1. Machine Head – UNATØNED (USA)
I’ll admit it up front: there’s bias here. I’m a Machine Head lifer. I’ve sweated through their Sydney shows, screamed the choruses with a room full of strangers who felt like brothers, and I’ve bought the albums twice, CD for the shelf, vinyl for the ritual. This band has scored entire eras of my life, so yeah, I walked into “UNATØNED” expecting to feel something.
Machine Head has always lived on the knife’s edge between reinvention and self-sabotage, and “UNATØNED” is the sound of a band embracing that duality with both hands, refusing to sand down the jagged edges. This is metal that screams at the mirror. Metal that questions its own reflection.
And I like it.
What hits hardest here isn’t the brutality, it’s the volatility. The feeling that the wheels might come off at any second, but somehow the chaos is the direction. Robb Flynn’s voice has never sounded more torn between rage and clarity, between tearing things down and trying one last time to build something that matters.
It’s the band wrestling with genre expectations, with the legacy they built and the scene that keeps trying to define them. Every riff feels like an argument with their past. Every breakdown is a refusal to accept complacency. And in that tension, in that refusal, Machine Head taps into something feral and real.
Metal isn’t supposed to be safe. This album remembers that.
Stand Out Tracks: “Outsider”, “Not Long For This World”, “Bonescraper”, “Bleeding Me Dry”, “Shards Of Shattered Dreams”, “Scorn”
2. The Night Flight Orchestra – Give Us The Moon (Sweden)
I was there on this tour, same as I was a few years back when they rolled through. And yeah, I did the VIP thing. Met them. Shook the hands that wrote the soundtrack to so many late-night drives and long-haul headspaces. I’ve been locked in since the debut dropped in 2012, and I haven’t looked back once.
Maybe that’s why Give Us The Moon hits the way it does. It’s not just another record, it’s another chapter in a story I’ve been following for over a decade. TNFO have always existed in their own cinematic universe, part AOR nostalgia, part neon-lit fantasy, part heart-on-sleeve sincerity. But this one feels like a culmination: tight, melodic, polished without losing the humanity. It’s the sound of a band who know exactly who they are and exactly what they’re doing
But “Give Us The Moon” carries a different weight. It’s the first album without Dave Andersson, founding member, core songwriter, a pillar of the band’s DNA. You can feel the absence, not as a void, but as a presence. The songs shimmer with that bittersweet afterglow you get when a band pushes forward because stopping isn’t an option.
And yet the record still soars.
There’s joy in these songs, but also yearning. The sense that we once believed in things bigger than us, and maybe still could.
Every chorus feels like the high point of the night. Every verse feels like the road leading there. And whether you lived through the era or discovered it through YouTube artifacts, “Give Us The Moon” hits with the same truth:
We’re all searching for the magic we lost… and sometimes, the only way forward is back through the stars.
Standout Tracks: “Like The Beating Of The Heart”, “Melbourne May I”, “Runaways”, “Give Us The Moon”
3. Landfall – Wide Open Sky (Brazil)
Landfall were one of those Frontiers discoveries that didn’t just slip onto my radar, they punched through it. Their 2020 debut, “The Turning Point”, arrived in the middle of lockdown chaos and felt like a flare in the dark: bright, melodic, unapologetically AOR, the kind of record that made you remember why hooks and heart still matter.
I was in from that moment.
Then “Elevate” hit in 2022 and confirmed it, they weren’t a one-off spark, they were a band worth following, worth investing in, worth waiting for.
And now we’re here.
There’s nothing more rebellious in today’s overproduced, hyper-calculated landscape than sincerity. “Wide Open Sky” understands that perfectly. Landfall isn’t trying to shock you. They’re trying to reach you.
This album lives in that sweet emotional bandwidth between familiarity and freshness, a place most bands try to fake and fail. Landfall hits it because they’re honest about who they are: a melodic hard rock band that refuses to apologize for loving melody, heart, and clean, powerful hooks.
There’s courage in restraint. There’s confidence in not overreaching.
And there’s beauty in doing the simple things extremely well.
Three albums in, they sound like a band refining their craft with each step, stripping away the fat, sharpening the hooks, tightening the storytelling. These aren’t songs that reinvent the wheel. They’re songs that remind you why wheels matter: movement, momentum, connection.
Standout Tracks: “Tree Of Life”, “SOS”, “Running In Circles”, “No Tomorrow”, “Higher Than The Moon”
4. Teramaze – The Harmony Machine (Australia)
Teramaze hit my life out of nowhere in 2020 with “I Wonder”, and it stopped me cold. One of those rare albums where every track is a keeper, no skips, no filler, just a band firing on every cylinder with clarity and intent. That was the moment they locked in for me.
Teramaze has always been one of those bands operating just outside the prog mainstream, too thoughtful for the “riff Olympics,” too heavy for the art-rock crowd. “The Harmony Machine” is the record that embraces that outsider identity fully.
This album is intricate without bragging about it. Heavy without shouting it. Emotional without melodrama.
Where most prog bands treat songwriting as a riddle to be solved, Teramaze uses complexity as a storytelling device. The twists serve the journey, not the guitarist’s ego. And you feel it: tension, doubt, revelation, collapse, rebuilding… all woven into the architecture of the songs.
There’s darkness here, but it’s purposeful.
There’s light, but it’s earned.
Call it progressive metal for people who care more about narrative than notation. It’s heavy music with a novelist’s sense of pacing, a rare and necessary mutation in a genre that often confuses density with depth.
Standout Tracks: “Like A Cyborg”, “Sinister”, “Perfect World”, “Desire Colours N Lust”, “Black Sound”, “The Harmony Machine”
5. Sisters Doll – Scars (Australia)
I found them this year through “Scars”, and that was it. One listen and you realise this band isn’t operating in the same frequency as the rest of Australia’s rock scene.
Because here’s the thing: Sisters Doll isn’t just a band; it’s four brothers raised on a steady drip-feed of KISS, Budgie, Firehouse, Mötley, Van Halen, Magnum, Aerosmith, Alice Cooper, the whole electricity-soaked DNA of 70s and 80s hard rock. When your dad has KISS posters on the walls and riffs pumping through the house before you even know your times tables, it rewires you. You grow up thinking this is what music is supposed to feel like: oversized, unapologetic, melodically dangerous.
And their name?
Pure lightning-in-a-moment creativity. The brothers at a computer, flicking through classic logos. Twisted Sister… New York Dolls… and then someone blurted out “Sisters Doll.” No corporate brainstorming session. No branding consultant. Just instinct, exactly how rock bands should be named.
That’s what hit me when “Scars”landed. The immediacy. The honesty. The sense that these four brothers aren’t trying to revive something, they genuinely are the continuation of that lineage. They carry the attitude in their blood. The hooks are polished, but the energy is raw.
Sisters Doll might be Australia’s best-kept secret right now, but secrets like this don’t stay hidden for long.
“Scars” takes every element, big choruses, shiny melodies, theatrical moments, and turns them into something raw and exposed. This isn’t glam for glam’s sake. This is glam dragged through lived experience, glam hardened and cracked in the right places.
The biggest surprise?
The vulnerability hits harder than the riffs.
The hooks are undeniable, but it’s the honesty that sticks. They’re not resurrecting the past. They’re weaponizing it. And the result is an album that earns every one of its emotional punches.
Standout Tracks: “Climbing Out Of Hell”, “Prisoner”, “Change”, “Kiss Me”
Plus they do a cool cover of “God Gave Rock N Roll To You”, released as a single in 2023.
6. Days of Jupiter – The World Was Never Enough (Sweden)
Days of Jupiter came into my world at exactly the moment I needed them.
Disturbed went on hiatus, and suddenly that gap, the groove-heavy, anthemic, modern-metal fix, was wide open.
That’s when “Secrets Brought to Life” hit me in 2012. It wasn’t an imitation; it was a different branch of the same evolutionary tree. Same muscular riff language, same emotional voltage, but with a Scandinavian coldness woven through the melody. It scratched the itch and created a new one at the same time.
Then came the run of albums that cemented it:
“Only Ashes Remain” (2015), the band at their most sharpened and dramatic, leaning into the fire.
“New Awakening” (2017), a title that felt prophetic, because this is where they stretched the edges.
“Panoptical” (2018), their tightest, most conceptually aware work, a panoramic scan of everything they’d become.
And then… silence.
The kind of disappearance that feels permanent in this genre, where momentum is everything.
But somehow, they’ve resurrected themselves.
“The World Was Never Enough” isn’t just a comeback record, it’s the shockwave after an unexpected return.
I didn’t expect them to return. That’s what makes this era exciting.
This feels less like “another album” and more like unfinished business finding its way back to daylight.
Massive soundscapes often swallow the message. Not here.
The vocals soar, the guitars punch, the rhythm section feels like tectonic plates grinding. But instead of collapsing under all that weight, the songs expand, breathe, and build.
This band understands contrast.
That power means nothing without space.
That melody means nothing without pressure.
What emerges is a record that feels like a fight and a release… a catharsis wrapped in polished production. It’s metal engineered for scale, but powered by emotion.
Standout Tracks: “The World Was Never Enough”, “The Fix”, “Parazite”, “Invincible”
7. Jimmy Barnes – Defiant (Australia)
What can I even say about Jimmy Barnes?
I’m a full-blown fanboy and have been for as long as I can remember. The Cold Chisel era lit the fuse, those songs were stitched into the fabric of this country long before I ever understood why they mattered.
Then the solo records hit, and each one felt like a chapter in a life lived louder, harder, and more honestly than most of us dare to imagine. Even his foray into soul, the books, the memoirs, the cookbooks, if Barnes put his name on it, I absorbed it.
He’s one of Australia’s most iconic voices, a force of nature wrapped in grit and heart, and no matter how wide the legacy stretches, he’ll always be our working-class man.
That’s the framework I carry into “Defiant”, not objectivity, not distance, but decades of connection, admiration, and a deep sense that his roar has been part of the soundtrack of my own life.
Barnes has been singing for decades like the world is trying to take something from him and he refuses to let it go. “Defiant” is the sound of that refusal reaching its final, volcanic form.
There are albums that preserve legacy. This one burns it into steel.
Every track feels earned, the rasp, the roar, the cracks that most singers would try to fix. Barnes doesn’t fix them. He weaponizes them. The grit tells the story long before the lyrics do. You can hear the years, the miles, the survival.
Working-class rock isn’t a genre. It’s a biography.
And this album is another chapter in a life built on refusing to die quietly.
Standout Tracks: “That’s What You Do For Love”, “Never Stop Loving You”, “Beyond The River Bend”, “New Day”, “Defiant”, “The Long Road”
8. WET – Apex (Sweden/USA)
W.E.T. is one of those rare Frontiers projects that didn’t just work, it over-delivered. On paper it looked like another label-engineered collaboration, the kind that burns bright for one album and quietly disappears. But when you put Robert Säll from Work of Art, Erik Mårtensson from Eclipse, and Jeff Scott Soto from Talisman in the same creative orbit, something different happened. The chemistry wasn’t theoretical, it was audible.
Their blend of melodic hard rock, arena-sized hooks, and polished contemporary rock hit me immediately when the debut landed in 2009. What was supposed to be a one-off turned into a proper band with multiple studio albums and even a live release, something almost unheard of for these “assembled” projects.
And that’s why they stuck with me.
There’s a moment every few years when a melodic rock record lands that feels like a line in the sand. “Apex” is exactly that.
WET didn’t chase trends. The production is meticulous, but the emotion bleeds through untouched. The choruses feel designed for stadiums, but the lyrics read like private confessions. It’s the rare fusion of precision and humanity, a record that rewards both technical analysis and emotional surrender.
Put simply: this is melodic rock done at the highest possible level.
A reminder of what the genre can be when ambition and heart align.
Standout Tracks: “Believer”, “Love Conquers All”, “Where Are The Heroes Now”, “Stay Alive”, “Day By Day”
9. Babylon AD – When the World Stops (USA)
When Babylon A.D.’s debut dropped at the end of the ’80s, I genuinely thought they were going to explode. They had the swagger, the hooks, the imagery, you could slot them right beside Crüe, Jovi, or Skid Row and it made perfect sense. I was ready for them to be one of those bands, the ones who went from the clubs to the arenas in a single breath. But it never quite happened.
The second album arrived, made a ripple, and vanished quicker than it deserved to. Then Seattle hit, and like a lot of bands from that era, Babylon A.D. slipped into the fog. For years it was radio silence. If you weren’t on MTV, the world forgot you existed.
Then Napster came along and, legalities aside, it resurrected whole corners of my musical DNA. Suddenly people were trading deep cuts, forgotten albums, and long-lost bands.
Babylon A.D. reappeared in the wild, passed around like a secret handshake. It didn’t make them chart-toppers, but it made them relevant again. It reminded me why I’d believed in them in the first place: there was real fire in those early songs, a spark worth rediscovering.
It’s a band that survived the cracks of an era and found its way back into the conversation.
“When the World Stops” is not a nostalgia trip. It’s a reckoning.
The riffs feel lived-in, the grooves carry weight, the lyrics sound like they’re written by people who’ve survived things rather than imagined them. There’s hunger here, but also honesty, the kind you can’t fake. It’s a rough-edged record, intentionally so, and that’s exactly why it works.
In an era obsessed with polish, Babylon AD rediscover the power of imperfection.
Standout Tracks: “When The World Stops”, “Torn”, “The Damage Is Done”
10. H.E.A.T – Welcome To The Future (Sweden)
What can I say about H.E.A.T?
They’re one of those Swedish bands that arrived exactly when I needed them, filling a void I didn’t even realise had gotten so wide. Melodic heavy rock had gone missing from my life, at least in the way I wanted it: big choruses, sharp hooks, bright production, and that sense of forward momentum only the best Scandinavian acts seem to bottle.
I first heard “Address the Nation” in 2012, and it hit with the force of a reminder. Oh right, this is what this music is supposed to feel like.
From there I immediately went backwards, digging into the first two albums, discovering the foundation they’d already laid. And once you’re in, you’re in. I’ve been following them ever since, album to album, lineup to lineup, watching them refine that hybrid of AOR sheen and hard-rock muscle into something unmistakably theirs.
H.E.A.T. made melodic heavy rock feel alive again. And every new release since has been another reason to stay plugged in.
But “Welcome To The Future” is the first time it feels like they’ve truly broken the gravitational pull of their own past.
This album is wired with urgency. You can feel the momentum in every chorus, the forward push in every riff. They’re not reinventing themselves, they’re evolving.
The guitars burn neon. The whole record feels like a mission statement:
Rock isn’t dead. It just needs believers.
And H.E.A.T sound like the last true evangelists.
Standout Tracks: “Running To You”, “Disaster”, “In Disguise”, “The End”
My Final Thoughts
I went into 2025 not knowing what the hell I even wanted to hear anymore. Burnout crept in from every angle, too many albums, too much algorithmic sameness, too much noise masquerading as discovery. My ears felt tired. My brain felt full. But I’m a lifer, and lifers don’t quit, we recalibrate. So I went back to the beginning. The stuff that built me. The records that knew my moods before I could name them. And once those old foundations were steady again, I opened the door to the new. Some records blindsided me. Some left me cold. Some whispered, “stick around… we’re not done yet.”
And that’s the point. These ten albums aren’t trophies, they’re the map of a year spent listening with intention. A reminder that perfection is a fairy tale, but impact is real. Music still has the ability to shock us, disappoint us, challenge us, and rewire our circuitry for an hour at a time. Even the albums that didn’t quite land took a swing, and that swing matters. Because the real story isn’t the ranking—it’s the pursuit. The restlessness. The search for something that hits deeper than expectation. That’s why we listen. That’s why we never stop.