Siloam (CAN)

Hard Rock, Melodic Rock , AOR , Blues Rock , Glam & Sleaze Rock , West Coast , Christian Rock
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Siloam (CAN)

Príspevokod užívateľa Horex » 14 Júl 2021, 07:56

Siloam - Sweet Destiny (1991)

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Year : 1991
Style : Christian Hard Rock , AOR
Country : Canada
Audio : 320 kbps + all scans
Size : 104 mb


Bio:

A Christian Hard Rock/AOR from Canada. Exceptional, melodic, good chorus, with loads of hooks and killer vox. They sound reminder a little of Firehouse, Bon Jovi and Warrant. The production is also quite good for an unknown independent band.Ottawa, Canada based Siloam is the brainchild of a talented drummer by the name of Brian Lutes. Coming out of a real street wise background, Lutes became a Christian after nearly dying of a drug overdose but went back to the streets in order to work with kids and relate the Gospel to them in a creditable way. Lutes, In the meantime, had given up music altogether until he was approached by his pastor who said he had a dream of him being involved in a band called Siloam (drawing its name from John 9:7). Proceeding to jam and play at church on Sunday, Lutes got together with a partner of his from another band, Tom Saidek, and started holding auditions in Los Angeles and Europe. After auditioning a total of 70 guitarist and 40 vocalist, the two settled on a vocalist and bassist who both hail from Boston, Lee Guthrie and Chad Everett respectively, and a keyboardist from Vermont in Ken Maris. Lead guitarist Tim Laroche was recruited out of Iceland. Immediately after its line up was put together, Siloam entered the studio and began work on its 1991 Image 7 debut Sweet Destiny.The best way to describe Siloam would be a blend of melodic hard rock and melodic rock with commercial metal tendencies. Sweet Destiny actually flows quite well from front to back in that it includes no filler tracks, best showcasing the bands songwriting skills on energetic hard rockers such as "Chemical King (Big Fight)" and "Eastern Skies" in addition to "Here I Am Again" and "Sweet Destiny" with their radio friendly sensibilities. The band even turns it up a notch on the guitar driven metal of "Lethal Lady" while delivering two customary - though very well done - commercial ballads in "Child Of Mine" and "After The Fire". In the end, if you happen to be a fan of Stryper, Holy Soldier, Guardian, Def Leppard, Bon Jovi and others in the same genre then Siloam is certain to appeal to you.

Album:

This is a much sought after little gem from the genre with killer songs driven by melodic guitar riffs, hooks galore, stellar lead vocals and sing-along choruses.Few bands captured the late Eighties to early Nineties commercial metal / hard rock / AOR sound like multi-national act SILOAM.Perhaps due to SILOAM coming from the Christian Rock scene “Sweet Destiny” didn’t became more popular at the time, but believe us, it truly deserves to be compared with early SKID ROW, STRYPER, GUARDIAN, HOLY SOLDIER, etc…A close listen to SILOAM’s 1991 debut ‘Sweet Destiny’ reveal all the era requirements to become huge: the notable melodies to garner MTV and FM radio play, a soaring vocalist capable of a high-end falsetto but also reaching down for some lower register grit, and shredding guitarist with a penchant for blistering leads in addition to the occasional leaning towards the bluesy.SILOAM fits the bill as well in that the band delivers the needed ingredient in terms of hair, hair and more hair but go beneath the surface and you will find a bit more than meets the eye all the same.Polished opener “Here I Am Again” is a good indicator of the Siloam sound. In traversing commercial hard rock to AOR territory, it fades in to keyboards and acoustic guitar ahead of slowly building and peaking until rhythm guitar kicks in to back the momentous refrain. Lead guitar and keyboards trade off instrumentally.“Miss Lizzy” takes the heavier stances with its bluesy hard rock vibe. Guitars play a more consistently forward role, aligning with Hammond B3 to take a rollicking stance reveling in the bustling up-tempo with tight backing vocals and fiery guitar leads to make periodic appearance.First of two (and quite good) ballads ensues in “Child Of Mine”. Yes, the song features its share of heartfelt acoustic guitar and keyboards (particularly for the first minute and closing seconds) but also ample doses of ardent rhythm guitar in aligning with the impassioned scene. Of note is Guthrie’s first-rate vocal performance, as his delivery ranges from the smoothly even to the focused and searing.Back to hard rock territory with “Chemical King (Big Fight)”, an amped up and groove driven piece to highlight a pronounced bass line and all the keyed up “Big Fight!” backing vocals you could ask. An anthem-like feel resonates from the agile keyboards. Tim Laroche cuts loose with an awesome display of shredding lead guitar.The six and a half minute “Eastern Skies” ranks among our choice cuts. First two minutes transition between a ringing telephone with the answering voice and offbeat sound effects. Remaining distance proves metal slugfest, with some of the albums more pronounced guitars and brazen soloing combining for the sublime as impetus peaks for the every bit imposing ‘there’s a battle raging under Eastern skies’ refrain. Catchy, cogent and even a little progressive, “Eastern Skies” serves as a showcase for the Siloam abilities.“Deceiver” rocks with a classic hard rock vibe. Opening to guitars crashing in and out of the mix, it snarls ahead to technical drum proclivities as spoken word delivery leads the way through the intense verse portions and more of the groups tightly woven harmony vocals for the sweeping refrain. Lead guitar continues in a fiercely played direction. In the end, “Deceiver” proves a three-minute explosion of unremitting energy and emotion.Ballad number two, “After The Fire”, follows with its warmly tinctured acoustic form. A churning keyboard solo carries the first minute prior to momentum slowly drifting ahead calm and gentle until rhythm guitar with an earthly supplants and aligns with the moving scene. Siloam leaves little doubt as to its ability to compose a top-notch ballad.“Lethal Lady” is first of three heavier pieces to close Sweet Destiny. What we have is a forward hard rocker echoing of the bluesy, intrinsic to open air guitar and drum solo to start only to move its length to full on upbeat emotion as Hammond B3 cleverly decorates the backdrop.Albums title track owes more to an AOR-ish to melodic hard rock quality ala Guardian as opposed to Stryper or Skid Row. It works, with a left to right channel keyboard solo to start succeeded by verse sections of a slowly moving, thickly woven form (with guitars setting the bottom heavy tone) and refrain on the lighter, freely flowing side (backed by polished vocal melodies). Nah-nah-nah-nah harmony vocals precede the fusion like instrumental section. A highlight.“Decent Souls” closes the album to its share of variations. At times, it impresses of a ballad, opening its first minute and a half to acoustic guitar and flowing harmonies; at others, it derives of hard rock, as found in the weighty guitars and muscular low end to carry the remaining distance. Added organ serves to tie everything together.Similar to many albums of the time, ”Sweet Destiny” went out of print and turned into a hard to find collectors item. Enter Retroactive Records, whom in 2020 remastered (courtesy of Rob Colwell of Bombworks Sound) and re-issued ”Sweet Destiny” on Gold Edition CD limited edition to 500 copies.The remastering takes things to the next level. Outside of increased volume levels to bring the album up to modern standards, fine details better sound out in the form of a more transparent drum sound, crisper guitars and easier to define bass and keyboards.If quality melodic hard rock / melodic metal with an AOR touch is your thing, then look no further than Siloam debut ”Sweet Destiny”. The front to back consistency is in place (noting no skip buttons or filler tracks) along with strengths in the areas of musicianship (lead guitar, bass and drums particularly stand out) and varied lead vocals.

Line Up:

Lee Guthrie – lead, backing vocals
Tim Laroche – guitars, backing vocals
Chad Everett – bass, backing vocals
Brian Lutes – drums, percussion
Ken Maris – keyboards, backing vocals

Special Guests:

Tom Saidak & Rob Durbano - Guitars
Tom Saidak - Bass
Frank Levin - Keyboards
Additional Backing Vocals - Danny Dean, Tom Saidak, Frank Levin, Andrew Main, Lou Nadeau, Kevin Small

production:

Produced, Engineered and Mixed by Frank Levin
Executive Producer - Brian Lutes
Recorded at Distortion Studios, Ottawa, Canada
Mastering - Future Disc Systems, Hollywood, CA

Tracklist:

01. Here I Am Again
02. Miss Lizzy
03. Child Of Mine
04. Chemical King (Big Fight)
05. Eastern Skies
06. Deceiver
07. After The Fire
08. Lethal Lady
09. Sweet Destiny
10. Decent Souls


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Download links for all albums only on our blog here: http://goodmetalandhar.do.am/
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Horex
Metalový král
Metalový král
Príspevky: 28395
Dátum registrácie: 21 Feb 2013, 19:14
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Re: Siloam (CAN)

Príspevokod užívateľa Horex » 26 Okt 2023, 13:12

Siloam - Dying To Live (1995)

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Year : 1995
Style : Christian Hard Rock , AOR
Country : Canada
Audio : 320 kbps + all scans
Size : 131 mb


Bio:

A Christian Hard Rock/AOR from Canada. Exceptional, melodic, good chorus, with loads of hooks and killer vox. They sound reminder a little of Firehouse, Bon Jovi and Warrant. The production is also quite good for an unknown independent band.Ottawa, Canada based Siloam is the brainchild of a talented drummer by the name of Brian Lutes. Coming out of a real street wise background, Lutes became a Christian after nearly dying of a drug overdose but went back to the streets in order to work with kids and relate the Gospel to them in a creditable way. Lutes, In the meantime, had given up music altogether until he was approached by his pastor who said he had a dream of him being involved in a band called Siloam (drawing its name from John 9:7). Proceeding to jam and play at church on Sunday, Lutes got together with a partner of his from another band, Tom Saidek, and started holding auditions in Los Angeles and Europe. After auditioning a total of 70 guitarist and 40 vocalist, the two settled on a vocalist and bassist who both hail from Boston, Lee Guthrie and Chad Everett respectively, and a keyboardist from Vermont in Ken Maris. Lead guitarist Tim Laroche was recruited out of Iceland. Immediately after its line up was put together, Siloam entered the studio and began work on its 1991 Image 7 debut Sweet Destiny.The best way to describe Siloam would be a blend of melodic hard rock and melodic rock with commercial metal tendencies. Sweet Destiny actually flows quite well from front to back in that it includes no filler tracks, best showcasing the bands songwriting skills on energetic hard rockers such as "Chemical King (Big Fight)" and "Eastern Skies" in addition to "Here I Am Again" and "Sweet Destiny" with their radio friendly sensibilities. The band even turns it up a notch on the guitar driven metal of "Lethal Lady" while delivering two customary - though very well done - commercial ballads in "Child Of Mine" and "After The Fire". In the end, if you happen to be a fan of Stryper, Holy Soldier, Guardian, Def Leppard, Bon Jovi and others in the same genre then Siloam is certain to appeal to you.

Album:

There’s a sense of familiarity when listening to Dying To Live, the 1995 Ocean Entertainment sophomore album from Siloam.It shares a comparable commercial metal and melodic hard rock affinity as the group’s 1991 Image 7 debut full length Sweet Destiny while branching out into similar radio friendly AOR, blues based hard rock and traditional ballad territory.Every bit analogous is the occasional groove to funk like rock moment and even the periodic leaning to lightly done progressiveness.Despite switching front men from Lee Guthrie to Brent Millsop, lead vocals continue to head in a high-end with intermittent tinges of middle-register grit direction that bring to mind Sonny Larsson (XT, Motherlode).Additional turnover consists of guitarist Marshall Zacharias replacing departed guitarist Tim Laroche and keyboardist Ken Maris. Returning is founding member and drummer Brian Lutes, whom recruited holdover bassist Chad Everett subsequent to a dream he had of being involved in a band called Siloam (moniker derived from John 9:7).It deserves note Lutes comes from a streetwise background but came to the faith after nearly dying of a drug overdose. He later returned to the streets to work with kids and relate the Gospel to them in a creditable manner; hence, the mission of Siloam.Specifically, the Siloam lyrics and songwriting are testimonial and stem from Lutes’ experience working with kids.Not unlike Sweet Destiny, Dying To Live went out of print and turned into a hard to find collectors item.Enter Retroactive Records, who in June of 2022 re-mastered (courtesy of Rob Colwell of Bombworks Sound) and re-issued Dying To Live on jewel case CD.Upgraded packaging to consist of a 12-page expanded booklet with lyrics and linter notes in an easy to read font attributes to Scott Waters of no Life Til Metal Graphics.The Ocean Entertainment version sounds fine for its era, but the Retroactive re-mastering results in a more polished sound to bring the album up to modern standards: low end stands out thicker and fuller (noting the cleaner mix of bass), while guitars reflect added edge and bite (leads come across better defined).Album opens to hard charger “Apathy” to see a high-energy tempo and every bit expeditious bass converge with Millsop’s immaculate classic tenor voice to mirror an emotional edge. Dogged hooks reveal in the process, as does an instrumental run slowing to ethereal feedback that gives way to Zacharias’s shred lead guitar.I cannot help but be reminded of Holy Soldier. “Daddy’s Little Girl” starts to open air bass prior to morphing into a boogie-flavored metal piece along similar lines as Stryper and Van Halen. A more aggressive touch impresses compared to “Apathy”, manifest in rhythm guitar to snarl in bristling fashion and refrain to touch upon the vehement (not to mention an overriding catchiness). The precise bass work of Everett in particular stands out.Albums title track is a classy melodic hard rocker emanating a Guardian like AOR vibe to see burnished keyboards elevate and pristine vocal melodies command the glistening scene. The uplifting momentum is undeniable as the buoyant tinctures not to mention grainy feel to vocals refuse to depart with repeat play.“Dying To Live” proves you can be commercial but relevant at the same time.First of three ballads “Pain Inside” is a good one. Acoustic guitar and keyboards at the start soon join with rhythm guitar to make a hard rock ballad statement, the moody scene elevated by the moving momentum as a melody rises to the surface reminding of that to the Damn Yankees hit “High Enough”. Closing the album is a keyboard based ‘Enya’ version to “Pain Inside”. Melodic hard rock territory returns with “Home Comin’”, a varied cut to feature prodigious doses of refinement found in the layered vocal melodies decorating throughout but also home to a bluesy veneer revealed in the earthy tinctures to the rhythm guitar tones. Yes, the song presents with its share of contrasts but it works, sort of like a more commercial version to early nineties Bride.“Brand New Man” shines with its accessible hard rock bearing. It jump starts from the get go, brimming of energy in giving prominence to non-stop hooks as fitting doses of AOR laced keyboards build upon the regal scene.The high-strung lead guitar is every bit focused. Second ballad “Tender Heart” approaches from the lighter and heavier sides. In terms of former, it includes ample doses of lounge style keyboards and lush vocal melodies; from standpoint of latter, it also makes room for copious portions of hard rock guitars, particularly for the deeply woven refrain. Whereas the song is somewhat overdone for my taste in terms of the overt refinement, it is good nonetheless.“My Pal Judas” delivers the groove underpinned and funk flavored goods.With prodigious bass leading the defiant way, the song prioritizes deeply set “big lies” backing vocals - to remind of Sweet Destiny track “Chemical King (Big Fight)” - alongside a mirthful form while not backing from the Siloam trademark hard rock underpinnings.No doubt, this one is outside the box but also reflects the group’s versatility.Sound of a thunderstorm appropriately opens “Lost In The Rain”. Moving forward song turns into an acoustic rocker until rhythm guitar bursts forth to make a classy melodic hard rock statement, issuing forth abundant vocal melodies and the commercial hooks to go in hand. A slower passage at the halfway point settles down to piano ahead of “Lost In The Rain” makes an abrupt transition to a vigorous instrumental interlude. At just under ten-minute, “Welcome To Despair” is albums longest but no need to worry in that Siloam is not turning into Dream Theater but rather strategically joins several songs together to form a unique whole. First four comes in the form of a ballad that mixes piano with riveting guitar to embolden the heightened melody, while second covers the subsequent four as a heavy hitting melodic metal piece in which tempo elevates as Millsop reaches down for some heartfelt soul to his delivery alongside Gospel influences backing vocals.As song reaches its close, impetus slows as ballad territory revisits. If Stryper had reunited in the mid-nineties to record a comeback album, impression left is Dying To Live would be an accurate indicator of the results.Yes, in my opinion it is that good, or at the very least the equal of Sweet Destiny in terms of songwriting and production. Whereas Siloam experienced turnover between albums, newcomers Brent Millsop and Marshall Zacharias more than hold their own as replacements to complement Brian Lutes and Chad Everett.If interested in ten quality eighties influenced melodic metal and hard rock cuts (eleven if you count the ‘Enya’ version to “Pain Inside”) I strongly encourage making the Retroactive re-issue to Dying To Live a priority.

Line Up:

Brent Millsop - Vocals
Brian Lutes - Drums & Percussion
Marshall Zacharias - Guitars, Banjo, Sitar & Kazoo
Chad Everett - Bass

Additional Musicians:

Keyboards - Frank Levin
Backing Vocals - Doug Bradshaw, Andy Del Castillo, Danny Deane
Guitar – Todd Huckbone

production:

Produced by Frank Levin
Executive Producer - Brian Lutes
Recorded and Mixed at Fish Tank Studios and Distortion Studios
Mastered at Crossroads Studios

Tracklist:

01. Apathy
02. Daddy's Little Girl
03. Dying To Live
04. Pain Inside
05. Home Comin
06. Brand New Man
07. Tender Heart
08. My Pal Judas
09. Lost In The Rain
10. Welcome To Despair
11. Pain Inside (Enya Version)


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Download links for all albums only on our blog here: http://goodmetalandhar.do.am/

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Download links for all albums only on our blog here: http://goodmetalandhar.do.am/
Odkazy na stažení všech alb naleznete pouze na našem blogu zde: http://goodmetalandhar.do.am/
Užívateľov profilový obrázok
Horex
Metalový král
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Príspevky: 28395
Dátum registrácie: 21 Feb 2013, 19:14
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Re: Siloam (CAN)

Príspevokod užívateľa Horex » 26 Okt 2023, 13:15

Siloam - Sweet Destiny (1991) (Retroactive Records Limited Edition 2020)

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Year : 1991 (Retroactive Records Limited Edition 2020)
Style : Christian Hard Rock , AOR
Country : Canada
Audio : 320 kbps + scans
Size : 110 mb


Bio:

A Christian Hard Rock/AOR from Canada. Exceptional, melodic, good chorus, with loads of hooks and killer vox. They sound reminder a little of Firehouse, Bon Jovi and Warrant. The production is also quite good for an unknown independent band.Ottawa, Canada based Siloam is the brainchild of a talented drummer by the name of Brian Lutes. Coming out of a real street wise background, Lutes became a Christian after nearly dying of a drug overdose but went back to the streets in order to work with kids and relate the Gospel to them in a creditable way. Lutes, In the meantime, had given up music altogether until he was approached by his pastor who said he had a dream of him being involved in a band called Siloam (drawing its name from John 9:7). Proceeding to jam and play at church on Sunday, Lutes got together with a partner of his from another band, Tom Saidek, and started holding auditions in Los Angeles and Europe. After auditioning a total of 70 guitarist and 40 vocalist, the two settled on a vocalist and bassist who both hail from Boston, Lee Guthrie and Chad Everett respectively, and a keyboardist from Vermont in Ken Maris. Lead guitarist Tim Laroche was recruited out of Iceland. Immediately after its line up was put together, Siloam entered the studio and began work on its 1991 Image 7 debut Sweet Destiny.The best way to describe Siloam would be a blend of melodic hard rock and melodic rock with commercial metal tendencies. Sweet Destiny actually flows quite well from front to back in that it includes no filler tracks, best showcasing the bands songwriting skills on energetic hard rockers such as "Chemical King (Big Fight)" and "Eastern Skies" in addition to "Here I Am Again" and "Sweet Destiny" with their radio friendly sensibilities. The band even turns it up a notch on the guitar driven metal of "Lethal Lady" while delivering two customary - though very well done - commercial ballads in "Child Of Mine" and "After The Fire". In the end, if you happen to be a fan of Stryper, Holy Soldier, Guardian, Def Leppard, Bon Jovi and others in the same genre then Siloam is certain to appeal to you.

Album:

Retroactive Records has remastered for the first time “Sweet Destiny“, the long out of print album from American / Canadian melodic hard rockers SILOAM, pressed on high quality gold disc and limited to 500 pieces. This is a much sought after little gem from the genre with killer songs driven by melodic guitar riffs, hooks galore, stellar lead vocals and sing-along choruses.Few bands captured the late Eighties to early Nineties commercial metal / hard rock / AOR sound like multi-national act SILOAM.Perhaps due to SILOAM coming from the Christian Rock scene “Sweet Destiny” didn’t became more popular at the time, but believe us, it truly deserves to be compared with early SKID ROW, STRYPER, GUARDIAN, HOLY SOLDIER, etc…A close listen to SILOAM’s 1991 debut ‘Sweet Destiny’ reveal all the era requirements to become huge: the notable melodies to garner MTV and FM radio play, a soaring vocalist capable of a high-end falsetto but also reaching down for some lower register grit, and shredding guitarist with a penchant for blistering leads in addition to the occasional leaning towards the bluesy.SILOAM fits the bill as well in that the band delivers the needed ingredient in terms of hair, hair and more hair but go beneath the surface and you will find a bit more than meets the eye all the same.Polished opener “Here I Am Again” is a good indicator of the Siloam sound. In traversing commercial hard rock to AOR territory, it fades in to keyboards and acoustic guitar ahead of slowly building and peaking until rhythm guitar kicks in to back the momentous refrain. Lead guitar and keyboards trade off instrumentally.“Miss Lizzy” takes the heavier stances with its bluesy hard rock vibe. Guitars play a more consistently forward role, aligning with Hammond B3 to take a rollicking stance reveling in the bustling up-tempo with tight backing vocals and fiery guitar leads to make periodic appearance.First of two (and quite good) ballads ensues in “Child Of Mine”. Yes, the song features its share of heartfelt acoustic guitar and keyboards (particularly for the first minute and closing seconds) but also ample doses of ardent rhythm guitar in aligning with the impassioned scene. Of note is Guthrie’s first-rate vocal performance, as his delivery ranges from the smoothly even to the focused and searing.Back to hard rock territory with “Chemical King (Big Fight)”, an amped up and groove driven piece to highlight a pronounced bass line and all the keyed up “Big Fight!” backing vocals you could ask. An anthem-like feel resonates from the agile keyboards. Tim Laroche cuts loose with an awesome display of shredding lead guitar.The six and a half minute “Eastern Skies” ranks among our choice cuts. First two minutes transition between a ringing telephone with the answering voice and offbeat sound effects. Remaining distance proves metal slugfest, with some of the albums more pronounced guitars and brazen soloing combining for the sublime as impetus peaks for the every bit imposing ‘there’s a battle raging under Eastern skies’ refrain. Catchy, cogent and even a little progressive, “Eastern Skies” serves as a showcase for the Siloam abilities.“Deceiver” rocks with a classic hard rock vibe. Opening to guitars crashing in and out of the mix, it snarls ahead to technical drum proclivities as spoken word delivery leads the way through the intense verse portions and more of the groups tightly woven harmony vocals for the sweeping refrain. Lead guitar continues in a fiercely played direction. In the end, “Deceiver” proves a three-minute explosion of unremitting energy and emotion.Ballad number two, “After The Fire”, follows with its warmly tinctured acoustic form. A churning keyboard solo carries the first minute prior to momentum slowly drifting ahead calm and gentle until rhythm guitar with an earthly supplants and aligns with the moving scene. Siloam leaves little doubt as to its ability to compose a top-notch ballad.“Lethal Lady” is first of three heavier pieces to close Sweet Destiny. What we have is a forward hard rocker echoing of the bluesy, intrinsic to open air guitar and drum solo to start only to move its length to full on upbeat emotion as Hammond B3 cleverly decorates the backdrop.Albums title track owes more to an AOR-ish to melodic hard rock quality ala Guardian as opposed to Stryper or Skid Row. It works, with a left to right channel keyboard solo to start succeeded by verse sections of a slowly moving, thickly woven form (with guitars setting the bottom heavy tone) and refrain on the lighter, freely flowing side (backed by polished vocal melodies). Nah-nah-nah-nah harmony vocals precede the fusion like instrumental section. A highlight.“Decent Souls” closes the album to its share of variations. At times, it impresses of a ballad, opening its first minute and a half to acoustic guitar and flowing harmonies; at others, it derives of hard rock, as found in the weighty guitars and muscular low end to carry the remaining distance. Added organ serves to tie everything together.Similar to many albums of the time, ”Sweet Destiny” went out of print and turned into a hard to find collectors item. Enter Retroactive Records, whom in 2020 remastered (courtesy of Rob Colwell of Bombworks Sound) and re-issued ”Sweet Destiny” on Gold Edition CD limited edition to 500 copies.The remastering takes things to the next level. Outside of increased volume levels to bring the album up to modern standards, fine details better sound out in the form of a more transparent drum sound, crisper guitars and easier to define bass and keyboards.If quality melodic hard rock / melodic metal with an AOR touch is your thing, then look no further than Siloam debut ”Sweet Destiny”. The front to back consistency is in place (noting no skip buttons or filler tracks) along with strengths in the areas of musicianship (lead guitar, bass and drums particularly stand out) and varied lead vocals.

Line Up:

Lee Guthrie – lead, backing vocals
Tim Laroche – guitars, backing vocals
Chad Everett – bass, backing vocals
Brian Lutes – drums, percussion
Ken Maris – keyboards, backing vocals

+

Guitar – Rob Durbano
Guitar, Bass – Tom Saidak

production:

Arranged By – Frank Levin*, Siloam (2), Tom Saidak (tracks: 1, 3-5, 7-10)
Cover, Layout – Richard A. Yaeger
Photography By – Paul Couvretta
Producer, Engineer, Mixed By, Keyboards – Frank Levin*

Tracklist:

01. Here I Am Again
02. Miss Lizzy
03. Child Of Mine
04. Chemical King (Big Fight)
05. Eastern Skies
06. Deceiver
07. After The Fire
08. Lethal Lady
09. Sweet Destiny
10. Decent Souls


Obrázok Obrázok

Download links for all albums only on our blog here: http://goodmetalandhar.do.am/

Obrázok





Download links for all albums only on our blog here: http://goodmetalandhar.do.am/
Odkazy na stažení všech alb naleznete pouze na našem blogu zde: http://goodmetalandhar.do.am/

Návrat na "HARD Rock, MELODIC Rock, AOR, BLUES Rock, GLAM & SLEAZE Rock"

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