Metal Music

I found out relatively recently that I like power metal music. After having listened to Dragonforce for about a year I was looking around for other similar groups, and I came upon Stratovarius and Sonata Arctica, among others. Well heck, let me just give a brief rundown of some of the bands that I tried out in the span of a few months as I learned more about the genre.

Stratovarius
Beautiful soaring power with clear cutting vocals that slash across the scene. I admit that some of the lyrics are a little cheesey, but a lot of them I can identify with.
Sonata Arctica
Powerful vocal harmonies and catchy melodies give the music a drive that just blasts forward. Great driving music.
Dragonforce
Amazing music, amazing musicianship, I got introduced to these guys (like so many people) via Guitar Hero. I listened to their music pretty much all the way when I took a 1600 mile road trip, and believe me that Dragonforce is great for driving 80 MPH!
Kamelot
I've got a few of their CDs but I've yet to really critically listen to them.
Helloween
I've only listened to the first few Helloween albums, and for some reason I'm not really drawn to it. There are a few songs: “Twilight of the Gods” is amazing.
Gamma Ray
The opposite of Helloween, I've listened to the latest four Gamma Ray albums, and I have mixed feelings. The musicianship is generally good, but I think the songwriting varies a lot. I've got it in my queue to listen back in time a little further.
Blind Guardian
Their early music was much more thrash and speed metal than their later work, which originally put me off somewhat. But after several subsequent listenings I really grew to like Follow the Blind. Their later work is frankly nothing short of amazing, as their music evolves into huge waves of powerful harmonies and massively-multitracked vocals. There's a very good reason why there's a fine tradition of referring to Blind Guardian's music as incredibly epic.
Rhapsody (of Fire)
to come
Symphony X
to come
Iron Savior
to come
Stormwarrior
to come
Freedom Call
to come

Stratovarius

Polaris

With the guy who wrote like 90% of their material gone, I had some trepidation about this album, as it was the last one I bought and I already loved the earlier stuff. Don't get me wrong, I'm not like some critic that had been following them forever, but I wondered if it would be a totally different sound, you know? Well, this album had me hooked at the first song, and the thing as a whole is one of my favorites.

Sonata Arctica

Reckoning Night

The first album I heard from Sonata Arctica was Reckoning Night which is still my favorite. This work is a musical tour de force (you may sigh because of the cliche, but it's true) with amazing harmonies and melodies that drive forward throughout. The use of quieter spots such as “Reckoning Day, Reckoning Night” punctuate and give much-needed pause between immense displays of songsmanship.

Blind Guardian

Follow the Blind

Initially the style of this album really put me off. It was too dark, too chaotic, for my tastes. It's a far cry from what I was really used to hearing at the time, clean cut stuff like DragonForce and Sonata Arctica, and really quite far from their latest album. But as I gave it a few more listens I really came to appreciate the sort of raw power in songs like “Banish from Sanctuary” and “Fast to Madness.” It's not terribly polished, like their later work has become, but it carries a lot of strength.

A Twist in the Myth

This is a really amazing album; musically it continues the evolution of a thicker and more complex sound which overlays guitar and overtracks lead vocals to create a powerful surge of interwoven harmonies.

Gamma Ray

I liked Kai Hansen's vocals in Helloween, so I thought I'd get a few Gamma Ray albums to see what he did there. It's a mixed bag: in my first few albums, No World Order was great, and Majestic was good too, but Land of the Free II and To the Metal! were not as impressive. So I eventually decided to have a listen to the other studio albums they did after Kai took over lead vocals.

Land of the Free II

There are some good tunes on this album, like “Into the Storm” and “Leaving Hell.” It's really unfortunate though that the mix on this album is, in my opinion, absolutely horrible. There are a lot of low frequencies, and the high range has really been neglected. The result feels very muddy, there's a huge difference between listening to this album and DragonForce's Sonic Firestorm which is comparatively very bright. Not only is there an aesthetic difference, but there's a difference in listenability too: I find it hard to listen to this album in the car, because the road and traffic covers up a lot of the music, there's no high range to really punch through the environmental noise. Maybe sort of a dark and dirty mix is what they were going for, I can only assume, but I think the album really suffers for it.