Lista de Títulos
One For The Road 4:40
Rocka Rolla 4:00
Winter 3:00
Deep Freeze 2:00
Winter Retreat 1:30
Cheater 2:55
Never Satisfied 4:50
Run Of The Mill 8:30
Dying To Meet You 6:15
Caviar And Meths 2:00
1974
Notas:
Rocka Rolla is the debut album by Judas Priest, released in 1974. It was produced by Rodger Bain, who had made a name for himself as the producer of Black Sabbath's first three albums.
This album was played entirely "live" (i.e. all musicians playing simultaneously as in a concert, vs. the more popular method of each musician's parts being recorded separately and then mixing them).
According to the band there were technical problems in the studio, resulting in poor sound quality and a hiss through the album. The band further claims that the producer had too much control over track selection, and omitted their more popular stage classics. These songs were eventually included on their next album. Many of the songs were written before Rob Halford joined the band. The track "Caviar and Meths" was originally a 14-minute epic penned by Halford's predecessor, Al Atkins, but due to time constraints, only the intro is recorded for the album. A longer version of the song appears on original vocalist Al Atkins's 1998 album Victim of Changes. Though not the full-length version, it is notably longer at seven minutes. The album also lists Atkins as co-writer of the songs "Winter" and "Never Satisfied". The very rare first UK printing of the album thanks Atkins with ""Thanks for the words Al!" on the back cover, presumably for writing those lyrics, or for the "words" Judas Priest, the name of his previous band that he allowed this band to use in 1971.
At this point of the band's career, they had not yet developed their signature look of leather and studs. They had appeared on a British television programme called The Old Grey Whistle Test in 1975, performing "Rocka Rolla" and "Dreamer Deceiver", and their wardrobe was very "hippified" as journalist Malcolm Dome put it. This footage was included on the "Electric Eye" DVD. In addition, the album has some slight progressive rock influences that would continue through to Stained Class, but to a lesser extent, and would be abandoned in later releases.
Drummer John Hinch would be dismissed in 1975, before the next record was to begin being recorded, for what Glenn Tipton would later call him being "musically inadequate".
The album was reissued in 1984 with a different cover. Reportedly the band was unhappy with the original cover art and logo, as it didn't fit with their image as a heavy metal band. There are also rumours that the Coca Cola Company brought legal pressure because the original album art too closely resembled their most famous brand. The re-issue cover art (By artist Mel Grant, and originally used as the cover for the novel The Steel Tsar) was also used for the US cover of Ballistix for the Turbo Grafx 16 and Commodore Amiga.
Since the album was released during the period when K.K. Downing was the band's frontman, this remains the only album on which he is the primary songwriter.
Judas Priest have rarely performed any of the songs from Rocka Rolla live since the mid-late 1970's. However, Never Satisfied was brought back into the band's setlist for the 2011 Epitaph tour.
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