Judas Priest - Battle Cry (2016)

Artist: Judas Priest
Title: Battle Cry
Year Of Release: 2016
Label: Columbia – 88985302262 / Sony Music – 88985302262
Genre: Hard Rock, Heavy Metal
Quality: FLAC (tracks+.cue,log artwork)
Total Time: 1:15:34
Total Size: 643 Mb
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist: Title: Battle Cry
Year Of Release: 2016
Label: Columbia – 88985302262 / Sony Music – 88985302262
Genre: Hard Rock, Heavy Metal
Quality: FLAC (tracks+.cue,log artwork)
Total Time: 1:15:34
Total Size: 643 Mb
WebSite: Album Preview
01. Battle Cry (Intro) (0:33)
02. Dragonaut (4:13)
03. Metal Gods (4:14)
04. Devil's Child (5:19)
05. Victim Of Changes (8:59)
06. Halls Of Valhalla (6:08)
07. Redeemer Of Souls (4:11)
08. Beyond The Realms Of Death (7:02)
09. Jawbreaker (4:06)
10. Breaking The Law (2:48)
11. Hell Bent For Leather (4:27)
12. The Hellion (0:37)
13. Electric Eye (4:37)
14. You've Got Another Thing Coming (11:03)
15. Painkiller (7:26)
With such a large metal phenomenon as Judas Priest, what expectations can you have when listening to a concert recording? It's a huge, unquestionable oeuvre, from which it is almost physically impossible to compile a bad setlist. On the other hand, it is equally impossible not to leave out a personal favorite.
The tracklist is certainly novel in that it naturally includes the songs from Redeemer of Souls (Dragonaut, Halls of Valhalla and the title track), but the rest are typically from early albums (Metal Gods, Breaking the Law, Electric Eye).
If we add the latest concert album, A Touch of Evil: Live, they complement each other nicely, because apart from Painkiller, there is no overlap between the two discs.
It is certainly a great luck that Redeemer of Souls turned out to be a good album. The songs sound as if they were much older. With Dragonaut, for example, it was easy to start, it sounds like it was written 20 years ago and has been played live countless times.
The tracklist is certainly novel in that it naturally includes the songs from Redeemer of Souls (Dragonaut, Halls of Valhalla and the title track), but the rest are typically from early albums (Metal Gods, Breaking the Law, Electric Eye).
If we add the latest concert album, A Touch of Evil: Live, they complement each other nicely, because apart from Painkiller, there is no overlap between the two discs.
It is certainly a great luck that Redeemer of Souls turned out to be a good album. The songs sound as if they were much older. With Dragonaut, for example, it was easy to start, it sounds like it was written 20 years ago and has been played live countless times.