"For various reasons I prefer Bhikkhu Sujato’s more contemporary (and less misogynistic) translation"
Yea' but it's fucking fake you fucking FAGGOT FUCK. They misognyst translation is correct you fucking faggot.
Remember: 3 things cannot be well hidden. One of them is the truth.
And you know what the truth is? Marry little girls is the truth. And the lies that women tell and their police enforce with their millions of soliders is the hidden ways of women put the the fore.
Fucking piece of shit. And if you want to fight I will.
BTW: Dipshit: we _ARE_ going to nuke your fucking society into the ground. White faggot.
Marry Little Girls.
Devarim 22 verse 28, greek, hebrew, latin (NOT english, FUCKING FAGGOT FUCK). Loli brides are allright.
"For various reasons I prefer Bhikkhu Sujato’s more contemporary (and less misogynistic) translation"
Yea' but it's f)cking fake you f)cking F_GG_T F_CK. They misognyst translation is correct you f_ck_ng f_gg_t.
Remember: 3 things cannot be well hidden. One of them is the truth.
And you know what the truth is? Marry little girls is the truth. And the lies that women tell and their police enforce with their millions of soliders is the hidden ways of women put the the fore.
F_cking p_ece of sh_t. And if you want to fight I will.
BTW: Dip_hit: we _ARE_ going to nuke your f_cking society into the ground. White f_gg_t.
Marry Little Girls.
Devarim 22 verse 28, greek, hebrew, latin (NOT english, F_CKING F_GG_T F_CK). Loli brides are allright.
We're going to get you for being a feminist and being fake, the very thing the quote (which rings true) notes.
You need 2 million police to make sure men don't marry cute little girl virgins, and obey women, because your beliefs are false. Natural beliefs and ways don't need that level of all pervasive force. You piece of sh_t.
K.K. explains, “We went backwards and forwards with that a lot. But for me, really, I consider myself as being [in] Priest since 1969. I was desperate to be in the band Judas Priest that existed before; I even auditioned for the band and didn’t get the job. But I stuck in there. I was thinking, ‘I’m determined to be in that [band]. I need to be in Judas Priest.’ And I traversed on that road and that journey, the evolution of music as we know it today. I’m so proud to have been not just a witness to but to be a part of that evolution. And so when this happened, after all of those decades, it’s impossible just to have a cutoff point and start again and call the band The Flying Tornadoes or something obscure. It just doesn’t work. I can’t just let the legacy and my heritage and all of those decades just be flushed down the pan. I don’t wanna throw it all away. I want to rejoice in it and bring some of all of that magic and that nostalgia into the present and into the future with us. And so I just couldn’t really let it go. The guys that are playing in Judas Priest now, I haven’t even met them. And if they can be a Priest, well, I can certainly be a Priest as well.”
This person doesn't like childish people. He want's everyone to be a beaten down real man. The last 2 people childish person got mad and felt anguish about got an aerortic tear and cancer. Long before .. if you read .. there are other strange coincidences around the founding of the band. Do Apparitions ever truely age?
2 years ago
David Bullied Why would you support a person who has thrown you under the bus at every opportunity then whined when the band didn't call you to fill in for glenn f**k KK and his childish nonsense.
I would highly recommend to anyone to remove your records from the older-style PVC sleeves. If it is part of the original packaging I would suggest keeping it and storing it
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Anonymous2024-08-06 2:41
Michael Chang Lives in CanadaAuthor has 21.5K answers and 19.7M answer views8y
No it does not.
The information on the record is in the groove and the sleeve only contacts the land area between grooves.
One concern is the static charge that can build up as you pull the record from the sleeve which will in turn attract dust, which then settles in the groove unless you clean it.
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Anonymous2024-08-06 3:00
"I spent almost a decade being angry at Rob for leaving me. He robbed me of my best years." - Tipton '98 "I spent a decade being angry when Ken left. I've been holding my guns for a decade, but I must fire away. He is crazy and silly. He never wrote any muisc and couldn't really play. I've done my best to help him. Even Iron Maiden wouldn't exist without me."- Tipton '22
I once saw something similar to the chromatic circle scale on some website, it didn't have the note names, just the on and off, off was white, off was blue, showed 3 scales in the image.
Never found it again.
Would be nice if you had a chart of all the scales in that way. Just on/off. No note names, Just all the scales. Makes sence that way.
White people will be mad and disagree. But they hate marrying cute young girls too and are fags. (Devarim chapter 22 verse 28, in greek, hebrew (ancient), and latin, (not english) explicitly allow girl children as brides. Something whites like you hate. Faggot. (Which is why your kind invented "better a millstone" new testament religion)
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Anonymous2024-08-06 3:40
@rabarebra "Uneducated about compression".... Bro, you're talking about Andy Sneap here lol. There is literally a compression technique called the Andy Sneap Technique that involves the Waves C4 compression plugin (you can use any dynamic multiband comp) using dynamic compression on low guitar chugs to dial them in. THAT TECHNIQUE changed the game in metal mixing. I have heard mixes of his where the drums are more dynamic, so i'm assuming it was a stylistic choice in this case. Dude has a special set of ears that most engineers don't....He knows compression for sure.
Side note: Really any "modern" sounding metal mix is going to have a fair amount of compression on the drums these days. With the goal of targeting specific LUF's (overall loudness) to be competitive with other mixes, there is going to be less dynamics and more compression/clippers/limiters that will squash the sound a bit. In the earlier days when the loudness war wasn't a thing, hitting those analog boards hot and clipping them with dynamic peaks added in character.....In the digital age all clipping does is produce nasty sounds that take away from the mix....so more compression is the tradeoff (or until we can learn to quiet things down again).
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Anonymous2024-08-06 3:43
@razz32razz 6 months ago (edited) My band opened for Priest back in '98. KK came into our dressing room and talked to us and signed autographs. It was an honor to meet him. He was one of the nicest musicians I've ever met. 359 Reply
"Changes came over her body, she doesn't see me any more" "VICCCTIMMM OFF CHANGGESSS"
Is this part of the song about when a cute little girl child for sex fucking becomes a bitchy whore cunt?
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Anonymous2024-08-06 4:53
Because Whites don't allow white MMAALLLEESSSS to sex-fuck young cute good girls. Only old whote whores. Like the wisky woman of the first part of the song. (these were originally 2 songs)
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Anonymous2024-08-06 6:25
muffled: 'I don't know what's happened to him; "He's been married to the job through eneemies"
@normbarrows 2 years ago Radio Shack used to sell a book called "Building speaker enclosures" that tells you more than you'll ever want to know about the subject. Might find it used online still.
@bigrat598 1 year ago There are quite a few editions. Later versions drop some subjects, and add newer concepts. Reply
Dean Cordisco Is this guy on drugs??!!! WTF is wrong with you dude??!! Go play on that great golf course you built
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Anonymous2024-08-11 15:05
Jimmy Kay · I am good with KK's Priest; Nothing wrong with it
3 г. 3 года назад
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Ken Valdez Jimmy Kay same here
3 г. 3 года назад
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Dr. Horace Blood Jimmy Kay agree it works
3 г. 3 года назад
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Топовый поклонник Dave Wight I was rooting for Defenders of the Priest
3 г. 3 года назад
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Mitch Kastner I'm thinking he maybe should have struggled just a little longer with it
3 г. 3 года назад
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Gregory Morris Is it that difficult to come up with a name?? Come on man. I'm sure kk. U know u still wanna b associated with priest. U don't have to lie Craig. U don't have to lie 😅
3 г. 3 года назад
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Jeff Rey He flipped a coin. Heads=KK Priest & Tails=Judas Downing!
3 г. 3 года назад
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Ace Schwartz This just makes the name even more embarrassing lmao
3 г. 3 года назад
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Chris George Shoulda went with, "Bitter." 👍
3 г. 3 года назад
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Топовый поклонник Robert Budzinski yeah a whole 3 minutes
3 г. 3 года назад
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Jeff Lampman Wolf Taylor Nugent would have been good
3 г. 3 года назад
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Топовый поклонник Sean M Dunn K.K.’s Priest is good with me!
KK Downing on quitting Priest, the trouble with Priest, and KK's Priest By Dave Ling ( Classic Rock ) published 7 October 2021
After more than 40 years with Judas Priest, guitarist KK Downing is loving life with his own band, but he still harbours grudges about his departure, and is still disappointed that he wasn’t asked back
When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission. Here’s how it works. KK Downing holding a guitar (Image credit: Will Ireland)
A co-founder of the second configuration of Judas Priest, from 1970 onwards KK Downing was with the Midlands-based band for 41 years, making 17 albums with them that wrote the template for heavy metal as we know it.
However, behind the scenes tension brewed within the creative nucleus of Downing, guitarist Glenn Tipton and lead singer Rob Halford, and the latter opted to leave following a world tour supporting their 1990 album Painkiller.
To replace Halford, Downing, Tipton, bassist Ian Hill and drummer Scott Travis brought in Tim ‘Ripper’ Owens, the American frontman with Judas Priest tribute act British Steel.
Despite re-establishing Priest as a live act, the band’s two albums with Owens – Jugulator and Demolition – flopped, and in 2003 Priest bowed to fan pressure and reunited with Halford. Downing’s explosive memoir Heavy Duty: Days And Nights In Judas Priest later lifted the lid on tensions that had festered within the band and their backroom team, and in 2010 he announced his retirement from the group.
In 2019 a pre-planned Special Guest spot with former Manowar guitarist Ross The Boss at the Bloodstock Festival served as the catalyst to the launch his band KK’s Priest, with a line-up that was intended to include two of his former Priest bandmates: Owens and drummer Les Binks.
Later in 2019 the trio, augmented by Megadeth bassist David Ellefson and Hostile guitarist AJ Mills, played a set of Priest songs at the Steel Mill, the Wolverhampton venue owned by Downing. Debut albums Sermons Of The Sinner is out now.
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Did you seriously consider yourself retired when you quit Priest in 2011? Classic Rock Newsletter
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No, not at all.
There was always a chance you’d return?
Absolutely. By 2010 things reached a boiling point and I had a bit of a breakdown, I think. I just couldn’t do it any more. Too many elements were no longer right. Rob had done two studio albums within about a year, and done a tour with his own band playing Priest songs. We did the Ozzfest and went to Peru, and that wasn’t very good. Then they asked me to do a five-track EP to support the farewell tour, which we had all agreed would be the end of the band, and I said no. I told them fuck it all, basically, and I sent my so-called retirement letter.
I tried to keep things amicable, but I was relying on those guys to make sure I received what I was entitled to [financially]. And then, three months later, I started to change my mind. I spoke to Ian [Hill] about doing the tour and asked to see the set-list, which I really liked. I had expected Glenn [Tipton] to have his own way, but it was a great set-list.
The next morning they released the press release [saying he was retiring]. That was deflating. So I sat in the wings, expecting an opportunity [to rejoin]. Then when Glenn retired [due to contracting Parkinson’s disease, in 2018 Tipton ceased touring] I totally thought they’d call me. When they didn’t I was despondent, completely gutted. Since then I’ve written a couple of times, but come to the conclusion the door is closed. So I’ve moved on.
When the golf course you owned went into administration, you sold your royalties to 136 Judas Priest songs.
Lots of things happen in life. I’d had the golf course five years before I quit the band. It was managed by a professional company. It’s just what the guys were telling the world – that’d I’d retired. I submitted my retirement letter in December 2010, and they put out the press release.
You were unhappy with the way your side of the story was presented?
That’s why the second letter said: “Ignore everything – these are the real reasons.” I told them I was planning to sell the golf course, but they didn’t reveal that. It suited them to tell the world I had retired. I had to carry that cross with the fans who thought I was neglecting them for rubbish reasons.
You’ve still got the music venue in Wolverhampton, KK’s Steel Mill.
I’m so proud of that. Cheap Trick are coming up. So is Michael Schenker. It’s even bigger now, the new capacity is three and a half thousand.
What happened to former Judas Priest drummer Les Binks, who is no longer part of KK’s Priest?
I sent the demos, and when Les didn’t get straight back to me I thought something was afoot. He had a wrist injury – and this stuff is very demanding to play. So, graciously, he backed out and we got Sean [Elg], who had played in Ripper’s band [the Three Tremors]. He can play Painkiller fantastically, but with Les it just wasn’t to be.
Les Binks would like to make guest appearances on tour. Are you open to that?
That was my suggestion, actually. This is KK’s Priest, and we’re all of an age now where we need to enjoy everything. There has been speculation that now bassist David Ellefson is no longer with Megadeth he might join KK’s Priest. No. Because we’ve been together for a year and a half and Tony [Newton, of Voodoo Six] has done such a great job, not only as a band member but also handling the production and engineering. He also gets involved in the videos. He’s a great all-rounder.
Did you consider any singers other than Ripper Owens?
No, no. I was really hopeful that Ripper would want the gig. I don’t know what we’d have done had he said no.
With him having been ‘let go’ to bring Rob Halford back, was it a difficult conversation?
No. We had remained in touch. What happened [to end his spell with Priest] was just an unfortunate set of circumstances. He’s such a great vocalist, and fans know that there’s usually one voice associated with one band: Klaus [Meine] is the voice of Scorpions, just as Bruce [Dickinson] is the voice of Maiden, and Dave [Lee Roth] will always be the voice of Van Halen because I saw them with him first. That [association] is what happened with Priest. We did a couple of albums with Ripper, and maybe if we had written a different type of material things might not have turned out the way they did.
KK’s Priest’s debut album, Sermons Of The Sinner, is a screaming dizbuster of a heavy metal album, no apologies offered nor required. It’s almost a caricature of the genre.
That’s what comes out of me. And what I liked about making it is that there was no need to confer with other people.
You’re the sole writer of it.
Completely, yeah. If the ideas hadn’t come I’d have looked bloody stupid, but I’m extremely happy with it, though going forward from here everyone will be getting stuck in.
What does Sermons Of The Sinner have that the Jugulator and Demolition albums didn’t?
It has elements of classic Judas Priest. When we brought in Ripper, the writing took a different turn. Those albums were different to anything before or after. Sermons is me going back to what Judas Priest does best.
Return Of The Sentinel is a nine-minute sequel to the track from Priest’s 1984 album Defenders Of The Faith.
Like I say, I can’t change who I am. I mean that musically, emotionally or as a person. I’m devoted to Judas Priest. I was never the guy that went away and played with other bands or had my own website and sold my own T-shirt. This album presents a statement: This is KK Downing. I won’t be around forever, and I want younger bands to hear it and think: “This is great.” Wouldn’t it be great if we had a young version of Deep Purple or the Scorpions? Are Greta Van Fleet another Led Zeppelin? The answer is probably yes.
The album’s press release claims that KK’s Priest are inspired by those we have lost – people like Lemmy and Ronnie James Dio – and says fans should savour the music while we are all on the right side of the turf.
That’s it exactly. Enjoy and appreciate it all. It [this genre] is coming to an end unless we can get some new blood. Otherwise it just becomes a page in a history book.
Amid the maelstrom on the album, Metal Through And Through is an epic, eight-minute ballad – with keyboards.
Yeah, there are keys in the melodic part. With this album I wanted to try every element that could work. I am metal through and through and the fans are metal through and through. When we play live we can rejoice in the fact that we’re all metal through and through, unashamedly.
Obviously, Judas Priest still exists. Some detractors have labelled KK’s Priest as a tribute band.
As a twenty-five-per-cent director of the Judas Priest company, and a shareholder, why wouldn’t they allow me to come back out of retirement? I believe that I, justifiably, have an entitlement [to continue the name].
Rob Halford’s autobiography, Confess, is a great read, but he handled your Priest exit in a lightweight manner.
When all is said and done, Rob knows I was the guy that brought him back into Priest [in 2003]. Glenn [Tipton] wasn’t happy about it, and I understood that, because after he left Rob said a few things about the band – a lot more than I ever did. Given a choice, I think Rob would have had me back in the band. We had fought so many battles together and travelled so many miles.
Did you ever really forgive Halford for leaving Priest? Around the time of Demolition, you told me: “Everybody in this band categorically believes that Rob Halford should never sing with us again [because] he doesn’t deserve it.”
Well, it all got proper ugly – Rob’s first album [with Fight] was called War Of Words. It was an ugly affair. Look, artists have difficult temperaments. There’s good, bad and ugly within us all and we get fired up about things. How many times have you broken up with a girlfriend and said never again, and a year later she’s back? Shit happens in life. Rob is a great performer, everybody knows that. But he’s sensitive. I can’t guarantee to say all of the right things in an interview, because everybody’s human.
One of the main reasons people like you is that you say what’s on your mind. For example, in your own autobiography you revealed that you told Tipton and Priest manager Jayne Andrews that you had “hated” them both “since 1985”. When I read the book, I had to read that paragraph again.
[Laughs darkly] Like I said, I had been on the phone to Ian about doing the farewell tour and [after he was snubbed by the band] I was angry. Glenn had formed a relationship with Jayne from day one, and it felt a bit like a John and Yoko situation. I didn’t like that.
You have already spoken of your astonishment that Priest didn’t ask you to rejoin when Tipton opted to stop touring. Given those comments in the book, were you really surprised?
[After some moments of silence] Yes, I was. Isn’t everyone allowed a moment when they throw their toys out of the pram? Back then my head was all over the place, and I really considered it the logical move.
Finally, how much of this is about revenge?
No. That’s completely the wrong word. Now I know that I can do this without Glenn, Rob, or Ian, it’s an absolute pleasure and a treat. I wasn’t sure about doing the book. The fans know me, but only as part of a team. And I am a team player. But one of the reasons for doing the book and making this album is that I wanted the fans to get to know me, as me. That’s what KK’s Priest is about. I would say three things to the fans: enjoy it, let me know what you think, and let’s rock out.
Sermons Of The Sinner is out now via Explorer1 Music Group.
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Anonymous2024-08-12 11:50
@MikeHawkey 7 years ago Nice build! - Impressive how dark that ( I assume) steelo/vinegar stain goes! 4 Reply CircuitsAndStrings · @CircuitsAndStrings 7 years ago +Mike Hawkey yes. It was darker than I thought it would be. Yep, vinegar and steel wool. Reply @GOLDSMITHEXILE 6 years ago it works great, I done the same on an oak drum shell, lovely dense velvety black. It only works on wood that has a naturally high tannin content. Reply @valvenator 6 years ago That is correct. It's not a stain but a chemical reaction between the tannin and the iron acetate. Though it can look horribly splotchy on woods with uneven tannin content such as maple.