Judas Priest kick off Painkiller anniversary tour with rarities-stacked setlist | Louder

For a few minutes one night in Birmingham, time stood still—and the gods of metal rose as one.

It started with the low hum of anticipation, the kind that buzzes in the bones of every fan who knows something epic is coming. The lights dimmed. A single spotlight cut through the smoke. And then—it began.

A siren wailed. Not just any siren, but that siren. The one every Sabbath fan knows like a heartbeat. “War Pigs” was about to echo through its birthplace—and Judas Priest was the vessel.

The crowd exploded before a single lyric was sung.

Rob Halford emerged from the shadows like a warrior priest of old—draped in black leather, chains glinting under the stage lights, eyes blazing with something more than nostalgia. At 73, Halford didn’t just channel Ozzy Osbourne—he summoned every ounce of rage, defiance, and fire that made Black Sabbath a force of nature. His voice, still sharp as a blade, cut through the night like artillery fire.

Behind him, the band launched into battle. Richie Faulkner’s guitar shrieked with holy fury, the riffs heavy and deliberate, as if forged in steel. Ian Hill’s bass thudded like war drums in a distant land. And Scott Travis hammered the kit like a man possessed. It wasn’t just music—it was warfare.

And yet… it was reverent. This was no cheap cover, no throwaway encore. It was sacred ground. Judas Priest, themselves icons born of the same Birmingham blood, were saluting the very origin of heavy metal. The crowd—thousands deep—felt it. You could see it in the tears, the raised fists, the mouths mouthing every lyric as if it were scripture.

“Generals gathered in their masses…” Halford roared, and the sea of fans became a choir of rage and memory.

It was more than a song. It was a reckoning.

Social media erupted within minutes. Clips of the performance spread like wildfire—shared by fans, fellow musicians, even Sabbath members themselves. Ozzy tweeted three fire emojis and one skull. Tony Iommi simply reposted the video with the words: “Respect.” Within five days, the video had racked up over 2.5 million views and counting.

But for those who were there… numbers don’t matter. What mattered was that feeling. The feeling of something ancient and sacred being reborn in real time. The passing of the torch—yet with no one letting go. Black Sabbath lit the flame. Judas Priest carried it through the storm.

And in Birmingham, where it all began, the torch burned brighter than ever.

After the final notes rang out, Halford didn’t speak. He just looked up, raised his hand in a devil horn salute—and the sky above the arena lit up in a thunderstorm of lights and fire. For a moment, it felt like the earth had cracked open, and the very soul of metal had risen to claim its place again.

This wasn’t just a performance. It was history. A salute. A war cry.

A reminder that metal never dies—it just gets louder.

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