The BRAND NEW studio album from British gothic rock legends THE MISSION!!!! Produced by Wayne Hussey & Tim Palmer, ANOTHER FALL FROM GRACE is the lost link between The Sisters Of Mercy First And Last And Always and The Mission s God's Own Medicine…
It starts with the flick of a switch. Then a squeal of feedback. Finally, the mother of all blues-rock riffs rises from the white noise, and Sky Won't Fall races out of the blocks in style. If the prospect of a new solo album from this titan of the British music scene didn't already have your undivided attention, then thirty seconds into Chains Of Hope, Stevie Nimmo has you by the lapels. Released in 2016 on Manhaton, it's a curious realisation that Sky Won't Fall is only the second solo album of Stevie's decorated career. In mitigation, the Glaswegian bandleader has been busy: since the late-'90s, there has been the small matter of helming legendary blues-rock outfit The Nimmo Brothers alongside younger sibling Alan.
Freedom To Glide are a two man outfit that stem from out of a Pink Floyd tribute band called Darkside Of The Wall. It is made up of Andy Nixon and Pete Riley. With a handful of EP’s and the first two in a trilogy of albums, Rain and Fall under their belts, Freedom To Glide have set themselves up pretty well as a formidable band. Their current offering in the planned trilogy about life between both World War I and World War 2 have certainly cemented the band in the progressive rock community as concept specialists.
Fall is the second in the continuation of the trilogy. Fall is also a common themed or a thematic concept album where there is not a deliberate intro and concluding outro…
Viulisti Kreeta-Maria Kentala on Suomen vanhan musiikin liikkeen uranuurtaja, joka on kotonaan solistina, johtajana ja pedagogina niin barokin, klassisen ja romantiikan ajan musiikin kuin kansanmusiikinkin parissa. Hän konsertoi säännöllisesti sekä soolo- ja kamarimusiikkiprojekteissa että eri orkesterien solistina, konserttimestarina ja johtajana.
Like Mick Jagger before him, Steven Tyler itched to launch a solo career, but where Mick struck while the iron was relatively hot – 20 years after "Satisfaction," true, yet the Rolling Stones still packed arenas – the Aerosmith singer took the better part of a decade to figure out what he wanted to do on his own. Stumbling through a starring gig on American Idol and an accompanying flop single that led to an awkward 2012 reunion with Aerosmith, Tyler finally resurfaced as a country singer – a surprise, because the closest he ever came to country was the Desmond Child co-write "What It Takes," a power ballad that provides a good touchstone for 2016's We're All Somebody from Somewhere.