Tune! with Beth Charlesworth, 12/5/26
I’ve heard people say you never know what to expect on this show, but one thing I can guarantee is
https://hardrockhellradio.com/2026/05/17/tune-with-beth-charlesworth-12-5-26/
#aor #ClassicRock #HeavyMetal #MelodicMetal #MelodicRock #metal #ModernMetal #Podcast #podcasts #PowerMetal #ProgressiveRock #Rock
#hrhrocks
♬〜 Toto - Goodbye Elenore 💿Turn Back
#MelodicRock #Rock #1981Albums #SoftRock #AOR #NowPlaying

Listening to PACIFIC BREEZE 2: Japanese City Pop, AOR And Boogie 1972-1986, a 2020 2-disc compilation album on the Light in the Attic Records label

https://www.discogs.com/release/15225902-Various-Pacific-Breeze-2-Japanese-City-Pop-AOR-And-Boogie-1972-1986

#PacificBreeze2 #LightInTheAttic #CityPop #Japan #Jazz #Rock #Funk #Soul #Pop #AOR #Fusion #Boogie

Various - Pacific Breeze 2: Japanese City Pop, AOR And Boogie 1972-1986

View credits, reviews, tracks and shop for the 2020 CD release of "Pacific Breeze 2: Japanese City Pop, AOR And Boogie 1972-1986" on Discogs.

Discogs

#NowPlaying the recent album "IV Aftermath" by the band #Creye from #Sweden

#AOR #MelodicRock #80s #Rock #HardRock #AlbumsOf2026

Personal Rating: 9 / 10
🟢🟢🟢🟢🟢🟢🟢🟢🟢⚪

Recommended Tracks: "Missing Something", "Don't Talk about it", "Only you", "Aligned", "Bad Romance", "Rust", "Left in Silence", "Clay", "Glow", "Through the Window", "Last Night on Earth"

Tune! with Beth Charlesworth, 5/5/26
Exploring a dizzying variety of rock music through the lens of melody. In this show, that means singles including Erik
https://hardrockhellradio.com/2026/05/10/tune-with-beth-charlesworth-5-5-26/
#aor #ClassicRock #HeavyMetal #MelodicMetal #MelodicRock #metal #ModernMetal #Podcast #podcasts #PowerMetal #ProgressiveRock #Rock
#hrhrocks

🔴 LIVE NOW ON VORTEX
📻 Vortex Rewind ⏪ (80s extended versions, maxi singles, long versions)
──────────────
🎵 Toto - Stranger In Town ( Extended Version )

▶️ Écouter / Listen : VorteX [Radio]
https://lesonduvortex.net

💬 Join us on Discord:
https://discord.gg/d82hJZBeDE

#VortexWave #Toto #AOR #SoftRock #80s

How about that. Creye have a new album out and it's actually good this time. I have not been impressed with their past few albums. #creye #rock #AOR #music

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1uB7I_AQpcM

Creye - "Something Missing" - Official Visualizer Video

YouTube
MARCHELLO – High Roller Records Reissues Two Albums From Cult AOR Act

Two cult classics of the late 1980s, early 1990s hard rock and metal genre are now available via High Roller Records on all formats. Songwriter and vocalist Peppi Marchello was the founder of the legendary hard rock/AOR outfit The Good Rats from Long Island. The band was amassing an enormous regional following but never broke

BraveWords - Where Music Lives
TYGERS OF PAN TANG (Regne Unit) presenta nou single: "Electrifyed" #TygersOfPanTang #Nwobhm #HeavyMetal #HardRock #Aor #Maig2026 #RegneUnit #NouSingle #Metall #Metal #MúsicaMetal #MetalMusic
Gus G. – Steel Burner Review By Baguette of Bodom

Gus G. is a busy man. For some odd 25 years and counting, the Greek guitarist has not only been running his own band Firewind but also contributed to many notable heavy/power metal acts’ beginnings, such as early Mystic Prophecy and Dream Evil. And somehow on top of that, he’s even managed to fit in five solo albums during that time! Steel Burner becomes the sixth album under the Gus G. moniker, the first since 2021’s very fun Quantum Leap. I was a big fan of Firewind’s energetic 2020 comeback and enjoyed 2024’s anthemic rock-oriented Stand United plenty as well. How does Steel Burner compare to his other recent works, and were any Steel Druhm’s harmed in the making?1

Gus has proven himself to be a very potent guitarist since the early ’00s, and Steel Burner’s strand of heavy metal offers a good general gist of the instrumental and solo craft he’s known for. The album doesn’t steer too far off Quantum Leap’s core in this regard. Gus’s natural bend towards ’80s rock and metal shows up in full force once again, containing Yngwie and Blackmore-esque guitar hero cheese (“What If,” “Closure”) in terms of both shred and soulful play. A surprising highlight is “Advent” with its interesting djent-ish influences by way of downtuned 2010s rhythm guitar work. It pans out much better than one might think and makes for a refreshing listen in an album full of otherwise expected source material.

The other side of Steel Burner is the record’s confusing flow and identity, the guest vocalist tracks being at odds with the instrumental songs. Whereas Quantum Leap was fully instrumental, Steel Burner contains a theoretically balanced set of five tracks with vocals and five instrumentals. This intentional variety quickly ends up working against itself. Doro (Doro, ex-Warlock) and Matt Barlow (ex-Iced Earth, ex-Pyramaze) are both starting to show their age, delivering some good lines but flat choruses (“Nothing Can Break Me,” “Dancing with Death”). The suddenly enervated instrumentation exacerbates the quality contrast between Steel Burner’s different aspects. Fortunately, the back half fares better. Vocal mercenaries Ronnie Romero (ex-Rainbow) and Dino Jelusić lend stronger performances on better, more AOR-adjacent tracks (“My Premonition,” “No One Has to Know”), and I wouldn’t mind Gus working with Ronnie more often based on “My Premonition.” Aside from the vocal-instrumental clash, the drums are a sticking point. Gus’s drum programming on the aforementioned tracks is solid, but Quantum Leap’s guest drumming proves that more varied and potent percussion would have helped make these songs much more lively.

Much like Jeff Waters (Annihilator), Gus G. is an excellent guitarist who is usually better when sharing vocals-forward songwriting reins with other people. Steel Burner tends to repeat some of his early-career hiccups with Mystic Prophecy, where the rhythm guitar tends to be underdeveloped and the songs oddly stripped-down without the choruses compensating for it. Gus is very good at crafting colorful instrumental compositions (“Advent,” “Confession”) or even standard power metal tracks at higher BPMs (“Kill the Pain” on Firewind’s self-titled, “Escape from Tomorrow” all the way back on Forged by Fire), but making a ‘normal’ mid-paced track with vocals often requires some extra hands alongside him. Firewind’s two most recent records are proof of this, and the positive effect of a consistent powerhouse vocalist like Herbie Langhans is undeniably lacking here.

Steel Burner has its bright spots, but ends up feeling like two EPs in a bar fight. It mashes together parts of Quantum Leap and Stand United, and both halves unfortunately suffer as a result. While nothing on the record is strictly off-putting, the instrumental side is clearly the better and more inspired one, containing the usual guitar goodness you would expect from Gus. Even so, one listen to Quantum Leap’s title track exposes Steel Burner’s general lack of urgency compared to prior works. Grab most of the instrumental tracks and “My Premonition,” and you’ve got a solid EP! Despite the overall experience being hit-and-miss, I still respect Gus’s work ethic, and I’ll be gladly waiting to see what he comes up with next.

Rating: Mixed
DR: Nope! | Format Reviewed: Alas, poor Stream!
Label: Metal Department
Websites: gusgofficial.com | Facebook | Instagram
Releases Worldwide: April 24th, 2026

#25 #2026 #Annihilator #AOR #Apr26 #Doro #DreamEvil #Firewind #GreekMetal #GusG #HardRock #HeavyMetal #IcedEarth #MetalDepartment #MysticProphecy #Pyramaze #Rainbow #Review #Reviews #SteelBurner #Warlock