Jump to content

Rob Halford: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
No edit summary
Line 14: Line 14:
| URL = [http://www.robhalford.com/ Official website]
| URL = [http://www.robhalford.com/ Official website]
}}
}}
'''Robert John Arthur Halford''' (born [[August 25]], [[1951]]) is an [[England|English]] singer and songwriter, best known as the lead vocalist for the [[heavy metal music|heavy metal]] band [[Judas Priest]]. Halford is known for his four and a half-octave vocal range (D2-G#6)<ref>
'''Robert John Arthur Halford''' (born [[August 25]], [[1951]]) is an [[England|English]] singer, songwriter, and faggot, best known as the lead vocalist for the [[heavy metal music|heavy metal]] band [[Judas Priest]]. Halford is known for his four and a half-octave vocal range (D2-G#6)<ref>
[http://members.firstinter.net/markster/PROFILE1.html Judas Priest Info Pages - Rob Profile<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>, high-pitched screams, and for his leather-clad biker image. He is one of the most respected singers of heavy metal. Halford has been nicknamed the "Metal God"<ref>{{Citation
[http://members.firstinter.net/markster/PROFILE1.html Judas Priest Info Pages - Rob Profile<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>, high-pitched screams, and for his leather-clad biker image. He is one of the most respected singers of heavy metal. Halford has been nicknamed the "Metal God"<ref>{{Citation
| last =Nalbandian
| last =Nalbandian

Revision as of 20:55, 9 June 2008

For the band, see Halford (band).
Rob Halford

Robert John Arthur Halford (born August 25, 1951) is an English singer, songwriter, and faggot, best known as the lead vocalist for the heavy metal band Judas Priest. Halford is known for his four and a half-octave vocal range (D2-G#6)[1], high-pitched screams, and for his leather-clad biker image. He is one of the most respected singers of heavy metal. Halford has been nicknamed the "Metal God"[2][3] as a tribute to his influence on metal. He currently lives in Phoenix, Arizona, US. [4]

Career

Early years

Halford was born and raised in Walsall,[5] a town to the northwest of Birmingham, in England's West Midlands. He sang for numerous bands including Athens Wood, Lord Lucifer, Abraxas, Thark and Hiroshima.

Judas Priest

In 1973, founding Judas Priest member Ian Hill was dating a woman from nearby town Walsall who suggested that her brother, Robert Halford, be considered as a singer for the band[6]. Halford, a former cinema manager, joined the band, bringing with him drummer John Hinch from his previous band, Hiroshima. In August 1974, the band debuted with the single "Rocka Rolla", before releasing an album of the same name a month later. The next albums were Sad Wings of Destiny (1976), which included a variety of old material; 1977's Sin After Sin; and 1978's Stained Class and Killing Machine (released in America as Hell Bent for Leather).

File:Judas Priest Sin After Sin Photo.jpg
Judas Priest, c. 1977. (left to right) Hill, Downing, Halford & Tipton

Judas Priest recorded twelve studio and two concert albums which garnered different degrees of critical and financial success. Overall, the band has sold in excess of 30 million albums globally.[7]

In 1980, the band released British Steel. The songs were shorter and had more mainstream radio hooks, but retained the heavy metal feel. The 1982 album Screaming for Vengeance' had a song, "You've Got Another Thing Comin'," which garnered strong US radio airplay, and the popular follow-up "Defenders of the Faith". Turbo was released in 1986, during the glam metal era. In 1988, Ram it Down was released, showcasing re-recorded material that was scrapped from the Turbo years. In 1990, the Painkiller album dropped the 1980s-style synthesisers for almost all of the songs.

Painkiller

After seeing their popularity gradually waning over the years, the apex of their success having been in the early 1980s, Judas Priest figured they needed to start from a new beginning. Ever since the successful tours of the Screaming for Vengeance album, Judas Priest had been in large part on a long decline. Despite its popularity, "Defenders of the Faith" was dubbed by critics as Screaming for Vengeance II, in large part because of its similar musical qualities. Turbo and its subsequent "Fuel for Life" Tour showed signs of an aging band trying to stay on top.

Ram it Down was by far Halford's weakest vocal performance, and the dissipation of the glam metal and the rise of heavier metal with likes of Appetite for Destruction and ...And Justice for All completely overpowered Judas Priest's release.

In August of 1990, Judas Priest released Painkiller which would prove to be their biggest success in eight years. With new drummer Scott Travis, ratings soared, and older fans began stepping back on the bandwagon. Judas Priest shows a wide range of diversity in this album, from screaming powermetal of the self-titled track "Painkiller" to the slower, darker rock ballad, "A Touch of Evil." Thrash metal tracks like "Metal Meltdown" and Leather Rebel" are Judas Priest' response to the changing era. This album had everything Judas Priest could have wanted.

Along with the change in musical style, Judas Priest started changing their look as well. Rob Halford emerged with all-new tattoos, including a bent Judas Priest cross on his right arm and ring around his other, as well as a few on his shoulders. He also began shaving his head for the first time, claiming that his receding hairline was getting annoying to keep up with.

During the tour for Painkiller, Halford rode onstage on a large Harley-Davidson motorcycle, dressed in motorcycle leathers, as part of the show. He collided with a drum riser and fell off the motorcycle, breaking his nose.[8] After regaining consciousness, Halford returned and performed the whole concert. In the band's Behind the Music episode, Halford named the accident as one of the events that caused the rift between him and the rest of the band that would eventually force them apart. However, during an interview with Bernard Perusse of The Gazette (August 1, 2007), he is quoted as saying "And it absolutely did not [lead me to leaving the band]. It was just an accident." After a 20-year career with Judas Priest, Halford announced to the band on July 4 1991 that he was leaving the band, and he also sued their label, Sony, for restrictive practices.

Fight and 2wo

He first formed the band Fight with Judas Priest drummer Scott Travis, bassist Jay Jay and guitarists Brian Tilse and Russ Parish recording two albums between 1993 and 1995: "War of Words" (1993) and, after Parish's departure and his replacement by Mark Chausee, "A Small Deadly Space" (1995). While the first one was a straightforward tough and solid metal record, the second record had a grungier sound, making it less appealing for fans who had developed a taste for his debut album.

In between both albums, Fight released an EP, "Mutations", featuring "War of Words" studio versions, live cuts and alternate mixes. Immediately before this, Halford had recorded a track called "Light Comes Out of Black" for the 1992 movie Buffy the Vampire Slayer. The song featured music provided by Pantera, although their contribution is uncredited. After Fight, he collaborated with guitarist John Lowery in an industrial-influenced project called 2wo which was produced by Trent Reznor and released on his Nothing Records label.

In 1998, Halford revealed he was homosexual in an interview on MTV. His sexual orientation was known to Judas Priest band members, and somewhat of an open secret among fans and the heavy metal press. Halford called the response from the heavy metal community "tremendous" [9]. Halford returned to his metal roots in 2000 with his band Halford and the widely acclaimed album Resurrection (2000), produced by Roy Z. A live album in 2001 was followed up by 2002's Crucible. That same year, Halford had a small role in the film Spun in which he played an irritated sex store clerk.

Reunion with Priest and other activities

A reunion with Judas Priest had been speculated on for some time, at least since the release of the Resurrection album which some critics claimed sounded more like Judas Priest than that band's previous album Jugulator (1997). Halford himself had never ruled it out, claiming in 2002 that "Gut instinct tells me that at some point it will happen".[10] In July 2003, the singer returned to his former band and they released Angel of Retribution in 2005. The world tour that accompanied the release marked the band's 30th anniversary.

Halford has also performed as the vocalist for Black Sabbath at three shows. He replaced Ronnie James Dio for two nights in November 1992, when Dio elected not to open a show for Ozzy Osbourne. Dio's contract had expired with the conclusion of the Dehumanizer tour[citation needed]. Halford also replaced Osbourne in Black Sabbath on August 25, 2004, his 53rd birthday at an Ozzfest show in Camden, New Jersey, since Osbourne could not perform due to bronchitis.

He'll be voicing the character General Lionwhyte in 2008 video game Brütal Legend.

Discography

Judas Priest

Fight

Guest appearances

References

  1. ^ Judas Priest Info Pages - Rob Profile
  2. ^ Nalbandian, Bob, Interview with Metal God ROB HALFORD, retrieved 2007-07-18
  3. ^ Sill, Don (May 13, 2002), Molten Metal: An Interview With Metal God Rob Halford, retrieved 2007-07-18
  4. ^ Halford MySpace website
  5. ^ Bernard Perusse. Q&A with Rob Halford. Montreal Gazette. 1 August 2007
  6. ^ Read more about Judas Priest
  7. ^ "Judas Priest CD & DVD release on Sony BMG'". JudasPriest.com. Retrieved 2007-04-23.
  8. ^ Ling, Dave (December 25, 2003), JUDAS PRIEST: The Making of 'Painkiller', retrieved 2007-07-20
  9. ^ VH1 - Behind the Music - Judas Priest
  10. ^ Hoaksey, Mark: "Interview with Rob Halford", Power Play Issue 35, July 2002