New Protection

Rate It! Avg: 3.5 (19 ratings)
New Protection album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 12   Total Length: 50:25

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Masterplan 2.0

cmenzik22

Wow, founded by the ex-drummer of Masterplan, it makes me wonder why he quit the band. This material sounds exactly like Masterplan down to the great vocals of the singer who sounds eerily like Jorn Lande. Good stuff, though.

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Europe meets metal

ArthurC

While there's a few good songs here, this is basically the illegitimate love child of the '80s band Rurope and some random metal group. The keyboard places far too prominent role in this group, the vocals are mediocre, and much of the guitar is forgettable. Mind you, this isn't a *bad* album, it's just not that good.

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Brilliant

Guitarrock

Ride The Sky are a new progpower metal supergroup lead by ex Masterplan drummer UliK. On the guitar the excellent BJansson, who elbows successfuly some room in the now crowded shreddodrome. Vocals are handled by Henning Ramseth, who delivers a performance worthy of Jorn`s best. If you like Masterplan and Euro metal you need to check this out! One last word for the stellar production, those cymbals are on fire! Let the mad Ride The Sky armada trample over Mudhoney and Mother Love Bone and their fans!

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Good

I_8_BAD_GRAPES

Kinda a Dream Theater meets Stratovarius groove here. Definite download when my downloads refresh for the month. :)

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They Say All Music Guide

As heavy metal bands assembled from assorted spare parts go (i.e. musicians drawn from numerous bands), Germany/Sweden’s Ride the Sky is bound to cause more confusion and potential frustration than most. Although the group was founded by former Helloween drummer Uli Kusch, and even named after one of the German power metal kings’ famed early songs, most fans are aware that said song was recorded nearly a decade before Kusch’s addition to that band — a fact which may explain why Ride the Sky’s first album, 2007′s New Protection, only occasionally resembles strictly defined power metal (see energetic numbers like “Break the Chain,” “Far Beyond the Stars,” and “A Crack in the Wall”). Rather, and for the most part, synth-heavy material such as “A Smile from Heaven’s Eye,” “Endless,” “Heaven Only Knows,” and the title cut, would be better defined as catchy, melodic, commercial Euro-metal; more preoccupied with tight composition, poppy hooks, and distinctive choruses than metallic aggression or flashy musicianship. Ride the Sky also delve into some synthetic orchestral passages midway through “Corroded Dreams,” and reveal their Swedish-ness in the intro to “The End of Days,” which has a neo-classical flavor, à la Yngwie Malmsteen. In closing, heavier-leaning metal fans may also take issue with New Protection’s sparkly-clean recording (so clean, Kusch’s drums sound synthetic at times), but they’d be missing the point entirely in terms of Ride the Sky’s obvious, intended inclinations toward performing an efficient, accessible mixture of hard rock and metal. [The CD was also released with a bonus track.] – Eduardo Rivadavia

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