After a major shift in its vocal setup, Atreyu move toward more open melodies and larger choruses on Baptize.
2020s Metal & Hard Rock Albums – Page 2
Browse 251 metal and hard rock albums from the 2020s, with links to release-year hubs, artists, track lists and English liner notes.
Albums
Dark Connection pushes Beast in Black’s power-metal drive into a neon-lit, cyberpunk world shaped by eighties synth-pop.
Black Label Society’s eleventh album is packed with Zakk Wylde’s thick, sustaining riffs, blues-rooted phrasing and low-slung groove.
Hellbound strips Buckcherry’s straight-ahead hard rock down to its most immediate form.
Street Lethal rebuilds Crazy Lixx’s love of eighties hard rock and glam metal with modern punch and a cinematic sense of motion.
Crowne’s debut presents Scandinavian melodic-rock polish in a remarkably clear and accessible form.
Turning to Crime is Deep Purple’s first studio album built entirely from songs written by others.
The Puzzle / Snuggles is a useful way to hear DEVIN TOWNSEND from a different angle within the 2021 catalogue.
Dream Theater’s fifteenth studio album gathers complex rhythm, precision unison work and melodic vocals into long-form progressive-metal architecture.
Wired sharpens Eclipse’s modern melodic-rock momentum with very little wasted space.
Omega expands Epica’s symphonic-metal scale to a grand, carefully controlled level.
On its first studio album of mostly original material in roughly a decade, Evanescence keep their gothic shadow while moving toward a more direct, contemporary rock sound
Returning to the studio after a long gap, Exodus deliver an extended blast of uncompromising thrash metal.
Winterbane develops Frozen Crown’s strengths—speed, twin-guitar melody and clear vocals—into a more three-dimensional third album.
Union Gives Strength gathers Galneryus’s long-developed strengths—dramatic melody, complex movement and virtuosic playing—into a record with a strong sense of collective
Fortitude retains Gojira’s low-end groove, machine-like riffs and massive rhythmic force while allowing more melody and openness into the frame.
Centered on Steve Overland’s rich, expressive voice, Groundbreaker’s second album delivers smooth, high-quality melodic rock.
Heart, Mind and Soul tightly connects Hardline’s thick guitar riffs with soaring vocal melody.
Recorded in the Pumpkins United lineup with Kai Hansen and Michael Kiske alongside Andi Deris, this self-titled album is a major meeting point in Helloween’s history.
Senjutsu pushes Iron Maiden’s large-scale instincts further, layering riffs, melody, key changes and quiet space across extended songs.
Labyrinth’s ninth album places its trademark melancholy melody and bright Italian power-metal guitar work inside more varied arrangements.
Above the Beyond carefully balances Leverage’s transparent Scandinavian melodic-metal character with thick hard-rock riffing.
Wolfgang Van Halen handles vocals, guitar, bass and drums on this debut, establishing a musical identity of his own.
Made with a varied group of guest vocalists, Immortal feels like a celebration of Michael Schenker’s long career.
Nestor’s debut openly celebrates eighties melodic rock, but it carries more warmth than a simple revival exercise.
Named after the phrase “And The Band Played On,” ATBPO reasserts Night Ranger’s arena-rock momentum and the strength of its seasoned ensemble.
Werewolves of Portland again shows Paul Gilbert using the guitar not merely as a vehicle for speed, but as a singing voice.
Resurrection Day puts Rage’s twin-guitar lineup at the front, intensifying the mix of heavy riffs, speed and melodic guitar interplay.
Glory for Salvation expands the central pleasures of symphonic power metal on Rhapsody of Fire’s thirteenth album.
Built around Paul Shortino, Amir Derakh and Matt Thorne, Rough Cutt 3 arrives after a long gap with a sound that keeps traces of eighties L.A.
Lockdown 2020 is best heard not simply as a covers-related entry, but as a record that shows how SAMMY HAGAR translates outside material into its own
With Ronnie Romero as its new vocalist, Sunstorm move toward firmer, more powerful melodic metal while retaining the smoother AOR character of earlier work.
21st Century Love Songs gathers the Wildhearts’ punk impulse, hard-rock weight and power-pop melodic gift into one restless body of work.
Trivium’s tenth album integrates thrash sharpness, metalcore aggression and progressive structure at high density.
Across a large sixteen-song running order, U.D.O. deliver traditional German heavy metal straight on.
W.E.T.’s fourth album brings the strengths of Jeff Scott Soto, Erik Martensson and Robert Säll into one focused band sound.
Parabellum expands Yngwie Malmsteen’s neoclassical-metal language into an even denser guitar orchestra.
After a long absence, Altaria return with Wisdom, a record that presents bright Scandinavian melodic-metal lines alongside approachable hard-rock warmth.
Halo is a refined fusion of the death-metal weight, folk-derived melody and progressive arrangement that Amorphis have developed over decades.
Deceivers sharpens Arch Enemy’s melodic-death-metal design with exceptional precision.
Tobias Sammet assembles a varied cast of singers and builds theatrical storytelling and oversized melody as a sequence of connected scenes.
With new vocalist Gabriel Keyes, Crashdïet restart their rough-edged glam-metal machine without losing its identity.
Diamond Star Halos expands Def Leppard’s trademark blend of stacked harmonies, bright guitars and pop momentum into a broader palette.
Lightwork retains Devin Townsend’s talent for enormous walls of sound while giving them more air and calm than some of his recent work.
As its title suggests, Divisive addresses distrust and division while returning to Disturbed’s direct heaviness and large-scale melody.
Centered on Herman Frank, Dreamtide’s return revisits the strengths of melodic hard rock with care and restraint.
Final Advent finds Sweden’s Dynazty linking heavy riffs, polished electronic textures and arena-sized choruses with impressive density.
Shangri-La finds Edenbridge building a fantasy world around Sabine Edelsbacher’s clear voice and Lanvall’s grand arrangements.
Closer to the Edge places Harry Hess’s warm yet focused voice at the center of polished melodic rock.
AfterLife draws on Five Finger Death Punch’s direct strengths: hard riffs, marching rhythms and Ivan Moody’s raw vocal presence.
FM’s thirteenth album refines the band’s urbane melodic-rock identity with relaxed performances and carefully shaped harmonies.
After a long gap, Giant return around David Huff and Mike Brignardello, with Kent Hilli’s voice helping restate the appeal of their melodic hard rock.
Fronted by the soaring voice of Kristian Fyhr, Ginevra’s debut delivers Scandinavian melodic-rock clarity in a modern sound.
With Kenny Leckremo back in the band, H.E.A.T reclaim the speed, melody and positive energy that shaped their early identity.
Abrakadabra blends Hardcore Superstar’s glam-metal flash with punkish roughness.