Welcome to PRIEST WEEKEND! It’s a long Thanksgiving weekend in Canada, and…
Well, here’s the truth of it. I had three Judas Priest reviews lined up and needed a spot to schedule them. A three day weekend worked. That’s how much thought went into the scheduling of this Thanksgiving theme.
Enjoy PRIEST WEEKEND starting with their immortal second album…
JUDAS PRIEST – Sad Wings of Destiny (1976 Gull)
It’s quite a shame that Judas Priest haven’t regained the rights to their first and second albums. Too many fly-by-night labels have done shoddy or half-arsed reissues of the albums and Sad Wings is no exception. This one, on Snapper, isn’t too objectionable. It’s funny to see “digitally mastered” on the front sticker, as if this is some kind of selling feature. All CDs are digitally mastered! Remember that old AAD, ADD, DDD logo that used to appear on CDs? The A and D refers to analog or digital processes: recording, mixing, and mastering. Every CD is at least AAD. The “informative liner notes” (by somebody called “Krusher”) is just a blubbering general history essay on the band.
Fortunately, no matter how it’s packaged, the music is exceptional.
“Victim of Changes” defines “epic”, and probably remains Judas Priest’s definitive word on the epic song. This is actually a mashup of two earlier songs called “Red Light Lady”, written by Rob Halford, and “Whiskey Woman” by original singer and founder, Al Atkins. That’s how it came to be that Halford shares a writing credit with his predecessor, an unusual circumstance indeed! The finished song “Victim of Changes” has everything: the concrete heavy riffs, the drama, the melody and the unearthly screams! It takes its time, but it simply lays waste to the landscape. By the time Rob nails his final scream, you may find yourself hard of hearing. As if that wasn’t enough, “The Ripper” (a shorty) contains even more screams-per-minute than “Victim”. Priest seemed to take a turn away from blues, towards metal on Sad Wings of Destiny. The first two songs are as sharp and devastating as anything else in the Priest canon.
Although they are often separated on compilations and whatnot, “Dreamer Deceiver” and “Deceiver” are more or less one song. One sounds incomplete without the other. “Dreamer Deceiver” is an airy, acoustic number about some sort of ethereal being. It is as entrancing as its title character:
“We followed the Dreamer through the purple hazy clouds,
He could control our sense of time.
We thought were lost but, no matter how we tried,
Everyone was in peace of mind.”
Rob’s vocal performance on this one ranges from the deep and dramatic, to the wails that Priest fans crave. It is the blueprint for similar early Iron Maiden tracks such as “Remember Tomorrow”. Even the guitar solo is a well-composed piece of music, but this is just the beginning. Morphing into “Deceiver”, the acoustic plucking has changed to an electric chug. This time the guitar solo blazes rather than cries. “Deceiver” burns out quick, ending the first side.
Side two begins, as it obviously should, with a piano instrumental! Glenn Tipton wrote and performed “Prelude” which is really just another track meant for you to let your guard down…before being ploughed over by the evil “Tyrant”! He is the destructor, and every man shall fall! The way Rob screams it, you believe it. This is straight up the alley of prior tunes, like “Ripper” and “Deceiver”: fast, lean, and heavy as balls!
“Genocide” is a change of pace, a leaning towards the mid-tempo ground that Priest would find great success with later. There is a Priest stamp to it: a simple 4/4 beat, a couple of cool riffs, verses, chorus and solo…but I like the slow middle section best. “Sin after sin…I have endured, but the wounds I bear, are the wounds of love.” Sin After Sin was used as the next Priest album title. Then, another surprise. “Epitaph” is a piano ballad with Rob singing with a Queen-like backdrop of vocals. Only piano and vocals, that is it. Once again this is a Glenn Tipton song, and even though Priest let on that they had quiet tendencies, this is still a bit of a shocker. “Pretty” is an appropriate word. It is a tour de force for Rob, who performed some very intricate singing.
Chugging off to into the horizon, “Island of Domination” is the final track on a purely excellent heavy metal album. Multi-layered Halford screams usher in the final assault. Rocking both heavily and intelligently, the mighty Priest finished the album with a blitzkrieg, taking no prisoners. From gallop to groove, “Island of Domination” has a bit of everything Priest did well.
What an album. Do you like heavy metal music? Then you need Sad Wings. Period. Exclamation point!
5/5 stars
It’s Canadian Thanksgiving? We don’t celebrate that in America until the end of November. Do you guys eat a bunch of turkey and watch football? Is it meant to commemorate the relationship between the early Canadian settlers and the Natives?
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Yes it’s basically the same as the US Thanksgiving, but not as big of a deal. We do it the same with the turkey and the fixings but it’s not as big a celebration as you have. Some people will be watching football this weekend but the majority will be watching the Toronto Blue Jays. Personally I look forward to classic seasonal movies — Planes Trains & Automobiles is the best Thanksgiving movie of all time.
As I speak the turkey is thawing. Baseball is Sunday. Tonight is hockey. I haven’t seen if the movie’s on yet…
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Scent of a woman is my favorite Thanksgiving film, but I haven’t seen Planes, Trains and Automobiles for a long time.
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One of my favourite thanksgiving films is Home for the Holidays with Holly Hunter, Anne Bancroft and Charles Durning.
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SATURDAY NIGHT AND THE PRIEST IS BACK!
Great write up Mike..to this day I have never owned this album of course I have heard the tracks from Unleashed ….but I may have to get around to getting this at some point …..
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Really, that surprises me Deke! I would have figured you to own all the classic Priest. Needless to say this is one to pick up in your travels. Unleashed is heavier but Sad Wings is the original.
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I’m leery of albums recorded as ADD. I just don’t believe they stayed with it long enough to see the project through properly…
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I see what you did there ;)
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Haha I thought you’d like… HEY LOOK A SQUIRREL!
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I got nothin’, you da man!
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You’e been working on that one for YEARS. Haven’t you?
:)
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Haha I swear it just came to me today as I was reading this post.
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I have this record here, somewhere! It’s packed with the first one all on one disc!
I remember listening to this stuff with you, in the car, headed into Taranna. I don’t remember what we were laughing about, but I remember some hilarity about the lyrics. It was probably something goofy I said as I misinterpreted things.
Great record, solid rawk. Hells yes.
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You have a Priest album that Deke does not. That’s something right there!
I know the track in the one clip from our video was “Winter” from Rocka Rolla (first album on that double thing you have). I wish I knew what we were laughing about! It doesn’t take much.
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No idea what we were laughing about. You’re right, it coulda been anything!
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I am pretty sure that when we’re in the car, just about everything was discussed and joked about!
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It’s true. Damn I wish I could remember what we were talking about, it’s vague in my memory though I do remember something about… something. Gah. Getting old is for the birds. Was it something to do with him liking men – some lyric that was a double entendre?
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Just found this in a box, it will be the moving soundtrack today.
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Are you moving today? Good luck sir!
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Been moving for weeks the joys of adult children, they don’t move as fast as you would like, thanks though.
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I have two CD masterings of this album. My favorite is the old RCA version with UPC: 078635474725… Amazon says it’s from 1990, but I think it’s actually older. I also have the KOCH version from 2000, UPC: 099923806721. It is slightly “louder” but not better, with more obvious tape flutter most apparent during the slower acoustic passages. Do you have either of these? Would it be worth it to pick up the Snapper release?
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Hey William,
No I have never owned either of those two version. You can hear tape flutter on this one too. Just slight. It would be interesting to get an original Gull LP and compare.
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Anything is worth picking up when the term Snapper is used!
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Deke!! You have kids!
LOL
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Great write up, Mike. This sounds like a winner! I’m not familiar with any of Priest’s early stuff at all … I think the earliest album I have is Unleashed. Anyway, if I see these cheap I’ll snag ’em.
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Unleashed has LOADS of songs from this. Much heavier performance on Unleashed though. That doesn’t make Sad Wings inferior just different.
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Definitely one I’m interested in. I do like the songs on here I know (thanks to Unleashed). Likely try find a reasonably priced copy …
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Giving thanks for the priest somehow seems appropriate.
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Hahaha, yeah it’s as close as I got to a theme.
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Essential album and cool write up. And that cover is one of the very best.
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YES! And further to the discussion on the Jugulator thread, you can see the “tuning fork” logo here, the original, around the angel’s neck. Looks less like a battle axe than the Jugulator version.
I don’t know who did this cover. Joe knows who did Jugulator ;)
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I happen to have this one on the external HD – I’ll add it to the iPod!
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Are you serious! That’s cool! How did you get it?
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Kevin. He likes Priest. I don’t know where he got it from…
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OK I have never really listened to Priest apart from the obvious songs but this is so fun, Uriah Heep by way of Queen and well it is heavy man.
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