1. Prelude (Instrumental)
2. Tyrant
3. Genocide
4. Epitaph
5. Island Of Domination
6. Victim Of Changes
7. The Ripper
8. Dreamer Deceiver
9. Deceiver
Released in 1976 when the popularity of heavy metal was beginning to wane, Judas Priest’s second album injected new life, speed and energy into the genre, and along with its successors paved the way for what would ultimately be defined as the New Wave of British Heavy Metal. Still commonly regarded as one of the band’s finest releases, it was unarguably a vast improvement over the messy and long-forgotten debut ‘Rocka Rolla,’ abandoning its blues-tinged, hard rock sound – for the most part – in favour of a highly charged approach that was in equal shares melodic and aggressive, based on the shrieking vocal talents of Rob Halford and the dual guitar harmonies and discordance of Glenn Tipton and K. K. Downing.
1 Comments:
This is my review from dooyoo.co.uk and metal-archives.com.
Don't use someone else's copy without giving credit or asking permission.
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