Judas Priest Screaming For Vengeance Special 30th Anniversary Edition

Yax

Ancient Mariner

JUDAS PRIEST
SCREAMING FOR VENGEANCE SPECIAL 30TH ANNIVERSARY EDITION
Release date: 3rd September 2012
"One of the most important, influential and imitated bands ever..." – Kerrang
A vital part of rock history - Judas Priest have spent 4 decades writing classic songs and putting on spectacular live shows. During this period, the band has sold in excess of 30 million albums, and played to countless millions of fans across the globe. In 1982, they released their eighth studio album SCREAMING FOR VENGEANCE, containing their hugely successful You’ve Got Another Thing Coming, the single which proved that metal could get mainstream radio airplay in the US – leading the way for a whole generation of new metal bands.
To celebrate the 30 year anniversary of this epic release, Judas Priest present you with SCREAMING FOR VENGEANCE – SPECIAL 30TH ANNIVERSARY EDITION, containing not only the re-mastered original album plus bonus tracks, but also a live DVD from the 1983 US Festival show, filmed in San Bernadino CA on 29th May 1983.
The US Festival was intended to be a celebration of evolving technologies; a marriage of music, computers, television and people - organized by Steve Wozniak formerly of Apple Computer.
The SCREAMING FOR VENGEANCE – SPECIAL 30TH ANNIVERSARY EDITION Live DVD was filmed at the second, and what turned out to be last, US Festival in 1983. The Sunday was the Heavy Metal Day -"It was the day new wave died and rock n' roll took over". It set the single-day concert attendance record for the US with an estimated 375,000 people.
Judas Priest have this to say about this memorable day in metal history:
'On the day that we performed, we flew in by helicopter - and the first sight we saw was that of thousands of abandoned cars piled up around the crests of the hills that surrounded the festival arena, which as we went over took our breath away. For there below us, spread throughout hundreds of acres was a massive crowd – over three hundred thousand strong! The summer heat was raging and combined with the hot Santa Ana winds made for a scorching metal furnace on stage.'
CD tracklisting:

1. The Hellion
2. Electric Eye
3. Riding On The Wind
4. Bloodstone
5. (Take These) Chains
6. Pain And Pleasure
7. Screaming For Vengeance
8. You’ve Got Another Thing Coming
9. Fever
10. Devil’s Child

Bonus tracks:
11. *Electric Eye (live)
12. *Riding on the Wind (live)
13. *You’ve Got Another Thing Coming (Live)
14. *Screaming For Vengeance (Live)
15. Devil’s Child (live)
16. Prisoner of Your Eyes

* Live from the San Antonio Civic Center, September 10th 1982
DVD:

US Festival Show - San Bernadino CA 29th May 1983

1. Electric Eye
2. Riding On The Wind
3. Heading Out To The Highway
4. Metal Gods
5. Breaking The Law
6. Diamonds And Rust
7. Victim Of Changes
8. Living After Midnight
9. The Green Manalishi (with the two-pronged crown)
10. Screaming For Vengeance
11. You’ve Got Another Thing Coming
12. Hell Bent For Leather


Plus booklet featuring photos from Mark Weiss and sleeve notes written by Eddie Trunk (long -standing and well-respected US rock journo, author, radio and tv presenter)

CD+DVD
Cat #: 88725444662
Barcode: 887254446620

----------------------------------------------------------


I am excited.
 
I am not that much. That DVD could be nice though. I wonder if something like this will happen again in 2014.
 
I am obviously excited over the DVD as well, not the CD.

I hope it does, Foro! DOTF footage is nearly non existent, save for Freewheel Burning from Dortmund 1983, before the album was released. I hope the Long Beach show was filmed...
 
Can't they just release a stand-alone DVD without re-packaging an old album yet again?
 
Can't they just release a stand-alone DVD without re-packaging an old album yet again?
It only costs 10.99£. The DVD is too short for a standalone release. I'm just happy they didn't just bundle the Memphis DVD with the CD. That would've sucked.
 
Right. Had you said Live Vengeance, I'd have known what you meant. ;)
 
I've the DVD present in the metalogy boxset, rather than the standalone one later released - I too am glad this will be a different concert. I have the 30th anniv. British Steel, and would even if I hadn't lost my original copy of the album.

I'll be most interested to see the 30th anniv of Ram it Down and Painkiller myself, but it brings up another issue I have with all such releases - where to draw the line? I tend to buy most live/comp albums Maiden or Priest do but sometimes think is it worth it... sure there's the "complete collection" thing but why? When Priest released the singles boxset I considered it for the B-sides but as with most songs I pretty much either listen to a whole gig or I listen to my favourite version (be it studio, single, live, whatever) and then all others are never touched... so why do I need/want them?
 
Yeah, why not just release a history series like Maiden do? There is a lot to criticise with Maiden's recent release policy, but the history DVDs are a prime example of how it should be done.
 
Back
Top