Nov. 12, 2021

Toscano and Chang go head-to-head

Toscano and Chang go head-to-head
Toscano and Chang go head-to-head
Back to the 80s Radio
Toscano and Chang go head-to-head
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Today the boys talk about their favorite band of all time!

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Well, it's such a drag sin
sub dot and I'm up here in

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the sky. I wish I had
a good friend to talk to somebody that

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you know, I don't know from
Mother England? Her today? How are

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00:01:03.239 --> 00:01:07.079
you today? Chapter? This is? This is Timmy McGuinty. How are

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you my friend? Oh? Tim? You're Irish? Oh? Sometimes when

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only when I'm drinking the old guinness, you know, it's typically typical.

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Well, my name is Winston.
I am from Birmingham. I don't know

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if you've heard of Birmingham, England. Are you from the good old the

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old Lander from Birmingham, Alabama or
from Birmingham the older in the UK.

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Crunky bastard. No one from England, your bastard or reckon seal. I've

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found so many lands and so many
women when I was alive. My name

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is Winston. You know I've got
a question for you, because we are

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saints after all. Shoot, you
know what are we doing? And we're

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supposed to gain our our saint wood
or gain our wings before we can go

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up there? You know, well, listen to these. This is what

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the Father has told me in the
past, that I need to cap maybe

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three souls. It should not be
on earth anymore. They could range from

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wherever. And if I supposedly bring
three chaps up, I will get my

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wings for heaven. That that was
my calling. It's now so you were

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talking. You were saying you have
to bring three souls. You know,

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I only have to bring one,
and I'm searching for the perfect soul,

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and I was thinking of getting one
from the world of rock and roll music.

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I won't know what kind of rubbish
is that you would only bring one

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soul. That's all I need.
I've already brought to Oh kind of is

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this? I bet the old Queen
would have something to say about this land.

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Why do I have to get three
blank and souls and you only get

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one. I've I've already brought to
you. See, so I think I've

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had that jump start on you.
Okay, this is a lowdown. I

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was thinking about gold after maybe Big
Jagger. You know he grew up out

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here too, thought I went to
high school with me Jagger. And I'll

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tell you right now, he put
socks in his path in his package.

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I don't have to put no socks
in the package. My package is ready

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to go. Would you like to
see the package? No, that's quite

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fine. I just want to get
Jonesy. He used to be the punk

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band. And you know Jonesy's a
Los Angeles sheer Rabbish at station is Robbish.

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It's just christ my flag, you
know. As far as for me,

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I think I was thinking of bringing
me maybe. Uh what's the name

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00:03:34.840 --> 00:03:37.919
of the guitarists from the Rolling Stones? You know that that guy. He's

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now nine hundred and twenty five years
old. He's he's older than Methuselah.

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That's the night he can't come up
with me, and everybody needs him down

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there. He's got a net money
for blood transfusions. Well, we're gonna

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bring him up here. You know, he's the only man Riches. Keith

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Riches is a ligger living saint.
He's a limping saint. You know,

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Keith ch is the only man alive
I know with the blood type of Jack

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00:04:01.840 --> 00:04:10.360
Daniels. How about let's see here. I went to America one one weekend

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emitted lad named Donald Trump. I
would like to take his soul, but

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I'm afraid he's not good to help
me get into if you know what I'm

55
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talking about. I think I go
after the old pal Aussie Osborne. Yeah,

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I think it's time that he comes
with me, becuz he's a babbling

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fool. His wife looks kind of
like a bag of makeup. Have you

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ever seen the Wizard of Oz?
She kind of reminds me of the old

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wicked witch. Perfect, you take
Aussie, I'm going to bring Jean Simmons.

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00:04:45.120 --> 00:04:47.839
I think we've had enough for Jean
Simmons down there over here, needled

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me called Jean Simmons. The Donald
Trump with he's wearing a Star Wars was

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the named dolth Vader. Here.
His bloken head looks like he's wearing or

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doroth Ada. I'm so sick of
Jean Simmons and and and that other guru

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fruity Paul Stanley. Well that's done, it's all settled. And then let's

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have a point and uh little dab
of some jamison. And now let's go

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for the souls. I say we
do that, Dane. I'll catch you

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up up in the sky. What
do you say, mate, I say,

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that's great. And on the way, why don't we stop by,

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stop by the nineteen eighties and and
lay back for a decade or so.

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Let's go back to the eighties.
You broke love one point patch. Hello

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and welcome to a very special edition
of Back to the Eighties Radio. I

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am Tuscano, the fantastic radio duo
Tuscano and chang here with you every single

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Friday along with me on this magic
carpet. Right, of course, is

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a man who's been spotted at ride
Aid eating thrifties ice cream inside their own

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freezers. Oh yes, he's also
been He's also been seeing cruising in a

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00:06:20.720 --> 00:06:26.560
red Pontiac fierro, claiming that he's
going back to the eighties to see the

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US Festival all over again. We
here included add back to the Eighties.

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Call him the wondrous chang ola Olah, I am not a chola. Yes,

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welcome to back to the eighties.
This is a chang How are all

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my little chang be danglies out there? Everybody out there staying lifted and gifted

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because remember, tomorrow is not promised, so let's enjoy today and live for

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a better tomorrow. Would you not
say so, Tuscano, I am wholeheartedly

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in agreement with you. I am
extra giddy for to day show. Giddy.

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Let me let our listeners know that
we're taking a side road in from

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00:07:05.680 --> 00:07:11.360
our top ten list of the eighties
that we promised you last show. We

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will continue that on the very next
show. But Tiskanno and I have a

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very special show for you listeners tonight, and hopefully you listeners are fans of

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both bands that we're going to discuss, and if you're not a fan of

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both groups that we're going to discuss, get into the music of these bands,

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and we guarantee you will feel as
giddy as Tiscano and I giddy,

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correct giddy, You like that we're
giddy. I haven't heard that in years.

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A matter of fact, the only
person I ever heard from is you.

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Well, sometimes I feel, but
it's better to say giddy. I

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want to give a very special shout
out to a very special and beautiful team

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that's our team at k Hits ninety
two point five. You guys mean the

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world to us. You rock.
You guys are just passionate for the eighties

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and thanks for taking this eighties ride
with us. So a big shout out

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00:08:03.519 --> 00:08:05.920
to the k Hits ninety two five
team. You know, and they're not

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00:08:07.000 --> 00:08:09.560
old cats like us, so hats
off to those cats. I love you

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00:08:09.639 --> 00:08:13.560
kids like like you were all you
were my children. I think you have

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00:08:13.720 --> 00:08:16.839
posters behind you that are older than
our in our crew, Oh yes I

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do. I want to give a
very special shout out to all of our

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Pandora listeners, even for those that
give us thumbs up, and especially for

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those that give us thumbs down.
Oh you know what, Tisconnod. There's

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nothing I love more than seeing when
we get the thumbs down, round of

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applause. Here's to you. We
appreciate it, yes, yes we did.

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Now, but before we get in, I want to really thank those

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thumb givers of down because it takes
a lot of effort to continuously listen to

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us and hate hate hate us every
single time you put a thumb down,

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and it's just it's more effort to
hate us than it is to love us.

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I like the that they give us
the thumbs down every single week when

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00:09:01.679 --> 00:09:05.639
they listen to us, but they're
always there listening to us. You know

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00:09:05.720 --> 00:09:07.360
we love you, guys. I
also want to give a very special shout

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00:09:07.360 --> 00:09:11.639
out if you're listening through Apple,
Spotify, Google Podcasts, Overcast Radio,

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00:09:11.679 --> 00:09:16.679
Public and iHeart Anchor, iTunes and
just a ton more man. So we

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00:09:16.720 --> 00:09:20.399
just want to give you guys a
big, big shout out for listening to

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our show. Now, we do
have a great show for you as we

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go head to head, toe to
toe talking about the band or bands that

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make us smile, that make us
laugh, to make us cry, that

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when we listen to them, it
makes time stand still for us. And

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both Chang and I are going to
be talking about the artists or bands that

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take us to those places deep in
our hearts. So stick around because we're

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going to be breaking the law tonight
and traveling back in time to a place

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where the streets have no name.
This is back to the eighties radio you're

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00:10:00.279 --> 00:10:05.440
listening to back to the eighty What
I t this country. You've got to

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00:10:05.480 --> 00:10:09.879
make the money first. Then we
get the money. You're getting fower.

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00:10:09.919 --> 00:10:13.519
Then we get a fower, Then
you're getting the woman. If they were

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00:10:13.519 --> 00:10:20.080
a laxity, they'd be so powerful
you could stand on your head and on

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the ceiling. Next position will not
only be unavailable, but also undignified.

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00:10:24.679 --> 00:10:33.440
And now back to the eighties with
Tiscano and Chang. Welcome back to back

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00:10:33.480 --> 00:10:35.840
to the eighty You are with Tskago
and Chang Chang here, and we are

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about to climb into the old ring. That's right, Mono Imano. We

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00:10:41.600 --> 00:10:46.559
will go heads up, band for
band, that's right. So you listeners

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00:10:46.600 --> 00:10:50.440
better get ready, get your popcorn, get your cold drink, light of

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00:10:50.480 --> 00:10:54.360
fatty, put the kids to bed, give him some benadroll and hot chocolate,

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00:10:54.639 --> 00:10:58.679
and get ready to rock and roll
with Tiscango and Chang in this battle.

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Now tonight, I'm gonna throw my
first swing at you. Now.

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00:11:03.080 --> 00:11:05.879
We are telling people, though,
just to keep in mind, if he

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00:11:05.919 --> 00:11:07.360
just joined us here, I'm back
to the eighties radio. We're going to

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00:11:07.399 --> 00:11:11.759
be talking about the band or artist
that is okay, specifically our favorite.

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00:11:11.919 --> 00:11:15.759
Now, this is a very difficult
show to prep for. Because you know,

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I'm a very big connoisseur of music, not all music. I've stated

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00:11:20.360 --> 00:11:22.559
that on the show. A lot
of people know that me is Dick Hator

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and that's okay, right, I'm
okay with that. Yeah, a bunch

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00:11:24.720 --> 00:11:28.720
of fools, but I'm okay with
that. Now. My most favorite band

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00:11:30.440 --> 00:11:37.039
a band that I first stumbled upon
in nineteen seventy seven but actually debuted in

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sixty nine and had their first album
in seventy four sixty nine. Besides Queen,

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I'm talking about, Judas Priest is
one of my most favorite hard rock

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00:11:48.960 --> 00:11:56.879
heavy metal bands of all time.
Judas Priest is like the soundtrack to my

150
00:11:58.120 --> 00:12:03.080
memories of my youth. I can
think of things very vividly of me in

151
00:12:03.200 --> 00:12:11.399
high school, and I'm always got
a Judas Priest song going over in my

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00:12:11.440 --> 00:12:15.840
mind. Like I mentioned, Judas
Priests did start in nineteen sixty nine from

153
00:12:15.919 --> 00:12:20.440
Birmingham, England, close to where
Black Sabbath came from, and the Priest

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00:12:20.519 --> 00:12:26.799
really didn't start cracking until the late
seventies. But it wasn't until nineteen eighty

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00:12:26.120 --> 00:12:33.240
when they came out with British Steel
when they became probably the gods of metal

156
00:12:35.399 --> 00:12:41.759
with Black Sabbath and of course with
the Iron Maiden. But Judas Priests catapulted

157
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into heavy metal and gave heavy metal
a look with the Leather, the studs,

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00:12:45.799 --> 00:12:50.519
the Hardy Davidson of the Hot Chicks, a lot of machoism, sex

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00:12:50.639 --> 00:12:56.440
driven, pulse racing, heavy metal
dual guitars. But they actually started in

160
00:12:56.440 --> 00:13:01.120
the seventies like Sabbath. Now,
Sabbath had that captivating blues kind of hard

161
00:13:01.279 --> 00:13:07.480
rock sound, where the Priests kind
of had that melodic, kind of operotic

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on the verge of a little bit
of punk, but with more musical talent.

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00:13:13.480 --> 00:13:16.240
You know what, As I recall
back in the eighties, I remember

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00:13:16.320 --> 00:13:20.720
listening to a show on KMET ninety
four point seven, a little bit of

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00:13:20.759 --> 00:13:26.320
Heaven the Mighty Met and I believe
it was Jim Ladd that used to host

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00:13:26.399 --> 00:13:31.919
the show, and it was called
the Mighty Metal Show Mighty Metal Hour.

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00:13:31.039 --> 00:13:37.080
I think, now what was I
believe this was probably the eighties, you

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00:13:37.120 --> 00:13:41.759
know. Jim Ladd was there from
eighty I think until KMT did close later

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00:13:41.879 --> 00:13:46.799
on in the later eighties, and
it was the Mighty Metal Shop and then

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00:13:46.919 --> 00:13:54.039
Kalos had their version of the Mighty
It was what it was Metal Shop at

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00:13:54.080 --> 00:14:00.360
Kalos, Right, So both the
stations did have a certain part of their

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00:14:00.399 --> 00:14:05.559
show at night dedicated to metal.
And I think metal evolved way before the

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00:14:05.559 --> 00:14:11.679
eighties, but it didn't become as
major of following and as a united brother

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00:14:11.720 --> 00:14:16.919
and sisterhood of the metal community until
the eighties, right, And this they

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00:14:18.039 --> 00:14:22.679
kicked up before MTV. And you
know, I'm a big hater of MTV

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00:14:22.879 --> 00:14:26.519
because the video killed the radio,
as that one song, uh, you

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00:14:26.559 --> 00:14:31.519
know stated although I did hate that
song, and I thought it was kind

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00:14:31.519 --> 00:14:35.399
of love the Bugles. Oh the
name the Buggles. It reminds me of

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00:14:35.480 --> 00:14:43.440
a kid show. Hey Bugles,
Oh, please save yourself. But you

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00:14:43.480 --> 00:14:46.159
know, metal evolved in like I
say, bro in the early seventies,

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00:14:46.159 --> 00:14:52.559
but it became a trend in the
eighties. And I have to say that

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00:14:52.759 --> 00:14:58.000
MTV did a tribute to the rise
of metal, but also, uh kind

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00:14:58.000 --> 00:15:01.120
of MTV kind of glamour ice metal, and that's when metal kind of went

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00:15:01.200 --> 00:15:05.840
into the pretty era, you know, where you get your poisons and you

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00:15:05.919 --> 00:15:11.679
get your wingers, and you got
your Motley Crewe, you know, twists

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00:15:11.720 --> 00:15:15.960
its sister. A lot of people
tripped out on I remember in the eighties

187
00:15:16.000 --> 00:15:18.399
or are like, oh man,
who are these guys wearing makeup? But

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00:15:18.519 --> 00:15:22.440
if you listen to Twisted Sister,
they had more chops than Kissed It and

189
00:15:22.440 --> 00:15:26.240
they didn't wear as much makeup.
So I can't say that Twists Its Sister

190
00:15:26.320 --> 00:15:31.559
to me was a glam band,
but I will say bands like Motley Crewe

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00:15:31.279 --> 00:15:37.519
forefronted to me glad metal. It
pretty much was the stab in the heart

192
00:15:37.679 --> 00:15:45.840
of metal to where metal bands like
Priests and Maiden and Anthrax and Saxon and

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00:15:46.039 --> 00:15:52.399
Slayer and Metallica and Megadeath kind of
started falling a little to the side as

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00:15:52.799 --> 00:15:58.200
the big picture of metal, where
it was metal was on TV. The

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00:15:58.240 --> 00:16:02.399
Hollywood Strip was everything go. But
there was a lot of pretty boys out

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there. You couldn't tell the guys
from the chicks walking down the street,

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right. I think that's you know, that's definitely when it took a turn

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once it hit it hit mainstream.
Even though MTV had their what was it

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their Metal Rocks or Metal some you
know, week week night metal show,

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it was head Danger's Ball there you
go. So even though they did have

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that, I think that once the
hair metal or the glam metal came in,

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it started a new trend. Yeah. What happened is instead of bringing

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in all the guys, which metal
did because it usually brought all the males,

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right, and once the hair glam
bands came in, that started bringing

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in the chicks. Yeah, and
then once and they dissipated really really quick,

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because I mean we all know after
nine yeah, I mean, it

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just it felt harder than Black Monday, you know. Oh yeah, it

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had to come in and take over. Yeah, and then that didn't last

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long either. So definitely metal had
its day in the eighties. I remember

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going to school and seeing a lot
of the rocker kids, the metal heads

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with their shirts. I mean that
was really big kids wearing the metal shirts.

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That's It's when I saw my first
Slayer shirt. I'm going to go

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all the way back to nineteen eighty
from their British Steel album The Metal Gods

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Themselves with you don't have to be
old to be wise. You were locked

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and loaded to Saskano and Chang.
You are at back to the eighties,

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or you're with us at k hits, not at two point five. Don't

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you go nowhere. We got the
metal coming. We're gonna keep it alive.

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You're listening back in the eighties radio
on Kay HiT's ninety two point five.

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If you just joined us, that
was the one and only Judas Priest

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and we are discussing here with the
ever wondrous chang our favorite bands. They

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were just shredding and ripping. It
was the kind of a music that where

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you slammed down some beers, some
whiskey, you get the hottest chick in

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the club or the gig, and
then you go out there and you just

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cause havoc on the street. That's
Judas Priest to me, you know what

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I mean, all out havoc,
you know, fear of nothing. It

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reminds me the story of Rob Halford
and Judas Priests. The movie they made

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in two thousand and one. It
was a musical drama comedy. It's called

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rock Star with Mark Wahlberg and Jennifer
Aniston because it tells the real life,

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or at least inspired, real life
story of Tim Ripper right ascended to the

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position of lead vocalist of his favorite
band. And it was the real life

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of mister Owens, singer and in
Judas in a Judas Priests tribute band who

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was chosen to replace Rob Halford.
Now you're talking about Tim the Ripper Rowan's

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correct. Now, I got to
give that guy a lot of credit.

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I mean, he's got some chops. But you know, if you're you're

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an old school medal head like me, you're just not going to stand for

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anybody coming in to sit in for
such a powerful vocalists as Rob Halford.

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Rob Halford, I think is one
of the greatest vocalists in rock and roll

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alone along with Dio, you know, along with Freddie Mercury, along with

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Jeff Tate of Queen's Reich. I
mean, the list goes on. You

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know, if a band started and
they had a good run ten years,

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twenty years, thirty years, whatever
it is, and they started with a

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certain member, you know, in
this case, Rob Halford, I think

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when you lose your main vocalist,
like what happened with Journey as well.

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I think, you know, no
matter how good that person sings, what

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happened with Queen right, And we
understandable because of Freddie Mercury passing, But

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I think that that that band with
that name, with the name, they

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should retire the name and become another
band. Do you know what I'm saying?

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We will always be comparing exactly that
singer who just came in with the

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original. Now it could be that
that new singer sings better, that's not

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the point. We grew up hearing
a certain singer, a certain front man,

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and now to have somebody else,
like what happened with a CDC when

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Brian Johnson stepped out. I was
good to bring up that bad right,

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and now you get the you know, the lizard King, Mama, throw

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mama off the train, lady,
the goonies old lady to replace Brian Johnson

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at some concerts and you know,
okay, that's right. Axel Rose.

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You can sing, but you just
know you're not You're not ACDC. You're

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guns and Roses. You look like
Benny Hill with a bad haircut. That's

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that's what I say about. You
look like the current British Prime minister.

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You know, you look like a
guy that would throw a cigarette at a

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guy with Brad new Chuck Taylor's white
right at them, and then you're only

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like maybe what a foot shorter than
that guy, and then you want to

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fight. You're you're like you're you
know, yeah, who would do that?

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Yeah? You know what? It's
funny how you just brought up that

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point, and I agree with you
as the transitions of lead singers or band

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members, how it really isn't the
same substance. And I'll go out on

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a limb and say this. You
know, I've got a lot of friends

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in bands. I jammed with cats
before, and when you have something solid,

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concrete and very together in tune,
you know that comes up with so

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many different energies of guys in a
band. When there's a new energy,

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that band kind of transitions a different
way. And if he doesn't, then

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the band has to try to shiat
transition into that vibe, to mingle with

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that vibe, and sometimes you don't
get that same electricity. Now, the

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odd thing I will say about this
is Judas Priest recently is only has uh

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mister Ian Hill and Rob Halford the
only two original members in Judas Priest.

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This band was formed by Ian Hill, KK Downing Glenn Tipton and I think

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the guy's name was I forgot the
guy's name of the drum rights. I

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think it was Miller or something like
that. They had another lead singer before

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Rob Halford. And the ironic thing
is they are continuing to call themselves Judas

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priest without three of the original founding
Yeah, yeah, I think I think

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that's got to go. It's like, for example, a real quick one.

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And I don't want to digress too
too much, but Rat Rat we

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know that they're they're their front man, Stephen Pearcy. He's got cancer.

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I mean, the chances of him, you know, you know, God

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hope he's with us for a long
time. But when he goes, if

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it's ever his time to go in
the very near future, you know that

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band should stop. Should no more
be rat, it all yourself something else,

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but no more Rat. In the
case of Queen, remember when Freddie

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Mercury passed, they got the front
man from Bad Bad Company, remember that,

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and then they switched over to this
to the kid right now now,

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the only one that I could see
taking Freddie Mercury's place, now that we

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don't have George Michael. And obviously
no Freddie Mercury, no George Michael is

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Mark Martel because he sings exactly like
Freddie Mercury. But I don't want to

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digress too far into it. No, I agree with that. He's even

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got that look in his eyes.
Everything everything, you know. Now,

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the funny thing like before we cut
it. Your bad Judas Priests has had

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three different drummers. Bro, you
know you've had started off with Less Binks

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00:23:42.359 --> 00:23:47.200
and you had Dave Holland yeah,
now trip out of this. Now they

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have a guy Scott Travis. So
if you if you listen to the Bad

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the albums that they've made, you
can tell how much different the sound and

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the ye of the songs are from
the original day. Yeah, it just

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cheapens it, Bro, And I
feel that way about ACGC. Me and

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you had that talk. Yeah we
did, I remember, and I agree,

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So all right, now onto mine
of course. Yes. Nineteen seventy

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00:24:17.519 --> 00:24:21.440
signal check this out of the year's
nineteen seventy six and a fourteen year old

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kid by the name of Larry Mullin
junior. He was a student at Mount

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Temple Comprehensive School in Dublin, Ireland. He posted a note in the school's

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board right their notice board in search
of musicians for a new band. Five

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00:24:34.279 --> 00:24:41.559
people responded and in attendance they met
in mister Larry Mullin's kitchen, believe it

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00:24:41.640 --> 00:24:45.960
or not, at his house where
yeah, he had his drum kit there

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00:24:45.960 --> 00:24:49.359
and everything, and along showed up
a gentleman by the name of This was

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00:24:49.400 --> 00:24:56.759
for auditions, Paul Howson, David
Evans, Dick Evans, and Adam Clayton,

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00:24:56.000 --> 00:25:00.160
and of course Paul David Houston,
I should say, is Bono.

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David Evans is of course the Edge. And his brother was Dick Evans,

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who of course could not play the
bass like Adam Clayton, so Adam replaced

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00:25:12.319 --> 00:25:17.079
him. And it started out being
they were going to name it the Larry

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Mullen Band for about ten minutes,
but then when they heard Bono sing,

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immediately it changed to you too.
Now I gotta say, my brother,

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I believe if you were to ask
me my opinion of what the greatest band

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who that ever lived was, there
are you know, differences of opinions everywhere

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00:25:37.079 --> 00:25:41.240
around the world. They would say
everywhere from the Beatles to the Rolling Stones.

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I would say, in my opinion, the greatest band hit that has

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ever lived is Queen. However,
if you were to ask me what my

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favorite band, my personal favorite,
the band that just moves me, shakes

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00:25:53.559 --> 00:25:59.440
me, makes me, I mean
tear up. And I had the pleasure

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to see him April of nineteen eighty
seven for the Joshua Tree Tour I also

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00:26:03.839 --> 00:26:10.920
had the tour the pleasure of seeing
them in the once Again Joshua Tree tour

327
00:26:11.119 --> 00:26:15.000
of twenty seventeen. When I saw
them, I saw them twelve days after

328
00:26:15.079 --> 00:26:21.200
my dad passed away. I had
tickets. That concert meant the world to

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00:26:21.279 --> 00:26:23.519
me. Bro It brought back so
many memories. My dad was the one

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00:26:23.559 --> 00:26:26.839
that dropped me off at my cousin's
house so that he can take me in

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nineteen eighty seven to see the first
concert from YouTube, and then for my

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00:26:33.559 --> 00:26:37.480
dad to pass away, and then
me's twelve days later. Now as an

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00:26:37.519 --> 00:26:41.799
adult, I got to take my
kids to see the concert, my wife

334
00:26:41.799 --> 00:26:45.680
to see the concert. I was
ten feet away from the edge and Adam

335
00:26:45.720 --> 00:26:52.599
Clayton and Bono I was literally we
were literally at the fence front row,

336
00:26:52.640 --> 00:26:56.319
and it was the greatest, the
greatest musical experience of my entire life.

337
00:26:56.519 --> 00:27:00.400
When you go see a band that
remind you of your youth, you always

338
00:27:00.440 --> 00:27:04.160
take that trip back to the people
and the loved ones that you lost or

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00:27:04.200 --> 00:27:08.359
were around when you were tripping on
that music. I would say You Two

340
00:27:08.519 --> 00:27:11.720
is my favorite band of all time. This is a band that's released over

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00:27:11.759 --> 00:27:18.240
fourteen studio albums that have won twenty
two Grammy Awards, more than any other

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00:27:18.319 --> 00:27:25.359
band, and they were inducted into
the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in

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00:27:25.400 --> 00:27:30.359
their very first year of eligibility.
They always come out in all these hundred

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00:27:30.359 --> 00:27:36.720
Greatest Artists of all time or Greatest
bands of all time, They're always up

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00:27:36.759 --> 00:27:41.400
there. And whatever you think of
you two, you know whether you either

346
00:27:41.480 --> 00:27:45.839
love them or hate them. For
me, on a personal level, they

347
00:27:45.839 --> 00:27:51.119
are a band that mean more than
just music. As a matter of fact,

348
00:27:51.640 --> 00:27:55.640
if you look up on YouTube,
the great on YouTube, the greatest,

349
00:27:55.960 --> 00:28:02.000
and I know you're gonna hate NFL
halftime shows, but the greatest NFL

350
00:28:02.079 --> 00:28:07.680
halftime show in the history of NFL
halftime shows was when the super Bowl right

351
00:28:07.799 --> 00:28:14.759
after nine to eleven happened. Okay, because YouTube took the stage and Bono

352
00:28:15.039 --> 00:28:18.559
is singing, and they have on
a screen they have the names of those

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00:28:18.599 --> 00:28:22.000
people that have lost their lives.
And then there is a is a part

354
00:28:22.039 --> 00:28:26.720
there where Bono he's wearing a leather
jacket. He takes his jacket and he

355
00:28:26.799 --> 00:28:30.759
opens it up and he's got the
American flag on there. Powerful, powerfulwerful

356
00:28:30.759 --> 00:28:33.279
off. I would, yeah,
you know I feel about the super Bowl

357
00:28:33.279 --> 00:28:37.000
shows. I think the only artist
I've ever liked was You two, the

358
00:28:37.160 --> 00:28:45.680
Stones and Prints. Everybody else sucked
ass And and you know You two is

359
00:28:45.440 --> 00:28:49.319
a is a band that's sold almost
two hundred million albums right now. They

360
00:28:49.319 --> 00:28:55.519
are a band that that has been
around since nineteen seventy six, and of

361
00:28:55.559 --> 00:29:04.200
course it wasn't until nineteen eighty nineteen
eighty with their first album, Boy came

362
00:29:04.240 --> 00:29:10.039
out and Here's an album. I
mean, they came out from an era

363
00:29:10.160 --> 00:29:17.240
of rock slash punk, and they
were deeply rooted in this genre of music.

364
00:29:17.319 --> 00:29:22.440
And one of the things that differentiates
many bands from You two is the

365
00:29:22.480 --> 00:29:27.839
fact that You Two's lyrics not only
are produced and written by them, but

366
00:29:29.440 --> 00:29:33.400
they have very very deep meanings.
Most of them. They're very Yeah,

367
00:29:33.440 --> 00:29:40.519
they're they're very politically inclined, they're
very socially inclined. They're all for the

368
00:29:40.640 --> 00:29:47.319
people, and you know they're they're
not really an anti government, but they

369
00:29:47.400 --> 00:29:52.160
are a four people band. So
I would say that you you two to

370
00:29:52.319 --> 00:29:59.960
you means the same thing as the
Beatles due to me because I kind of

371
00:30:00.759 --> 00:30:03.319
I look at YouTube as being a
great band and I kind of put them

372
00:30:03.440 --> 00:30:08.240
up there in a Beatle genre in
a kind of not genre, but a

373
00:30:08.279 --> 00:30:15.799
Beatle vibe. Therefore, the people, equal rights, humanity, You go

374
00:30:15.839 --> 00:30:18.920
out there and care for people,
uh, you know, don't let government

375
00:30:19.000 --> 00:30:23.200
take over, stand up for yourselves. Come together. And that's the kind

376
00:30:23.240 --> 00:30:29.119
of same essence that the Beatles transcended
in their era. So I've always thought

377
00:30:29.160 --> 00:30:33.400
of YouTube being a modern day Beatles, not only for their their creativity and

378
00:30:33.440 --> 00:30:41.960
their love of life and the humanitarian
of that entire band, but every album

379
00:30:42.000 --> 00:30:47.119
that they've created has got a different
sound, a different vibe, a different

380
00:30:47.160 --> 00:30:52.680
beat. Only great bands can do
that and did. To me, they're

381
00:30:52.759 --> 00:30:56.119
very reminiscent of what the Beatles did
because every Beatle album that was created was

382
00:30:56.240 --> 00:31:00.559
always different. You know, great
music, great bands, they come and

383
00:31:00.599 --> 00:31:07.160
go. But twenty two Grammy Award
winning You two with a song from their

384
00:31:07.559 --> 00:31:14.640
first album from Boy, I Will
Follow. This is back to the eighties

385
00:31:14.759 --> 00:31:26.880
radio on k Hits in ninety two
point five, Back to the eighties radio.

386
00:31:26.000 --> 00:31:30.359
This is Toscanno from Toscano and Chang. That was You two with I

387
00:31:30.440 --> 00:31:34.160
Will Follow from their first album,
Boy nineteen eighty. Now now can you

388
00:31:34.240 --> 00:31:37.359
see, my friend? Can you
see why they're so powerful? I mean

389
00:31:37.359 --> 00:31:41.319
this is a band that has stuck
around. It's not one of those bands

390
00:31:41.400 --> 00:31:47.200
that comes and goes. They're not
these bubblegum bands that appear on all these

391
00:31:47.240 --> 00:31:53.319
game shows and UH and talent shows. This band, like many others of

392
00:31:53.359 --> 00:32:00.599
the eighties, have withstood the test
of time. And one very quick note

393
00:32:00.880 --> 00:32:06.079
of humility from You two in twenty
fifteen and twenty fifteen, when they were

394
00:32:07.000 --> 00:32:10.079
doing a concert in New York City
and Bono had a terrible accident, remember

395
00:32:10.119 --> 00:32:15.839
I think it was a biking accident, and he was taking some rest the

396
00:32:15.079 --> 00:32:21.079
edge and Adam Clayton went to a
small little bar where they were having a

397
00:32:21.200 --> 00:32:25.759
U two cover band. They went
in there and played with a cover band

398
00:32:25.920 --> 00:32:32.240
a few songs. What other band
of the stature of You two would you

399
00:32:32.279 --> 00:32:35.880
know? Some would consider it.
I'm not going to lower myself. I'm

400
00:32:35.880 --> 00:32:37.880
not gonna go with beginners, you
know, I'm not going to go on

401
00:32:37.920 --> 00:32:43.160
a small little stage anymore. I'm
past that. No, these two guys

402
00:32:43.200 --> 00:32:45.599
went up there, and you know
what, it seemed like they were enjoying

403
00:32:45.640 --> 00:32:49.200
their time even more than the people
that were listening to them play. Ye

404
00:32:49.359 --> 00:32:52.799
dude, that's brilliance right there.
Bro I got that's a great band that

405
00:32:52.920 --> 00:32:55.759
you brought to the forefront. I'm
very glad that you did bring out that

406
00:32:55.839 --> 00:33:00.880
band. We could do a whole
show on that band. I think there

407
00:33:00.880 --> 00:33:05.079
are many bands that we could probably
do a whole show on except for Rush.

408
00:33:05.359 --> 00:33:07.319
Yeah. No, Rush is a
great band out of Canada. Yeah,

409
00:33:07.359 --> 00:33:15.599
the most powerful trio of bands instrumentally
of vocal content that is unlike anything

410
00:33:15.640 --> 00:33:19.640
else that you've ever heard. Yeah, they remind me in the style.

411
00:33:20.200 --> 00:33:24.400
Rush to me is like smell sniffing
Raid. Oh yeah, how could you

412
00:33:24.480 --> 00:33:30.880
hate the hate? You must be
a Dicator's brother, right, I think

413
00:33:30.920 --> 00:33:34.640
so. I think we need to
bring the hater brothers one of these days.

414
00:33:34.640 --> 00:33:37.480
And as long as you're gonna play
anything from the Cure, the Dictator's

415
00:33:37.519 --> 00:33:40.720
just gonna be sitting right here.
I'll kick Chang's ass off the microphone.

416
00:33:40.880 --> 00:33:44.000
Hey, just to go in there. And there's a little side note to

417
00:33:44.160 --> 00:33:46.839
anybody listening on a podcast platform.
If you do want to listen to the

418
00:33:46.920 --> 00:33:52.400
songs in their entirety, you have
to go to k Hits nine five dot

419
00:33:52.400 --> 00:33:57.319
com press play. Look, the
website isn't even finished yet, but at

420
00:33:57.359 --> 00:34:00.839
least our players there click on play
and uh and and listen to the show.

421
00:34:00.880 --> 00:34:04.799
I mean, if you want on
your way tickle our ears with some

422
00:34:04.880 --> 00:34:07.239
more Judas Priests, how would you
convince me to like them? I mean,

423
00:34:07.480 --> 00:34:09.480
you know, when I was a
kid, they bands like that used

424
00:34:09.519 --> 00:34:12.960
to scare me. Well, you
know, when you're a little kid and

425
00:34:13.000 --> 00:34:22.880
you're or you're a whoosy, that
kind of wo wow now went straight for

426
00:34:23.239 --> 00:34:27.679
I would have to say that with
my black soul that I've always had,

427
00:34:28.639 --> 00:34:32.559
I just I just I just drifted
away into bands like Judas Priests and Black

428
00:34:32.599 --> 00:34:37.960
Sabbaths and Iron Maiden and Sin Lizzie
and UFO. And I've always been a

429
00:34:38.079 --> 00:34:44.079
full throttled kind of kid, kind
of like the night Stalker. As a

430
00:34:44.119 --> 00:34:47.960
matter of fact, Richard Ramirez is
one of his favorite songs is the Ripper

431
00:34:49.360 --> 00:34:52.280
Yeah from Judas Priest. Nice.
You know, I thought it was just

432
00:34:52.800 --> 00:34:58.440
mister Crowley from Ozzie No. And
every time I hear that song gets you're

433
00:34:58.519 --> 00:35:04.079
in fal surprise. Ah, That's
gives me the creeps. Oh no,

434
00:35:04.079 --> 00:35:06.760
no, no, that Coason gives
me the creeps. Man trip out in

435
00:35:06.800 --> 00:35:14.000
this nineteen eighty one Point of Entry
debuted and I would like you to listen

436
00:35:14.000 --> 00:35:17.000
to this album. There's a lot
of heavy duty songs. You have to

437
00:35:17.039 --> 00:35:22.400
listen to the lyrical content and then
you'll feel the music. So what's the

438
00:35:22.400 --> 00:35:29.000
old Ranger? It's just a point
of entry. Is about finding out who

439
00:35:29.079 --> 00:35:32.039
you are and just throwing yourself out
there. Whether you're going to space,

440
00:35:32.159 --> 00:35:37.480
you're taking a long drive, it's
you're on a mission, and on this

441
00:35:37.639 --> 00:35:42.559
mission yours to find out who you
are and what you feel about certain things

442
00:35:42.639 --> 00:35:45.800
and to just let loose. You
know, great songs out there like heading

443
00:35:45.800 --> 00:35:52.480
out to the Highway Solar Angels,
two different styles of a song, but

444
00:35:52.719 --> 00:35:55.079
I mean the message is there and
the one thing which you just priests.

445
00:35:55.119 --> 00:35:59.239
A lot of their albums do have
that message. Some of them are a

446
00:35:59.280 --> 00:36:02.199
little bit more seductive, some of
them are a little bit more darker,

447
00:36:02.639 --> 00:36:07.559
but in no where or of light
are they satanic to where anybody should be

448
00:36:07.559 --> 00:36:15.519
afraid of the lyrical content. The
lyrical content is only I think created through

449
00:36:15.960 --> 00:36:21.719
a darker side of life, some
letdowns coming up from struggle, having certain

450
00:36:22.079 --> 00:36:27.039
events or situations occur in their life
that are of the negative. So it

451
00:36:27.159 --> 00:36:31.960
probably catapulted him the individuals to play
that type of music that's what hard rock

452
00:36:32.079 --> 00:36:35.800
is, that's what metal is.
If you were to listen to that album,

453
00:36:35.840 --> 00:36:38.400
you would not believe it's Judas Priest
to what you're thinking in your head

454
00:36:38.440 --> 00:36:44.280
when you're thinking of a song.
It's captivating, bro It's deep. It

455
00:36:44.320 --> 00:36:50.079
deals with the life after death.
It deals with an interview. You're going

456
00:36:50.119 --> 00:36:53.280
into their mortality thoughts. So they've
got a lot of great music out there,

457
00:36:53.280 --> 00:36:57.960
the lyrical content, the emotional content. You know, don't let the

458
00:36:58.000 --> 00:37:00.960
hard rock and the dual guitar scare
you. Yeah, it took. They're

459
00:37:01.000 --> 00:37:05.599
a great band. They're just louder
than than a lot of other bands that

460
00:37:05.639 --> 00:37:07.079
put it out there. Bro Right, you know what I think. I'm

461
00:37:07.119 --> 00:37:12.559
gonna go ahead, and I'm gonna
go with one from nineteen eighty one,

462
00:37:12.760 --> 00:37:19.639
from the Point of Entry album.
I'm gonna give you some solar Angels from

463
00:37:19.679 --> 00:37:23.280
the legendary metal gods Judas Priests.
You are on the hang with Tuscano and

464
00:37:23.360 --> 00:37:28.039
Chang and you are rocket and rolland
to back to the eighties, and don't

465
00:37:28.119 --> 00:37:31.440
go anywhere because here at k hits
not at two point five. We've got

466
00:37:31.440 --> 00:37:39.039
the eighties five to keep you alive. Let's get some priest style babies you

467
00:37:39.079 --> 00:37:43.159
were back with back to the eighties, Ciskanno and Chang Chang on the hang

468
00:37:43.239 --> 00:37:46.519
here and you just heard Solar Rangers
from the legendary Judas Priests off the Point

469
00:37:46.519 --> 00:37:52.840
of Entry album in nineteen eighty one
and out Tuscano. Both are bands,

470
00:37:52.119 --> 00:37:58.760
are badasses from the eighties. They
both catapulted to the statue that they are

471
00:37:59.280 --> 00:38:04.280
in nineteen eighty Is that not ironic, my brother? It is? It

472
00:38:04.360 --> 00:38:07.800
is, And to the point where, hey, we're talking heavy lyrics,

473
00:38:07.199 --> 00:38:14.000
lyrics that make you, ly lyrics
that make you just sit back and just

474
00:38:14.159 --> 00:38:17.840
make you think that there's that there's
more to life than just you, right,

475
00:38:19.000 --> 00:38:21.960
that is hanging on the balance,
like for example, this song from

476
00:38:22.320 --> 00:38:29.000
the album War from You two.
It's probably their most over political song.

477
00:38:29.679 --> 00:38:35.559
It was a song that's lyrics describe
the horror felt by by somebody who who

478
00:38:35.639 --> 00:38:39.000
was an observer of the troubles in
Northern Ireland. In Ireland, mainly focusing

479
00:38:39.000 --> 00:38:45.800
on the nineteen seventy two Bloody Sunday
incident in Dary, where the British troops

480
00:38:45.920 --> 00:38:51.639
shot and killed unarmed civil rights protesters. And here's what I mean. So

481
00:38:51.719 --> 00:39:01.400
here's You two with Sunday Bloody Sunday. Back to the eighties radio. This

482
00:39:01.519 --> 00:39:04.559
is back to the eighties radio.
This is just kind of from just kind

483
00:39:04.559 --> 00:39:07.400
of changing a song that has remained
a staple of You Two's live concerts.

484
00:39:07.440 --> 00:39:13.719
That was Sunday Bloody Sunday. The
earliest performance as a song created controversy,

485
00:39:14.039 --> 00:39:17.840
and Bono is the front man and
in front of the audience for so many

486
00:39:17.920 --> 00:39:22.280
years when Sunday Bloody Sunday starts,
which is a matter of fact, the

487
00:39:22.400 --> 00:39:28.440
song that they started their entire Joshua
Tree tour in just these past couple of

488
00:39:28.519 --> 00:39:30.960
years. Man, you hear that
song for the very first time, that

489
00:39:31.119 --> 00:39:37.599
militarized drum solo in the beginning,
and Wow, that sends chills down your

490
00:39:37.639 --> 00:39:43.400
spine. I think every track on
that album sends chills down your spine.

491
00:39:43.440 --> 00:39:50.519
Bro. I mean it's every instrument
sounds like it's hitting your soul and not

492
00:39:50.679 --> 00:39:52.880
your ears, you know what I
mean. The guitar work, the drum

493
00:39:52.960 --> 00:40:00.960
beats, some of the bass work, the way the edge Bonno kind of

494
00:40:00.079 --> 00:40:06.960
harmonize each other. You know it? You two is is to me?

495
00:40:07.079 --> 00:40:12.079
You two is has not really been
recognized to a certain degree I would say

496
00:40:12.519 --> 00:40:16.480
as being really great. I think
I think that they're greater and they go

497
00:40:16.599 --> 00:40:21.599
beyond anything, even being inducted to
the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.

498
00:40:22.199 --> 00:40:24.119
You know, they're a band that
they have nothing but love for the States

499
00:40:24.119 --> 00:40:29.280
and their fans out here, and
they just go out there and they just

500
00:40:29.559 --> 00:40:37.360
try to give everybody some inspiration.
I mean that speaks volumes beside being categorized

501
00:40:37.400 --> 00:40:40.400
as a rock band or being in
a Hall of Fame. When you have

502
00:40:40.559 --> 00:40:46.440
that type of power to move people
in a positive way, that's something God

503
00:40:46.519 --> 00:40:50.199
said. Brother. But let me
ask you real quick, what is your

504
00:40:50.239 --> 00:40:53.679
favorite you two song? Favorite of
the Joshua Tree that's one of my favorite

505
00:40:53.679 --> 00:40:58.519
albums. Well, actually it's a
song that we're gonna be playing in a

506
00:40:58.639 --> 00:41:02.760
in a little while, but it's
it's a song that was played at Live

507
00:41:02.880 --> 00:41:08.159
Aid. It is from their Unforgettable
Fire album nineteen eighty two, The Screaming

508
00:41:08.400 --> 00:41:12.280
for Vengeance album came out and I
thought it was a ripping album. And

509
00:41:12.480 --> 00:41:15.440
now this is an album that I've
heard you mention a lot on the show,

510
00:41:15.480 --> 00:41:20.239
the Screaming for Vengeance and the tour. Yes, now this album that

511
00:41:20.320 --> 00:41:24.039
was one of the very first concerts
of Judas Priests that I attended Screaming for

512
00:41:24.119 --> 00:41:27.280
Vengeance. I went with my homeboys. Man, we had a blast,

513
00:41:27.320 --> 00:41:30.639
you know, drinking, lo and
braw you know, teenagers just getting crazy.

514
00:41:30.679 --> 00:41:32.800
Everybody had hair, and we were
out there to fight the world.

515
00:41:32.880 --> 00:41:37.960
Man. And that concert was such
a pretty badass. Now, Now,

516
00:41:37.280 --> 00:41:43.239
what what I gotta say about this
album? This album had a political charge

517
00:41:43.320 --> 00:41:50.119
to it, you know what I
mean, A stand up against society's forces

518
00:41:50.239 --> 00:41:55.679
and power. So this kind of
gave that kind of feel to I think

519
00:41:55.719 --> 00:41:59.760
the youth of America. You know, we were we were going through the

520
00:42:00.079 --> 00:42:04.559
Ronald Reagan, that bows of the
clown President era and all that he was

521
00:42:04.599 --> 00:42:08.840
trying to pass off a lot of
eighties lovers. I'm sorry, I love

522
00:42:08.880 --> 00:42:15.119
the Cowboy President. Yeah, well, I remember I went to go see

523
00:42:15.159 --> 00:42:21.280
it screaming Prevengeance to it, I
lost mommy. Anyway, on this album

524
00:42:21.679 --> 00:42:24.840
had a political thrust to it,
you know what I mean. And Uh,

525
00:42:25.039 --> 00:42:28.880
one of my favorite songs that I
think you should listen to and our

526
00:42:28.880 --> 00:42:32.239
listeners should listen to his Electric Eye, and it talks about how we are

527
00:42:32.280 --> 00:42:37.039
being watched by the government with cameras
everywhere and you know, it's it's true

528
00:42:37.079 --> 00:42:43.280
to date our cell phones. So
that song kind of goes with the what

529
00:42:43.320 --> 00:42:46.119
we were seeing in the eighties as
well as it does today. But it

530
00:42:46.239 --> 00:42:51.039
was just said in a more powerful
way, you know what I mean,

531
00:42:51.360 --> 00:42:57.320
without like the heartfelt basa or the
blues vibe or the malo vibe of you

532
00:42:57.559 --> 00:43:01.519
two putting a statement out like this, which they did in similar songs.

533
00:43:02.000 --> 00:43:06.559
But this was another way to go
back at the government, as in hard

534
00:43:06.599 --> 00:43:08.480
rock with Electric Eye. You know, that's an album that you should check

535
00:43:08.480 --> 00:43:10.960
out. Maybe check out that song. You know what. As a matter

536
00:43:12.000 --> 00:43:16.039
of fact, I am going to
go into take these chains from Judas Priests

537
00:43:16.159 --> 00:43:21.840
nineteen eighty two Screaming for Vengeance.
You are rocking along with Tiscano Chang here

538
00:43:21.880 --> 00:43:23.559
at back to the eighties, don't
you go nowhere? Kay? HiT's not

539
00:43:23.639 --> 00:43:43.400
at two point father station that gave
the eighties alive. Welcome back to back

540
00:43:43.440 --> 00:43:45.960
to the eighties, Tiscano. When
Chang sitting in geared up and ready to

541
00:43:46.000 --> 00:43:52.079
go to give you guys some more
eighties that hat there's some medal right there

542
00:43:52.079 --> 00:43:54.840
with the Priest. Of course,
everybody, I'm urging you, I'm begging

543
00:43:54.840 --> 00:43:59.360
you to go out there and check
out this album song for song and read

544
00:43:59.719 --> 00:44:05.679
the lyrical content. Now before we
go any farther, mister Tusky Tiscano,

545
00:44:05.920 --> 00:44:10.119
what do you have for us with
one of your next favorite albums or songs

546
00:44:10.239 --> 00:44:17.320
from the legendary YouTube from nineteen eighty
one from their album October's by the Way.

547
00:44:17.360 --> 00:44:22.199
It's a great song October but from
the peaking at number fifty five,

548
00:44:22.280 --> 00:44:28.480
but was more successful in Ireland and
New Zealand than here, and it did

549
00:44:28.559 --> 00:44:32.840
reach the top twenty. And it's
a song that highlights bassist Adam Clayton.

550
00:44:32.880 --> 00:44:37.039
And it features three different styles of
playing and one single song, and it's

551
00:44:37.079 --> 00:44:40.480
a song called Gloria. This is
a song for a lot of people who

552
00:44:40.559 --> 00:44:45.199
don't know. He sings part in
English, part in Latin, and it

553
00:44:45.239 --> 00:44:52.159
translates when he says gloria inte domine, which means gloria translates to glory in

554
00:44:52.360 --> 00:44:55.599
you Lord. For those of you
who don't know. You two grew up,

555
00:44:55.880 --> 00:45:00.159
you know partially as you know,
it's a and that believes heavily in

556
00:45:00.280 --> 00:45:07.159
God. And they, you know, according to them, they they owe

557
00:45:07.199 --> 00:45:09.639
all their you know, they give
all the credit to God. For life

558
00:45:09.719 --> 00:45:15.639
and the inspiration for their music and
their songs. As a matter of fact,

559
00:45:15.360 --> 00:45:22.079
Bono was asked nineteen ninety four and
he answered regarding this very same song

560
00:45:22.280 --> 00:45:27.320
in a book called Race of Angels, and he says that he actually really

561
00:45:27.400 --> 00:45:30.679
liked that lyric because it was written
really quick and it expressed the thing of

562
00:45:30.800 --> 00:45:35.480
language, of speaking in tongues,
looking for a way out of language.

563
00:45:35.480 --> 00:45:37.880
He says, I try to sing
this song. Quote, I try to

564
00:45:37.920 --> 00:45:39.239
sing the song. I try to
stand up, but I can't find my

565
00:45:39.280 --> 00:45:44.679
feet, and taking this Latin thing, this is a hymn, So basically

566
00:45:45.119 --> 00:45:49.199
he says, it's it's more a
song about God. However, people that

567
00:45:49.280 --> 00:45:53.360
don't understand that associate it with a
girl, so I guess, he says,

568
00:45:53.719 --> 00:45:58.000
if you think about it as a
woman in the Van Morrison sense,

569
00:45:58.480 --> 00:46:02.119
that's fine, But now now you
know that it was all a thing about

570
00:46:02.159 --> 00:46:06.880
God and not a woman. So
for those of you who haven't heard,

571
00:46:07.199 --> 00:46:14.480
this is you two with a song
called Gloria from their album October nineteen eighty

572
00:46:14.480 --> 00:46:25.760
one. Here on Back to the
eighties radio that was YouTube with Gloria.

573
00:46:25.880 --> 00:46:30.280
This is back to the eighties radio
and k hits ninety two point five.

574
00:46:30.599 --> 00:46:32.320
This is a song that's been played
in concert more than three hundred and seventy

575
00:46:32.320 --> 00:46:36.880
times, and it was debuted,
of course, on their October tour prior

576
00:46:36.960 --> 00:46:40.400
to the release of their album Did
you know that? After after that tour,

577
00:46:40.800 --> 00:46:46.079
it was only played up until their
Lovetown tour and then fifteen years later.

578
00:46:46.159 --> 00:46:51.199
They didn't play this song at any
concert for fifteen years until the Vertigo

579
00:46:51.239 --> 00:46:57.039
tour where it made several appearances,
and then once again in their newest tours

580
00:46:57.039 --> 00:47:00.880
of course, starting starting in twenty
fifteen with Innocence and then the Joshua Treat

581
00:47:01.000 --> 00:47:05.480
tour. Of course, when I
heard that song live, Oh, I

582
00:47:05.519 --> 00:47:08.280
gotta tell you, bro, I
can't express enough. You know that you'll

583
00:47:08.320 --> 00:47:13.760
hear certain songs and it will just
bring back just an ocean full of memories,

584
00:47:13.840 --> 00:47:15.599
right well, yeah, and this
was one of their one of those

585
00:47:15.639 --> 00:47:21.480
songs. And I really think it
doesn't matter what type of music. I

586
00:47:21.519 --> 00:47:27.519
think all music takes people down memory
lane. And I think all forms of

587
00:47:27.599 --> 00:47:30.079
music are to bring a certain fan, a certain individual, or a listener

588
00:47:30.159 --> 00:47:34.519
to tears. So I think what
you what you just stated is beautiful for

589
00:47:34.599 --> 00:47:39.719
stating that. But I think you're
not alone for somebody that does show such

590
00:47:39.760 --> 00:47:44.599
emotion at a concert. And as
a little side note, and I know

591
00:47:44.639 --> 00:47:47.559
that you're an MTV hater, but
I wasn't at the time, But Gloria

592
00:47:47.719 --> 00:47:52.599
was the first YouTube music video that
received heavy, heavy airplay on MTV when

593
00:47:52.639 --> 00:48:01.880
it when it first came out.
And then that's ribbing. Yeah, yeah,

594
00:48:02.119 --> 00:48:07.079
bring on another Judas Pries song.
I guess for such a powerful band

595
00:48:07.400 --> 00:48:13.480
of spiritual emotion, for them to
to, you know, push the envelope

596
00:48:13.519 --> 00:48:17.440
and get themselves recognition on MTV.
The thing that killed the essence of music

597
00:48:17.880 --> 00:48:24.079
as we knew it, gonna get
an Amen sisters out there now, Okay,

598
00:48:24.079 --> 00:48:30.239
we're gonna go back to nineteen eighty
three. May twenty ninth, The

599
00:48:30.320 --> 00:48:35.199
legendary band that I brought up,
Judas Priests, played on Heavy Metal Day

600
00:48:35.280 --> 00:48:40.519
at the us US Festival. That's
right, the US Festival in San Bernardino,

601
00:48:40.719 --> 00:48:46.079
California, and it was sponsored by
Steve who whoas's nack ha ha.

602
00:48:46.880 --> 00:48:52.599
Now. The Priest was the fourth
band in the lineup, and this lineup

603
00:48:52.599 --> 00:48:59.039
included Quiet Riot, right. We
both talked about Quiet Right before Motley Crue,

604
00:48:59.280 --> 00:49:05.159
Motley Crude, Ozzy Osbourne without the
late great Randy Rhodes, Triumph,

605
00:49:05.360 --> 00:49:12.320
the Scorpions, and the drunken Van
Halen. Now, I attended this uh

606
00:49:12.559 --> 00:49:20.320
festival for three days, right,
and I left there physically exhausted, in

607
00:49:20.639 --> 00:49:28.880
dire need of a blood transfusion.
My mind was touched musically far beyond any

608
00:49:28.880 --> 00:49:34.039
other music experience to that present date
in my young life. And I also

609
00:49:34.079 --> 00:49:39.320
went home with Crabs, So all
in all, it was, yeah,

610
00:49:39.360 --> 00:49:44.639
I wouldn't stay that if it wasn't
true. That's I am the essence of

611
00:49:44.719 --> 00:49:51.239
rock and roll, my brother.
But I remember watching I remember watching Judas

612
00:49:51.280 --> 00:49:53.760
Priests at that that concert. Bro
and I got as close as I could

613
00:49:53.960 --> 00:49:59.440
fighting through to this stage, and
I'll never forget I took a squirt bottle

614
00:49:59.440 --> 00:50:04.559
and I just kept squirting these two
little heavy metal hotties on their Judas Priest

615
00:50:04.559 --> 00:50:07.440
shirts, right, so I could
see some nipleage and I was just rocking

616
00:50:07.519 --> 00:50:15.199
and rolling to the Priest. That
was that Watching that band that close in

617
00:50:15.239 --> 00:50:20.360
that vibe with all those people,
it was breathtaking. I mean just it

618
00:50:20.400 --> 00:50:23.320
was kind of like the Woodstock,
i'd say, of the eighties generation.

619
00:50:23.960 --> 00:50:28.320
Whether you were a metal head or
you were there the very first night when

620
00:50:28.320 --> 00:50:32.239
the Pretenders played bands like to artists
like Tom Petty. I mean, the

621
00:50:32.280 --> 00:50:40.039
whole festival was kind of an overdose
of rock and roll fluid, like,

622
00:50:42.599 --> 00:50:45.039
you know, like people don't want
to take the shot now, right but

623
00:50:45.199 --> 00:50:49.320
back then you went to the US
Festival, you got a shot of rock

624
00:50:49.360 --> 00:50:51.719
and roll in your soul, right
then. Yeah, it was a great

625
00:50:51.760 --> 00:50:55.880
concert. The Priest I thought the
Judas Priest probably was the one of the

626
00:50:55.920 --> 00:51:00.480
better. Was the best band besides
the Triumph and the Square Orpians. Ozzie

627
00:51:00.639 --> 00:51:05.800
was okay, you know, but
there was a certain a couple of songs

628
00:51:05.800 --> 00:51:08.920
that sound like he was lip singing
Motley Crue, and I really didn't give

629
00:51:08.960 --> 00:51:13.320
them a lot of praise in the
forefront at all. Quiet Riot had a

630
00:51:13.360 --> 00:51:17.199
bad sound system, and Van Halen
came out drunk. Did Diamond Day was

631
00:51:17.239 --> 00:51:22.360
a drunken jerk. So I think
I'm going to take us. I'm gonna

632
00:51:22.400 --> 00:51:28.599
give us another track off the Screaming
for Vengeance album by Judas Priest, and

633
00:51:28.840 --> 00:51:34.159
I'm going to dedicate this one out
there to everybody out there against the establishment,

634
00:51:34.599 --> 00:51:38.760
to remember that they are always watching
us, even when we don't think

635
00:51:38.760 --> 00:51:42.880
about it. You are rocking it
only with Tiscango and Chang. Add back

636
00:51:42.880 --> 00:51:45.719
to the eighties and let's get your
k hits not at two point five,

637
00:51:45.960 --> 00:51:52.599
off with some more metal militia for
your brain. Metal up with Judas Priests,

638
00:51:52.960 --> 00:52:02.480
and I'm talking about Electric Eye.
Welcome back to the one and only,

639
00:52:02.599 --> 00:52:07.519
back to the eighties. Hopefully you're
all refreshed. Maybe you took us

640
00:52:07.519 --> 00:52:09.440
in the shower with you, you
went to the powder not in the shower

641
00:52:09.440 --> 00:52:12.760
with you, but you put us
on the counter and you were listening to

642
00:52:12.880 --> 00:52:15.079
us as you're freshening up. Maybe
you got another drink. You got those

643
00:52:15.159 --> 00:52:21.159
kids to sleep yet with the hot
chocolate and a quarter shot of that benefit

644
00:52:21.159 --> 00:52:24.440
of girl or night quill or night
Quill's good too. But sometimes your kids

645
00:52:24.480 --> 00:52:29.880
will say and taste fucky. Don't
worry, just drink it up. Time

646
00:52:29.880 --> 00:52:34.719
for bad girls turning it up,
Timmy, I say, you're going to

647
00:52:34.760 --> 00:52:37.920
take us, hopefully to nineteen eighty
four or eighty five with their next No,

648
00:52:38.400 --> 00:52:43.559
you are so right and taking it
to nineteen eighty four. However,

649
00:52:43.719 --> 00:52:51.280
the song was made extremely extremely popular
in nineteen eighty five because of You two's

650
00:52:51.360 --> 00:52:55.960
twelve minute performance of this particular song
at the Live Aid charity concert in nineteen

651
00:52:57.000 --> 00:53:00.079
eighty five. It was their breakthrough
moment for lots of bands, but in

652
00:53:00.119 --> 00:53:04.800
particular for You two. And this
following song was, of course from their

653
00:53:04.880 --> 00:53:08.280
Unforgettable Fire This is my favorite song. Bono wrote this song and he said

654
00:53:08.280 --> 00:53:13.159
he wrote it for a friend of
his who had died. And I think

655
00:53:13.199 --> 00:53:16.559
about a lot of people. I've
had family members who have died of drug

656
00:53:16.599 --> 00:53:22.559
overdose, and this song was written
for those people that have suffered or are

657
00:53:22.599 --> 00:53:29.880
suffering from the addiction that drugs are. It's just a powerful song that's called

658
00:53:30.159 --> 00:53:35.480
Bad and I want you guys to
listen to it as you take a moment

659
00:53:35.559 --> 00:53:40.039
and think about those who have gone
before us with this addiction, for those

660
00:53:40.559 --> 00:53:45.119
that are still suffering with this addiction. There are songs that are written in

661
00:53:45.199 --> 00:53:50.039
life that can save another. And
on that note, here's a song from

662
00:53:50.119 --> 00:53:55.119
nineteen eighty four performed by You Two
from their Unforgetable Fire album, This is

663
00:53:55.199 --> 00:54:02.840
Bad. Back to the eighties radio
That was You Two with Bad from their

664
00:54:02.920 --> 00:54:07.719
Unforgettable Fire album. The early nineteen
eighties recession had led to a to a

665
00:54:07.840 --> 00:54:13.159
high number of heroin addicts in the
inner city of everywhere pretty much, but

666
00:54:13.199 --> 00:54:17.880
in particular in Dublin. And that
was when one of Bono and Edge's friends

667
00:54:19.760 --> 00:54:27.199
passed away with a needle still hanging
out his arm. So in memory of

668
00:54:27.239 --> 00:54:31.440
all those people, that was you
two with bad man, that was that's

669
00:54:31.440 --> 00:54:36.440
a terrible story right there. I
mean, you know how many people out

670
00:54:36.519 --> 00:54:42.119
there have had someone lose their life
to having the monkey on their back.

671
00:54:43.039 --> 00:54:46.719
I think heroin is probably one of
the most heinous drugs besides crystal meth and

672
00:54:46.960 --> 00:54:52.119
certain pharmaceuticals that the youth are taking. Now. You know, it's just

673
00:54:52.280 --> 00:54:59.400
it's sad that we can lose such
beautiful people in our lives that means so

674
00:54:59.519 --> 00:55:01.800
much and use it. Usually the
ones that we lose, it seems they

675
00:55:01.800 --> 00:55:09.519
are more charismatic, more loving of
life, and they end up leaving us

676
00:55:09.559 --> 00:55:15.199
a lot sooner than they should for
some unknown demon or something in their head,

677
00:55:15.280 --> 00:55:17.559
or maybe they're just on another level
having too good of a time.

678
00:55:17.599 --> 00:55:22.559
But it's just sad that any you
have to hear of anybody losing their life

679
00:55:23.199 --> 00:55:28.880
to a drug addiction, my brother
exactly, and everybody out there, if

680
00:55:28.920 --> 00:55:31.960
you know somebody going through drug addiction
or you've been through it and you're struggling.

681
00:55:32.400 --> 00:55:37.119
Hey, you know what, reach
out to somebody. Getting over the

682
00:55:37.159 --> 00:55:44.119
mountain is not always easiest to do
by yourself. Sometimes you're going to stammer

683
00:55:44.199 --> 00:55:47.280
and struggle and slip down that mountain. But if you know that there's a

684
00:55:47.280 --> 00:55:52.000
hand that you can grab to pull
you up each and every little step of

685
00:55:52.039 --> 00:55:55.199
the way, reach for that hand
and do something good for yourselves, you

686
00:55:55.239 --> 00:55:59.360
know, beat the demon and climb
them out and get to the other side.

687
00:55:59.440 --> 00:56:00.960
If you know somebody that needs it, be that hand to get them

688
00:56:01.000 --> 00:56:05.639
up that hill. We're going to
go into a Nineteen eighty three still was

689
00:56:05.679 --> 00:56:07.880
a great year. Not only did
the chan graduate from high school, and

690
00:56:08.039 --> 00:56:13.039
we had the fantastic US Festival,
where I told you I had quite an

691
00:56:13.039 --> 00:56:17.519
experience. Here's an album that it
kind of was the beginning of when Judas

692
00:56:17.519 --> 00:56:25.360
Priests started touching toes with the glam
kind of metal scene they did. They

693
00:56:25.400 --> 00:56:30.000
did their hair a little bit different, U, the sound was a little

694
00:56:30.000 --> 00:56:34.760
bit different, and this album is
Defenders of the Faith. Now, this

695
00:56:34.800 --> 00:56:38.440
album to me was kind of a
fifty fifty. Fifty percent of it was

696
00:56:38.480 --> 00:56:42.599
like badass Priest. Fifty percent of
it was like, ah, you're touching

697
00:56:42.679 --> 00:56:46.039
the grounds of something of the Crew
and poison, and I don't like to

698
00:56:46.039 --> 00:56:52.280
stick my feet in that dirty water. But I'll tell you they had some

699
00:56:52.360 --> 00:56:57.519
tracks on that album that were pretty
provocative. You know. They had free

700
00:56:57.519 --> 00:57:04.280
Will Burning. They had another song
I thought that was great if you were

701
00:57:04.320 --> 00:57:07.400
going to be a stripper, and
it's in the dead of night love Bites.

702
00:57:08.360 --> 00:57:12.519
That's a pretty sexy song. And
now, the funny thing is a

703
00:57:12.559 --> 00:57:17.480
lot of these songs were very macho
and male testosterone driven sexually. You know

704
00:57:17.519 --> 00:57:22.840
what I'm saying. Now, that's
the kind of aura that Judas Priests kind

705
00:57:22.840 --> 00:57:25.760
of represented. And the funny thing
is, well, not funny, but

706
00:57:25.800 --> 00:57:30.960
the truth of it is, the
ironic thing is Rob Halford finally came out

707
00:57:31.360 --> 00:57:37.000
and admitted he was gay, and
for all those years he had to hide

708
00:57:37.199 --> 00:57:38.800
not being gay. Now, this
is what I had heard from a story

709
00:57:39.440 --> 00:57:45.159
from a friend of mine who knew
Rob Halford because he played with him in

710
00:57:45.239 --> 00:57:47.559
Helford. Remember O, My buddy
Mike gave us he was a guest on

711
00:57:47.559 --> 00:57:52.119
the show, absolutely and he had
mentioned that, you know, Halford used

712
00:57:52.119 --> 00:57:54.800
to let these chicks come in and
party with him. And give them whatever

713
00:57:54.880 --> 00:57:59.360
they wanted, as long as they
didn't go out there and spread the secret.

714
00:57:59.480 --> 00:58:06.079
Sure chicks had to sign, you
know, paperwork versions that they would

715
00:58:06.119 --> 00:58:09.079
say. Yeah. So it must
have been really hard for the dude to

716
00:58:09.119 --> 00:58:15.480
hold up and and and grab the
fan base and the feeling it was creating

717
00:58:15.519 --> 00:58:19.400
with his music to hide in the
closets. So propped off to to Rob

718
00:58:19.480 --> 00:58:22.800
Helford for coming out of the closet, and propped off to anybody out there

719
00:58:22.840 --> 00:58:25.920
that has had to feel like they
have to be hidden or ashamed of who

720
00:58:27.000 --> 00:58:29.960
they are. Nobody should be ashamed
of who you are, what you like,

721
00:58:30.119 --> 00:58:32.320
or what you believe in. We're
living in a free country. We're

722
00:58:32.320 --> 00:58:37.239
supposed to be living in a time
where everybody is accepted. So stand up

723
00:58:37.239 --> 00:58:39.440
and be bold and be who you
gotta be. So uh so, let

724
00:58:39.480 --> 00:58:45.159
me is another reason why I really
love Judas priest for his balls to come

725
00:58:45.159 --> 00:58:46.840
out. So let me ask you. It's like one question in two different

726
00:58:46.840 --> 00:58:51.880
parts. So sure, um,
when this? When? What year was

727
00:58:51.880 --> 00:58:54.119
this? First of all, when
he came out, I believe Helford came

728
00:58:54.159 --> 00:59:00.360
out in eighty I want to say
eighties, So was the eighty it was

729
00:59:00.360 --> 00:59:04.760
definitely then it was. It was
in the eighties, the early nineties maybe,

730
00:59:04.800 --> 00:59:07.280
so the second part okay, so
the second part of the question is

731
00:59:07.840 --> 00:59:12.719
being that it wasn't the eighties and
we didn't have a lot of people,

732
00:59:12.840 --> 00:59:16.280
you know, uh coming out.
But like you said, in that genre

733
00:59:16.320 --> 00:59:22.280
of music, it was so male
to stosterone driven. How was the shock

734
00:59:22.400 --> 00:59:25.199
because it must have been a shock
to the metal world, you know what,

735
00:59:27.440 --> 00:59:31.440
being in that in that time and
space. He didn't get a lot

736
00:59:31.440 --> 00:59:35.920
of criticism. There was not a
lot of back hate for him coming out

737
00:59:35.960 --> 00:59:37.880
of the closet. Yes, there
was shock, especially for you know,

738
00:59:37.960 --> 00:59:43.360
horny bastards like me that were youth
youth inspired back then. And he was

739
00:59:43.400 --> 00:59:45.239
singing these songs and you know,
we're getting some action with a girl.

740
00:59:45.239 --> 00:59:47.880
What are you gonna do. You're
gonna cry and calling some priests and you're

741
00:59:47.880 --> 00:59:52.000
gonna give it to it for about
two hours straight. Both of you are

742
00:59:52.000 --> 00:59:54.880
going to come out of there with
your your toetils curled. But you know,

743
00:59:55.000 --> 00:59:58.920
it wasn't a big, a big
kick in the ass when he came

744
00:59:58.960 --> 01:00:02.559
out everybody except did it because he
really stayed true to who he was now.

745
01:00:04.000 --> 01:00:07.719
Rob Halford to me, is the
kind of guy that will serenade you,

746
01:00:07.039 --> 01:00:13.199
beat your ass, take your motorcycle, and then try and offer you

747
01:00:13.280 --> 01:00:16.000
his hand, or show you what
his favorite cat looks like, or talk

748
01:00:16.039 --> 01:00:20.199
to you about flowers. I mean, he's just that kind of a guy.

749
01:00:20.440 --> 01:00:23.239
And I don't think gay, gay
or straight, that or that persona

750
01:00:23.280 --> 01:00:29.440
that Rob Halford has on stage is
I'm gonna metallize you. I'm gonna kick

751
01:00:29.480 --> 01:00:30.960
your ass with my vocals. I'm
gonna kick your ass with my lyrics,

752
01:00:31.079 --> 01:00:34.639
and we're going to give you the
best rock and roll show to make you

753
01:00:34.719 --> 01:00:37.360
feel inspired to go out there and
take on the world. To me,

754
01:00:37.480 --> 01:00:42.639
that's that's a great us, that's
good back. That's a good fight song

755
01:00:42.679 --> 01:00:45.960
for anybody. Bro. So the
next song we are going to dive into.

756
01:00:45.119 --> 01:00:49.239
Next I'm gonna have to tell you, I'm going from one of these

757
01:00:49.280 --> 01:00:52.679
three. Are you ready? And
I'm ready to lay the law down to

758
01:00:52.840 --> 01:00:57.199
all you. Mona Lishi, here's
the green Mona Lishi from Judas Priest,

759
01:00:58.000 --> 01:01:00.599
right back at you from Tascoto and
hang it back to the eighties. Don't

760
01:01:00.599 --> 01:01:04.920
you go anywhere, because Kay,
HiT's not a two point five has got

761
01:01:04.920 --> 01:01:07.639
the medal to keep that vibe alive. Don't you dare touch that dial.

762
01:01:14.360 --> 01:01:17.519
Welcome back to back to the eighties
with the Scotland cheg. You're meddled up

763
01:01:17.519 --> 01:01:22.719
with Judas Priests and everybody's favorite you
too from the eighties. Hey boys,

764
01:01:22.719 --> 01:01:30.840
bring it all back? Wow?
Okay, well you are listening to your

765
01:01:31.079 --> 01:01:36.159
back to the eighties. This is
Tiscano and uh with Chang to our side.

766
01:01:36.159 --> 01:01:38.599
And I don't know who disappeared,
but we want to welcome him too,

767
01:01:38.800 --> 01:01:45.960
or whoever that was. He is
an Incubi shirt. Ah. It's

768
01:01:45.039 --> 01:01:51.920
like if you would have said Russia's
love Child. Anyway. Well, that

769
01:01:51.960 --> 01:01:52.679
was a pretty good song. That's
one of them. That's the one of

770
01:01:52.719 --> 01:01:57.519
the songs from from the Priests that
I like. Actually, Oh that's a

771
01:01:57.559 --> 01:02:00.519
great song, bro, It's a
sexy song. Yeah, I guess you

772
01:02:00.519 --> 01:02:02.000
could call it a sexy song.
Absolutely, you know what I mean.

773
01:02:02.320 --> 01:02:07.639
I backed a couple of Green Mona
leshies in my day. I can't believe

774
01:02:07.800 --> 01:02:15.880
that you need my love so bad? Oh, brother man, you know,

775
01:02:15.880 --> 01:02:17.519
if you just joined us, this
has been a long show and it's

776
01:02:17.559 --> 01:02:22.239
because we have a lot of ground
to cover. We were almost done,

777
01:02:22.320 --> 01:02:25.400
ladies and gentlemen. We are almost
done. And on that note, it's

778
01:02:25.440 --> 01:02:30.760
only in horseshoes. Yeah, on
that note, I've only got two songs

779
01:02:30.840 --> 01:02:37.639
left to the Joshua Tree album nineteen
eighty seven. My friends, here's a

780
01:02:37.719 --> 01:02:44.199
song that Bono wrote the lyrics to
based on the street where they lived in

781
01:02:44.360 --> 01:02:50.320
Belfast during you know the difficulties of
those days because they made a lot of

782
01:02:50.920 --> 01:02:53.760
differences, you know, social differences
between the rich and the poor, because

783
01:02:53.800 --> 01:02:59.079
of whatever street you lived on.
And so here comes Bono writing the street.

784
01:02:59.159 --> 01:03:00.840
You know, I want to see
those days where the streets have no

785
01:03:01.119 --> 01:03:06.519
name. It doesn't matter where you
live, we are all the same.

786
01:03:07.199 --> 01:03:10.480
And on that note, I want
you guys to listen closely because this is

787
01:03:10.559 --> 01:03:15.199
you two, where the streets have
no name on back to the eighties radio.

788
01:03:23.440 --> 01:03:27.559
What the streets have no name?
That was you two. This is

789
01:03:27.639 --> 01:03:30.239
super Mario or Tuscano or whatever you
want to call me. I've been known

790
01:03:30.280 --> 01:03:35.519
by others. This is back to
the eighties radio. A very beatle ish

791
01:03:35.639 --> 01:03:37.760
that song. When I hear When
I hear that song and I've seen him

792
01:03:37.760 --> 01:03:42.360
performed, it reminds me of the
Beatles for some reason. Yeah, it's

793
01:03:42.400 --> 01:03:52.519
just incredible repeating guitar arpaggio with some
delay and just wow, what what a

794
01:03:52.639 --> 01:03:55.719
melo. Would you rank The Edge
as a guitar player in rock and roll?

795
01:03:58.239 --> 01:04:00.559
I don't know. I would say
in the top fifty. He was

796
01:04:00.719 --> 01:04:05.119
he was. He was named the
U in position number thirty eight. As

797
01:04:05.119 --> 01:04:10.119
far as rock is concerned, whether
it is true or not, I don't

798
01:04:10.119 --> 01:04:13.400
know. I would say in the
top fifty somewhere because he's got it,

799
01:04:13.519 --> 01:04:16.239
you know, he's it's his own
style. So you know, you're a

800
01:04:16.280 --> 01:04:20.360
great musician, bro. When you
have you're a very distinct sound. And

801
01:04:20.400 --> 01:04:25.800
I definitely think the Edges got his
own distinct sound. Maybe some great now

802
01:04:26.519 --> 01:04:30.440
I'm not going to talk. They
came out with the album in nineteen eighty

803
01:04:30.480 --> 01:04:33.519
five, Turboll and that's they were
totally glamorized then. I mean they were

804
01:04:33.559 --> 01:04:40.039
wearing shiny, glittery stuff. Rob
Halford grew hair and had it kind of

805
01:04:40.679 --> 01:04:44.920
kind of looking like kind of like
bonno a little bit, you know that

806
01:04:45.000 --> 01:04:47.360
mullet. Yeah, yeah, Alford
had that mullet kind of wild thing.

807
01:04:47.360 --> 01:04:51.880
And at that album. I went
to that tour just to take my girlfriend

808
01:04:51.920 --> 01:04:56.480
at the time because I wanted to
get lucky. But man, I did

809
01:04:56.519 --> 01:04:59.599
get lucky because that's a great album
to have sex with back back in the

810
01:04:59.679 --> 01:05:02.119
days, the Turbo album. But
if if you're going for the macho type

811
01:05:02.159 --> 01:05:05.000
Judhist priest, now that was in
my can of beans. Hey do you

812
01:05:05.039 --> 01:05:10.840
remember back then at concerts they didn't
let you take cameras. Remember that?

813
01:05:11.480 --> 01:05:14.920
Yeah, I remember that. I
mean people still took them, but that

814
01:05:15.000 --> 01:05:18.239
was one big thing. You can't
bring cameras, you can't bring video cameras

815
01:05:18.360 --> 01:05:23.800
anything like that. And today everything
bringing alcohol, drugs, But it was

816
01:05:23.840 --> 01:05:28.840
all there. Yeah, you could
always sneak something. You had to wear

817
01:05:28.920 --> 01:05:30.920
your shirt and everything like that.
They had to. It was terrible.

818
01:05:31.719 --> 01:05:35.000
Commando. What I didn't know they
were gonna be checking me down there.

819
01:05:35.079 --> 01:05:39.840
I'm commando. Okay, now I'm
going to I'm going to go back.

820
01:05:40.320 --> 01:05:45.119
Okay, I'm gonna go back into
the seventies. I hope you're okay with

821
01:05:45.159 --> 01:05:49.280
this and go back to an album
like I mentioned before, Sad Wings of

822
01:05:49.440 --> 01:05:54.400
Destiny. That album, I mean
is heavy duty. I mean it had

823
01:05:54.400 --> 01:05:59.639
to hit your mortality right in the
face. This Uh. It was a

824
01:05:59.719 --> 01:06:05.320
heavy riffing complex of song arrangements that
Glenn Tipton and KK Downing have always said

825
01:06:05.440 --> 01:06:11.719
inspired them to write this was growing
up in the factories of the Black Country.

826
01:06:11.920 --> 01:06:14.679
And that's Birmingham, the Steel Country, you know what I mean,

827
01:06:14.719 --> 01:06:18.639
where it's you're poor and you're working
in a factory. They're the only thing

828
01:06:18.679 --> 01:06:21.360
you're going to do is go to
school and then work in that factory.

829
01:06:23.039 --> 01:06:29.719
So they that album came to be
with what they were feeling emotionally and the

830
01:06:29.800 --> 01:06:31.599
questions that they had on their young
minds. Is this what we're going to

831
01:06:31.639 --> 01:06:33.840
do? Is is that what we're
going to have to do, just like

832
01:06:33.880 --> 01:06:41.679
everybody else. So that album there
is very very emotional, very questionable about

833
01:06:41.800 --> 01:06:47.280
about one's future or one's fears or
one's hopes. And I think I'm going

834
01:06:47.320 --> 01:06:51.360
to take a song from that album
and that'll be my very last song of

835
01:06:51.519 --> 01:06:57.039
Judas Priest. And I want you
to all to put your ears to this

836
01:06:57.119 --> 01:07:00.039
and listen to this album. I
mean rather this song, this song is

837
01:07:00.079 --> 01:07:06.840
called Victim of Changes and don't you
change anything. You are here with Tuscango

838
01:07:06.920 --> 01:07:13.559
and Chango. Back to the eighties
radio and don't forget to tune in every

839
01:07:13.679 --> 01:07:17.880
day, all day, all night
to k Hits ninety two point five.

840
01:07:18.599 --> 01:07:25.159
The station that brings the eighties medal, the eighties rock, and we bring

841
01:07:25.239 --> 01:07:30.760
that vibe alive just for you and
everybody else like you. Stay lifted and

842
01:07:30.760 --> 01:07:40.920
gifted babies. Don't you go nowhere, Runny. You are back back to

843
01:07:40.960 --> 01:07:45.079
the eighties, Tskango and Chang,
and we have just laid out for you

844
01:07:45.320 --> 01:07:51.119
some of our more favorite songs from
our favorite band. And I just gave

845
01:07:51.119 --> 01:07:55.199
you some priests and I took you
back to the seventies. And hopefully you

846
01:07:55.320 --> 01:07:59.360
enjoyed that song and you really listen
to the words and hopefully it helps you

847
01:07:59.400 --> 01:08:00.679
out. Maybe it doesn't. Maybe
you're just going to say, hey,

848
01:08:00.719 --> 01:08:03.679
you know what, I feel like
smashing a cat of beer over my head.

849
01:08:04.159 --> 01:08:09.000
Either way, but now Tskana,
we're coming up to the end,

850
01:08:09.599 --> 01:08:14.039
so you got to lay down the
track that is your number one friend from

851
01:08:14.079 --> 01:08:16.439
YouTube. All right. Well,
if a lot of people don't know,

852
01:08:16.479 --> 01:08:20.840
they're going to know tonight that Over
the years, Bono, the frontman for

853
01:08:20.880 --> 01:08:26.439
YouTube, has been a part of
many causes or organizations that you know that

854
01:08:26.640 --> 01:08:31.760
helped to raise money for relief organizations
and things like that that nature, and

855
01:08:32.560 --> 01:08:36.840
he wrote a song for you know
when he was going on a relief mission

856
01:08:36.840 --> 01:08:43.560
to Ethiopia. It was an anti
Apartheite song and they make a political statement

857
01:08:43.600 --> 01:08:46.399
about how money seems to be more
important than personal freedoms in the eyes of

858
01:08:46.439 --> 01:08:54.279
many world leaders. And that song
is from their album Rattle and Hum album

859
01:08:54.279 --> 01:09:00.479
and it's a song called silver and
Gold. Pay attention because silver and gold

860
01:09:00.760 --> 01:09:03.720
ain't all that makes you happy in
life. This is you two on Back

861
01:09:03.760 --> 01:09:24.520
to the eighties radio Don't Believe,
I Don't Believe. Choose is a little

862
01:09:24.640 --> 01:09:30.479
same without the band Back to the
eighties Radio Rattling Hum album, Silver and

863
01:09:30.560 --> 01:09:36.119
Gold and God Part two from a
group that many have said is the second

864
01:09:36.159 --> 01:09:43.880
coming of the Beatles, band that
that shakes me to my very core when

865
01:09:43.880 --> 01:09:46.720
I hear them. No matter when
I hear them, it is a band

866
01:09:46.800 --> 01:09:50.319
that will live on in my heart
forever as my favorite band of all time.

867
01:09:50.800 --> 01:09:54.680
Now you you know you just mentioned
God, you know, and then

868
01:09:55.840 --> 01:10:00.880
John Lennon's version of God, and
it's kind of like a I would say

869
01:10:00.800 --> 01:10:09.159
Bono gets visits from I would say
the angel John Lennon. Sometimes I think

870
01:10:09.199 --> 01:10:13.640
that with the way that Bono presents
themselves and puts themselves out, puts himself

871
01:10:13.640 --> 01:10:17.279
out there for the causes and he's
you know, there for the people in

872
01:10:17.439 --> 01:10:21.720
need and the vibe that he's creating, and the energy that he promotes,

873
01:10:21.960 --> 01:10:26.159
and the and the feeling he's trying
to get through to people. He's on

874
01:10:26.199 --> 01:10:31.279
a spiritual level, unlike many others, almost in a way to where it

875
01:10:31.479 --> 01:10:39.039
was kind of John Lennon type on. This a different wavelength of trying to

876
01:10:39.079 --> 01:10:44.960
get society to pay attention and to
not judge each other and not go to

877
01:10:45.079 --> 01:10:50.199
war and to work together. I
have not seen an artist since John Lennon

878
01:10:50.239 --> 01:10:57.680
besides Bono, have that kind of
magnitude on people and be the lead singer

879
01:10:57.680 --> 01:10:59.920
and the artists that they are well, you know, have to give,

880
01:11:00.680 --> 01:11:04.239
you know. That's That's exactly what
I say about the majority of the bands

881
01:11:04.279 --> 01:11:08.960
that we like and we listen to
from the eighties, and you know,

882
01:11:09.039 --> 01:11:13.560
bands that were probably formed in the
seventies and they went on in the eighties

883
01:11:13.560 --> 01:11:17.159
and created their their their tone,
their footprint, they left their footprint or

884
01:11:17.159 --> 01:11:21.159
their mark on this world. In
the eighties. These bands had something so

885
01:11:21.199 --> 01:11:26.000
special it was I've said this many
times, they were the first of their

886
01:11:26.119 --> 01:11:30.319
kind. That's why they produced the
shock and awe that they did in our

887
01:11:30.359 --> 01:11:35.359
lives. You mentioned that they are
the soundtrack of our own personal lives,

888
01:11:35.359 --> 01:11:41.079
and I think that that is the
perfect phrase to use. All these bands

889
01:11:41.479 --> 01:11:45.159
that we have mentioned, and the
bands that are closer to our hearts,

890
01:11:45.359 --> 01:11:49.119
all the bands from the eighties,
you may like them, you may not

891
01:11:49.279 --> 01:11:54.079
like them, even to the bands
that you probably hate from the eighties.

892
01:11:54.279 --> 01:11:57.760
But you know what, I am
the first one to admit there will never

893
01:11:57.840 --> 01:12:00.760
be bands we like their were back
then. I got another song before we

894
01:12:00.840 --> 01:12:03.960
cut out that I would like to
mention to you. I'm not going to

895
01:12:04.239 --> 01:12:08.720
tell you what album or anything,
but I think this would be a great

896
01:12:08.720 --> 01:12:13.039
song for us to play tonight for
our k hits uh ninety two point five

897
01:12:13.119 --> 01:12:18.000
listeners and our loved friends here at
back to the eighties. And this song

898
01:12:18.079 --> 01:12:23.680
goes out to all of you listening, everybody out there trying to do what

899
01:12:23.680 --> 01:12:28.560
they have to do to survive and
and take care of your own and your

900
01:12:28.560 --> 01:12:32.760
family. You know, don't don't
ever take on life without having faith in

901
01:12:32.880 --> 01:12:36.479
something, and remember to always have
faith in yourself. So this song I

902
01:12:36.600 --> 01:12:40.760
dedicate to all of you and to
you, my brother. This song is

903
01:12:40.800 --> 01:12:45.880
called Angel by Judas priest. This
is back to the eighties radio. We'll

904
01:12:45.880 --> 01:13:00.720
see you next week. Ye foot
sad wings around project me from this world

905
01:13:00.000 --> 01:13:15.439
that's sin, so that we can
rise again. Oh yea, we can

906
01:13:15.640 --> 01:13:27.159
find a way somehow escaping from the
world, bearing to a place where we

907
01:13:28.159 --> 01:13:43.079
began, and I we find a
bit of place and peace. Mind,

908
01:13:44.159 --> 01:13:54.920
Just tell me that it's all you
want for you and me, and you

909
01:13:55.199 --> 01:14:18.600
want you sad me free. Remember
how we chase the side then reaching for

910
01:14:18.840 --> 01:14:34.640
the stars and nights as I life
sat you begin when I calls mynd I

911
01:14:34.960 --> 01:14:51.720
hear your valved boys and Grid I'm
waiting with Or can't you see angel shine

912
01:14:51.760 --> 01:15:24.840
your light on me? Ain't jos
to needs once more? I'll brain when

913
01:15:24.960 --> 01:15:40.560
all my scenes are washed away?
Only inside y'all wings and stand. Ain't

914
01:15:40.640 --> 01:15:55.399
y'all take me far that wings around
me? Ain't y'll take me by?

915
01:15:58.840 --> 01:16:10.560
What's that wings around me? Now? So that we rise again? What's

916
01:16:10.680 --> 01:16:21.600
that wa round me now? Ain't
don't take me by? What's that way

917
01:16:21.720 --> 01:16:40.680
to around? So that way?
And rid can't take me back to the

918
01:16:40.760 --> 01:16:53.560
cold? Dee take me back,
dere take me back till nine? So

919
01:16:54.520 --> 01:17:00.560
who so deeree