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  • ROB HALFORD Discusses Documentary “The Ballad Of JUDAS PRIEST” And The Fire Behind His Lyrics: “As I’ve Gotten Older, I’ve Gotten Angrier With the World”

    A new documentary, The Ballad Of Judas Priest, has made its world premiere at the 76th Berlinale – Berlin International Film Festival, running 02/12–02/22. The film is co-directed by filmmaker Sam Dunn and Rage Against The Machine guitarist Tom Morello, and it focuses on Judas Priest’s rise and long-term influence inside and outside metal culture.

    The documentary includes key tracks in the band’s catalog, including “Breaking The Law” and “You’ve Got Another Thing Comin’,” and frames Judas Priest as a band whose impact goes beyond genre labels.

    At the film’s 02/15 Berlinale press conference, Tom Morello directly addressed the political angle in both the movie and the band’s legacy: “What a time to be alive, where you can both make a documentary about one of your favorite bands and fight fascism at the same time. But one of the things that, while the lyrical content — maybe ‘Breaking The Law’ and a few songs — are explicitly political in Judas Priest, the band’s existence is very political.”

    “When I’ve seen Judas Priest over the course of the last decade or so in Los Angeles, the audience is maybe more than 50% Latino. It’s a lot of gay couples — nothing that has anything to do with the stereotypical… And yes, there are some older dudes like myself and leather jackets proudly bringing their kids to the show as well, but that community and the unity and the harmony that exists at a Judas Priest show is in some ways a model for how we might all do better,” Morello continued (transcribed by Blabbermouth).

    Judas Priest singer Rob Halford was also at the press conference and explained how social and political realities have shaped his writing for years: “It’s been impossible for me as a lyricist to not avoid seeing things in the world that affect me, that get me pissed off and thinking, is there a way I can put this into a song?” Rob explained.

    “And I’ve been doing that forever, whether it was ‘Raw Deal’ from Sin After Sin, which was a really explicit gay song, going to Fire Island and trying to hook up with somebody and the freedom that that gives you as a person to be with your own people, to a song called ‘Savage’, which is about climate change from the — what album was ‘Savage’ on? Stained Class? So that’s a ways back. The last album [2024’s Invincible Shield], I talk about — I’m not gonna say his name, but I talk about that person, and it’s a bit of a smokescreen, but if you understand, if you really listen, the message is there, the expression, the feeling is there. And it’s a very difficult tight rope to walk because I just wanna give people a good time,” he added.

    Halford continued with a broader point about messaging and audience connection: “Rage Against The Machine gives people a great time. When you see everybody bouncing up and down, they’re lost. They’re in ecstasy, but the message isn’t lost on them. The message is probably more relevant when they’re home alone, lying in bed or sitting, having a coffee and listening to music. That’s a whole different experience in the way the message can reach you. So, I really have to temper myself, because as I’ve gotten older, I’ve gotten angrier with the world. I’ve gotten angrier with the injustice, particularly for my own people who are still suffering and are not given the human rights that they absolutely deserve.”

    “I’m not talking about Germany, — I’m talking about Saudi Arabia, Iran, other parts of the world where people like myself are just used and abused in horrible ways. So, I try my best to avoid that type of explicit message, but it’s there. It’s there. And that gives me some comfort that I’m not letting myself down consciously on subjects that mean a lot to me and piss me off.”

    Co-director Sam Dunn also emphasized why “Breaking The Law” is a central moment in the film: “For me, going into the film, there were probably four or five main moments I knew we needed to hit in the story of this band. And one of them was the song ‘Breaking The Law’ and the brilliant and fun video for ‘Breaking The Law’. And the reason why that is is ’cause — this ties back to our first film, which is, I think, we’ve been on a journey to debunk stereotypes about heavy metal for over two decades now. And I think there still lingers that stereotype of heavy metal [that] it’s just about sex, drugs, and hedonism, and all of that. So a song like ‘Breaking The Law’ was very important to illustrate that Judas Priest, in 1980, had something very important and timely to say about the lives of working-class people in England at that time. And when I did the last interview with Rob and he said the line, ‘It’s a revolution song’ — thank you for delivering that line — that was a very important beat in the story for me.”

    The first preview clip from The Ballad Of Judas Priest, featuring Rob Halford discussing the inspiration behind “Breaking The Law,” premiered through Rolling Stone. Check it out below.

    The post ROB HALFORD Discusses Documentary “The Ballad Of JUDAS PRIEST” And The Fire Behind His Lyrics: “As I’ve Gotten Older, I’ve Gotten Angrier With the World” appeared first on Sonic Perspectives.

  • GoFundMe Launched for Family of KRIEG’s Neill Jameson to Aid in Cancer Treatment & Childcare Expenses

    If you have even a passing interest in the U.S. black metal scene, you definitely know who Neill Jameson is from his work with Twilight, Poison Blood and, most notably, Krieg. And if you’ve been reading Decibel with any regularly for the past decade, you really know who Neill Jameson is via his incredibly candid and long-running Low Culture column. Over the past several years, he’s detailed his partner’s battle with cancer, and the obvious strain it’s leveled on their family. Unfortunately after five years of a remission, scans last summer revealed that disease had returned as Stage 4 lung cancer, requiring immediate and aggressive treatment.

    Neill was recently forced to leave to his job to serve has his partner’s primary caregiver and to also take care of their four-year old daughter full-time, resulting in the launch of a GoFundMe to not only aid in cancer treatment and childcare expenses, but to help with basic living necessities. Neill explains:

    Because of this, we are facing incredible financial hardship-mortgage, groceries, utilities. With my family’s care being a 24 hour job there is no possibility that I can work (outside of secondary income sources like freelancing, which even then is a challenge) and we are in danger of losing our home as well as the negative impact this sort of stress has on Nikki’s health and Vale’s development. It’s just an overall terrible situation, made worse by the previous year’s financial emergencies from unexpected home damage destroying my savings and credit.
    As much as I hate to do it, especially in today’s world where so much is going wrong for so many, I have to ask for help. I am asking for donations to help keep our house and the ability to cover general expenses while I help give my family the care they need in both of their difficult situations. Anything helps to alleviate the stress from outside while we continue to see how Nikki progresses and Vale grows. Even if it’s just sharing this Gofundme or through my Discogs/eBay/Substack where I am continuing to list much of my music and personal collection accumulated through four decades in music and the arts.
    If you are in a position to do so, please considering donating to help out one of our own.

    The post GoFundMe Launched for Family of KRIEG’s Neill Jameson to Aid in Cancer Treatment & Childcare Expenses appeared first on Decibel Magazine.

  • Album Review: Sham 69 – The Albums 1978-80

    Album Review: Sham 69 – The Albums 1978-80

    Reviewed by Dan Barnes

    Formed in 1975 in Hersham, Surrey, as Jimmy & The Ferrets (according to Punk77.co.uk) by singer Jimmy Pursey, before changing their style and name after witnessing the Sex Pistols in concert, Sham 69 were the real-deal when it came to Street Punk as they were four working class lads from rough neighbourhoods, who wrote and sung about the world they saw.

    Early line-up changes settled in 1977 when Pursey was joined by Dave Parsons, bassist Dave Tregunna and drummer Mark Cain, who would see the band through the initial recordings and releases of their first two influential albums.

    Such is the complicated history of Sham 69 – one that still needs a blank wall and yards of red string to fully articulate – that the band found themselves burning brightly in the latter years of the Seventies, only to implode and sit most of the Eighties out, a footnote in the genre throughout most of that decade.

    As is their jam, Cherry Red Records is to issue a four-CD box set of Sham’s first wave of albums, running from the Tell Us the Truth debut in 1978, through the to final recording for eight years, The Game in 1980. As ever, Cherry Red have sweetened the deal further but loading each disc with more bonus tracks than you can shake a stick at, and producing a full colour booklet packed with pictures and comprehensive liner notes from Vive La Rock’s Phil Singleton.

    Disc one is the first of the two albums released by Shamin 1978: the debut Tell Us the Truth, which is unusually split between what was then the side 1, of six live tracks, and side 2 the studio stuff.

    Recorded at various venues across London, side 1 captures the raw aggression of a Seventies Sham show, opening with We Got a Fight – about getting you head kicked in – Pursey’s uncultured vocals are the perfect fit for the subject matter, with the band smashing out aggy punk attitude. Rip Off, a drum-led Ulster, the protest of George Davies is Innocent proved politics was never far from Punk’s radar. They Don’t Understand and one of Sham’s biggest hits, Borstal Breakout.

    The studio side opens with Family Life and a snippet of a typical working-class home in the Seventies, the following Hey Little Rich Boy seems to follow perfectly, addressing many of the same themes from a different angle. I’m A Man, I’m a Boy and What About the Lonely? are both Street Punk to the core, with the former having a real Cockney Rejects vibe. The title track and It’s Never Too Late veer into more traditional punk territory, as the latter adopts something of a Ramones’ feel. Closer, Whose Generation! stands out for its dissonance.

    The bonus material includes all three tracks from the 1977 gritty single, I Don’t Wanna, including B-sides Ulster and Red London; the single version of Borstal Breakout and Song of the Streets, also known as What Have We Got?

    Tell Us the Truth released in the Spring of 1978 and its successor, That’s Life saw the light of day that same November. Hitting number twenty-seven in the UK Album charts – two places lower than its predecessor, this sophomore record was a far more coherent listen, with the bulk of the material being written as a collaboration between Jimmy and Dave Parsons.

    As the fatalistic title suggests, That’s Life is something of a concept album, taking all the trails and tribulations of the unceasing daily grind of just trying to survive, and turning it into something that anyone caught on the eat-sleep-work-repeat treadmill can appreciate. The initial release courted two singles: Hurry Up Harry – with its iconic “We’re going down the pub” chorus – out before the album and reaching number 10 in the UK Singles chart; and Angels with Dirty Faces which hit number 19 six months later.

    Album Review: Sham 69 - The Albums 1978-80

    The B-sides of both those singles can be found among the bonus material: No Entry, from …Harry is unremarkable, but Angel’s… flip side, Cockney Kids Are Innocent, is worthy of more exposure. A 7” version of Sunday Morning Nightmare adds thirty-seconds to the run-time, released at the other side of one of Sham 69’s biggest moments: If the Kids are United; as much a stone-cold punk classic as Pretty Vacant, War on the Terraces, or New Rose.

    It was nearly a whole year before album number three was released, The Adventures of the Hersham Boys also saw a change in personnel with Ricky Goldstein picking up the sticks following Mark’s departure.

    While not as critically well received as the first two, Adventures… broke into the UK Top Ten Albums charts on release. Accusations were levelled that the band had lost their Street sound and had become too refined. The balladic Fly Dark Angel, the Rock N Roll of Joey’s on the Street Again, and The Yardbirds’ cover of You’re a Better Man Than I, do take some of the band’s energy out of the album early on.

    The introduction of Hersham Boys’ gang shouts, Lost on Highway 46’s driving rhythms and the rabble-rousing What Have We Got? goes someway to right the ship.

    Bonus material here includes the single edit of Questions and Answers, B-sides of Gotta Survive and an unceremonious cover of The Beatles’ With a Little Help From My Friends; insult to injury comes when they took on Day Tripper, giving it the Sham treatment. There’s the 7” version of Hersham Boys, which made number 6 in the UK Singles chart in the summer of ’79 and 12” edits of both Borstal Breakout and If the Kids Are United.

    Disc four is what would be Sham 69’s last album for some years, The Game, recorded in the French Alps it seems a world away from the gritty Streets of Hersham. The criticism levelled at the last album fits suitable here too, with the bulk of The Game’s songs being rather toothless compared to other Sham tunes on offer in this boxset.

    Give a Dog a Bone, Spray It on the Wall, Déjà Vu and Run Wild Run Free are the standout tracks for me. Single, Tell the Children, includes saxophone by Hawkwind’s Nik Turner; Lord of the Flies has backing vocals courtesy of The Royal School of Music. The bonus material is more scant here than on the other three discs, with …Children B-side, Jack, a synth accompanied Unite and Win, and another version of the debut’s I’m a Man, I’m a Boy.

    Following the release of The Game, Sham 69 would disappear, with only an occasional compilation or live record to keep them in the minds of the public. Pursey and Parsons would come together again for 1988’s Volunteer album, both writing and producing in partnership.

    A steady stream of albums was released through the Nineties, up to 2001’s Direct Action Day 21, after which things start to get messy. At one point there were two functioning bands bearing the Sham 69 name: one featuring the Pursey / Parsons / Tregunna line-up, the other with original guitarist Neil Harris. It’s the Pursey / Parsons / Tregunna iteration who regularly headlined at such festivals as Rebellion and Calling. Sadly, Neil passed away in January 2018, aged 63.

    One of Punk’s most enduring acts is celebrated in this sixty-six-track boxset, covering their most successful and influential period. Well worth a look.

    For all the latest news, reviews, interviews across the heavy metal spectrum follow THE RAZORS’S EDGE on facebook, twitter and instagram.

    The post Album Review: Sham 69 – The Albums 1978-80 appeared first on The Razor's Edge.

  • Brittany Howard Covers Tina Turner With The St. Louis Symphony Orchestra

    There aren’t too many singers who have voices big enough to cover the late Tina Turner without embarrassing themselves, but Brittany Howard is one of them. On Sunday night, Howard took part in the St. Louis Symphony Orchestra’s tribute to Turner at St. Louis’ Jack C. Taylor Music Center. Turner famously came from Nutbush, Tennessee, but she got her start singing in St. Louis nightclubs. As part of that salute, Howard joined the orchestra to howl out Turner’s hit “The Best,” which is not actually titled “Simply The Best” even though that’s what everyone calls it.

    The post Brittany Howard Covers Tina Turner With The St. Louis Symphony Orchestra appeared first on Stereogum.

  • Behemoth Forced To Cancel Show In Bangalore, India

    Following the recent cancellation of their scheduled show in Turkiye, Polish blackened death metal titans Behemoth has announced that they have been forced to cancel their upcoming show in Bangalore, India, owing to pressure from religious groups. A statement from the band reads as follows: "Behemoth regret to announce the cancellation of the ba… Read More/Discuss on Metal Underground.com
  • Death Ray Vision’s Chris Rosati Allegedly Linked to Patriot Front

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    Well, well, well. Here we go again, with some in a hardcore band being on some dumb fuckin racist, nazi shit… allegedly. The culprit this time around is Chris Rosati, the guitarist for Massachusetts thrashcore band Death Ray Vision. They somehow just found out that he’s allegedly connected to Patriot Front Network 7 and the New England Active Club. *Extreme eyeroll*

    The band’s vocalist Keith Bennett took to social media to address everything, sharing how they were surprised by the allegations and how he himself also used to believe in all that bullshit but has since had a

    “Hey, what’s up? My name is Keith. I’m a singer for Death Ray Vision, and I’m making this to address the situation that evolved over the last couple of days with our guitar players involvement with the Patriot Front. First of all, fuck the Patriot Front. Fuck fascism, fuck Nazis, fuck racism, fuck the Patriot Front.

    “We had no idea about any of this. We did not cosign, we did not condone, we did not enable, and we weren’t hiding anything within our ranks because we didn’t fucking know. It sucks. It came out of fucking nowhere.

    “But for anybody who gives a fuck, because obviously we’re not Metallica, but We’re all human beings who have to get painted by the same brush. So for anybody who’s listening, anybody who gives a fuck, I know that the band is making their own statement today, but I can speak for everybody. We’re not about that bullshit. No fucking way.

    “For accountability, I had a past that was part of that world, and I left that far fucking behind. I can speak with confidence saying that that is not who I am today. It’s not who I’ve been for a long fucking time, and I still regret that bullshit.

    “I hope everybody has a good day. Fuck the Patriot front. Stay free. Bye.”

    The rest of the band echoed Bennett by reposting his video with the below caption:

    Keith said it best in this video. In solidarity, we are reposting his eloquent words.

    “For anyone who is still uncertain about how we feel:

    “DRV does not support Fascism, Racism, or ANY Nazi ideology. These abhorrent views do not have anything to do with who we are and what we believe in.

    “Fuck The Patriot Front”

    Cool. This shit is so old. It is beyond me how the band DIDN’T already know about this, considering he’s been in the band FOR ALMOST A DECADE. Like, get fuckin real. At least Keith owned up to his own bullshit of the past, but if anything, I feel like that would’ve made it easier for him to connect the dots when it comes to Chris. But, what do I know?

    Rosati has yet to respond.

    The post Death Ray Vision’s Chris Rosati Allegedly Linked to Patriot Front appeared first on MetalSucks.

  • AN NCS PREMIERE: OSMIUM GATE — “WATERS OF NATRON”

    (written by Islander) We are genuinely thrilled today to introduce you to Osmium Gate, a two-person instrumental metal band “forged in the shadows of Salt Lake City, Utah”. Those two people are guitarist/bassist Drew Ehrgott, known for his work in Reverence Of The Martyr, and drummer Rene Gomez, “whose percussive presence reverberates through Ibex Throne, […]

    The post AN NCS PREMIERE: OSMIUM GATE — “WATERS OF NATRON” appeared first on NO CLEAN SINGING.

  • AVATAR Ends London Gig Early Due To Crew Members Being Shocked By Electrical Equipment

    Avatar 2025

    Swedish metal group Avatar had to cut their London show short due to their crew members being shocked by electrical equipment.

    The post AVATAR Ends London Gig Early Due To Crew Members Being Shocked By Electrical Equipment appeared first on Metal Injection.