Break the Silence opens with drums rolling like distant thunder. Ben Turner doesn’t just keep time—he drives the track, moving across the kit from crash to tom to bass, every hit a heartbeat you can feel in your chest. The guitars slice in on top, tight and metallic, twisting into minor-key runs that curl like smoke before lightning strikes.
The energy hits like Eye of the Tiger if Led Zeppelin or Iron Maiden had made it. The rhythm pushes forward without pause, the riffs punch and climb, and the metallic textures give the track a precision that makes it feel alive. It’s familiar, it’s triumphant, but it’s all Voltstorm.
At 2:55, the track detonates. John Prasec’s vocals collide with the guitar solo. He growls and bends notes until his voice becomes another instrument, merging with the solo in a shockwave that slams into you. It’s a moment that makes the song feel unstoppable.
Tension and release thread through every second. The rhythm section is taut, urgent, and relentless. The guitars bite, the drums hit like they have weight, and a ghostly whistle lingers in the high register like a shadow you can’t shake.
Break the Silence demands you lean in, raises your fists, and refuses to let go. It’s cinematic, visceral, and pure metal. Voltstorm built a track that doesn’t just play—it hits, burns, and stays with you long after it ends.





