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Judas Priest celebrates 50 years with tour

On the road during pandemic is ‘like walking a tightrope’

By Kevin C. Johnson, St. Louis Post-Dispatch
Published: September 30, 2021, 6:11am

A year later than planned, Judas Priest has finally embarked on its “50 Heavy Metal Years” tour. Let the headbanging commence.

Guitarist Richie Faulkner says the tour celebrates the band’s history, its music, and its influence on music and on heavy metal.

“Half a century — that’s pretty nutty,” he says. “Fifty years — fans have been giving the band that lifeblood for 50 years.”

Faulkner, formerly of Dirty Deeds, replaced original player K.K. Downing and has been with Judas Priest for only a decade.

“I’m honored to be here,” he says. “Those guys are really the forefathers of the heavy metal sound.”

He promises the set list will represent all 50 years — “the old, the new, the obscure, the party songs and all the deep cuts. It’s all the stuff (that), if an alien came down and (asked), ‘What’s this Judas Priest we’ve been hearing about?,’ we could just play the set and that’s it.”

Judas Priest is known for hits including “Breaking the Law,” “Living After Midnight,” “Heading Out to the Highway,” “Turbo Lover” and “You Got Another Thing Coming.”

There’s also music from the band’s latest album, “Firepower.” But since it’s an anniversary show, Faulkner points out, some songs must be included, and the band can’t get too obscure.

For this tour, the show will be heavy on special effects and likely will involve fire — lots of fire — as well as a particular inflatable.

Touring during a pandemic is like “walking a tightrope,” Faulkner says. “You can fall off at any time. We’re running a tight ship. There are parameters we stick by. We have procedures in place. Some bands have had to cancel or suspend their tours. We’re seeing what other bands are doing and being careful — doing what we can to protect people around us.”

With a handful of shows already under their belts, Faulkner says, the tour is going well, and the musicians are happy to be back onstage.

“For us, as a touring band, the uncertainty, it was everyone’s livelihood,” he says. “And to get back and play for the first time, you can imagine that uncertainty diminishing.”

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He says the return to the road has been emotional, and the band is hopeful that the return to concerts continues in the right direction.

“We’ve spoken to fans, and they’re happy to get back to experiencing live music again,” he says. “You can see it on their faces and feel the energy in the room.”

Judas Priest got its start in 1970 in Birmingham, England — the birthplace of heavy metal. Long before joining the band in 2011, Faulkner played in cover bands around London and says playing music by Judas Priest, Iron Maiden and Def Leppard was a part of life for gigging musicians at the time.

“I played it around London five times a week,” Faulkner says. “I knew what the music meant to people and to the culture. I knew the legacy long before me. I knew how important it was.”

When the opportunity came to join Judas Priest, replacing K.K. Downing, Faulkner says: “I grabbed it by the horns.”

He had been recommended for the band by someone on the production crew. Faulkner initially had deleted management’s emails to him, but they eventually connected.

“They discussed what they wanted, and I discussed what I wanted,” he says.

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