| | Raven For The Future CD Raven Discography of CDs
Remastered EP from the NWOBHM act contains four tracks which date back to those genre defining days & for many this will be their first chance to hear the band performing the tracks, 'Rock Until You Drop', 'Chainsaw', 'Crash Bang Wollop', & 'For The Future', which were all originally found on the band's first two albums. Metalprint. 2004.
Raven (UK Band): Mark Gallagher (guitar); John Ryan Gallagher (bass instrument); Rob "Wacko" Hunter (drums). Raven For The Future Songs For The Future Review
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Purchase For The Future CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Transatlantic The Whirlwind CDs (2009)
For The Future album
$18.79
| | Halford III: Winter Songs CD (2009) Special Edition; Digipak
For The Future CD music
$13.75 At first glance, Halford's entry into the crowded holiday market looks like a parody. Heavy metal and Christmas make for strange bedfellows, and WINTER SONGS' pastoral cover art -- which depicts Rob ...
| | Metallica - Live SH.T: Binge & Purge DVDs (1993)
For The Future music CDs
$42.15
| | Breaking Benjamin We Are Not Alone CD (2004)
For The Future songs
$10.45 When Aaron Fink and Markus James left Universal Records act Lifer to join the then-unsigned Breaking Benjamin, many hard-rock fans were skeptical. WE ARE NOT ALONE, the latter band's sophomore effort, promises to silence the naysayers for good. Led by powerful vocalist Ben Burnley, Breaking Benjamin delivers a snap-tight, streamlined brand of heavy alternative rock with occasional ...
| | Kid Rock Devil Without A Cause CD (1998)
For The Future album
$10.75 In the grand tradition of Faith No More, Red Hot Chili Peppers, etc. genre-hopper Kid Rock chooses to lay down his raps over a bed of rock-oriented electric guitar riffs instead of traditional hip-hop tracks and ...
| | Savatage Hall Of The Mountain King CD (1987)
For The Future CD music
$8.39 With band members, critics, and fans unhappy with the commercialism of Fight for the Rock, Savatage began to disintegrate. However the new found acquaintance of producer Paul O'Neill not only changed the group's fortunes but soon pointed them in new directions. O'Neill, who was looking for a metal band to record some of his musical ideas, agreed to produce the group's next ...
| | Joseph Malovany Magical Moments In Cantorial Music CD (2001)
For The Future music CDs
$15.89
| | Apocalyptica Reflections CD (2003) Bonus Track; Japan
For The Future songs
$33.75 Apocalyptica, a quartet of cellist with a penchant for heavy metal covers, released REFLECTIONS, which includes the songs "No Education," "Heat," and "Cohkka," among others.
From classical cover band devoted exclusively to performing Metallica's symphony-friendly epics to all purpose string ensemble interpreters of other heavy metal bands' music for the cello, to composers of original material fit to mingle with even more metallic translations, Finland's Apocalyptica had come a long way in the span of their first three albums. And, naturally, there were bound to be further innovations lined up for the band's fourth opus, Reflections, which arrived in 2003 bearing not a single heavy metal cover, and introducing several unexpected innovations into Apocalyptica's m.o., to boot. Chief among these was the addition of a drummer behind the group (recently paired down from quartet to trio), and since Apocalyptica's virtuosos would hardly stand for anything short of brilliance for such an assignment, that percussionist wound up being none other than Slayer legend Dave Lombardo, on whose Grip Inc. albums, group leader Eicca Toppinen had conveniently performed as well. One of those rare rock drummers whose sound and style is instantly recognizable, Lombardo was more than up to the task, providing the necessary flailing-limbs thrust behind dramatically driving originals like "Prologue (Apprehension)," "Somewhere Around Nothing," and "Resurrection" (which sounds like it should have originated as a metal song, but didn't). Apocalyptica also does without him on several compositions, of course, but they keep the experimentation coming by adding a pianist for the exquisite ballad "Far Away," discreet synth effects for the multi-faceted "Cohkka," full-on drum machines for "Heat," and a Spanish horn section for "Toreador II" -- Ole! And for those fans who simply want to hear them shred, there's plenty of that throughout this set, with the suitably named "Pandemonium" offering an especially blinding display. All in all, Apocalyptica's first foray into all-original material is nothing short of triumphant, and an eye opener for rock music fans who simply came along because ...
| | 10 Return To Evermore CD (2006) Bonus Track; Japan
For The Future album
$37.59
| | Narnack Record Sampler CD (2004)
For The Future CD music
$6.15 Coachwhips,Langhorne Slim,The Fall,Shesus,Guitar Wolf ++
| | Jumbonics Super-Baxophone CD (2005) (Import) United Kingdom
For The Future music CDs
$12.85 The Jumbonics demo landed on the A&R desk at Tru Thoughts with just their name and a picture of a cat on it. We liked it immediately ...
| | Lori McKenna Bittertown CD (2004)
For The Future songs
$9.09 Steeped in a kettle of Americana or alt country, Lori McKenna should rank up there with quality performers such as Lucinda Williams, Julie Miller, Kathleen Edwards, and Mary Alice Wood. "Bible Song," which sports a guest appearance by Buddy Miller, gives a perfect example of the singer knowing what she wants and getting it right: hints of twang, mandolin touches, and a melody that is just as uplifting as it is dreary and pragmatic. More radio-friendly are the pop-inspired roots on the infectious yet world weary "Mr. Sunshine." It has more in common with a lighter Melissa Etheridge, but McKenna is more than capable of pulling it off with flying colors. The folk-like quasi-lullaby "One Man" is pure professionalism as she sings about a town "losing its balls" while Chris Trapper provides strong harmonies. Sparser but not quite as polished is "Pour," a slow, downtempo tune that resembles early Jewel. "Stealing Kisses" and "Silver Bus" are the true great singer/songwriter tunes, recalling softer offerings from Mary Chapin Carpenter or Nanci Griffith, as she is basically left on her own. The minimal Cowboy Junkies-like "If You Ask" has McKenna at her most vulnerable as Kevin Barry's resonator guitar results in a slightly fuller sound that toes the line between coffeehouse folk and roots country. "Monday Afternoon," another gem that fits like a well-worn shoe, is nearly too formulaic, but the singer builds on the momentum during the second ...
| | Dai Lo Constant Threat Of Accidental Death CD (2003) (Import)
For The Future album
$18.39
| | Stereo Total My Melody CD (1999)
For The Future CD music
$11.39 Stereo Total's MY MELODY marks an advance in the eclectic Euro-pop duo's postmodern art by making it even more of a musically diverse pop-culture splatter painting, while still maintaining an indelibly catchy core. The group's blend of 1960s ...
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