98 Live Meltdown is a good recording. It’s my go to for any Ripper era material. The Jugulator songs are greatly improved there and most of the best ones are performed.
As I slowly catch up in this thread, I’ve found that the period from 1986 to about 1992ish was a bit of a Renaissance for Halford, similar to the late 90s to early 00s for Bruce. Painkiller is the go to example, but his vocals are really fantastic on Turbo and Ram It Down as well. The live album is also great and showcases a level of energy and intensity from Rob that hasn’t been seen before or since. He even dances! Knowing what he was going through not long before makes it all the more inspirational. The Priest Live video is without a doubt my favorite live footage from the band. It’s not even a contest. The Turbo songs sound great. Out in the Cold is such a good opener and has more energy than on record. The highlight has to be The Sentinel though. Again, Halford is stunning on it.
Ram It Down is Priest’s b-sides albums. Filled with leftovers and a clearly unfinished production. It doesn’t surprise me that there was little to no promotion and the band has essentially ignored it since. It’s almost like they were filling some contractual obligation. I know a lot of the material was supposed to make up a second disc of Turbo, but that doesn’t explain why Ram It Down was such a rushed job.
It’s an odd album because you can hear Priest getting their edge back but it’s still very much drenched in 80s hairspray. Rob sounds incredible, the best he’s sounded since the 70s. His shrieks are powerful and he delivers even the cheesiest lyrics with so much conviction. His tone is also fuller and there’s more support in his voice. The guitar playing took a huge step up during this time. They’re incorporating new techniques like sweep picking to keep up with the younger metal gunslingers. I think Glenn and KK frequently overstretched themselves as players, but it’s at least commendable that they regularly tried to innovate and grow as musicians. That sort of thing is very rare in the rock world. There’s a lot of great playing on this album that proves it was a necessary stepping stone to get to Painkiller.
I don’t dislike many of the songs here. I actually think most of the first six songs are pretty decent to great. Come And Get It is the weak link. Ram It Down, Hard As Iron, and Blood Red Skies are among the heaviest and greatest songs the band ever recorded, period. Imagine those with Painkiller’s production. Heavy Metal and Love Zone are enjoyable enough, but probably wouldn’t stand out much on a better album. Everything after Blood Red Skies is pretty disposable to me. It’s all stuff that should’ve been b-sides, not album tracks. I’m surprised at the love for Monster of Rock, not a huge fan. I can appreciate the doominess though.
Overall, the album suffers from lack of real drums, poor production, and half of the material had no business being on a main album. I’m not sure which I prefer between this and Turbo. They’re both in this weird space where I don’t dislike them but they were also creatives missteps and not really what I want from Priest. I would probably take Turbo just because it is a much more fully realized and sonically interesting project. That being said, this would be a top 5 Priest album:
Ram It Down
Turbo Lover
Locked In
Reckless
Out in the Cold
Heavy Metal
Blood Red Skies
Hard As Iron
Forgive me Cried, for I have list.
As I slowly catch up in this thread, I’ve found that the period from 1986 to about 1992ish was a bit of a Renaissance for Halford, similar to the late 90s to early 00s for Bruce. Painkiller is the go to example, but his vocals are really fantastic on Turbo and Ram It Down as well. The live album is also great and showcases a level of energy and intensity from Rob that hasn’t been seen before or since. He even dances! Knowing what he was going through not long before makes it all the more inspirational. The Priest Live video is without a doubt my favorite live footage from the band. It’s not even a contest. The Turbo songs sound great. Out in the Cold is such a good opener and has more energy than on record. The highlight has to be The Sentinel though. Again, Halford is stunning on it.
Ram It Down is Priest’s b-sides albums. Filled with leftovers and a clearly unfinished production. It doesn’t surprise me that there was little to no promotion and the band has essentially ignored it since. It’s almost like they were filling some contractual obligation. I know a lot of the material was supposed to make up a second disc of Turbo, but that doesn’t explain why Ram It Down was such a rushed job.
It’s an odd album because you can hear Priest getting their edge back but it’s still very much drenched in 80s hairspray. Rob sounds incredible, the best he’s sounded since the 70s. His shrieks are powerful and he delivers even the cheesiest lyrics with so much conviction. His tone is also fuller and there’s more support in his voice. The guitar playing took a huge step up during this time. They’re incorporating new techniques like sweep picking to keep up with the younger metal gunslingers. I think Glenn and KK frequently overstretched themselves as players, but it’s at least commendable that they regularly tried to innovate and grow as musicians. That sort of thing is very rare in the rock world. There’s a lot of great playing on this album that proves it was a necessary stepping stone to get to Painkiller.
I don’t dislike many of the songs here. I actually think most of the first six songs are pretty decent to great. Come And Get It is the weak link. Ram It Down, Hard As Iron, and Blood Red Skies are among the heaviest and greatest songs the band ever recorded, period. Imagine those with Painkiller’s production. Heavy Metal and Love Zone are enjoyable enough, but probably wouldn’t stand out much on a better album. Everything after Blood Red Skies is pretty disposable to me. It’s all stuff that should’ve been b-sides, not album tracks. I’m surprised at the love for Monster of Rock, not a huge fan. I can appreciate the doominess though.
Overall, the album suffers from lack of real drums, poor production, and half of the material had no business being on a main album. I’m not sure which I prefer between this and Turbo. They’re both in this weird space where I don’t dislike them but they were also creatives missteps and not really what I want from Priest. I would probably take Turbo just because it is a much more fully realized and sonically interesting project. That being said, this would be a top 5 Priest album:
Ram It Down
Turbo Lover
Locked In
Reckless
Out in the Cold
Heavy Metal
Blood Red Skies
Hard As Iron
Forgive me Cried, for I have list.
Bias! The best version was played in Las Vegas but I can’t find a recording.This is the best performance of Blood Red Skies IMO @MrKnickerbocker
Better than the studio version.