Click to enlarge
Sad Wings Of Destiny = LP, Silver = (LP)
The year 1976 was crucial for the evolution of heavy metal, as landmark albums like Rainbow's Rising and Scorpions' Virgin Killer began to reshape the genre. Perhaps none was quite as important as Judas Priest's sophomore effort, Sad Wings of Destiny, which simultaneously took heavy metal to new depths of darkness and new heights of technical precision. Building on the hard prog of bands like Queen and Wishbone Ash, plus the twin-guitar innovations of the latter and Thin Lizzy, Sad Wings fused these new influences with the gothic doom of Black Sabbath, the classical precision of Deep Purple, and the tight riffery of the more compact Led Zeppelin tunes. Priest's prog roots are still readily apparent here, particularly on the spacy ballad "Dreamer Deceiver," the multi-sectioned "Victim of Changes," and the softer sonic textures that appear from time to time. But if Priest's style was still evolving, the band's trademarks are firmly in place -- the piercing, operatic vocals of Rob Halford and the tightly controlled power riffing of guitarists K.K. Downing and Glenn Tipton. This foundation sounded like little else on the metal scene at the time, and gave Sad Wings of Destiny much of its dramatic impact. Its mystique, though, was something else. No metal band had been this convincingly dark since Black Sabbath, and that band's hallucinatory haze was gone, replaced by a chillingly real cast of serial killers ("The Ripper"), murderous dictators ("Tyrant"), and military atrocities that far outweighed "War Pigs" ("Genocide"). Even the light piano ballad "Epitaph" sounds like a morbidly depressed Queen rewriting Sabbath's "Changes." Three songs rank as all-time metal classics, starting with the epic "Victim of Changes," which is blessed with an indelible main riff, a star-making vocal turn from Halford, explosive guitar work, and a tight focus that belies its nearly eight-minute length. "The Ripper" and "Tyrant," with their driving guitar riffs and concise construction, are the first seeds of what would flower into the New Wave of British Heavy Metal movement. More than any other heavy metal album of its time, Sad Wings of Destiny offered the blueprint for the way forwa
349 SEK 
 
  Tell a friend   Inform me
Use the form below to send information about this product to a friend.
Your name    Your e-mail
Send
Your friend's name Your friend's e-mail
Enter your email address to be automatically informed when this item is back in stock
Your e-mail   
Send
Not in stock. Usually ships within 12-16 days.
Similar artists: FIGHT, GLENN TIPTON, HALFORD, EARTH (UK), KK'S PRIEST
Specifications
Type: LP
Recorded: 1976
Release Date: 2018-08-24
Label: Repertoire Records
Country: Euro
Item No: V130C
Customer rating & reviews
Rate this item | Review this item
Track List
01 Prelude
02 Tyrant
03 Genocide
04 Epitaph
05 Island of domination
06 Victimof changes
07 Ripper
08 Dreamer deceiver
09 Deceiver
Browse by back in stock - 656 items Show as list
CD
 
319 SEK
 
PORTRAIT
The Host = 2 LP =
CD
 
169 SEK
 
GENESIS
Mind The Gap
CD
 
159 SEK
 
AIRBAG
Century Of The Self
CD
 
179 SEK
 
KRYPTOS
Decimator
CD
 
169 SEK
 
YES
The Alternate Generator
LP
 
499 SEK
 
YES
Talk = 2 LP =
CD
 
169 SEK
 
PORTRAIT
The Host
CD
 
159 SEK
 
STONE FURY
Let Them Talk
CD
 
179 SEK
 
ETHOS
Open Up
CD
 
169 SEK
 
PSYCHIC TRASH
Live in Tokio
CD
 
159 SEK
 
WHITE WILLOW
Ignis Fatuus
CD
 
179 SEK
 
ETHOS
Ardour
LP
 
329 SEK
 
CACTUS
Cactus = LP =
CD
 
179 SEK
 
WESTING
Future = Digipack =
LP
 
249 SEK
 
TRAPEZE
Medusa = LP =
CD
 
129 SEK
 
MARDUK
Plague Angel
CD
 
179 SEK
 
ORANGE POWER
Orange Power
CD
 
179 SEK
 
ABLUTION
Ablution
CD
 
179 SEK
 
MAGENTA (BEL)
Magenta
LP
 
249 SEK
 
ASOKA
Asoka = LP =
CD
 
169 SEK
 
ILLUSION
If It's So
LP
 
299 SEK
 
TOOL
10,000 Days = 2 LP =
CD
 
159 SEK
 
MARSHALL LAW
Marshall Law
Pages:  [1 2  3  4  5  6  7 
Items per page: 25 50 [100] 
Next page  
Others also bought