Opeth – On Track: Book Review
Sonicbond and On Track are back on our bookshelves with the mighty Opeth.
Sonicbond and On Track are back on our bookshelves with the mighty Opeth.
We do the honours again with the On Track series that looks at the music of Aimee Mann and Psych Prog rockers Gong.
On Track with the classic British hard rock band UFO – warts and all – all the highs and lows of their catalogue.
We review three more books as the On Track authors plot the every album, every song output of Renaissance, Dire Straits and Kate Bush.
On Track take the work of The Move, Wizzard and ELO as its next venture. James R Turner confesses to raiding his parent’s record collection as he goes in deep with Roy Wood
Eoghan Ling goes On Track with U2. Every album and every song checked out in the latest Sonicbond tome.
Two more from the On Track bookshelf from Sonicbond. American AOR giants Kansas go under the microscope as does the output of the cult of Van Der Graaf Generator and their leading man, Peter Hammill .
A couple of new appearances on the On Track bookshelf from Sonicbond. Crosby, Stills & Nash and Barclay James Harvest get thoroughly discussed with an every album, every song analysis.
The latest On Track assesses the work of possibly the greatest of all British Metal bands, the mighty Iron Maiden.
The On Track analysts take up the ‘every album, every song’ catalogues of The Who, 10CC and Gentle Giant.
We’re enjoying reading Jordan Blum’s analysis of the music of Prog Metal giants Dream Theater in the latest On Track addition to the bookshelves.
We go on track again and look at the next in the series that examines the output of Fairport Convention, Hawkwind and Toto. Three bands who define their genre.
The next batch of releases in the On Track series looks at the solo output of John, Paul, George & Ringo in the decade after the break up of The Fab Four and then the Becker/Fagan fronted Steely Dan.
The next batch of releases in the On Track (‘Every album, every song’) series looks at the contrasting outputs of the Metal Gods, a decade of Sir Elton, The Moody Blues and the enigmatic Frank Zappa.