The Stage turns themes of space, science and existence into complex, dramatic heavy metal.
2010s Metal & Hard Rock Albums – Page 7
Browse 474 metal and hard rock albums from the 2010s, with links to release-year hubs, artists, track lists and English liner notes.
Albums
To the Light shapes Blindman’s lyrical melody, expansive vocals and precise guitar work into traditional hard rock with care.
This House Is Not for Sale turns Bon Jovi’s sense of band unity and purpose into direct rock songs.
Urban Night naturally joins Cyntia’s urban pop instinct to the sharp guitar edge of heavy metal.
Atoma joins Dark Tranquillity’s cutting melodic-death-metal harmonies to an atmosphere of cold, beautiful keyboards.
The Evil Divide brings together Death Angel’s lively speed and twisting guitar work in a tightly focused record.
Transcendence lets Devin Townsend move freely between massive guitar sound, layered choirs and quieter emotional expression.
Forward in Reverse is Dizzy Mizz Lizzy’s studio return after a long gap, joining intricate guitar phrases, heavy riffs and melodic instinct at high density.
The Astonishing by DREAM THEATER: track list, Spotify player, music videos and English liner notes on METAL BOOST.
Titanic Mass places Dynazty’s large melodies and strong vocal delivery inside a heavier, more modern metal sound.
The Holographic Principle joins orchestral-style arrangements, choirs and heavy guitar riffs inside large-scale compositions.
Pimp Your Past rebuilds key material from Fair Warning’s first three albums in the band’s 2016 sound.
Theories of Flight raises Fates Warning’s progressive-metal tension through complex rhythm, fluid guitar and introspective vocals.
One Step Over the Line builds classic melodic rock around a vocal performance that is both powerful and warm.
Master of Light lets Freedom Call’s bright melody, speed and positive singalongs ring out with particular openness.
Magma keeps Gojira’s massive riffs and unusual rhythmic identity while moving into quieter, more inward-looking territory.
Human Nature builds dramatic melodic hard rock around powerful vocals and thick guitar.
Beautiful Broken revisits parts of Heart’s catalogue through a present-day lens, pairing reworked material with a small number of new songs.
Battles connects In Flames’ metallic guitar push with more open vocal melody and a carefully modern sound.
Titancraft delivers Iron Savior’s science-fiction world and thick-riffed German power metal with complete confidence.
Incarnate gathers Killswitch Engage’s sharp metalcore riffs, breakdowns and melodic choruses into a concentrated form.
The Serenity of Suffering brings Korn’s low, sinking guitars, uneasy bouncing rhythm and pain-filled vocals to the front.
In Disguise is a covers record in which Last Autumn’s Dream recast songs from different eras through their own melodic-rock touch.
Dystopia concentrates Megadeth’s sharp riffs, crooked structures and cold, pressurized atmosphere into a tightly focused record.
XI restates the sturdy appeal of traditional American heavy metal through hard riffs, heavy rhythm and commanding vocal lines.
Hardwired. to Self-Destruct places Metallica’s quick, explosive thrash instinct beside longer pieces that patiently accumulate weight.
War Brigade puts Mystic Prophecy’s thick guitar riffs and forceful beat at the front of a combative power-metal record.
Nordic Union’s debut condenses Scandinavian melodic rock’s clear keyboards, firm guitars and expansive vocals into exceptionally direct songs.
I Can Destroy puts Paul Gilbert’s extraordinary guitar ability in service of the pleasure of the songs.
Rulebreaker assembles Primal Fear’s hard-edged riffs, piercing high vocals and heavy rhythm with great precision.
The Devil Strikes Again reunites Rage’s speed-metal sharpness, heavy riff pressure and technical development in one aggressive flow.
InVader by RECKLESS LOVE: track list, Spotify player, music videos and English liner notes on METAL BOOST.
Into the Legend unites Rhapsody of Fire’s fantasy storytelling, orchestral grandeur and racing power metal.
The Ninth Hour presents Sonata Arctica’s lyrical melody and storytelling in more measured structures.
Stand in the Fire brings together Striker’s speed-metal guitar attack, energetic beat and memorable choruses.
Edge of Tomorrow carefully links Sunstorm’s smooth AOR feel to melodic metal with firm guitar weight.
Brotherhood of the Snake sharpens Testament’s Bay Area thrash force through modern density and precise execution.
Hidden City gathers the Cult’s mystical atmosphere and hard-rock force into a dense, heavy sound.
Ghost of Graceland delivers Treat’s colorful melodic hard rock through mature playing and a full sound.
Tabula Rasa uses clear keyboards, smooth vocals and lyrical guitar to draw out the best qualities of Scandinavian AOR and melodic rock.
World on Fire commits fully to the neoclassical-metal language Yngwie Malmsteen has made his own.
The Rise of Chaos delivers Accept’s steel-hard riffs and large choruses with present-day weight.
Unlimited Diffusion expands Aldious’ ornate twin guitars, speed and clear vocal character into a more colorful melodic-metal setting.
Madness retains All That Remains’ metalcore edge while reaching toward wider melody and a more modern-rock texture.
For the Demented centers Annihilator on thrash-metal sharpness while layering Jeff Waters’ intricate guitar work and uneasy melody around it.
Will to Power keeps Arch Enemy’s melodic-death-metal attack intact while widening the contrast between harsh force, vocal melody and arrangement.
Retrolution presents Axxis’ positive melodic hard rock in an especially colorful production.
Berserker is Beast in Black’s explosive debut, fusing power-metal velocity, flashy synthesizer color and eighties-style pop melody in one sweep.
Ruff Justice tightens the flash of eighties glam and sleaze metal into a modern frame.
Infinite finds Deep Purple drawing on blues, hard rock and improvisational chemistry with both calmness and fire.
Six delivers the pleasures of traditional heavy metal in a direct burst of thick riffs and large choruses.
Monumentum packs Eclipse’s modern hard-rock precision and melodic-rock-sized hooks into a very concentrated form.
The Great Momentum layers Edenbridge’s symphonic grandeur over the forward force of firm guitar riffs.
Walk the Earth crystallizes the mix Europe have developed since their reunion: the weight of seventies hard rock and a distinctly Scandinavian sense of melody.
Synthesis reimagines Evanescence’s earlier songs through orchestra and electronic texture, while also adding new material.