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Hell's Heroes VII caters to entire metal community, shows festival organizers how it's done

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Hell's Heroes VII caters to entire metal community, shows festival organizers how it's done

HOUSTON — When it comes to the quaint gathering known as the metal festival, Hell’s Heroes doesn’t have the notoriety of Rocklahoma. It may not have the pomp of Louder Than Life or the circumstance of Aftershock.

What it does have is so much more meaningful: resonance with those who matter the most.

The artists and the fans.

Hell’s Heroes VII concluded another stellar year Saturday, March 22, at White Oak Music Hall, culminating the four-day, two-stage affair with a lot of something for everyone (see 185-photo gallery).

Enjoy your metal with a side of Satan? Goatwhore was happy to oblige spotlighting its 2000 debut album The Eclipse of Ages Into Black.

Fan of the New Wave of British Heavy Metal? Saxon headlined the finale with a special “The Eagle Has Landed” set 24 hours after playing Wheels of Steel in its entirety at the Tobin Center (coverage here).

Want to be a part of history? S.A. Slayer reunited for its first performance in 40 years (coverage here).

How about possibly reliving your high school years with a trip down Memory Lane from a guy who shouldn’t even be alive? That would be original Danzig guitarist John Christ highlighting that band’s first two game changing albums from 1988 & 1990 despite the fact he was nearly killed in an auto wreck in 2004.

Then there was Celtic folk / black metal band Primordial from Ireland, whose vocalist A.A. Nemtheanga performs with a noose around his neck.

And that was just scratching the fretboard.

The architect of Christian Larson, Hell’s Heroes VII may not be on the same platform as the bigger-name fests or performed on a cruise ship. Nevertheless, a big phat set of horns needs to be raised to Larson and his cohorts because it was a raging success with those who witnessed it no matter from where they came, independent of whether they were there one day, all four or somewhere in between.

Larson is the vocalist of heavy shredders Night Cobra, which kicked off Saturday’s festivities at 12:30 p.m. How many festival founders would put their band on first when the least amount of fans would be in attendance?

But Larson did just that, demonstrating he’s not interested in any sort of ego interfering with how his festival would be run.

And what a run it was.

Though Alamo True Metal was there only for the final day due to paying the bills and covering the aforementioned Saxon, Riot V, Lizzy Borden gig the night before in the Alamo City, the fest made quite an impression in many ways.

Despite the fact it was an 80-degree day in March as opposed to a brutal 100-degree muggy affair in July, both photo pits were stocked with cases of bottled water that security offered up for free to the hardcore fans that spent hours by the barrier.

There were no fights or visible signs of trouble. Instead, there were hours of safe metal mayhem accompanied by food trucks, and vendors selling everything from T-shirts and beanies with your favorite band’s logos to dog and cat jean jackets (somebody say MUTT-allica?).

Larson undoubtedly also put his band on first so he could spend the remainder of the fest overseeing the goings-on while admiring the fruits of his and the White Oak staff’s labor.

Larson, who also sings and plays guitar in black-metal outfit Necrofier, which headlined Hi-Tones in San Antonio on Jan. 26 (coverage here), fronted a slew of songs from Night Cobra’s 2020 debut EP In Praise of the Shadow and 2022 lone full-length Dawn of the Serpent.

Bass player Trevi Biles, meanwhile, offers up a different type of double duty. According to Encyclopaedia Metallum, he teaches high school students Precalculus and Algebra II Accelerated.

Speaking of double duty . . . drummer Dave McClain, who’s also in Sacred Reich and known for his time in Machine Head, went from S.A. Slayer’s reunion to providing the backstop for Danzig guitarist Christ less than 90 minutes later.

A stagehand resembling Glenn Danzig, complete with the sideburns, introduced the band simply by bellowing, “Do you wanna cross that line,” to which the crowd erupted, “ ‘Cause it’s a Long Way Back From Hell!”

That would be just one of the eight Danzig songs Christ, McClain and Co. would perform as part of a 45-minute set.

Each minute Christ lives, let alone plays guitar, is a victory in and of itself. While driving a truck in 2004, a tire blew out. Christ’s vehicle rolled, ejecting him into oncoming traffic and leading to years of physical and mental therapy.

Prior to launching into “Snakes of Christ,” (ATM footage below), Christ used a sense of humor to regale the audience about his frightening experience.

“I wanted to go for a helicopter ride, right? The only way I found out (how) to do it was to get thrown out of a truck on the freeway and get run over by traffic going the other way,” Christ said. “But I got my helicopter ride. I shut down the freeway in both directions in L.A., and I almost kicked the bucket. Broke half my body, and it took five years to be able to play guitar again. I had to learn how to talk everything and walk. Some people say I still can’t talk or walk at the same time. But anyway, and now it’s 20 years later. I’m back. I missed you guys.”

Christ, who stamped Danzig’s sound on the first four albums after a stint with Glenn Danzig in Samhain, was playing his first gig in Houston since 1995. The crowd ate it up on classic riff-laden opener “Twist of Cain,” “She Rides,” “Am I Demon” and of course, the hit that broke Danzig’s MTV bank: “Mother.”

“MTV hated us until ‘Beavis & Butt-head’ loved us in ‘93,” Christ said.

There was also Swiss trio Coroner, still being spearheaded by singer/bassist Ron Royce. It was a little surreal standing in line with them at one of the food trucks immediately after their set, but that’s the intimacy you get at Hell’s Heroes that doesn’t happen at all festivals.

There was Scotland’s Hellripper, packing them in during the hottest part of the afternoon while marking their first trip to America.

There was San Antonio’s own Las Cruces, which learned only about a week before that they’d be replacing the absent Blood Ceremony. Vocalist Jason Kane was a headbanging and singing machine, while guitarist Mando Serna, bassist Jimmy Bell and band leader George Trevino made the Alamo City proud throughout the set, a taste of which can be seen below on ATM’s footage of “Ringmaster” and “Cocaine Wizard Woman.”

Lest anyone call it a night early, they would have missed Saxon putting a metallic bow on another year of Hell’s Heroes.

At one point, vocalist Biff Byford lamented the discrepancy in Saxon’s appearances at festivals overseas compared to the dearth of American ones, saying, “We should play more festivals in America. We don’t get asked to play festivals here. It’s a bloody shame, really.”

But all it took was the performance of a few tracks Saxon didn’t perform at the Tobin Center such as “This Town Rocks” plus “And the Bands Played On” to make things right again immediately after thundering through “1066” and “The Eagle Has Landed” (ATM footage of both below).

Following the latter, Byford told the crowd Saxon would play “a few extra songs.” He gave the people the choice of hearing the two aforementioned ones along with their cover of San Antonio native Christopher Cross’ “Ride Like the Wind” before yielding, “Maybe we’ll do two of them. Or all three.”

After ending the trifecta with the remake, Byford instructed of Houston: “Don’t tell San Antonio we played that one.”

The generosity, however, came at a small price. As Saxon began to exceed the 11 p.m. curfew, the venue pulled the plug after the first verse of finale “Princess of the Night.”

It was the only blemish on the evening, if you could even call it that.

Barely a breath after the final note, Hell’s Heroes was already reaching out to fans asking for which bands they want to have at next year’s fest. A good start would be the groups that couldn’t make it due to visa or travel issues such as the aforementioned Blood Ceremony and Onslaught.

But again, Hell’s Heroes has something for everyone. Whatever the choices, they’re bound to be worth the time and price of admission you’re willing to invest in it in 2026.

Next time, you might want to bring your pet. Just don’t forget to raise those horns, and paws, high to the sky.

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Hell, Riot & Shock awe sold-out Tobin Center

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Hell, Riot & Shock awe sold-out Tobin Center

If the proverbial three certainties in life always include death and taxes, then the kicker — at least as far as San Antonio metal is concerned — is Saxon will always draw a sold-out devoted following whenever it comes to town.

In a town that knows how to rock, the latest example came last Friday night on Saxon’s second visit ever to the downtown Tobin Center, once again drawing approximately 1,800 fans filling all levels of the cozy and acoustically impeccable theater for the performing arts.

As in May 2024, Saxon shared tracks from latest album Hell, Fire & Damnation (coverage here). Unlike that show, the New Wave of British Heavy Metal stalwarts went eight songs deep before unleashing 1980 classic Wheels of Steel in its entirety — a treat on this “Hell, Fire & Steel” tour Saxon was not going to unveil the following night in Houston at the Hell’s Heroes VIII festival that it headlined (coverage forthcoming).

Original vocalist Biff Byford and Austin resident and (practically original) drummer Nigel Glockler were once again backed by longtime guitarist Doug Scarratt, bassist Tim “Nibbs” Carter and Diamond Head mainstay Brian Tatler on guitar.

Mixing songs from all eras (see setlist in 54-photo gallery), Saxon and the 74-year-old Byford (yes, you read that correctly) continue to defy age and logic in the city that gave the band its first taste of American radio airplay back in 1979-80. Watch them in action at the bottom via ATM’s footage of “Heavy Metal Thunder” and the band’s 1980 account of the John F. Kennedy assassination, “Dallas 1 p.m.”

Amazingly, the direct support act has been around a little longer than Saxon.

Riot V and hometown bassist Don Van Stavern are touring as part of their 50th anniversary in support of latest album Mean Streets.

Although no original members remain in the group, Van Stavern has been more than a huge contributor to Riot’s legacy beginning with the classic 1988 Thundersteel lineup, with guitarist Mike Flyntz following only five years later.

Backed by drummer Frank Gilchriest and new guitarist Jonathan Reinheimer, the group was injected with a new bolt of energy when vocalist Todd Michael Hall — then of Jack Starr’s Burning Starr and Reverence — was hired by Van Stavern in late 2013 and officially announced as the fifth singer in the band’s storied history in January 2014. Mean Streets marks the third Riot V album with Hall on vocals, a record that sees Van Stavern having written tracks in the vein of each of the band’s eras.

Hall, meanwhile, recently celebrated the fifth anniversary of his scintillating performance on “The Voice” of Foreigner’s “Jukebox Hero” (watch here) and released his latest classic-rock solo album of originals Off the Rails this past October.

Although it was a thankless task narrowing 50 years of music into nine or 10 “support act” songs, Riot pulled it off masterfully with tracks from various albums and nearly every era, highlighted by 1988 opener “Thundersteel,” the mandatory 1981 sing-along “Swords and Tequila” and 1979 dynamo “Road Racin.’ “

Riot added Thundersteel classic “Johnny’s Back” to the printed setlist and inserted it prior to finale “Warrior.” You can watch the group in action at the bottom via ATM’s footage of new-album single “Feel the Fire,” 1982 title track “Restless Breed” and Thundersteel MTV hit “Bloodstreets.”

Kicking off the night was the unpredictable shock-rocker Lizzy Borden, who came out in a three-headed monster contraption while singing the title track to his latest album, 2018’s My Midnight Things.

Longtime drummer Joey Scott provided the beats on classics such as “Notorious,” “Eyes of a Stranger” and “Me Against the World.”

ATM footage below of “Master of Disguise” and the crowd-pleasing “American Metal” captured Lizzy Borden’s uplifting performance in what was a rare San Antonio visit, buoyed by guitarist AC Alexander, who’s a luxury realtor in California known as Alexander Ciullo when he’s not playing, well, American metal.

From the shores of England, to the streets of New York and the glitz of Los Angeles, the trio of acts at the Tobin on this night provided a get-together that San Antonio could be proud of. The debate as to whether the Alamo City remains the “Heavy Metal capital” in 2025 will carry on. But there’s no denying there aren’t many cities in the U.S. that have welcomed, and flown the flag for, Saxon, Riot, Lizzy Borden and many others like them for as long as it has.

For that, San Antonio undoubtedly remains second to none — and the reason these bands will continue to return as long as they’re around to do so.

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Saxon treat 'favorites' to hell, fire, heep & heavy metal thunder

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Saxon treat 'favorites' to hell, fire, heep & heavy metal thunder

When a band storied enough to be part of the New Wave of British Heavy Metal movement has played in a city for nearly 45 years, the venues tend to come and go. But the heavy metal thunder remains. In Saxon’s case, that thunderous music just keeps getting better.

On a co-headlining North American trek with fellow NWOBHM friends Uriah Heep, Saxon added another Alamo City concert residence to its San Antonio history by performing at the Tobin Center for the first time this past Thursday night. The “Hell, Fire & Chaos” tour celebrated Saxon’s latest album Hell, Fire & Damnation in conjunction with Uriah Heep’s 25th and newest studio effort Chaos & Colour.

A sold-out four-story crowd of approximately 1,800 relished a Saxon performance that lasted from 9:40-11:12 p.m. following Uriah Heep’s rockin’ set that went from 7:49-9:14 p.m.

After opening with the obligatory title track to Saxon’s new album, vocalist Biff Byford had the fans eating out of his spread-out hands when he quipped, “You know you’re our favorites, right?” The standard company line of many a vocalist playing any city isn’t a load of bullocks as far as Byford is concerned.

Saxon received its first taste of American radio airplay in 1979-80 here thanks to the late legendary disc jockey Joe Anthony. “The Godfather” is the reason Byford, Judas Priest’s Rob Halford and several others mention Anthony by name every time their band plays San Antonio. On this night, Byford dedicated the classic title track to 1980’s Wheels of Steel to Anthony.

“We’ve been playing San Antonio since 1980,” Byford acknowledged to thunderous applause. “We’ve played the (HemisFair) Arena. We’ve played Sunken Gardens. We’ve played everywhere! We even played in a sandwich bar,” he recalled, referencing Saxon’s impromptu gig at Sam’s Burger Joint Music Hall on Sept. 2, 2015, when they were supposed to support Motorhead at the Aztec Theatre, only for that show to be called off due to Lemmy Kilmister’s illness — something Byford discussed exclusively with yours truly in 2017 (watch here).

Saxon and Uriah Heep helped the Tobin Center mark its 10th year, which is also how long ago Byford’s prog metal masterpiece as part of The Scintilla Project, entitled The Hybrid, was released, which Byford also discussed in the aforementioned interview link.

This particular night also made Saxon history in another way. It was the first San Antonio gig as a member of the band for lead and rhythm guitarist Brian Tatler, who was brought in after last year’s surprising departure of original guitarist Paul Quinn.

Tatler, of course, is known for his current stature in Diamond Head — the group made even more popular thanks to Metallica’s covers of their tracks “Am I Evil” and “It’s Electric” — which comes full circle given that Metallica’s second concert was opening for Saxon. Byford also flew from Helsinki, Finland, to San Francisco to perform “Motorcycle Man” at Metallica’s 30th anniversary bash in 2011 (yes, that too was discussed in the interview above).

Tatler had little trouble integrating with Byford, fellow guitarist Doug Scarratt, bassist Tim “Nibbs” Carter and the “Bucc-ee’s Tour” T-shirt wearing and Austin resident drummer Nigel Glockler as evidenced below on Alamo True Metal’s footage of seven Saxon tracks including new tunes “There’s Something In Roswell” and “Madame Guillotine” plus oldies “Heavy Metal Thunder,” “Dallas 1 p.m.,” “Crusader” and “747 (Strangers in the Night).”

With so many classics from which to choose while touring in support of a new album, that means Saxon felt the need to omit a couple of its more recent bangers such as the title track to 2013’s Sacrifice and “Age of Steam” from 2022’s Carpe Diem.

But when it comes to the Alamo City in particular, all of that goes by the wayside as it pertains to arguably metal’s most recognizable anthem that does not mention “rock” or “metal” in the title: “Denim and Leather, brought us all together,” which you can also watch below.

Not to be outdone was Uriah Heep, which, unlike Saxon, doesn’t exactly come around to San Antonio every other year.

The group’s lone remaining original member, guitarist Mick Box, is joined these days by vocalist Bernie Shaw, who’s been fronting the group since 1986 — in other words, almost an original himself.

And while Uriah Heep’s debut album came out a year before yours truly was born, they, like Saxon, aren’t hanging their hats on the past. Uriah Heep’s 2023 effort Chaos & Colour spawned three new tracks at the Tobin that are worth checking out — two of them can be seen below in “Hurricane” and “Hail the Sunrise,” which flanked ‘70’s era’s “Sweet Lorraine” and “Free ‘n’ Easy.”

Shaw demonstrated he’s the ideal complement to Box’s playing in both vocal skills and sound as well as stage presence and commanding the Tobin audience. Along with bassist Dave Rimmer, drummer Russell Gilbrook and new touring keyboardist Adam Wakeman — the son of legendary Yes keyboardist Rick Wakeman and who also played keys on Ozzy Osbourne’s 2008 Black Rain tour — Box and Shaw also shone on “Gypsy,” and “Stealin’.” The latter was once covered by local rock and blues guitar/vocal thoroughbred Jason Kane of Jason Kane & The Jive.

Uriah Heep’s performance may have been a tad too long for some given rumblings that could be heard by these ears around the Tobin from fans eager to see Saxon. But that sentiment evaporated when UH prepared to unveil its final encore with Shaw declaring, “We didn’t come all this way not to play ‘Easy Livin’!” Similar to the Metallica/Diamond Head relationship with “Am I Evil,” the 1972 Heep hit gained more notoriety to a new generation when W.A.S.P. covered it on its 1986 release Inside the Electric Circus.

But once again, it was Saxon’s hand-in-hand relationship with San Antonio that was the story. Saxon eclipsed the scheduled 11 p.m. end time by 12 minutes, treating the Tobin to a trio of encores.

Byford gave the crowd a chance to show applause for possible extras Saxon would play, warning the Tobin that the eventual first encore, “The Eagle Has Landed,” is a seven-minute song as if to say the show might run long or that playing that song would negate the possibility of hearing other expected ones.

But of course, all rules are tossed out when Saxon invades San Antonio. It doesn’t matter if it’s at a burger joint or on the night of tornadic conditions during a show with Armored Saint at the Vibes Event Center.

So Saxon found room for two more, performing its cover of San Antonio native Christopher Cross’ “Ride Like the Wind” before ending with “Princess of the Night.” The latter was once a funny topic of discussion on an episode of “That Metal Show” when host Eddie Trunk poked fun at Lady Gaga claiming she was a Saxon fan, only to have Byford chime in with, “Well, she knows the words to ‘Princess of the Night.’ “

Whether Lady Gaga is a “Northern Lady” or not, she still might have a long way to go, however, before matching the Alamo City’s dedication to Saxon. After all, the heavy metal capital will always take pride in being home to heavy metal thunder.

SAXON SETLIST: The Prophecy/Hell, Fire & Damnation; Motorcycle Man; This Town Rocks; Power & The Glory; There’s Something In Roswell; Heavy Metal Thunder; Madame Guillotine; Dallas 1 p.m.; Strong Arm of the Law; 1066; Crusader; 747 (Strangers in the Night); Denim & Leather; Wheels of Steel (dedicated to Joe Anthony). ENCORES: The Eagle Has Landed; Ride Like the Wind (Christopher Cross cover); Princess of the Night

URIAH HEEP SETLIST: Save Me Tonight; Grazed By Heaven; Rainbow Demon; Stealin’; Hurricane; Sweet Lorraine; Hail the Sunrise; Free ‘n’ Easy; Gypsy; Look At Yourself; July Morning; Sunrise. ENCORE: Easy Livin’

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