I’m doing good. My phone has been blowing up. It’s a good thing I had it switched off last night. I was looking at the times. It started to go “ping!” crazy at 6 a.m.It’s a validation, more than anything else, of the importance and the relevance of Judas Priest. Fifty years we’ve been doing this. To have this opportunity as we continue to celebrate our 50th anniversary is just a beautiful thing. It couldn’t have happened at a better time.
I’ve said forever that metal has always been perceived by the academia of rock & roll … we’re the underdogs. We’re the black sheep of the rock & roll family. That certainly doesn’t appear to be the case now. I think with Priest being put in the Hall and you see the extraordinary list of people that have been inducted, hundreds of people, yes, we matter. We’re important. We have something to say.
It was interesting. At first she was like, “I don’t want that. I’m country.” Then at the very end, she changed her mind and was all for it.] I think, again, if you look at everyone in the Hall, it makes perfect sense to have Dolly Parton in there. I think it’s just this “rock & roll” thing. Should it be called the Music Hall of Fame? I don’t know. It started out with rock & roll, and roll & roll is everything and anything. It’s just a phraseology.This is what I love about the Hall.
Absolutely. As I said before, you’ve got to push aside anything that gets in the way. You’ve got to remove the emotional clutter and just reference this great celebration. Otherwise, if you don’t do that, and you leave the building, a couple of years later you’ll go, “What the hell? Why didn’t we do that?” It’s a few hours, but those few hours last forever.
There tends to be a big all-star jam at the end of the night. Are you able to imagine a scenario where Judas Priest is playing alongside Pat Benatar and Duran Duran and Carly Simon and Dolly Parton?] It was at Alice Cooper’s blast for his great institution the Solid Rock Foundation. If I could stand alongside my buddy Larry and sing “roll, baby, roll” [from the Doors’ “Roadhouse Blues”], I can certainly stand next to Dolly Parton on my left and Lionel Richie on my right.
rockhall Thanks for the retweet
What an emotionally powerful interview with Rob Halford. The man speaks with such love and gratefulness about this important moment for them and for heavy metal. It’s long overdue and so well-deserved. Rock on forever Judas Priest! Rock on!
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