Painkiller Review
Band | |
---|---|
Album | Painkiller |
Type | Album (Studio full-length) |
Released | September 3, 1990 |
Genres | Heavy Metal |
Labels | Columbia Records, Sony Music |
Length | 55:12 |
Ranked | #2 for 1990 , #2 all-time |
Album rating : 96.9 / 100
Votes : 271 (17 reviews)
Votes : 271 (17 reviews)
January 11, 2023
Judas Priest are one of the most important bands in the history of metal. They exist since the 1970s and have influenced thousands and thousands of acts. Yet the pinnacle of their career coincides with a record released just in 1990, probably the most extreme and heavy of their entire discography.
It obviously is Painkiller, one of the most powerful albums in the history of music. In facts, while the first records were still quite "delicate", while remaining metal, this is the musical version of taking a hammer to the teeth.
To confirm this, the titletrack starts with Scott Travis pounding the drums and a nice riff, not particularly fast but pressing and completely devastating. There is not a moment of rest for the whole song, which runs for six minutes between rapid solos, apocalyptic scenarios starring the splendid metal angel portrayed on the famous cover and Rob Halford demonstrating all of his vocal power with absolutely perfect screams. There's a reason it's a metal anthem now. Hell patrol is slower and perhaps more catchy and controlled but equally engaging, as well as a second magnificent opportunity to admire the band's technique, and All guns blazing, another fast and violent piece, in just three minutes destroys the listener's resistance to the power of metal.
Lether rebel is the most melodic song, although characterized by rapid verses, a bombing bridge and an explosive refrain, but it is just the calm before the storm. Metal meltdown, track number five, is, as you can guess from the name, even more destructive than Painkiller. After a very technical initial solo, the descent into molten metal begins (and Halford almost breaks through the sound barrier with his vocal prowess). Night crawler is introduced by a disturbing choir and proceeds with a full-blown horror atmosphere created by distressing riffs, a scratchy voice and a spoken interlude that describes the physical and psychological sufferings of a monster's unfortunate victims.
Between the hammer and the anvil is more regular, but the riff is still perfect, fast and suspended between hardness and melody, the drums really look like a hammer that beats on an anvil and the voice, as well as being powerful as usual, provides other vocalizations which are certainly enviable. The start and end are very peculiar, slow and oscillating, perfect to create expectation. A touch of evil begins wonderfully with the tolling of a bell and a rather gothic keyboard sparkle and continues even better with a mid-tempo with sensual and desperate tones. Battle hymn lasts less than a minute, but it is slow, solemn and bewitching enough to lead to the final piece, One shot at glory. The latter is the closest thing to a power metal song that has ever been inserted in a record of another genre, with lots of epic and warlike lyrics, and it is perfect thanks to the mixture of speed, melody and aggression.
The line-up is the classic one and you can hear it. After all they are musicians of the highest level, among the best of the last fifty years, and in this album they really show off all their skills, both in terms of technique and of expressive ability. Few releases can make understand what metal really is in its purest essence and Painkiller is one of them.
In addition to the music, the lyrics are also heavier than the rest of the Priest discography. They are dystopian, apocalyptic, even horrifying, and even come to touch on "uncomfortable" but always fascinating themes such as religion and sin (Between the hammer and the anvil and A touch of evil).
The result is pure metal ready to overwhelm the inexperienced listener (but also the expert one). Despite how many artists it has influenced, it is a unique album of its kind, which has also remained unsurpassed by its predecessors and successors. And this is why it is legendary and will always be.
Best tracks: Painkiller, Metal meltdown, Between The Hammer and The Anvil
It obviously is Painkiller, one of the most powerful albums in the history of music. In facts, while the first records were still quite "delicate", while remaining metal, this is the musical version of taking a hammer to the teeth.
To confirm this, the titletrack starts with Scott Travis pounding the drums and a nice riff, not particularly fast but pressing and completely devastating. There is not a moment of rest for the whole song, which runs for six minutes between rapid solos, apocalyptic scenarios starring the splendid metal angel portrayed on the famous cover and Rob Halford demonstrating all of his vocal power with absolutely perfect screams. There's a reason it's a metal anthem now. Hell patrol is slower and perhaps more catchy and controlled but equally engaging, as well as a second magnificent opportunity to admire the band's technique, and All guns blazing, another fast and violent piece, in just three minutes destroys the listener's resistance to the power of metal.
Lether rebel is the most melodic song, although characterized by rapid verses, a bombing bridge and an explosive refrain, but it is just the calm before the storm. Metal meltdown, track number five, is, as you can guess from the name, even more destructive than Painkiller. After a very technical initial solo, the descent into molten metal begins (and Halford almost breaks through the sound barrier with his vocal prowess). Night crawler is introduced by a disturbing choir and proceeds with a full-blown horror atmosphere created by distressing riffs, a scratchy voice and a spoken interlude that describes the physical and psychological sufferings of a monster's unfortunate victims.
Between the hammer and the anvil is more regular, but the riff is still perfect, fast and suspended between hardness and melody, the drums really look like a hammer that beats on an anvil and the voice, as well as being powerful as usual, provides other vocalizations which are certainly enviable. The start and end are very peculiar, slow and oscillating, perfect to create expectation. A touch of evil begins wonderfully with the tolling of a bell and a rather gothic keyboard sparkle and continues even better with a mid-tempo with sensual and desperate tones. Battle hymn lasts less than a minute, but it is slow, solemn and bewitching enough to lead to the final piece, One shot at glory. The latter is the closest thing to a power metal song that has ever been inserted in a record of another genre, with lots of epic and warlike lyrics, and it is perfect thanks to the mixture of speed, melody and aggression.
The line-up is the classic one and you can hear it. After all they are musicians of the highest level, among the best of the last fifty years, and in this album they really show off all their skills, both in terms of technique and of expressive ability. Few releases can make understand what metal really is in its purest essence and Painkiller is one of them.
In addition to the music, the lyrics are also heavier than the rest of the Priest discography. They are dystopian, apocalyptic, even horrifying, and even come to touch on "uncomfortable" but always fascinating themes such as religion and sin (Between the hammer and the anvil and A touch of evil).
The result is pure metal ready to overwhelm the inexperienced listener (but also the expert one). Despite how many artists it has influenced, it is a unique album of its kind, which has also remained unsurpassed by its predecessors and successors. And this is why it is legendary and will always be.
Best tracks: Painkiller, Metal meltdown, Between The Hammer and The Anvil
2 likes
Track listing (Songs)
title | rating | votes | video | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1. | Painkiller | 6:06 | 99.5 | 153 | Lyric Video Audio Music Video |
2. | Hell Patrol | 3:37 | 94.9 | 93 | Audio Audio Audio |
3. | All Guns Blazing | 3:58 | 94.2 | 95 | Audio Audio Audio |
4. | Leather Rebel | 3:35 | 91.6 | 85 | Audio Audio Audio |
5. | Metal Meltdown | 4:49 | 94.2 | 84 | Audio Audio Audio |
6. | Night Crawler | 5:45 | 95.5 | 88 | Audio Audio |
7. | Between the Hammer & The Anvil | 4:49 | 96.3 | 88 | Audio Audio Audio |
8. | A Touch of Evil | 5:45 | 95.3 | 86 | Music Video Audio Music Video |
9. | Battle Hymn | 0:57 | 87.9 | 73 | Audio Audio Audio |
10. | One Shot at Glory | 6:49 | 94.6 | 82 | Audio Audio Lyric Video |
2001 bonus tracks | |||||
11. | Living Bad Dreams | 5:20 | 87.7 | 15 | Audio Audio Audio |
12. | Leather Rebel (Live) | 3:38 | 84.4 | 11 | Live Video Audio |
Line-up (members)
- Rob Halford : Vocals, Songwriting (all tracks)
- Glenn Tipton : Guitars, Songwriting (all tracks)
- K. K. Downing : Guitars, Songwriting (all tracks)
- Ian Hill : Bass
- Scott Travis : Drums
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