Dedicated to Chaos uses dark sound, irregular rhythm and electronic texture to move Queensrÿche somewhat away from a conventional metal template.
2010s Metal & Hard Rock Albums – Page 3
Browse 474 metal and hard rock albums from the 2010s, with links to release-year hubs, artists, track lists and English liner notes.
Albums
Animal Attraction packs Reckless Love’s flashy guitars, bouncing beats and instantly chantable choruses into bright, compact songs.
From Chaos to Eternity layers orchestra, choir, speed metal and narration to bring Rhapsody of Fire’s long-running fantasy story to a large-scale close.
Immortal Soul combines Riot’s sharp twin guitars, speedy rhythm and powerful high-register singing to renew the heat of traditional US metal.
Show Me How to Live reunites Royal Hunt with D.C. Cooper, reconnecting André Andersen’s grand keyboards, melodic guitar and dramatic vocals.
Comeblack is best heard not simply as a covers-related entry, but as a record that shows how SCORPIONS translates outside material into its own sense of
Shy layers expressive vocals, polished guitar and full choruses into mature British melodic rock.
Balls Out delivers Steel Panther’s oversized eighties glam-metal riffs, flashy solos and giant choruses with full commitment to humor.
Elysium layers Stratovarius’ shining keyboards, fluent guitar and high-register vocals into power metal that combines speed with emotion.
Iconoclast joins Symphony X’s low, heavy guitar riffs, complex rhythm and Russell Allen’s powerful vocals to push the heavier side of progressive metal.
Twisted Wires & the Acoustic Sessions...
Ritual layers The Black Dahlia Murder’s cutting riffs, icy melodies and feral vocals into extreme metal with high tension.
Performocracy uses The Poodles’ large choruses, melodic guitar and bright keyboards to create polished Scandinavian hard rock.
Samsara uses shadowed melodies, heavy guitar and restrained vocals to create dark, emotional gothic metal.
In Waves crosses Trivium’s sharp thrash riffs, breakdown weight and melodic choruses to display the band’s range.
Rev-Raptor puts U.D.O.’s hard riffs, forceful drums and Udo Dirkschneider’s unmistakable raspy voice at the front of traditional metal.
Rockaholic is built around Warrant’s catchy choruses, easy-moving riffs and positive rock-and-roll feel.
Forevermore layers Whitesnake’s blues-rooted thick riffs, weighty arrangements and David Coverdale’s expressive voice.
The Unforgiving builds on a narrative concept with Sharon den Adel’s clear voice, heavy guitar and electronic accents.
Stalingrad drives Accept’s sharp guitar riffs, marching rhythm and commanding choruses into a concentrated statement of traditional metal weight.
Music from Another Dimension! moves through bluesy rock and roll, catchy arena rock and emotional balladry as if surveying Aerosmith’s long career from several angles.
A War You Cannot Win combines All That Remains’ tightly chugging guitars and heavy breakdowns with large clean-vocal choruses.
XXX layers Asia’s clear keyboard colors, song-focused guitar work and measured vocals with care.
reDISCOver(ed) is best heard not simply as a covers-related entry, but as a record that shows how AXXIS translates outside material into its own sense
BLAZING CRISIS joins Blindman’s expressive vocals, fluent guitar lines and full choruses into dramatic melodic hard rock.
Riot Avenue uses flashy guitars, immediate choruses and streetwise beats to bring the pleasures of eighties hard rock into a contemporary setting.
Endless World is Cyntia’s debut, combining bright twin guitars, fast rhythm and soaring female vocals.
Epicloud fuses Devin Townsend Project’s massive choirs, thick guitars, electronic texture and surprisingly accessible melodies into one wide-screen sound.
Broken Bones is shaped by Dokken’s hard guitar riffs, shadowed melodies and a somewhat darker sound.
Sultans of Sin uses fast-moving riffs, shining keyboards and forward vocals to deliver youthful melodic metal.
Bleed & Scream joins hard, tight riffs, urgent rhythm and instantly singable choruses into a persuasive form of modern melodic rock.
Requiem for the Indifferent uses orchestral weight, heavy guitars and the contrast between clean and harsh vocals to frame social concerns on a large scale.
Bag of Bones moves Europe further into the foundations of seventies hard rock and blues rock, building a mature band sound.
Few Against Many centers Firewind’s sharp riffs, fluid solos and strong vocals in a tightly focused power-metal record.
Land of the Crimson Dawn opens Freedom Call’s bright melodies, brisk speed and fantasy-colored world to the fullest.
Angel of Salvation brings together Galneryus’s high-speed guitar and keyboards, powerful high-register vocals and a grand approach that includes extended compositions.
L'Enfant Sauvage uses low, rolling riffs, precise rhythm and guitar textures with an unusual sense of space to create metal that is both massive and reflective.
Firebirth marks Gotthard’s new beginning with a new vocalist, built from warm melody, bluesy guitar and reliable band groove.
Address the Nation uses bouncing rhythm, bright keyboards and powerful vocals to deliver modern melodic rock with confidence.
Danger Zone combines soaring vocals, tight guitar riffs and thick choruses into a polished statement of classic melodic hard rock.
Fanatic moves between powerful vocals, acoustic shading and heavy guitar riffs to show Heart’s continuing rock vitality.
Damage Control brings Jeff Scott Soto’s powerful voice, modern guitar riffs and polished melody into a varied hard-rock setting.
Silverthorn introduces a new vocalist while reconnecting Kamelot’s heavy riffs, symphonic decoration and dark storytelling.
Monster puts thick guitar riffs, simple beats and full-band choruses at the front of a direct rock and roll statement.
Resolution uses shifting rhythms, hard-chopped riffs and rough vocals to build high-tension groove metal.
El Dorado Hotel layers Lana Lane’s clear vocals, keyboard-born fantasy colors and dramatic guitar work.
Ten Tangerine Tales uses soft-edged vocals, rich keyboards and polished guitar to portray the warmth of Scandinavian melodic rock with care.
XI: The Days Before Tomorrow uses heavy guitar, shadowed melody and restrained vocals to create mature hard rock.
Living Things condenses Linkin Park’s heavy guitars, electronic beats, rap and melodic singing into short, sharp songs.
Vibrato shows Paul Gilbert’s range through fluent solos, thick rock riffs and playful arrangements.
Unbreakable puts Primal Fear’s steel-edged riffs, fast rhythm and powerful high-register vocals at the front of a title-true power-metal record.
21 joins Rage’s cutting guitars, tight rhythms and constantly changing structures into power metal that is aggressive yet intelligent.
Clockwork Angels joins Rush’s precise rhythms, shape-shifting bass, inventive guitar and science-fiction storytelling in a full concept work.
Fire From the Sky uses sharp thrash riffs, heavy breaks and rough vocals to create dark, aggressive metal.
Amaryllis combines heavy guitars, electronic texture and emotionally expansive vocals into modern rock with real scale.