Beyond the Realms of Death
"Beyond The Realms of Death" | |
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Song by Judas Priest from the album Stained Class | |
Released | 10 February 1978 |
Recorded | October–November 1977, Chipping Norton Recording Studios, Oxfordshire |
Genre | Heavy metal |
Length | 6:53 |
Label |
CBS, Inc. (UK) Columbia Records (US) |
Writer(s) |
Rob Halford Les Binks |
Producer(s) | Dennis Mackay, Judas Priest |
Stained Class track listing | |
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"Beyond The Realms of Death" is a power ballad by British heavy metal band Judas Priest from their 1978 album, Stained Class. Vocalist Rob Halford's performance is considered one of his finest ever, and the guitar work is noted as well, especially the epic dual guitar solo. Many reviewers have called it one of the best songs on the album.[1][2] The song is considered a Judas Priest classic, with versions of the song appearing on the albums Priest, Live and Rare, '98 Live Meltdown, Live in London, A Touch of Evil: Live, Live Insurrection and many of the group's compilation albums. Drummer Les Binks has his only songwriting credit with the band for the main riff of this song.
Composition
The song starts out as a slow and light ballad until the chorus, where the song erupts into heavy riffs. The song then turns light once again until the next chorus, and the following bridge section. The first guitar solo is then played by Glenn Tipton. Then the song turns light once again for the next verses, which is followed by the heavy chorus/bridge section once again and the second guitar solo played by K.K. Downing. This is followed by the final heavy riffs and the epic final scream of Rob Halford.
The song describes a man who succumbs to the effects of depression, and enters into a state of pseudo-catatonic depression which gives the outwards appearance of a comatose state, in that it essentially renders the body physically immobile whilst leaving inner thought processes intact in an almost 'locked-in' fashion. He eventually dies, most unlikely by his own hand due to the catatonic state of depression in which he was essentially locked, so he is once more released from the chains of life. Furthermore, other lines in the song suggest an anti-suicidal message. The song was mentioned in a 1990 trial, in which the parents of two teens who had committed suicide after listening to the album Stained Class alleged that subliminal messages encouraging suicide had been hidden in another song on the album that prompted the suicides.
Covers
- Blind Guardian did a cover version of the song for the album, A Tribute to Judas Priest: Legends of Metal.
Personnel
- Rob Halford: vocals
- K.K. Downing: guitar
- Glenn Tipton: guitar
- Ian Hill: bass
- Les Binks: drums
References
- ↑ "Judas Priest - Stained Class (album review 3)". Sputnikmusic. Retrieved 2014-05-19.
- ↑ Steve Huey. "Stained Class - Judas Priest | Songs, Reviews, Credits, Awards". AllMusic. Retrieved 2014-05-19.