Post by Monsters of Rock on Mar 24, 2021 20:44:24 GMT 10
Judas Priest: Killing Machine
Few people would relish Killing Machine / Hell Bent for Leather its place in the Judas Priest pantheon – after stone-cold metal classic Stained Class and before commercial superstar classic British Steel, it’s almost begging to be forgotten. Yet it’s a damn good album, a classic in its own right, and very significant, being the album where Priest broke out their leather-and-studs image, as well as started to move towards the catchier, more commercial style of British Steel and onwards. Judas Priest never dropped their dark lyrical themes, however, and the existence of songs with themes of heavy partying and S&M give it a dangerous edge suitable for the year of release, in the dying years of the 70s, when the classics were dying out and the commercial, superstar era was approaching…
The Americans got the better end of the deal as far as the album title goes. Killing Machine may be a harder, tougher sounding-title, but Hell Bent for Leather fits in far better with the band’s image and style. There’s a lust for leather evident in several of the songs here, tying the whole package up well with that wonderful cover art, a stylized figure with futuristic explosions reflected in those effortlessly cool shades. And, of course, the music, a collection of killer songs that’s not quite up there with Stained Class (what is?) that nonetheless holds up extremely well thirty-five years later. Really, you could have named the album after any of the songs present, not least the excellent opener Delivering The Goods, warming up with staggered riffing before launching into high-quality rocking, quality that never lets up.
Priest fire on all cylinders from the beginning, Halford’s voice strong and powerful, Tipton and Downing’s guitars melodic and memorable whether riffing or soloing, and with solid backing from the rhythm section of Hill and Binks. And things only get better, with Rock Forever (which gets better every time I hear it, that multi-voiced chorus building up to that amazing solo…) proving that awesome bands are sometimes at their best when writing about listening to awesome bands. The variety is quite excellent. Evening Star starts in acoustic 70s prog style, almost sounding like early Rush before launching into that infectiously catchy chorus, a mini-epic and smash hit single in one killer package. Hell Bent for Leather follows with a noisy opening before putting its head down and charging into perfect chugging metal, topped off with a lovely bit of soloing which manages to sound more futuristic in 1978 than any over-produced Muse pap out recently…
Burning Up is one of those killer Priest songs that always seems to get overlooked when discussing the band’s best, opening with eerie electronic effects before the rock suddenly slides in, mid-paced crunch topped with Halford’s infectious pleas in the verse, the percussive change in the catchy chorus alone sheer genius. The song changes partway through, taking on a proggier style and jazzing things up before returning to that killer chorus. And whether your version of the album has the band’s cover of The Green Manalishi (With the Two-Pronged Crown) or Killing Machine, or both, you’re guaranteed excellent songs, the former turning Fleetwood Mac’s eerie classic rocker into a solid, crunching metal anthem, the latter a slow-burning chugger that matches the casual threat of the lyrics.
To be honest, the only place that this album lets me down at all is Take on the World, which although a forerunner to the likes of United seems a bit out-of-place and awkward to me. There’s no denying that it works as it’s supposed to though, those initial lines of ‘you’ve got to leave your seat, you’ve gotta get up upon your feet’ having the intended stirring feeling, and Halford’s semi-growl quite the change from what we’re used to hearing from him. Elsewhere, even tearsome ballad Before the Dawn works for what it is, and fantastic closer Evil Fantasies, where Halford seems to be trying to mimic an over-enthusiastic soul singer, is just the perfect, highly sexual ending to a great album, building up to something cannily similar to classic Led Zeppelin. It’s a worthy comparison, in my view; Judas Priest may be most famous for their 80s output, but it’s always worth reminding yourself just how bloody good they were in the 70s, and although Killing Machine / Hell Bent for Leather wasn’t their best album in that decade, it’s still a solid, gleaming, studded metal classic.
Side one
Delivering the Goods
Rock Forever
Evening Star
Hell Bent for Leather
Take On the World
Side two
Burnin' Up
The Green Manalishi (With the Two-Pronged Crown) (Fleetwood Mac cover)
Killing Machine
Running Wild
Before the Dawn
Evil Fantasies
Metal Reviews website
Few people would relish Killing Machine / Hell Bent for Leather its place in the Judas Priest pantheon – after stone-cold metal classic Stained Class and before commercial superstar classic British Steel, it’s almost begging to be forgotten. Yet it’s a damn good album, a classic in its own right, and very significant, being the album where Priest broke out their leather-and-studs image, as well as started to move towards the catchier, more commercial style of British Steel and onwards. Judas Priest never dropped their dark lyrical themes, however, and the existence of songs with themes of heavy partying and S&M give it a dangerous edge suitable for the year of release, in the dying years of the 70s, when the classics were dying out and the commercial, superstar era was approaching…
The Americans got the better end of the deal as far as the album title goes. Killing Machine may be a harder, tougher sounding-title, but Hell Bent for Leather fits in far better with the band’s image and style. There’s a lust for leather evident in several of the songs here, tying the whole package up well with that wonderful cover art, a stylized figure with futuristic explosions reflected in those effortlessly cool shades. And, of course, the music, a collection of killer songs that’s not quite up there with Stained Class (what is?) that nonetheless holds up extremely well thirty-five years later. Really, you could have named the album after any of the songs present, not least the excellent opener Delivering The Goods, warming up with staggered riffing before launching into high-quality rocking, quality that never lets up.
Priest fire on all cylinders from the beginning, Halford’s voice strong and powerful, Tipton and Downing’s guitars melodic and memorable whether riffing or soloing, and with solid backing from the rhythm section of Hill and Binks. And things only get better, with Rock Forever (which gets better every time I hear it, that multi-voiced chorus building up to that amazing solo…) proving that awesome bands are sometimes at their best when writing about listening to awesome bands. The variety is quite excellent. Evening Star starts in acoustic 70s prog style, almost sounding like early Rush before launching into that infectiously catchy chorus, a mini-epic and smash hit single in one killer package. Hell Bent for Leather follows with a noisy opening before putting its head down and charging into perfect chugging metal, topped off with a lovely bit of soloing which manages to sound more futuristic in 1978 than any over-produced Muse pap out recently…
Burning Up is one of those killer Priest songs that always seems to get overlooked when discussing the band’s best, opening with eerie electronic effects before the rock suddenly slides in, mid-paced crunch topped with Halford’s infectious pleas in the verse, the percussive change in the catchy chorus alone sheer genius. The song changes partway through, taking on a proggier style and jazzing things up before returning to that killer chorus. And whether your version of the album has the band’s cover of The Green Manalishi (With the Two-Pronged Crown) or Killing Machine, or both, you’re guaranteed excellent songs, the former turning Fleetwood Mac’s eerie classic rocker into a solid, crunching metal anthem, the latter a slow-burning chugger that matches the casual threat of the lyrics.
To be honest, the only place that this album lets me down at all is Take on the World, which although a forerunner to the likes of United seems a bit out-of-place and awkward to me. There’s no denying that it works as it’s supposed to though, those initial lines of ‘you’ve got to leave your seat, you’ve gotta get up upon your feet’ having the intended stirring feeling, and Halford’s semi-growl quite the change from what we’re used to hearing from him. Elsewhere, even tearsome ballad Before the Dawn works for what it is, and fantastic closer Evil Fantasies, where Halford seems to be trying to mimic an over-enthusiastic soul singer, is just the perfect, highly sexual ending to a great album, building up to something cannily similar to classic Led Zeppelin. It’s a worthy comparison, in my view; Judas Priest may be most famous for their 80s output, but it’s always worth reminding yourself just how bloody good they were in the 70s, and although Killing Machine / Hell Bent for Leather wasn’t their best album in that decade, it’s still a solid, gleaming, studded metal classic.
Side one
Delivering the Goods
Rock Forever
Evening Star
Hell Bent for Leather
Take On the World
Side two
Burnin' Up
The Green Manalishi (With the Two-Pronged Crown) (Fleetwood Mac cover)
Killing Machine
Running Wild
Before the Dawn
Evil Fantasies
Metal Reviews website