Rust keeps Crashdïet’s glam and sleaze-metal flash intact while bringing more weight and wounded atmosphere into the picture.
Glam Metal 2010s Albums
Browse 29 Glam Metal albums from the 2010s in the METAL BOOST catalog, with artist pages, track lists, Spotify players and English liner notes.
Albums
Forever Wild openly embraces the spirit of eighties arena rock and rebuilds it with contemporary weight.
Heavy Metal Rules puts Steel Panther’s love of eighties glam metal, excessive humor and surprisingly solid musicianship directly out front.
Reidolized (The Soundtrack to the Crimson Idol) revisits familiar material through the voice, production weight and arrangement sense of its recording
Ruff Justice tightens the flash of eighties glam and sleaze metal into a modern frame.
Lower the Bar sees Steel Panther recreating the language of eighties glam metal through exaggeration and humor.
Louder Harder Faster brings Warrant’s instinct for catchy hard rock into a thicker guitar sound and a more forceful rhythmic frame.
InVader by RECKLESS LOVE: track list, Spotify player, music videos and English liner notes on METAL BOOST.
The self-titled Def Leppard revisits the band’s stacked harmonies, polished guitar sound and buoyant rhythm with a contemporary feel.
Human Era delivers Trixter’s bright guitar, sunny choruses and positive rock ’n’ roll spirit directly.
Golgotha layers W.A.S.P.’s heavy guitar riffs, dramatic vocals and dark storytelling into theatrical heavy metal.
The self-titled Crazy Lixx gathers riffs, synth color and cinematic atmosphere that recall eighties American hard rock.
All You Can Eat loads up on the oversized choruses, fast guitar work and mischievous spirit of eighties glam metal.
Better Days Comin' places detailed rhythmic shifts and layered arrangements inside Winger’s catchy hard-rock framework.
The Savage Playground layers the glamour of eighties-style glam metal with a rougher street edge and a darker mood.
Spirit packs bright synthesizers, flashy guitar and sing-along choruses into Reckless Love’s glam-rock world.
Riot Avenue uses flashy guitars, immediate choruses and streetwise beats to bring the pleasures of eighties hard rock into a contemporary setting.
Broken Bones is shaped by Dokken’s hard guitar riffs, shadowed melodies and a somewhat darker sound.
New Audio Machine is Trixter’s return to straightforward American hard rock, driven by bright choruses, lively guitar and easy-rolling rhythm.
A Different Kind of Truth reunites Van Halen with David Lee Roth and brings the band’s thick riffs, bouncing rhythm and unruly vocal personality back to the front.
Hell Yeah! puts Black ’n Blue’s catchy choruses, thick guitar riffs and good-time rock-and-roll spirit up front.
Full Circle revisits FireHouse songs through new performances, bringing the band’s bright melodies, soaring vocals and lively guitar back into focus.
Animal Attraction packs Reckless Love’s flashy guitars, bouncing beats and instantly chantable choruses into bright, compact songs.
Balls Out delivers Steel Panther’s oversized eighties glam-metal riffs, flashy solos and giant choruses with full commitment to humor.
Rockaholic is built around Warrant’s catchy choruses, easy-moving riffs and positive rock-and-roll feel.
Generation Wild joins Crashdïet’s sleazy rock-and-roll charge to catchy choruses and slightly shadowed melody.
New Religion rebuilds the huge choruses, bright guitar and forceful beat of eighties hard rock with a modern sound.
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.