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Halford

There have been few vocalists in the history of heavy metal whose singing style has been as influential and instantly recognizable as RobHalford. Born on August 25, 1951, in Birmingham, England, Halford began singing as a teenager, fronting a local rock band, Hiroshima, andworking as a theatrical lighting engineer. But a freak occurrence landed Halford the frontman spot with an up-and-coming rock band out ofBirmingham, Judas Priest. In 1973, Halford's sister was dating Priest bassist Ian Hill, and one day a few members were over at the Halford'shouse, when they overheard Halford singing along ...read more

There have been few vocalists in the history of heavy metal whose singing style has been as influential and instantly recognizable as RobHalford. Born on August 25, 1951, in Birmingham, England, Halford began singing as a teenager, fronting a local rock band, Hiroshima, andworking as a theatrical lighting engineer. But a freak occurrence landed Halford the frontman spot with an up-and-coming rock band out ofBirmingham, Judas Priest. In 1973, Halford's sister was dating Priest bassist Ian Hill, and one day a few members were over at the Halford'shouse, when they overheard Halford singing along to the radio. Priest had just lost a singer, so a tryout was set up, and Halford was promptlyaccepted into Priest, joining Hill, the twin guitar team of K.K. Downing and Glenn Tipton, and a revolving door of drummers.With Halford on board, Priest's sound shifted to a more metallic sound, and by 1974, their first album was issued on the small Gull label, RockaRolla. Although the debut was an unfocused affair that quickly sank from sight, with each successive release, Judas Priest focused their soundand songwriting, leading to a string of certifiable metal classics that broadened their worldwide fan base -- 1976's Sad Wings of Destiny, 1977'sSin After Sin (the band's first for Columbia Records), 1978's Stained Class, plus 1979's Hell Bent for Leather and Unleashed in the East (thesealbums in particular would inspire countless future metal bands: Iron Maiden, Metallica, Slayer, Def Leppard, Megadeth, Pantera, etc.) During thistime, Halford's look reflected a motorcyclist -- dressed head to toe in leather and studs, he would even drive a Harley out on stage at each show.He also had become one of the best singers in all of hard rock, able to effortlessly alternate between a throaty growl and an ear-splittingfalsetto.Judas Priest had built up a loyal cult following during the '70s, but by the dawn of the '80s, the quintet sought to broaden their sound to obtainmainstream success. The ploy worked, with such gold- and platinum-selling hits as 1980's British Steel, 1981's Point of Entry, 1982's Screamingfor Vengeance, and 1984's Defenders of the Faith, making Priest one of the world's top metal bands and an arena headliner. Further sold-outtours and albums of varying quality followed (1986's Turbo, 1987's Priest Live, 1988's Ram it Down, and 1990's over-the-top metalfestPainkiller), but by 1992, Halford announced he was leaving the group after nearly 20 years of service.Although the reason given for Halford's abrupt departure was his need to explore other musical styles, his first non-Priest project was Fight, aquintet that was a carbon copy of Painkiller-era Priest. After a total of two albums (1994's War of Words and 1995's Small Deadly Space) and anEP (1994's Mutations), Halford ended the band. His next project would be a more industrial-sounding outfit, entitled Two. Undoubtedly inspiredby Nine Inch Nails (the band was even signed to NIN leader Trent Reznor's label, Nothing Records), Two issued a lone album in 1997, entitledVoyeurs. Just prior to the album's release, Halford addressed long-standing rumors concerning his sexuality by stating publicly for the first timein his career that he was gay. With his electro-rock experiment out of his system, the former Priest singer returned to his metal roots withanother quintet entitled, simply, Halford. 2000's Resurrection was greeted favorably by metalheads everywhere, as an opening stint on IronMaiden's Brave New World tour heightened interest. Halford's first post-Priest live set followed a year later with the double-disc Live Insurrection,while rumors continued to persist concerning a Halford/Priest reunion (both camps have supposedly patched up their differences). In 2002,another Halford release was issued, Crucible, before the announcement that many a metalhead had been clamoring for was made public --Halford and Priest were once again back together, resulting in the release of such subsequent albums as 2005's Angel of Retribution and 2008'sNostradamus, and world tours. « hide

Similar Bands: Judas Priest, Fight, U.D.O., KK's Priest, Bruce Dickinson

LPs
Celestial
2019

2.8
9 Votes
Halford IV - Made Of Metal
2010

3.3
65 Votes
Halford III - Winter Songs
2009

3
59 Votes
Crucible
2002

3.7
92 Votes
Resurrection
2000

4
175 Votes
Live Albums
Live at Saitama Super Arena
2011

4
4 Votes
Live In Anaheim
2010

4
5 Votes
LIVE - Disney House of Blues Concert
2004

3.8
2 Votes
Live Insurrection
2001

4.5
34 Votes
Compilations
Metal God Essentials, Vol. 1
2007

4
4 Votes

Contributors: Oswaldo88, rockandmetaljunkie, Tyrael, Mikesn, blekzebbed, Jom, rockandmetaljunkie, MetalSun, Voivod,

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