Frozen by SENTENCED: track list, Spotify player, music videos and English liner notes on METAL BOOST.
1990s Metal & Hard Rock Albums – Page 7
Browse 379 metal and hard rock albums from the 1990s, with links to release-year hubs, artists, track lists and English liner notes.
Albums
Diabolus in Musica builds an oppressive heaviness from low, heavy guitar, hard-carved rhythm and cutting vocals.
Steelbath Suicide is Soilwork’s debut, driven by fast riffs, harsh vocals and aggressive rhythm.
Destiny uses fast guitar, shining keyboards and soaring vocals to create grand-scale power metal.
Twilight in Olympus joins classical harmony, intricate rhythm and powerful vocals in Symphony X’s progressive-metal world.
Truth brings supple bass, crisp guitar and expressive vocals together in Talisman’s melodic hard-rock world.
No Limits puts steel-edged riffs, forceful rhythm and Udo Dirkschneider’s unmistakable voice at the front of a traditional heavy-metal statement.
Van Halen III brings a new voice into the band and reaches toward wider song forms and longer developments than the group’s usual template.
Tangerine retains Vixen’s melodic sense while moving toward drier guitar textures and a more alternative-leaning atmosphere.
Concerto Suite for Electric Guitar and Orchestra is a useful way to hear YNGWIE MALMSTEEN from a different angle within the 1998 catalogue.
Tuonela keeps Amorphis’s heavy guitar foundation while giving greater weight to quiet keyboards, folk-tinged melody and a submerged atmosphere.
Criteria for a Black Widow shapes high-tension thrash metal from slicing riffs, sudden turns and intricate guitar work.
Burning Bridges links weighty riffs, fast cutting lead guitar and harsh vocals in Arch Enemy’s aggressive melodic-death approach.
Sonic Brew establishes Black Label Society through weighty riffs, earthy blues feeling and rough vocal delivery.
Being Human builds melody-centered hard rock from clear vocals, lyrical keyboards and finely detailed guitar.
Buckcherry arrives with bluesy guitar riffs, gritty vocals and a dangerous rock-and-roll rush.
Burning Rain’s debut combines thick guitar riffs, blues-rooted lead work and soulful vocals.
Hatebreeder fuses cutting guitar riffs, rapid drumming and flamboyantly active keyboards into Children of Bodom’s distinctive attack.
Road of Desire combines thick guitar riffs, forceful rhythm and melancholy-tinged melody in Damned Nation’s melodic hard rock.
Shadowland is Dark Moor’s debut, combining classical keyboards, fast guitar and story-minded melody.
Projector expands Dark Tranquillity’s melodic-death language with clean vocals, piano and a pronounced gothic shade.
Euphoria brings Def Leppard’s signature strengths back to the foreground: stacked harmonies, polished guitar work and hooks built for instant lift.
Erase the Slate organizes sharp guitar work, firm rhythm and melancholy-tinged vocals into a return to classic melodic metal.
Metropolis Pt. 2: Scenes from a Memory joins complex rhythm, fluent soloing and memorable vocal melody into a single narrative arc.
Theater of Salvation combines the drive of fast metal with dramatic development, keyboard color and large choral hooks.
Stairway to Fairyland is Freedom Call’s bright, fantasy-tinged power-metal debut, built from soaring melody, brisk rhythm and sparkling keyboards.
Power Plant gathers fast twin guitars, clear high vocals and expansive choruses into a quintessential Gamma Ray power-metal record.
Open combines thick guitar riffs and songful melody in Gotthard’s broad, arena-ready hard-rock style.
Rubber finds Harem Scarem loosening its established melodic-hard-rock shape and bringing in tighter beats and more alternative-leaning textures.
Metal Jukebox is best heard not simply as a covers-related entry, but as a record that shows how HELLOWEEN translates outside material into its own
Colony weaves chiseled riffs, rapid drums and memorable twin-guitar melody into a high-density In Flames record.
Unification builds steel-plated power metal from mechanical riffing, heavy rhythm and heroic vocal melody.
The Fourth Legacy gathers heavy riffs, flowing keyboards and narrative-minded melody into a grand Kamelot power-metal statement.
Issues layers low, unsettling guitar, bouncing bass and nervous rhythm to make Korn’s themes of isolation and anger feel especially close.
Burn the Priest is a useful way to hear LAMB OF GOD from a different angle within the 1999 catalogue.
Queen of the Ocean paints a fantasy-tinged rock world with expansive keyboards, dramatic guitar and Lana Lane’s clear vocal presence.
Fields of Yesterday highlights Lillian Axe’s shaded melodies and carefully shaped guitar arrangements.
The Burning Red retains Machine Head’s heavy riff foundation while bringing in bouncier rhythm, more dynamic vocals and modern production.
Risk deliberately pulls back from Megadeth’s usual thrash attack and moves toward smoother melody, mid-tempo groove and more pop-shaped arrangements.
Masterpeace attacks with heavy guitar riffs, hard-edged drums and urgent vocals, reaffirming Metal Church’s traditional heavy-metal force.
The Unforgiven builds on Michael Schenker Group’s melodic hard-rock strengths: sharp riffs, singing lead guitar and songs shaped around real emotional movement.
Angelfire combines smooth vocal melody, shimmering keyboards and polished guitar in Millenium’s melodic-rock approach.
The Sacred Talisman combines fast rhythm, bright guitar melody and clear, soaring choruses in Nocturnal Rites’ power-metal mode.
Jaws of Death brings together thick guitar chug, forceful drums and piercing high vocals in Primal Fear’s heavy traditional-metal attack.
Q2K reduces some of Queensrÿche’s more elaborate progressive machinery and presents vocals and riffs in a more direct rock form.
Alive and Well puts Quiet Riot’s upbeat rock-and-roll spirit and big singable choruses back in front.
Ghosts draws Rage slightly away from its usual sharp metal attack and gives more attention to acoustic resonance and quieter melody.
The Battle of Los Angeles unites bouncing bass, hard drums, unorthodox guitar sounds and sharply delivered words in Rage Against the Machine’s tense political rock.
Ratt centers on dry, sharp guitar riffs, spring-loaded rhythm and a vocal presence with a little danger in it.
Sons of Society brings together driving rhythm, sharp twin guitars and rising vocal melody in Riot’s power-metal mode.
Fear builds dramatic melodic metal from thick keyboard orchestration, hard guitar and expansive vocal melody.
Red Voodoo is a useful way to hear SAMMY HAGAR from a different angle within the 1999 catalogue.
Eye II Eye finds Scorpions expanding beyond their familiar hard-rock frame with programming, pop texture and a more contemporary compactness.
Regeneration is centered on unreleased material and offers another chance to hear Shy’s soaring choruses, lyrical vocal melodies and polished guitar work.
Back to Reality retains Slaughter’s catchy melodies and smooth choruses while moving into a more settled rock texture.