces combine to move the immoveable instrumental object. Gov’t Mule – a classic southern rock jam band in the vein of the Grateful...

Review: Thulcandra – Ascension Lost (2015)

German melodic black metallers keep the search going on album number three. From the moment Thulcandra released their debut Fallen Angel’s Dominion in 2010 they...

Review: Voices – London (2014)

The fatal silencing of Akercocke gives rise to new Voices. To the casual tourist London appears to be a bustling, glamourous, cosmopolitan city with landmarks...

Desert Storm – Omniscient

Oxford's stoner kings in waiting reveal their other side One of the promo shots that came with this album depicts Desert Storm in a...

Martyr De Mona: Impera

Birmingham's best and brightest alternative metal hopes finally release their debut record It is, as AC/DC so rightly observed, a long way to the top...

Ignis Haereticum – Luciferian Gnosis (2014)

South America unleashes a new age of darkness with Occulists Ignis Haereticum. As the album title would suggest these Colombians Occultists are not the kind of...

Resurrection Men – Resurrection Men Must Die

Music in 2015 has to run along strict genre lines, right? No one told this Coventry band It's a fact in this modern age that...

Review: Ethereal – Opus Aethereum (2014)

The long wait is over as Ethereal finally release debut album. Symphonic Black Metal, when done correctly, is a powerful and evocative musical landscape. Bands...

Review: Cóndor – Duin (2015)

Bogota’s young progressive death folksters mature on album number two. It’s an instrumental entitled “Río frío” that kicks things off. What starts as an acoustic...

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