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Judas Priest: Farewell Tour

ROCK WITH THE PRIEST ONE LAST TIME


Judas Priest

After storming the world for nearly 40 years and taking their very special brand of heavy metal to all four corners of
the planet, Judas Priest,
one of the most influential heavy metal bands of all time, have announced this will be their final world tour.

However, the mighty Priest will be going out strong as they rock the planet starting in 2011 on the massive “Epitaph
Tour” – hitting all the major cities throughout the world they will be playing the songs that helped make the name
Judas Priest synonymous with heavy metal.

The band will be starting their world tour in Europe. Check out the confirmed dates below, and stay tuned as more
dates are announced.

TOUR DATES

9th June Sweden Rock Festival, Sweden
11th June Sauna Festival, Finland
17th June Copenhell Festival, Copenhagen, Denmark
19th June Hellfest, Nantes, France
22nd June Gods of Metal Festival, Milan, Italy
25th June Graspop Festival, Belgium

23rd July HIgh Voltage Festival, London, UK

5th August Wacken Festival, Germany

Judas Priest
Tour Dates

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16 Entertainers Who Died In The Act

The massive ranks of those who live to entertain, are sometimes thinned by the Darwinian forces of dramatic irony. Wether on stage, on screen, or on a high-wire, the cold, bony finger of Death himself has pointed at many a star. Heart attacks seem to be a prime culprit, obviously some entertainers enjoy culinary pleasures [...]

Living Colour | 10.30 | NYC

Words by: Matt Draper | Images by: Greg Aiello

Living Colour :: 10.30.09 :: Highline Ballroom :: New York, NY

Living Colour :: 10.30 :: New York

When thinking about Living Colour, most music fans remember a funk-metal foursome who was a regular fixture on MTV in the early ’90s. Sporting enough neon to guide an airplane in, their outfits matched their sound: a loud, explosive force comprised of many flavors.

26 years after forming in New York City, Living Colour returned to Manhattan’s Highline Ballroom as part of a world tour in support of its fifth album, The Chair in the Doorway.

To be clear, this was not a reunion tour. Frontman Corey Glover has gone on record to say that despite each member’s side projects, Living Colour has been together for nearly a decade following its eight-year hiatus. These side projects included Glover playing the role of Judas in Jesus Christ Superstar, bassist Doug Wimbish and drummer Will Calhoun forming the drum and bass group Head>>Fake, and guitarist Vernon Reid playing with a range of artists, including forming the Yohimbe Brothers with DJ Logic. However, with the new album and massive tour, the band has a feel of reinvention. Better put, this latest incarnation of Living Colour features the same blistering metal-funk rockers who, as we found out at the Highline, have an even greater arsenal of sounds.

From his first words (“We’re baaaaaack!”), Glover commanded a vice grip on the sold out crowd, who was already fist-pumping during the first few lines of the band’s opener, “Burning Bridges,” an aggressive rock song that opens the new album. Glover led the way with his signature halting vocals, made all the more mesmerizing by his night-before-Halloween butcher costume, complete with goggles and leather apron. Calhoun and Wimbish drove the beat while Reid joined the fray to send the song home with his trademark wailing, dizzying guitar.

Vernon Reid :: 10.30 :: New York

A pair of new songs, “The Chair” and “Decadance,” followed next. “Chair,” which, according to a recent JamBase interview served as the album’s key metaphor, evoked a dark, hardcore feel with shouting vocals and deep, dripping bass lines, while “Decadance’s” hard-charging metal sound echoed early Metallica.

Reid stepped to the forefront in the next song, fan-favorite “Middle Man” from the band’s first album, Vivid. As Reid made a flourish of short solos, Glover showed off his vocal range, moving from powerful chorus shouts to flying falsettos. Riding a fired-up crowd hanging on every lyric, Glover unleashed his snarl, which built up to an exploding guitar solo by Reid.

“Time’s Up” followed, featuring Calhoun’s pulsating, rapid-fire drums before moving into “Go Away,” another dark, metal-tinged song. Mirroring many of the politically charged tunes from the Stain album, “Go Away” saw Glover twisting and lunging while belting out stinging lyrics on the topics of suffering and starvation. Reid was again let off his leash for a frenzied solo that seemed to climb higher with Glover’s final chorus shout of “Go awaaaaaaay!” Exhausted, Glover stuck out his tongue as if to pant after the full-body workout.

Shifting gears, Calhoun laid down delicate drums to a sampled backing beat that led to “Method.” The manufactured beats sandwiched between Living Colour’s heavy live sound built a layered effect, adding a new – and welcome – contemporary element to the band’s repertoire.

Corey Glover :: 10.30 :: New York

And then it was time for church. Summoning every ounce of gospel and soul, Glover took over the room with an extended vocal introduction to “Open Letter to a Landlord,” Vivid‘s housing-project anthem. Standing at the mic, bathed in a yellow spotlight, it was hard not to be blown away by Glover’s vocal command. As loud as it was beautiful, Glover hung onto the final word, “memories,” for what seemed like 15 seconds before letting it vanish into Reid’s ripping guitar. A large video screen behind Calhoun served as a visual of the lyrics, displaying dilapidated houses surrounded by flames.

The band then launched into “Bi,” a standard funk-rock tune that quickly became a set highlight when a ferocious Wimbish, now wielding a tiger-patterned bass, hopped down into the crowd and launched into a raging solo that featured him playing with fingers and, yes, his teeth.

“Y’all ain’t ready,” said Glover to the frenzied crowd, which included a packed floor section and second level of seated diners, many of whom had abandoned their chairs. And we weren’t ready, as Calhoun proceeded to slay the crowd with an eye-popping drum solo that made those played by Widespread Panic or The Dead seem like yawners in comparison. Clocking in at more than 10 minutes, Calhoun unleashed an onslaught of sonic weapons, manipulating drum-machines, smashing gongs, and hammering techno-triggered cymbals with neon-tipped drumsticks that made him look like the conductor of a firework show.

Doug Wimbish :: 10.30

With all four members returning to the stage, the band moved back in time with a cover of The Temptations‘ “Papa Was a Rollin’ Stone,” that quickly moved into the old-school hit “Glamour Boys.” Next was new one “Behind the Sun” followed by “Hard Times,” a funky blues number, and “Out of Mind,” a primal, stripped-down metal song warmly greeted by a few head-bangers in the front row.

And just when the band appeared ready to turn it up another level, things took an unusual turn. While Glover spoke to the crowd between songs, he couldn’t seem to take his eyes off Reid. What seemed like funny interplay between the two became a bit awkward, with Glover calling Reid a “crack head” several times (maybe for good reason – though Reid was killing it on guitar, he was shouting a steady stream of gibberish and at one point delayed a song when he didn’t realize his axe wasn’t plugged in).

A forgettable “Elvis is Dead” came next. Played at hyper-speed and featuring saxophone work by Jeff Smith, the song seemed to meander throughout. While impressive, Smith’s solo never hit the song’s high note and, with Reid looking a bit lost, the song came undone before transitioning to a short rendition of Elvis‘ “Hound Dog.”

“Type,” another crowd favorite, kicked the energy back up. The band sped up the studio version, striking a harder, faster tone before stopping on a dime to float into the tune’s “children of concrete and steel” chorus. With the song changing tempos, Glover’s vocals ebbed and flowed over Reid’s crunching guitar licks, and the song melted into a soaring, reggae-inspired finish.

With the band hitting its stride – and with the brief drama behind it – a familiar voice boomed over the speakers. It was Malcolm X, whose soundbite, “And during the few moments that we have left…,” serves as the introduction to “Cult of Personality,” the band’s biggest song that still, 20 years and a million worn-out cassette tapes later, carries an absolutely infectious hook. The crowd erupted with Reid’s first guitar lick and ended up providing, via Glover’s direction, back-up vocals through most of the song, including belting the last stanza at the top of its collective lungs.

Living Colour :: 10.30 :: New York

The band returned for an encore, with Glover informing the crowd he and Reid were bickering backstage over the final song. After mentioning the options – “Love Rears Its Ugly Head” or “Asshole” – Reid piped up, “Why not both?”

And that’s what they did. “Love” came out tight and super funky, and “Asshole” added a melodic touch to finish the show.

The crowd was beyond satiated and the band left the stage to a sea of clapping hands and full-throttle screams. A long line waited to buy merchandise, and the post-show crowd spilling onto 16th Street sung high praise. Living Colour delivered a rollicking two hours of metal, rock, punk, funk, and even a bit of dance music with Calhoun’s drum-circus solo. Minus a couple thrash-heavy metal tunes and Reid’s end-of-show aloofness, they threw down. Simply put, the band came roaring out of the gate, mowing through old and new material with balance while adding some new flavors. While things have drastically changed in both New York (the Highline Ballroom didn’t exist the last time the band put out an album) and the music industry (songs are now purchased electronically) since its beginnings, Living Colour continues to deliver a downright gripping live experience.

Living Colour :: 10.30.09 :: Highline Ballroom :: New York, NY

Burning Bridges, The Chair, Decadance, Middleman, Time’s Up, Go Away, Method, Open Letter to a Landlord, Bi, Drum Solo, Papa was a Rollin’ Stone, Glamour Boys, Behind the Sun, Hard Times, Out of Mind, Elvis is Dead, Hound Dog, Type, Cult of Personality

Encore: Love Rears Its Ugly Head, Asshole

JamBase | Colourful
Go See Live Music!


Sat Eye Candy: Judas Priest

GLENN TIPTON IS 62 WITH NO SIGNS OF SLOWING!

Venerable leather enthusiasts and heavy metal founding fathers Judas Priest celebrate their 40th anniversary this year, and today is the birthday of guitarist Glenn Tipton, who with guitarist K.K. Downing, forms the fierce nucleus of Priest’s original and massively influential sound. Speed, dexterity, and rugged invention are the hallmarks of the Tipton/Downing dyad. Theirs are the iron fists that pummel one bloody whilst Rob Halford snarls and soars, a gut stuck opera singer on a tear.

Without Priest there would be no Iron Maiden, no Megadeth, and a lot less quality heavy music overall (not to mention a very different iconic look for many bands). They remain an active, exciting touring entity and continue to push themselves creatively, putting out their first double studio album last year themed around Nostradamus. We raise a toast to Glenn Tipton, and then a second to the whole lot of them. Thanks for keeping music heavy, sirs!

There’s really nowhere else we could begin except Priest’s signature anthem presented in front of a seething arena mob.

“I’ll be damned, here comes your ghost again.” Thus begins one of the best songs in Judas Priest’s gigantic catalog, “Diamonds And Rust.” Always a touch more sensitive even amidst so much groin thunder, Priest excels at personal laments that speak to us, especially in our angst riddled youth (and those parts that remain with us throughout our lives). Here they are in Memphis on 1982′s Screaming For Vengeance Tour.

After decades of slapping this one around, Priest now shares partial ownership of Fleetwood Mac’s landmark “Green Manalishi (With The Two-Prong Crown).”

Here’s one for aspiring guitarists out there. Glenn teaches us some basics for “Breaking The Law,” “Victim of Changes,” and “Hell Bent For Leather.”

Rob broke out the baddest wizard robe for this 2008 Jimmy Kimmel performance of one of the standouts on their latest album.

There are few spectacles as guiltily satisfying as the start of a Priest concert. A primitive Transformer gives Halford a reach-around in this clip. Really.

Continue reading for more Priestly blessings…

So much air guitar has been played to this! This version is taken from the glorious 2004 Reunited Tour, which saw Halford return to the band after a few years apart. Metal hearts everywhere leapt a little when this tour was announced.

Tunes like this are part of the reason Judas Priest was nearly untouchable in metal in the early ’80s. Boogie meets scrappy proto-thrash. Yum!

Bold, scientifically precise, technically exacting, and tough as nails, this is primo Priest.

More primo Priest from the Defenders of the Faith album, captured in full overblown glory for your weekend amusement.

Rob Halford looks like an escapee from the Hellraiser films in this clip, which roars with a nice punk rock edge full of fast, ugly guitar noise and a beyond ragged vocal.

We conclude with one of the greatest riffs in rock history. Slather that with a snotty, rebellious lyric, deliver it all with appropriate attitude and you’ve got a bonafide classic. Long may the Priest reign!


Jennifer Donahue: Jay-Z: “Every Step You Take, They Remind You, You Ghetto”

The problem isn’t so much what happened with Crowley and Gates. A greater problem is the divide between famous and easily identifiable people of color and those with no defense.