British Steel was to emerge into a changed media environment.
We had grown used to the wrist merchants of the music press routinely mocking and ridiculing heavy metal. Now, to our surprise, they had concocted a scene celebrating it.
Sounds newspaper were the main movers behind the New Wave of British Heavy Metal. The main bands that it looked to champion were Iron Maiden, Def Leppard, Motörhead, Saxon, Samson... and Judas Priest.
Now, a lot of bands dislike being co-opted into music journalists’ manufactured movements and lazily pigeonholed, but I liked the idea of the New Wave. I figured, after years of being ignored, it was nice for metal to get a bit of attention for a change. It felt like validation.
Our support on the UK leg of the British Steel tour was to be Iron Maiden, one of the new bands being championed by the press. On the eve of the tour, they did a music-press interview in which their then-singer, Paul Di’Anno, said they would blow Judas Priest off stage every night.
I wasn’t remotely bothered by this, because a) they were wrong, and b) that was the kind of thing cocky young bands were supposed to say! We had tried to do it to every major band we had supported, so why shouldn’t they? I found it funny.
Ken didn’t agree. He was offended and outraged by the comment, and demanded that we kick Maiden off the tour. The rest of us said that would be a daft overreaction to a flippant remark, but he was absolutely livid. I love Ken to bits, but he will never let go of a grudge and he stewed about the Iron Maiden slight forever. When they sat and watched us soundcheck before an early gig on the tour, he took it as a personal affront, for reasons I didn’t begin to understand.
We didn’t really hang out and banter with Maiden much on that tour, but maybe I took Di’Anno’s comment that he would blow Priest off stage too literally... because the one night we got drunk together, I tried to seduce him! We went to my room to carry on drinking, but I was too pissed to try anything, and he was too pissed to even know what I wanted to try.
I think that was definitely for the best.
*I really must take it back some day.
Extracted from Confess: The Autobiography by Rob Halford, published by Headline on September 29.