JUDAS PRIEST - InTheStudio Celebrates 40th Anniversary Of British Steel Album; ROB HALFORD Audio Interview
April 28, 2020, 4 years ago
North American syndicated rock radio show and website, InTheStudio With Redbeard: The Stories Behind History’s Greatest Rock Bands, celebrates the 40th anniversary of Judas Priest's British Steel album.
Says Host Redbeard: "Four decades after its April 1980 release, the double-edged guitars of Judas Priest on British Steel still slice and dice my speakers (and frighten my cat). Success, which had eluded heavy metal in general and Judas Priest in particular in the US, had been tee’d up barely six months earlier when American FM rock deejays had discovered two curious cover versions on a live Japanese import. It took a full five albums and the entire 1970s decade for Judas Priest to break out, but few of the music critics who slagged them initially were around to write about the band’s multi-million selling successes in the Eighties, starting with the live Unleashed in the East in late 1979, followed by the definitive metal statements British Steel in 1980, Point Of Entry in 1981, and Screaming For Vengeance mid-1982.
"All of the members of Judas Priest grew up in or around the northern industrial English city of Birmingham amidst coal mines, steel factories, iron ore smelters, and the mountainous piles of waste, or ”slag”, an inevitable by-product from such heavy industry (the most notorious “slag heap” in rock is the album cover photo on The Who’s Who’s Next ). In English slang, to ”slag off” somebody or something meant to reduce its value to nothing.
"While still trying to get a band together, Judas Priest lead guitarist Glenn Tipton actually worked at British Steel for his day job. Recently it appeared that some 21st century Madison Avenue “Mad Men” advertising exec was a closeted heavy metal fan, slipping Judas Priest into the soundtrack of a recent Honda Accord car TV commercial."
Tune in here.