Browse 2000s Albums albums in the METAL BOOST catalog.
Rock Albums
Explore 20 Rock albums in the METAL BOOST catalog, organized by decade and linked to detailed artist and album pages.
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Latest Albums
Cult layers To/Die/For’s dark gothic-metal atmosphere, lyrical guitar and melancholy vocals.
Toto XIV uses Toto’s refined ensemble work, rich chord sense and dependable melody to portray mature rock and AOR at their best.
Samsara uses shadowed melodies, heavy guitar and restrained vocals to create dark, emotional gothic metal.
Wounds Wide Open combines To/Die/For’s cold guitar color, sunken rhythm, and melancholy vocal character.
Falling in Between joins Toto’s polished pop instinct to hard-rock weight and progressive construction.
IV uses dark guitar, low-set rhythm and melancholy vocals to build gothic-metal shade.
Jaded combines heavy guitar, cold programming and shadowed vocals to build a melancholic world.
Through the Looking Glass is best heard not simply as a covers-related entry, but as a record that shows how TOTO translates outside material into its
Epilogue layers gothic-metal darkness with accessible melody in To/Die/For’s characteristic way.
All Eternity introduces To/Die/For through heavy guitars, shadowed keyboards and low, emotional vocals.
Mindfields uses Toto’s considerable musicianship in service of atmosphere rather than display.
Tambu keeps Toto’s precise ensemble work but shifts its center of gravity toward lower, heavier rhythms and muted color.
Kingdom of Desire retains Toto’s polish while bringing guitar weight and a more immediate band feel to the front.
The Seventh One unites Toto’s precise rhythm work, layered keyboards and open-hearted vocals without allowing studio polish to turn cold.
Fahrenheit keeps Toto’s precise musicianship while placing Joseph Williams’s bright, soaring voice at the center.
Isolation keeps Toto’s exceptional musicianship while moving toward a harder, more rock-oriented texture than its predecessor.
Toto IV joins the band’s formidable playing to detailed, immediately appealing songwriting.
Turn Back keeps Toto’s polished studio discipline but brings harder guitars and faster rhythm to the front.
Hydra shows Toto using exceptional instrumental command not as an end in itself, but as a way to create distinct colors and stories from song to song.
Toto’s debut brings together the technical command of veteran session players and the immediate pull of pop songwriting.