Sunday, May 20

Judas Priest - British Steel

year 1980:With Hell Bent for Leather, Judas Priest had begun the task of developing their image for increased mainstream attention, reveling in leather-and-motorcycle trappings while beginning to simplify and streamline their sound. British Steel brings that process full circle, offering the band's catchiest, most accessible set of tunes yet, while retaining the precision guitar assault and quasi-operatic vocals that had come to define their sound. It was the simplest music Priest had yet attempted, but thanks to the (mostly) top-notch songwriting and AC/DC-like willingness to allow the songs' grooves room to breathe, the record is a smashing success overall, with maybe one or two subpar tracks. There are a couple of trends beginning here that would take their toll later on -- the lyrics are a bit more juvenile, and the music seems to prize commercialism over complexity -- but in this context, neither really matters, as Priest display a real penchant for stadium-ready anthems. "Breaking the Law" and "Living After Midnight" became genuine hit singles in the U.K., and deservedly so, while the album became their first to reach the U.S. Top 40, going platinum in the process.

6 comments:

Anonymous said...

http://rapidshare.com/files/4551488/judpwq112.rar.html

Anonymous said...

Thanks for this Classic Album from one of the best British metal bands of our times

Falcon The Loner said...

JUDAS PRIEST... what else we can say about this METAL ICON... they're great... METAL GODS... Thanx for the post, it's a heavy metal classic and this post contains new material like one live track and other previously unreleased... Thanx a lot...

Anonymous said...

Iam cheking, thanks for the album

Prez said...

Just FYI ... in naming the tracks, the person who ripped this used the original tracks and mixed a few up. This is the Turbo Sessions version, meaning the tracks have different titles. Do a quick wiki search for proper renaming.

Cheers and thanks!

Justinian said...

Link Isht Toten.