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2wo - Voyeurs Album Promo: Unrestrained! Magazine #4, 1998
Halford - Halford IV: Made for Metal (2010)
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Halford - "Crucible" 21/06/2002
Friday, May 23: Halford, "Hearts of Darkness"
Rob Halford was one of the select few artists whose most challenging and βdifficultβ material was also among their most rewarding.Β Crucible was certainly all of those things, as it was not the obvious next step from the deliberate Judas Priest throwback reset that was Resurrection, and for that matter it only came to exist because Priest wouldnβt take Halford back and the singer didnβt have anything else to fall back on.Β But even as it felt like a willfully obtuse and not especially welcoming record, Crucible also immediately signaled its virtues through its focused musicianship, incisive arrangements and shockingly thoughtful wordsmithing that found Halford not taking the easy way lyrically for the first time in a long time, if not perhaps for the first time in his life.Β That was what made βHearts of Darknessβ crush to such memorable effect: it was not inherently accessible, but Roy Z.βs smooth (not slick) production gave the guitars a distinct ebb and flow while the innate power of Halfordβs strident tenor provided its own hook.Β Best of all, the track showed how the Halford band synced and locked into each other, as the combination of the guitars, Bobby Jarzombekβs near-prog drumming and secret weapon Ray Riendeauβs jazzy bass moved as a single forbidding unit.Β βHearts of Darknessβ was traditional heavy metal but not pandering in the slightest, presenting a less self-conscious version of an icon who is often all too aware of peopleβs perceptions and expectations.