The Night Flight Orchestra - Aeromantic (2020)
Music genres / Classic Rock, Hard Rock maestro 0 936 23.03.23
Performer: The Night Flight Orchestra
Album: Aeromantic
Label: Nuclear Blast. Made in RU.
Catalog #: none
Style: Classic Rock
Year: 2020
Format: FLAC (image + .cue)
Bitrate: lossless
Covers: full (72 DPI)
Amount of tracks: 12
Size ZIP: ~ 400 mb
Upload: nitroflare.com
Password: without a password
Album: Aeromantic
Label: Nuclear Blast. Made in RU.
Catalog #: none
Style: Classic Rock
Year: 2020
Format: FLAC (image + .cue)
Bitrate: lossless
Covers: full (72 DPI)
Amount of tracks: 12
Size ZIP: ~ 400 mb
Upload: nitroflare.com
Password: without a password
Normally, the first few lines of an album review are fertile soil for some rock-and-roll philosophy, or irony, or witticisms, or some old-fashioned rock history. However, what does one say about a Helsingborg-based Swedish metal band, with a mild-mannered Clark Kent alter ego in the form of a 70s/80s glam funk AOR band themed around airline travel? Not much. It has a way of speaking for itself.
In the way of light history, metal band Soilwork gives us fairly legendary Björn “Speed” Strid on vocals, as well as David Andersson on guitars. From 2007 to 2012, the two began scheming a musical way to tell the tales of rock-and-roll excess and absurdity of the 70s and 80s, and once Arch Enemy’s Sharlee D’Angelo insisted upon not being left out of the absurd shenanigans, thus was The Night Flight Orchestra born. In the years since, the band released four albums, exploring tales of travel, romance, heartbreak, space exploration, and even the deliciously retro “Turn to Miami” found on their fourth album, “Sometimes the World Ain’t Enough,” complete with its obviously quasi Miami Vice underpinnings.
In the way of light history, metal band Soilwork gives us fairly legendary Björn “Speed” Strid on vocals, as well as David Andersson on guitars. From 2007 to 2012, the two began scheming a musical way to tell the tales of rock-and-roll excess and absurdity of the 70s and 80s, and once Arch Enemy’s Sharlee D’Angelo insisted upon not being left out of the absurd shenanigans, thus was The Night Flight Orchestra born. In the years since, the band released four albums, exploring tales of travel, romance, heartbreak, space exploration, and even the deliciously retro “Turn to Miami” found on their fourth album, “Sometimes the World Ain’t Enough,” complete with its obviously quasi Miami Vice underpinnings.