Hardreams - The road goes on (2008)
http://www.myspace.com/hardreams
Comparte zonatorrent
Idioma: English
Genero: Hard Rock,Hardreams
Traclist
1. Apologies
2. Bad Times Are Gone
3. Rebel Heart
4. My Last Desire
5. Little Sinner Queen
6. We´re One
7. Too Late
8. Someday Somewhere
9. I´ll Say Bye Tonight
10. Two Shots
11. The Road Goes On
Manu Esteve - Vocals
David Aguera - Guitars
Victor Muino - Bass
Sergi Segarra - Keyboards
Sergio Hormigo - Drums
With this name, I guess I should not expect something different from a melodic Hard Rock band. HARDREAMS has already released another album (recorded in 2002, released in 2004), named "Calling Everywhre", while this years "The Road Goes On..." sees a sophomore CD that will easily attract the interest of mellow Rock/AOR aficionados. And...an extra hint: they come from Spain but the vocals do not sound Spanish at all.
The first three songs - "Apologies", "Bad Times Are Gone" and "Rebel Heart" - do bear the same groove; the AOR fast-pace classic tempo, that unveils some notable guitar/keys hooks and great vocal melodies. "My Last Desire" calms things down, with moody major tones, singing warmth and tempo mildness. "Little Sinner Queen" belongs to the fast-pace category, again, and - then - "We Are One" sees a ballad full of emotion, accompanied by a piano, with Manu Esteve sounding like a mix of GOTTHARDs Steve Lee and SURVIVORs Dave Bickler.
"Too Late" fastens things up, in a semi-WHITESNAKE/DEEP PURPLE way, while "Someday Somewhere" runs mid-pace again, in powerful AOR fields. "Ill Say Bye Tonight" is an up-tempo melodic rocker with elegant guitars/keys co-existing and "Two Shots" (again) applies to the joyful AOR category, in a hasty pace similar to e.g. some of FINAL FRONTIER portfolio. "The Road Goes On" wraps up the album; it opens up in a TYKETTO way, with acoustic guitars and mid-tone vocals, then to unfold to a mid-tempo sweet melodic Rock chill-out song.
For a band with only two (now) albums of career, I was impressed by the chemistry of the band members plus the comfort in neither rushing their songlist nor pressing for a naive hit. Theres quality in their songwriting structure; I can extract maturity from the integrity of the songs, the singing of Esteve is more than fine, and - last but not least - you will not get tired of listening to the whole album repeatedly track after track.
If the production was more live or fat wed be talking for a superb Melodic Rock album; the cover also seems a little faint in colors. Still, these two obstacles would not prevent you - the fan of bands like HARLAN CAGE, TYKETTO, STRANGEWAYS, (Hugos) VALENTINE, PRIDE OF LIONS, mild WHITESNAKE and moody SYRVIVOR - to stay away from "The Road Goes On...", since it will surely apply to your taste.