A Touch of Heaven layers Last Autumn’s Dream’s warm vocals, soft keyboards and graceful melody into Scandinavian AOR.
2010s Metal & Hard Rock Albums – Page 2
Browse 474 metal and hard rock albums from the 2010s, with links to release-year hubs, artists, track lists and English liner notes.
Albums
Yes is a useful way to hear LAST AUTUMN'S DREAM from a different angle within the 2010 catalogue.
A Thousand Suns moves Linkin Park toward a concept-driven world of electronic sound, fragmented interludes and heavy rock passages, carrying a nuclear-age sense of tensio
Bad D.N.A. layers Marty Friedman’s exotic-tinged melodies, sharp guitar phrases and arrangements that cross rock and metal.
Time to Be King builds dramatic power metal from Masterplan’s thick guitar, symphonic keyboards and grand choruses.
Scream combines Ozzy Osbourne’s unmistakable vocal character with heavy guitar and modern rhythm to create dark, hard-edged metal.
Fuzz Universe lets Paul Gilbert move freely between rock, fusion, metal and pop-minded ideas in an instrumental showcase of guitar expression.
Strings to a Web combines Rage’s hard riffs, speed and multi-part large-scale construction.
Infestation revisits Ratt’s L.A. hard-rock appeal through catchy riffs, loose-but-satisfying groove and husky vocals.
Reckless Love is Reckless Love’s full-color debut, firing off huge choruses, bouncing beats and sweetly catchy melodies.
The Frozen Tears of Angels binds Rhapsody of Fire’s grand orchestration, fast power metal and cinematic storytelling.
X shows Royal Hunt’s symphonic and progressive metal strengths through dramatic keyboards, hard guitar and shadowed melody.
Sting in the Tail balances Scorpions’ hard guitar riffs, forceful rockers and emotional balladry.
Origins layers Shaman’s Brazilian-metal passion, symphonic color and emotional melody.
Slash pairs Slash with a wide range of guest vocalists, moving from bluesy riff rock to arena-sized hard rock.
The Panic Broadcast combines Soilwork’s cutting melodic-death riffs, modern groove and vocals that move between clean and harsh approaches.
Audio Secrecy combines Stone Sour’s heavy guitar with melancholic melody and a sensitive ballad instinct.
Eyes in the Night is Striker’s youthful traditional-metal debut, powered by sharp guitar riffs, racing rhythm and high-reaching vocals.
A Farewell to Arms layers TNT’s beautiful vocal melodies, delicate yet bright guitar and clear keyboards.
Coup de Grace brings Treat back with thick choruses, sharp guitar and refined keyboards, powerfully restoring Scandinavian melodic rock’s appeal.
Facemelter delivers classic hard rock through Y&T’s bluesy guitar, sturdy rhythm and direct vocals.
Relentless puts Yngwie Malmsteen’s neoclassical melodies, breathtaking speed and heavy riffs at the front.
Determination joins Aldious’ bright twin guitars, speed-driven rhythm and soaring vocals into melodic metal with real lift.
Amaranthe’s self-titled debut crosses female clean vocals, male clean vocals and harsh vocals within the same songs, connecting metal force with electronic-minded product
Beneath lets Amoral move between heavy-metal riffs, hard-rock songcraft and progressive turns.
The Beginning of Times wraps Amorphis’ mythology-rooted atmosphere in melancholy melody, weighty guitar and soft keyboard color.
Worship Music brings together Anthrax’s cutting thrash riffs, bouncing groove and commanding choruses to balance tradition with a modern punch.
Khaos Legions is built around the Amott brothers’ sharp twin guitars, Angela Gossow’s ferocious vocals and heavy, precise rhythm.
Atmosphere layers Bad Habit’s soft-edged vocals, full choruses and glossy keyboards into the warmth associated with Scandinavian AOR.
Hell Yeah! puts Black ’n Blue’s catchy choruses, thick guitar riffs and good-time rock-and-roll spirit up front.
Chickenfoot III brings Sammy Hagar, Joe Satriani, Michael Anthony and Chad Smith together around thick riffs and a free-breathing sense of performance.
Relentless Reckless Forever sends Children of Bodom’s fast guitar riffs, neoclassical keyboards and rough vocals forward at full speed.
Deconstruction packs Devin Townsend’s extreme heaviness, complex turns, humor and unease into one ambitious work.
Ghost uses acoustic guitar, soft vocals and ambient-like sound to create Devin Townsend’s quieter, open-air side.
A Dramatic Turn of Events is a turning-point album for Dream Theater, introducing Mike Mangini through intricate meters, precise ensemble work and large-scale melody.
Knock You Down is a hard-rock record built around Dynazty’s thick guitar riffs, energetic beats and instantly singable choruses.
Age of the Joker by EDGUY: track list, Spotify player, music videos and English liner notes on METAL BOOST.
Evanescence’s self-titled album layers heavy guitar, electronic texture, Amy Lee’s striking voice and piano to update the band’s dark appeal for a new moment.
Full Circle revisits FireHouse songs through new performances, bringing the band’s bright melodies, soaring vocals and lively guitar back into focus.
American Capitalist uses low chugging riffs, heavyweight beats and forceful vocals to push Five Finger Death Punch’s direct modern-metal impact.
Phoenix Rising brings Galneryus’ fluent guitar, shining keyboards and high-reaching vocals together in power metal with a distinctly Japanese melodic sense.
Sounds of a Playground Fading retains melodic-death guitar language while moving In Flames toward a more direct, modern sound.
The Landing carries Iron Savior’s science-fiction atmosphere through steel-edged riffs, fast rhythm and heroic choruses.
Eclipse brings Neal Schon’s guitar further forward, supporting Journey’s arena-rock melodies with a tougher riff foundation.
The Path of Totality pairs Korn with dubstep and EDM producers, placing the band’s heavy riffs directly against the impact of electronic sound.
Nine Lives uses soft vocals, tasteful keyboards and emotional guitar to portray the warmth of Scandinavian melodic rock.
Unto the Locust expands Machine Head’s groove-metal weight through low growling riffs, complex rhythm and long-form drama.
Tokyo Jukebox 2 is best heard not simply as a covers-related entry, but as a record that shows how MARTY FRIEDMAN translates outside material into its
Thirteen combines Megadeth’s slicing riffs, restless rhythm and Dave Mustaine’s dry, sardonic vocal character.
Metamorphosis layers Mercenary’s heavyweight guitar, melodic leads and clean-to-harsh vocal contrast to show the band’s strength amid change.
What If... lets the reunited Mr. Big members play to each other’s strengths across catchy rock songs and emotional ballads.
Ravenlord puts Mystic Prophecy’s hard guitar riffs, heroic choruses and powerful vocals at the front of a traditional power-metal record.
Here and Now uses thick guitar, heavy beats and instantly memorable choruses to deliver Nickelback’s arena-ready hard rock directly.
Somewhere in California reaffirms Night Ranger’s American hard-rock identity through bright choruses, lively twin guitars and colorful keyboards.
Imaginaerum layers Nightwish’s orchestra, choir, heavy guitar and Anette Olzon’s voice into a fantasy narrative about dreams and memory.