1:59
Monkeyhouse is a Finnish band that was equally comfortable playing straight blues or melodic hard rock and excelled at various mixtures of those styles. This indie release from 1993 is the only document of their existence; very little information is available about this band other than the CD liner notes. They certainly were committed to the quality of their music and had a great deal of support in making this album. The track, "Closing The Opening", is a slower number that is amazingly sweet and should be of great interest to AOR/Melodic Rock fans. If you are a blues rock fan, you already know you need to hear it.Ty Fogkhat.
Read On
1:59
Monkeyhouse is a Finnish band that was equally comfortable playing straight blues or melodic hard rock and excelled at various mixtures of those styles. This indie release from 1993 is the only document of their existence; very little information is available about this band other than the CD liner notes. They certainly were committed to the quality of their music and had a great deal of support in making this album. The track, "Closing The Opening", is a slower number that is amazingly sweet and should be of great interest to AOR/Melodic Rock fans. If you are a blues rock fan, you already know you need to hear it.Ty Fogkhat.
Read On
2:03
RainLord is a Florida-based band that played Melodic Hard Rock very proficiently. One gets the feeling they could just pick up their instruments and start playing, and it would always sound just like it does here. All of the players will catch your attention at times. This indie release from 1998 appears to be the only document of their existence; very little information is available about this band other than the CD liner notes. All of the material is quite good, the production is solid (although a good producer might have shaved a couple of tracks, as it is a bit long), and the sound is very good, especially in light of the indie feeling. Definitely worthwhile.Ty Fogkhat.
Read On
2:03
RainLord is a Florida-based band that played Melodic Hard Rock very proficiently. One gets the feeling they could just pick up their instruments and start playing, and it would always sound just like it does here. All of the players will catch your attention at times. This indie release from 1998 appears to be the only document of their existence; very little information is available about this band other than the CD liner notes. All of the material is quite good, the production is solid (although a good producer might have shaved a couple of tracks, as it is a bit long), and the sound is very good, especially in light of the indie feeling. Definitely worthwhile.Ty Fogkhat.
Read On