| | Judas Priest Sad Wings Of Destiny CD Judas Priest Discography of CDs
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The year 1976 was crucial for the evolution of heavy metal, as landmark albums like Rainbow's Rising and Scorpions' Virgin Killer began to reshape the genre. Perhaps none was quite as important as Judas Priest's sophomore effort, Sad Wings of Destiny, which simultaneously took heavy metal to new depths of darkness and new heights of technical precision. Building on the hard prog of bands like Queen and Wishbone Ash, plus the twin-guitar innovations of the latter and Thin Lizzy, Sad Wings fused these new influences with the gothic doom of Black Sabbath, the classical precision of Deep Purple, and the tight riffery of the more compact Led Zeppelin tunes. Priest's prog roots are still readily apparent here, particularly on the spacy ballad "Dreamer Deceiver," the multi-sectioned "Victim of Changes," and the softer sonic textures that appear from time to time. But if Priest's style was still evolving, the band's trademarks are firmly in place -- the piercing, operatic vocals of Rob Halford and the tightly controlled power riffing of guitarists K.K. Downing and Glenn Tipton. This foundation sounded like little else on the metal scene at the time, and gave Sad Wings of Destiny much of its dramatic impact. Its mystique, though, was something else. No metal band had been this convincingly dark since Black Sabbath, and that band's hallucinatory haze was gone, replaced by a chillingly real cast of serial killers ("The Ripper"), murderous dictators ("Tyrant"), and military atrocities that far outweighed "War Pigs" ("Genocide"). Even the light piano ballad "Epitaph" sounds like a morbidly depressed Queen rewriting Sabbath's "Changes." Three songs rank as all-time metal classics, starting with the epic "Victim of Changes," which is blessed with an indelible main riff, a star-making vocal turn from Halford, explosive guitar work, and a tight focus that belies its nearly eight-minute length. "The Ripper" and "Tyrant," with their driving guitar riffs and concise construction, are the first seeds of what would flower into the New Wave of British Heavy Metal movement. More than any other heavy metal album of its time, Sad Wings of Destiny offered the blueprint for the way forward. What's striking is how deeply this blueprint resonated through the years, from the prog ambitions of Iron Maiden to the thematic echoes in a pair of '80s thrash masterpieces. The horrors of Sad Wings are largely drawn from real life, much like Slayer's Seasons in the Abyss, and its all-consuming anxiety is over powerlessness, just like Metallica's magnum opus, Master of Puppets. (Though this latter preoccupation doubtlessly had more psychosexual roots in Rob Halford's case -- witness the peculiar torture fantasy of "Island of Domination.") Unfortunately, Sad Wings of Destiny didn't have as much impact upon release as it should have, mostly owing to the limitations of the small Gull label. It did, however, earn Judas Priest a shot with Columbia, where they would quickly become the most influential band in heavy metal not named Black Sabbath. (Note: To date, all CD reissues of Sad Wings of Destiny have switched the A and B sides of the original vinyl version.) ~ Steve Huey Frontman Rob Halford has considered this to be Judas Priest's SGT. PEPPER, and it's easy to see why. The album expanded upon the group's debut by tackling a variety of styles, utilizing dynamics to striking effect, and establishing the essential guitar interplay between Glenn Tipton and K.K. Downing. "Victim Of Changes" may be forever known for its snarling riffs and Halford's startling final scream, but its subdued mid-section enhances the power of those elements. "The Ripper" offers up Victorian horror, while "Tyrant" and "Island Of Domination" thunder along with metallic machismo. The album has it softer side, however, notably the neo-classical rock instrumental "Prelude," the melancholy piano ballad "Epitaph," complete with crooning vocal harmonies, and the semi-acoustic existential co Sad Wings Of Destiny Music Judas Priest Sad Wings Of Destiny Songs Sad Wings Of Destiny Music Sad Wings Of Destiny Music Review Average Rating: (4.5 out of 5 stars)    List All Reviews Classy cool intelligent original Metal Heard this back in the 70s.Could not believe the progression that Metal had made with the twin guitar attack of Tipton and K K Downing and Halford's soulful, skilful soaring Vocal. Great light and shade on this album. Deadly riffs often preceded by cool slow dramatic passages. Take the album as a whole listening experience for maximum effect.This is in my All Time Top 10 Metal Albums.In my Top Three Priest, fighting with Painkiller and Stained Class for Top Place.Saw them on this tour in Croydon, UK in a tiny club. Oh boy! how good was that and it was half empty. Submitted by bruno (catford,london) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No 1 of 1 found this helpful.
One of the top ten best metal albums ever Definately in the top ten of all time. This was before the black leather priest and MTV. Musta bought this record 3 times during the 70's because I wore out my copies out so fast. If your a priest fan, and dont have this album, then your not really a priest fan are you? Submitted by mlopez (San Antonio,TX)  Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
Your metal hunger is fed !! Second Judas Priest album .Not among their bests ,but as always good heavy ,hard and melodic sound .Not as good as the fantastic "Rocka rolla" or "Defenders of the faith" cause the lyrics melodies are not so inspired ,but musically it's really good .Buy it now !! Submitted by rockprogboy (France)  Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
This ROCKS!! This is a True, pure Heavy Metal Record. The Heavy chords of Glen and K.K., the wide spread vocals of Halford, what more could any fan of Music want!! all in all awesome record!!! Submitted by a reviewer (Box 64 Chapel's Cove, NL)  Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
Awesome early works from the Masters of Metal This (among others) is one of those albums which greatly affected many metal groups of the 80's, 90's and so on. Essential listening material to discover Priest's metal roots. Submitted by a reviewer (Brooklyn, USA)  Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
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Buy Sad Wings Of Destiny CD Purchase Sad Wings Of Destiny CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Judas Priest Defenders Of The Faith CD (1984)
Sad Wings Of Destiny
$7.59 ;2 New Bonus Tracks
Judas Priest: Rob Halford (vocals); Glenn Tipton, K.K. Downing (guitar); Ian Hill (bass); Dave Holland (drums). Digitally remastered by Jon Astley. The last quality album from Judas Priest's commercial period, Defenders of the Faith doesn't quite reach the heights of British Steel or Screaming for Vengeance, in part because it lacks a standout single on the level of those two records' best material. That said, even if there's a low percentage of signature songs here, there's a remarkably high percentage of hidden gems waiting to ...
| | Judas Priest Rocka Rolla CD (1974)
Sad Wings Of Destiny
$9.99 Judas Priest: Rob Halford (vocals, harmonica); Glenn Tipton (guitar, synthesizer, background vocals); K.K. Downing (guitar); Ian Hill (bass); John Hinch (drums). Recorded in June & July 1974. A sketchy and underfocused debut, Rocka Rolla nonetheless begins to delineate the musical territory Judas Priest would explore over the remainder of the decade: frighteningly dark in its effect, tight in its grooves, and capable of expanding to epic song lengths. On the other hand, Rocka Rolla is also murkier, less precise ...
| | Judas Priest Stained Class CD (1978)
Sad Wings Of Destiny
$6.75 ;2 Bonus Tracks,One Studio,One Live
Personnel: Rob Halford (vocals); Glenn Tipton, K.K. Downing (guitar); Ian Hill (bass); Dave Holland (drums). All tracks have been digitally remastered. Judas Priest: Rob Halford (vocals); Glen Tipton (guitar, background vocals); K.K. Downing (guitar); Ian Hill (bass); Les Binks (drums). Producers: Dennis MacKay, James Guthrie, Judas Priest. Engineers include: Neil Ross, Ken Thomas, Paul Northfield. Principally recorded at ...
| | Judas Priest Hell Bent For Leather CD (1979)
Sad Wings Of Destiny
$6.75 The British version of this release is titled KILLING MACHINE. Judas Priest: Rob Halford (vocals); Glenn Tipton, K.K. Downing (guitar); Ian Hill (bass); Les Binks (drums). Principally recorded at Utopia, Basing Street and CBS Studios, London, England in 1978. Includes liner notes by Judas Priest. Digitally remastered by Jon Astley. Personnel: Glenn Tipton (guitar); Ian Hill (bass guitar); Les Binks (drums). Audio Remasterer: Jon Astley. Recording information: Basing Street (1978); CBS ...
| | Judas Priest Sin After Sin CD (1977)
Sad Wings Of Destiny
$6.75 ;2 Bonus Track,One Studio,One Live
Judas Priest: Robert Halford (vocals); Glenn Tipton, K.K. Downing (guitar); Ian Hill (bass). Additional personnel: Simon Phillips (drums, percussion). Princiipally recorded at Ramport Studios, London, England in 1977. Includes liner notes by Judas Priest. Digitally remastered by Jon Astley. Judas Priest's major-label debut Sin After Sin marks their only recording with then-teenage session drummer Simon Phillips, whose technical prowess helps push the band's burgeoning aggression ...
| | Judas Priest Painkiller CD (1990) Bonus Tracks; Remastered
Sad Wings Of Destiny
$6.79 Judas Priest: Rob Halford (vocals); K.K. Downing, Glenn Tipton (guitar); Ian Hill (bass); Scott Travis (drums). Principally recorded at Miraval Studios, Brignoles, France in 1990. Includes liner notes ...
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| | Cathedral Carnival Bizarre CD (1995)
Sad Wings Of Destiny
$14.05 Cathedral: Lee Dorrian (vocals); Gary "Gaz" Jennings (guitar); Leo Smee (bass); Brian Dixon (drums). Additional personnel includes: Tony Iommi (guitar). Recognizing the innovation ...
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