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Judas Priest, Queensryche inject Alamo City with double dose of musical excellence

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Judas Priest, Queensryche inject Alamo City with double dose of musical excellence

It may not have been the month-long residency many artists have undertaken in Las Vegas the past several years. But when Judas Priest and Queensryche arrived last week in San Antonio, they packed their buses for more than a one-night stay.

Back-to-back performances at the new Tech Port Center + Arena last Tuesday and Wednesday prior to Thanksgiving before approximately 3,000 fans each night in the 3,100-capacity venue near Lackland Air Force Base saw a combined 90 years worth of molten metal take flight.

Could any other city the world over claim that?

It’s OK. We’ll wait for your answer.

Perhaps that was just part of the reason Judas Priest vocalist Rob Halford, while giving thanks to the late Joe Anthony for being the first disc jockey in the United States to expose Priest’s music in the 1970s and ‘80s to an American listening audience, said in part: “It feels so good to be back in San Antonio. It’s like home to me . . . the beloved Joe Anthony. Two nights here. It just goes to show that heavy metal is in the heart of San Antonio. It’s the heavy metal capital of Texas as far as I’m concerned.”

Queensryche vocalist Todd La Torre was not to be outdone on Night 2 when he said, “San Antonio is the most metal city.”

The dual nights followed a March 21 appearance by both artists at Freeman Coliseum. For non-math majors, that’s three visits to the Alamo City this year.

And it’s not like those on hand at Tech Port needed 50 years to realize Judas Priest is a special band. Nevertheless, the group’s reception of the Musical Excellence Award earlier in the month at the Rock N’ Roll Hall of Fame, which saw Halford and original bassist Ian Hill reunite (one night only, for now) with guitarist K.K. Downing and ‘70s drummer Les Binks, was the cherry on top of the Birmingham, England, natives’ latest stop. It’s also something Hill discussed with Alamo True Metal here.

Celebrating 50 years of heavy metal and the 40th year of seminal album Screaming for Vengeance, the mighty Priest displayed a vast selection of hits including “Hell Bent for Leather, “Breaking the Law” and “Living After Midnight,” deeper cuts “Between the Hammer and the Anvil” and “Judas Rising” along with the title track to its 2018 and most recent album Firepower, followed by that record’s “Never the Heroes.” Priest played the same identical set each night, but those who only attended Night 2 received an extra song in their classic cover of Joan Baez’s “Diamonds and Rust.”

While it’s easy to say it’s not a complete Judas Priest concert without staples “Victim of Changes,” “Painkiller,” and “Metal Gods,” it was refreshing to see the five-decade mainstays throw caution to the wind, while riding on it, and change things up from previous tours.

But you can also say it’s definitely not a complete Priest showing without guitarist Glenn Tipton, who had been appearing for the encores in recent visits dating back to 2018 but whose bout with Parkinson’s disease undoubtedly prevented an appearance this time around. T-shirts were selling at the merch booth with sales from one specialty top going toward Tipton’s Parkinson’s Foundation.

Guitarist Richie Faulkner, sporting a fresh scar from his ruptured aorta endured onstage in September 2021 in Louisville, Kentucky, and subsequent 10 1/2-hour emergency open heart surgery, demonstrated that every show he plays from here on out is a major miracle of life as he continued to do what he does best on stage.

Veteran producer and guitarist Andy Sneap returned as well, while drummer Scott Travis subbed out his usual introduction of “Painkiller” for the title track to Screaming for Vengeance (ATM Facebook Live footage here).

No professional video was allowed of Judas Priest, but you can watch them via more ATM Facebook Live footage from the first night on “Genocide,” “Steeler,” “Between the Hammer and the Anvil” and “Halls of Valhalla.” Also check out “Beyond the Realms of Death,” “Judas Rising” and “Devil’s Child.”

Recognition from the Rock N’ Roll Hall of Fame can be a funny thing. It obviously means a lot to the musicians who put in the work and longevity. From a fan standpoint, it only seems to matter when an artist that is long overdue to receive such status doesn’t, thus setting off a chain of rebellious emotions that serves as the basis of heavy metal music in the first place.

Enter bands such as Iron Maiden. Motorhead.

And Queensryche.

Perhaps the latter will get there one day. To its lifelong fans, however, the place among the Rock Hall’s elite doesn’t need to be solidified officially because it already began with the band’s 1983 self-titled EP and full-length follow-up The Warning in 1984.

Queensryche spotlighted those two records among their opening tracks each night (see setlists below and in photo gallery), as evidenced by ATM footage on Night 2 of “En Force.” La Torre, original guitarist Michael Wilton, guitarist Mike Stone, original bassist Eddie Jackson and drummer Casey Grillo kept the hits coming on “Take Hold of the Flame,” “Screaming In Digital” and finale “Eyes of a Stranger.”

Unlike the show in March, Queensryche also brought some terrific new music with them. Having released Digital Noise Alliance on Oct. 7, the band debuted “Behind the Walls” and “In Extremis” (ATM footage below photo gallery). The album marks the fourth already with La Torre on vocals, and fans should start getting used to hearing more of his material without the frontman almost apologetically telling an audience that the group is going to take a break from the classics and hits to unveil new tunes.

After all, La Torre is marking his own decade in Queensryche. So it’s about time fans more than simply try out his other albums The Verdict, Condition: Human and Queensryche and actually keep them in their own regular listening rotation.

At these Tech Port shows, La Torre’s delay throws were much less pronounced and shorter than the March concert at Freeman, mere mention of which in this space caused a seismic reaction among Internet trolls even though the words “lip syncing” were never uttered here. In fact, one of the few times the delay was especially recognizable this time came not via singing but rather when La Torre boasted at show’s end, “We are the one, the only Queensryche,” with the band’s name reverberating throughout the venue.

The Seattle veterans mixed things up both nights more than Priest. Having played “NM 156” and “Operation: Mindcrime” on the first night, Queensryche subbed out “Walk In the Shadows” and “The Needle Lies,” respectively, on Wednesday.

Here’s hoping they’ll go on a headlining tour next year that will feature even more of the past four albums — records yours truly had been listening to consistently long before Internet backlash spewed ATM’s way because Queensryche has always been a personal favorite no matter which of its vocalists is holding the mic.

How many haters could say that about their Queensryche fandom or say they’ve never missed a Queensryche visit to their town the past 17 years?

It’s OK. We’ll wait.

As the long-standing original members, Wilton and Jackson also shouldn’t have to apologize for making new music they should be proud of, nor in effect ask an audience to listen openly to new music. When fresh material mixes with the classic catalog the ‘Ryche possesses, there aren’t many bands that can say every album can hold a candle — or at least a flame — to its predecessor the way Queensryche can.

As if two consecutive shows by these heavyweights wasn’t enough, Night 2 brought out a who’s who of South Texas rockers that took in the action from the Tech Port’s lone suite.

Among the masses were Disturbed bassist John Moyer, Fates Warning/Sebastian Bach/Halford/ex-Riot drummer Bobby Jarzombek (who’s playing for country legend George Strait these days), Riot bassist Don Van Stavern, Heaven Below singer/guitarist and Lita Ford guitarist Patrick Kennison and Buckcherry drummer Francis Ruiz (see photo gallery).

What they heard — Priest’s Harley-Davidson on “Hell Bent for Leather” notwithstanding — was one of the loudest shows in recent memory. And that was before Priest unleashed its blowup Birmingham bull for finale “Living After Midnight.”

What several others heard were arguably the two loudest shows in the Alamo City since Covid-19.

Judas Priest and Queensryche were the right way to celebrate nine decades of music that will always stand the test of time. Not only were they the perfect antidote to drown out one’s annoying family members at Thanksgiving dinner since ears were still ringing 24 and 48 hours later. They were, and will always be, reasons to hold ‘em up high rather than hanging ‘em out to dry.

JUDAS PRIEST SETLIST: Hellion/Electric Eye, Riding on the Wind, You’ve Got Another Thing Comin’, Jawbreaker, Firepower, Never the Heroes, Beyond the Realms Of Death, Judas Rising, Devil’s Child, Genocide, Steeler, Between the Hammer and the Anvil, Halls of Valhalla, Diamonds and Rust (2nd night only), The Green Manalishi (With the Two-Pronged Crown), Screaming for Vengeance. Encores: Hell Bent for Leather, Breaking the Law, Living After Midnight

QUEENSRYCHE SETLIST (Night 1): Queen of the Reich, Warning, En Force, NM 156, Behind the Walls, Empire, Operation: Mindcrime, In Extremis, Take Hold of the Flame, Screaming In Digital, Eyes of a Stranger

QUEENSRYCHE SETLIST (Night 2): Queen of the Reich, Warning, En Force, Walk In the Shadows, Behind the Walls, Empire, The Needle Lies, In Extremis, Take Hold of the Flame, Screaming In Digital, Eyes of a Stranger

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Tierra Sagrada fest takes S.A. on nostalgic ride down Memory Lane

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Tierra Sagrada fest takes S.A. on nostalgic ride down Memory Lane

It took three years and a brand new venue for the first installment of the Tierra Sagrada Festival to finally come to fruition last Saturday. So what was an extra hour and five minutes or so?

The return of two of San Antonio’s favorite classic rock and metal artists — Legs Diamond from California and Moxy of Canada — highlighted the gathering originally scheduled for the 5,200 capacity historic outdoor Sunken Garden Theater in the fall of 2020 pre-Covid-19 that found its way to the less than 5-month-old 3,100 indoor capacity of Tech Port Center + Arena.

The bill also featured nothing-to-sneeze-at acts Lita Ford and Jack Russell’s Great White, the reunion of Kingdom Come and local openers Jessikill, who were fresh off their first major national tour opening for Yngwie Malmsteen this past spring.

The influence of the late disc jockey Joe “The Godfather” Anthony was palpable, as he helped give many bands, including those from other countries, their first taste of American radio exposure in the 1970s and ‘80s. That included not only Legs Diamond and Moxy, but also the Scorpions, who just happened to be playing down the road at Freeman Coliseum.

In fact, Moxy’s lone remaining original member, guitarist Earl Johnson (see start of the 107-photo slideshow below) is quoted on Wikipedia as once saying: “We did an interview with a DJ in Texas. I asked him what songs of ours they were playing. He said, ‘First we play the first side, then we play the second side.’ I just about fell off my chair.”

Legs Diamond participated in a meet-and-greet the night before at Fitzgerald’s, which included an unexpected appearance from Scorpions drummer Mikkey Dee. They then hit the stage at 11:53 p.m. after technical issues at the Tech Port forced festivities to begin more than an hour late, cutting Jessikill’s scheduled six-song set in half and backlogging the rest of the night. By the time Legs Diamond performed San Antonio favorite “Woman,” it was after 1 a.m., and a fraction of the 1,500 on hand remained for a set that had been slated to end between 11:30 and midnight.

The view of a half-filled arena that’s mid-sized to begin with was disappointing given the stature of the six bands. However, given that the Scorpions were also in town along with Collective Soul and Switchfoot at the Majestic Theatre, promoters Din Productions were not complaining. And despite the lengthy delay at the start that, according to one source, was caused by Jack Russell’s Great White insisting on using their own soundman which led to backstage bickering, the difficulties and lateness failed to put a damper on the music.

Or the reaction to it.

Still featuring original members in lead guitarist Roger Romeo, rhythm guitarist and keyboardist Michael Prince and drummer Jeff Poole and fronted these days by Keith England, the West Coast outfit rocked the house with a bevy of classics from the ‘70s and a few tunes from the ‘90s. See Legs Diamond in action via ATM’s Facebook Live footage on “Rock Doktor” and “Remember My Name,” as well as below the slideshow via “Town Bad Girl” and “Pain Killer.”

Despite each band experiencing its own bout of technical issues, Moxy had the crispest sound of the evening. Led by Johnson, who promised that the band will return next year, the group from north of the border powered through its set to the delight of all on hand. Several songs were performed with an enlarged black-and-white photo of the late original vocalist Buzz Shearman serving as a backdrop. Johnson’s newly assembled band following Moxy’s 40th anniversary, featuring vocalist Nicholas Walsh, guitarist Rob Robbins and bassist Rod Aldon, demonstrated how tight of a unit they are on “Midnight Flight” and “Can’t You See I’m A Star” plus “Out of the Darkness,” “Fantasy” and “Sail On Sail Away,” each of which can be viewed below.

Lita Ford preceded Moxy, bringing tunes from her classic mid and late ’80s albums plus 1991 rocker “Larger Than Life” and 2012’s “Relentless” (see setlist in slideshow). Patrick Kennison of Heaven Below and formerly of The Union Underground once again returned to his hometown as Ford’s guitarist, while Bobby Rock provided the only drum solo on the entire night (ATM footage below), 36 years after he humorously destroyed his kit in Vinnie Vincent Invasion’s first video in 1986, “Boyz Are Gonna Rock.” Watch additional ATM footage of 1988 hit “Back to the Cave” that includes an extended jam session.

Once Russell’s band sorted out its technical issues and differences, the quintet rocked the house on a bevy of classics such as “All Over Now,” “Lady Red Light” and “Mista Bone.” Guitarist Robby Lochner won the unofficial award as the most energetic musician on the entire bill, constantly parading throughout the stage while rocking the axe, while former Alice Cooper drummer Ken Mary was behind the kit.

But yours truly was, well, truly disappointed to learn after the show that Russell’s other guitarist and keyboard player was original Leatherwolf vocalist and guitarist Michael Olivieri, whose latest beard style made him slightly unrecognizable to this dedicated and longtime Leatherwolf fan who was not expecting him to be performing Great White tunes.

Nevertheless, Russell demonstrated his voice is still in top shape even if his body continues to make things difficult for him. Fourteen years after performing while leaning on a cane at the now defunct Scout Bar following back surgery, Russell churned out other hits such as “Save Your Love” and "Desert Moon.” The latter sadly will always mark a controversial period in Great White’s existence given that Russell said he would never perform that tune again following the fire in 2003 that killed 100 people at their concert in Rhode Island. In fact, Great White would continue to open with that song for several years, including at the Scout Bar show.

An appreciative Russell told the crowd, “Thank you for not going to see the Scorpions” and that it was “pushing me to the limit, and I love it.” He then ended the set with Great White’s two biggest hits, “Rock Me” and “Once Bitten, Twice Shy” (footage below) before walking off with a cane and slight assistance from a staffer.

The first national act to hit the stage was the reunion of Kingdom Come. Featuring three-fifths original members in lead guitarist Danny Stag, rhythm guitarist and keyboardist Rick Steier and bassist Johnny B. Frank, the band was missing original vocalist Lenny Wolf and drummer James Kottak for vastly different reasons.

Wolf did not want to take part in any sort of reunion tour, necessitating the usage of Keith St. John to front the group the past four years. But it’s Kottak who has been much maligned since his drinking issues led to his dismissal from the Scorpions several years back and resulted in a pair of scathing reviews of Kingdom Come’s gigs in Sweden earlier this year. Kottak then reportedly told fans “Don’t waste your time” in announcing he would not be at Tech Port, which also begged the question of whether he would turn up at the Scorpions show and confront (or hang out with, depending on your perspective) his former mates.

Filling in for, or permanently replacing, Kottak was Slaughter drummer Blas Elias, who was performing for only the second time with Kingdom Come. Watch him and the band in action below on “Do You Like It” and one of the most emotional and best ballads ever recorded by anyone on the group’s 1988 self-titled debut album, “What Love Can Be,” below.

You can also check them out via ATM Facebook Live footage on finale “Get It On,” during which St. John successfully motivated the slow-starting faithful to rise to their feet and remain there for the rest of the night. Kingdom Come also used its biggest hit to toss in some Led Zeppelin crowd participation sing-alongs both as a show of influence from one of the all-time greats, but also likely as a middle finger to critics who incessantly labeled Wolf and the band as a Zeppelin clone dating back to its 1988 Monsters of Rock tour inclusion with Van Halen, Scorpions, Dokken and Metallica.

Jessikill bore the brunt of the delayed start with its scheduled six-song set slashed to three. But as the only hometown band on the program that was playing arguably for the first time ever with a gigantic version of its logo adding to the visuals, Jessica Alejo, Jyro Alejo and Arturo Knight kicked things off in a big way with “Dead of Night,” “Right Now” and “Lightning.” However, just as the keyboards to fourth song “The Beast” kicked in, their sound was halted. Thus, no video footage was able to be filmed.

But at long last, Tierra Sagrada’s initial showing was added to the history books. An extended night of classic Rock N’ Roll mixed with a small handful of more recent tunes could only be delayed, not canceled, by a global pandemic and overcame tech issues and the presence of other bands playing elsewhere in town.

If only San Antonians could teleport between shows.

Alas, fans experienced a night of rock that should tide them over until Tierra Sagrada’s second installment arrives Nov. 4 featuring W.A.S.P., Michael Schenker and Armored Saint, also at Tech Port.

So for those who made the choice to see six bands instead of two, it was clear the state-of-the-art building mere miles from Lackland Air Force Base may not have been the only place to rock out. But it was definitely a great place to be.

And to hold one’s horns high enough for The Godfather to take notice. And maybe even offer up a smile of his own.

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