The Burning

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The Burning album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 10   Total Length: 48:53

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The Best of Thunderstone, if that says anything...

vexlix

Thunderstone's greatest album. Melodically, lyrically (although even so the lyrics are a bit lacking), the song structures add more to a built up suspense as they progress. However, despite these advantages, Thunderstone is quite typical for the genre. But not to diss the band or the album because they are definately a band worth a listen, or two, or many more!

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Great Hard Rock

darthtyler

I would strongly recommend this album to any fan of hard rock/hair metal. Even with the keyboards these guys rock with the best of them.

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Welcome to eMusic!

Zzzzz

Beautiful! All of Thunderstone's albums are well worth the downloads. Thunderstone is one of those bands whose intelligent musicianship makes for moving, powerful ROCK! True talent!

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This is the best of Thunderstone

OrkyDoc

This is the best of Thunderstone. Any metalhead looking to spice up their collection should give The Burning a try. It has emotional vocals, killer guitar solos, good melodies, and textbook drumming. Overall it is excellent. At times it reminds me of DIO from either his Sabbath days or From Holy Diver. The vocal and music are just amazing!

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They Say All Music Guide

Critics who slam Finland’s Thunderstone for picking such a macho, power metal cliché of a moniker should pause and consider the even sillier habit of some of their competitors, who name themselves things like Chinchilla or Custard. At least with Thunderstone, there’s no doubt of what’s in store: heavy but melodic, often thrash-sped numbers topped with operatic metal vocals and expert musicianship. And that is exactly the recipe behind the Fins’ second album, 2004′s Burning, which offers a slew of finely crafted mid-paced metal anthems (“Mirror Never Lies,” “Drawn to the Flame,” etc.), equally effective, all-out thrashers such as “Break the Emotions” and “Tin Star Man,” and the suitably dramatic power ballad “Sea of Sorrow.” To be honest, Thunderstone’s only capital sin is sounding like pretty much everyone else in this crowded field, so that what stands out most about the band is their startlingly technical musicianship. On display throughout the album, this impressive interplay arguably achieves its climax on the frenetic “Side by Side,” where guitarist Nino Laurenne and keyboard player Kari Tornack enter into a friendly war of solos that is reminiscent of Deep Purple — only at double the speed. Although hardly groundbreaking Burning is competent power metal defined. – Eduardo Rivadavia

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