Review by Rexorcist for Judas Priest - Firepower (2018)
Judas Priest were lighter than what metal should be interpreted as for many of their early albums, and that all chanced with the surprise comeback album Painkiller, which perfected the metal tropes that the same band's earlier albums helped to influence. They had steered into Metal Church and Metallica territory and reinvented themselves. Unfortunately, nobody liked what came after that until almost 30 years later, when these 70-year-olds put out Firepower, their second comeback album. Now Judas Priest are once again the talk of the metal world. However, does this even come close to Painkiller?
As far as attacking the entire heavy metal genre goes, most of these songs are exercises in one or another typical stle of heavy metal. The album dives into speed, power, thrash and even arena rock territory without ever fully crossing those borders, allowing Judas Priest to both stay true to their Painkiller sound while addressing the variety of the genre they influenced. And boy, does this trope fest give you ALL the goods. Each melody and riff is quite catchy and packed with energy that almost reaches Painkiller heights. Right from the get-go, you know what your getting as its opening title track punches you in the face with its own energy. And even though it's obvious that Halford's voice aged, he's still able to hold the metallic sound of it very well, perfectly fitting into Priest's style yet again. And lyrically, the album's loaded with all the metal themes of the classic age: the warnings against Satanism and the horror stories that come from it, the machine guns blasting over the battlefield, comparing your sex appeal to weather like you're suddenly a Norse god, etc. etc. And these lyrics are all pretty good and easy to sing along with.
So basically, you kind of have to say that this is the kind of album that's been done before, not only by Priest before but by other bands. I occasionally even got a WASP feel. The real clincher here is that none of these tropes are poorly delivered. So the fact that these guys can stay this good after a series of failures between Painkiller and this shows that they're becoming more aware of what they must be, and it looks like the success stemming from their awareness carries on into Invincible Shield. Firepower is one of the most spirited metal albums of the 2010's. If you don't like heavy metal at all, you might find this generic. If you do, you really should check this out. If it was released around the time British Steel was, it would be one of their original classics. On the other hand, you could say it bears a strong nostalgic touch thanks to its spirit, as is the justification for "pizza thrash," I mean, let's be honest. Priest weren't quite this metallic and loud in the 80's, and this sounds just like an 80's album by another band that was heavier at the time, so the weird thing is that while this is a generic but good album, it's also an album that the band HASN'T DONE BEFORE.