Metal Hammer UK

ROB HALFORD

There are many iconic figures in heavy metal, but there’s only one Metal God. In a career spanning five decades, Rob Halford has fronted one of the most important and influential metal bands in history, his beloved Judas Priest, and almost singlehandedly defined the look and sound that’s integral to the genre. He’s come a long way since his early days growing up on a housing estate near Walsall in the West Midlands, but his passion and love for metal has not diminished one iota. “I’m a metal singer, that’s what I do,” he tells us, as he settles down to talk to us from his US home.

Last time we saw Rob in the UK was for Priest’s tremendous and emotional headlining set at Bloodstock 2021. “When I was up there onstage at Bloodstock belting it out, I couldn’t help but feel grateful and humble for the long life that I’ve made as a metal singer with a band that I love more than any other band in the world,” he smiles. It’s this kind of attitude, alongside the spectacular back catalogue he’s contributed to, that makes Rob such a star. We got him to reminisce about some of the highlights of a life forged in metal.

What was your childhood like growing up on a housing estate in Sutton Coldfield?

“It was a remarkable time. The world was just

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Metal Hammer UK

Metal Hammer UK5 min read
Dool
RALPH WALDO EMERSON once wrote, “To be yourself in a world that is constantly trying to make you something else is the greatest accomplishment.” This is the central idea behind the latest outing from Dutch voyagers Dool. Both sonically and thematical
Metal Hammer UK2 min read
Creeping Death
AT LONG LAST, the weather is getting warmer and the days are getting longer again, but that’s not the type of scenery that Frozen Soul deal in. Dallas–Fort Worth’s ice-obsessed death metallers are about to arrive onstage at the Underworld and thrust
Metal Hammer UK2 min read
Ou
China has famously given the world many things during its millennia-long history: paper, gunpowder, banknotes, a great big wall among them. But prog metal? Not so much. Ou (pronounced ‘O’) are out to change that. The Beijing four-piece put a unique s

Related