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Halford in 1984 Halford performing with Judas Priest, 2005 Halford was introduced to Judas Priest bassist and co-founder Ian Hill by his sister Sue, who was dating Hill at the time. [ 14 ] Halford, a manager of a men's clothing store, [ 15 ] joined the band as singer, bringing with him drummer John Hinch from his previous band Hiroshima.
The song's lyrics alludes to motorcycle riding, and it broadly features an aggressive, sexual tone, with frontman Rob Halford having described the single as embodying "escapism". [7] Musically, it incorporates a synthesizer-based sound to the band's traditional type of heavy metal music ; [ 6 ] one music magazine has compared the particular ...
(left to right) K. K. Downing, Scott Travis (on drums), Tim "Ripper" Owens and Glenn Tipton (Ian Hill not shown) (left to right) Scott Travis, K. K. Downing, Rob Halford, Glenn Tipton and Ian Hill (Obscured) (left to right) Richie Faulkner, Rob Halford, Scott Travis, Glenn Tipton and Ian Hill. (left to right) Andy Sneap, Scott Travis, Richie Faulkner, Rob Halford, Ian Hill and Glenn Tipton ...
Voyeurs is the only album by Two, a musical collaboration between vocalist Rob Halford (of Judas Priest) and guitarist John 5 (of Red Square Black, Marilyn Manson and Rob Zombie). Nine Inch Nails' Trent Reznor receives executive-producer credit, with the actual production duties being handled by Bob Marlette and Skinny Puppy's Dave Ogilvie.
Spun is a 2002 American black comedy crime drama film directed by Jonas Åkerlund from an original screenplay by William De Los Santos and Creighton Vero, [2] based on three days of De Los Santos's life in the Eugene, Oregon drug subculture.
In addition to Black, Lemmy, Judas Priest's Rob Halford, The Runaways' Lita Ford, and Ozzy Osbourne provide character voices for these lines. [30] [31] Schafer's original vision for the game had not anticipated a celebrity cast. [32] In particular, though Eddie came to resemble Black, the team had not planned on having Jack Black voice the ...
The video ends with Rob Halford in a pose similar to the one on the album's cover, with the word Voyeurs appearing over his face. The video was not widely shown due to its content, but it was not banned. The video is briefly featured in the 1999 black comedy film Idle Hands.
The song title came about when Glenn Tipton awakened Rob Halford with his loud guitar playing at 4 AM, during the band's stay at Tittenhurst Park to record British Steel in 1980. Halford commented to Tipton that he was "really living after midnight", and Tipton replied that Halford's comment was a great title for the song he was working on. [6]