This interview was originally published in 2014 in Guitar.com.
Indestructible. That’s as good a definition for the band Judas Priest as any. Despite an oft-changing roster over the years in the drum chair; the departure, long-time absence, and eventual return of lead singer Rob Halford; the 2011 retirement of founding member, guitarist K.K. Downing — and not to mention changing musical tastes of the general public, or the complete revamp of the music industry itself — Judas Priest has carried on.
More than carried on, actually. With Redeemer of Souls, the band’s just released studio album breaking the U.S. Top 10 album charts at Number 6 — the group’s first ever U.S. Top 10 album — Priest have proven to be, in a word, indestructible.
Guitarist Glenn Tipton, himself celebrating his 40th anniversary with Priest in 2014, has been on the ride since the group was known only in their native England. And with longevity comes reverence. Tipton’s edgy guitar riffing has been at the forefront of heavy metal since its inception. Countless hard rock and heavy metal guitarists cite Tipton and Judas Priest as major influences, and for many a famous metal player today, early Judas Priest hits such as “Breaking The Law,” “Living After Midnight,” or “You’ve Got Another Thing Comin'” were standard, must-learn anthems.
Redeemer of Souls is indeed a return to classic Judas Priest: all straight-ahead, plug-in-and-play guitar tones, ripping riffs, and screaming guitar solos. Tipton and K.K. Downing replacement, guitarist Richie Faulkner, are tearing it up on …Souls with a fury that fits right in with Priest’s classic catalog. Could it be the quintet’s best work since British Steel or Screaming for Vengeance?
In this exclusive Guitar.com interview, we spoke with guitarist Tipton about his and the band’s songwriting process, the gear and guitars he favors at home and on the road, and even his penchant for fly-fishing between tours and recording sessions.
Guitar.com: A new Judas Priest album and tour, this is exciting!
Glenn Tipton: Yes, we’re pretty excited.
Guitar.com: So why do we have to wait until the fall in the United States for the Judas Priest tour?
Tipton: We’ve really only just released the album and we’ve done a lot of promotion. And I think we deserve a rest! (laughs).
Guitar.com: The U.S. audiences are greatly looking forward to seeing you again.
Tipton: We need to get into rehearsals, so there’s rehearsal time in there.
Guitar.com: Is there a European tour before the U.S. tour?
Tipton: No. We start in America.
Guitar.com: Redeemer of Souls is really rockin’. What was going on in the mindset as you were going into the studio with these songs?
Tipton: Nothing really. The last studio album was a conceptual album, Nostradamus. And we wanted to do a basic Judas Priest album, full of Judas Priest heavy metal character. And we just sat down and wrote naturally, and it just emerged. It evolved, and just showed itself. We just very much wanted to do a metal album this time.
Guitar.com: Do you do the writing in the studio or ahead of time?
Tipton: What we normally do is we all go away and do our own thing, write our own bits and get riffs and sections of songs down, and what we think would make a good verse or a good chorus. And then Rob will go away and do the same with his lyrics and song titles. And then we just get together and pull everything in, and songs just sort of emerge from that.
Guitar.com: So do you have a studio at home that you put ideas down with?
Tipton: Yeah. I think everybody has a studio at home now.
Guitar.com: So are you guys sending each other files through the Internet?
Tipton: We do, ’cause Richie and Rob have boards, so we exchange ideas on the Internet.
Guitar.com: When you’re in a writing mode, what is your process?
Tipton: Just mess around on the guitar, listen to a lot of stuff, and get some effects down on the guitar to give me inspiration. Maybe some unusual effects or something. They don’t always end up being used, but creating an atmosphere that breeds ideas. And then I just jot them down and record them. I usually put them in categories of fast, medium, and slow.
Guitar.com: Do you record most of your ideas?
Tipton: I do, to get them. If I get what I think is a strong idea for a song, I record it.
Guitar.com: I’ve found that if I’m coming up with ideas, if I don’t record them, later on I may remember the notes, but I can never recapture the magic of the rhythm I played them with. Does that happen to you?
Tipton: Yeah. That’s why I put everything down. When I get what I think is a good idea, I always put it down somewhere, because, yeah, you can remember the notes, but you can’t remember how they were played, particularly. I’ve got a bad memory anyways, so there’s a lot of good riffs gone into space that I never jotted down (laughs).
Guitar.com: Right. What do you use to record?
Tipton: Pro Tools.
Guitar.com: You probably have your rig all set up and just ready to hit “go,” right?
Tipton: Yeah. I’ve got a couple of Pro Tools systems. One is for just jotting stuff down. And I’ve got a personal assistant to record them.
Guitar.com: What do you use in your home studio when you’re playing? Do you use guitars that we don’t see on tour?
Tipton: I do if I need to. But normally I use the Hamer guitars that I use on tour. Or I’ll use Gibson SGs, or Strats, or anything that gives me the sound. If it’s an acoustic section I might use a Taylor. Whatever suits the track. I don’t believe it’s totally important to reproduce exactly on stage what you do in the studio, so I always give the studio preference, or precedence, I should say. I get the sound that is recorded on the album, on the song.
Guitar.com: What guitars did you use on Redeemer of Souls?
Tipton: Hamer, Gibson. I did use a Taylor for an acoustic section at the start of “To Hell And Back.” And that’s it really. I probably used a Strat in places to get some of the quieter sounds. But I didn’t use a hell of a lot of guitars. We wanted this album to sound natural and fresh, and we didn’t want to lace it with all sorts of effects or different guitars. We wanted to give it a solid sound that flowed through the album and didn’t disrupt. Sometimes you can have too many diversities on the album and it’s tough to play the album [on tour].
Indestructible. That’s as good a definition for the band Judas Priest as any. Despite an oft-changing roster over the years in the drum chair; the departure, long-time absence, and eventual return of lead singer Rob Halford; the 2011 retirement of founding member, guitarist K.K. Downing — and not to mention changing musical tastes of the general public, or the complete revamp of the music industry itself — Judas Priest has carried on.
More than carried on, actually. With Redeemer of Souls, the band’s just released studio album breaking the U.S. Top 10 album charts at Number 6 — the group’s first ever U.S. Top 10 album — Priest have proven to be, in a word, indestructible.
Guitarist Glenn Tipton, himself celebrating his 40th anniversary with Priest in 2014, has been on the ride since the group was known only in their native England. And with longevity comes reverence. Tipton’s edgy guitar riffing has been at the forefront of heavy metal since its inception. Countless hard rock and heavy metal guitarists cite Tipton and Judas Priest as major influences, and for many a famous metal player today, early Judas Priest hits such as “Breaking The Law,” “Living After Midnight,” or “You’ve Got Another Thing Comin'” were standard, must-learn anthems.
Redeemer of Souls is indeed a return to classic Judas Priest: all straight-ahead, plug-in-and-play guitar tones, ripping riffs, and screaming guitar solos. Tipton and K.K. Downing replacement, guitarist Richie Faulkner, are tearing it up on …Souls with a fury that fits right in with Priest’s classic catalog. Could it be the quintet’s best work since British Steel or Screaming for Vengeance?
In this exclusive Guitar.com interview, we spoke with guitarist Tipton about his and the band’s songwriting process, the gear and guitars he favors at home and on the road, and even his penchant for fly-fishing between tours and recording sessions.
Guitar.com: A new Judas Priest album and tour, this is exciting!
Glenn Tipton: Yes, we’re pretty excited.
Guitar.com: So why do we have to wait until the fall in the United States for the Judas Priest tour?
Tipton: We’ve really only just released the album and we’ve done a lot of promotion. And I think we deserve a rest! (laughs).
Guitar.com: The U.S. audiences are greatly looking forward to seeing you again.
Tipton: We need to get into rehearsals, so there’s rehearsal time in there.
Guitar.com: Is there a European tour before the U.S. tour?
Tipton: No. We start in America.
Guitar.com: Redeemer of Souls is really rockin’. What was going on in the mindset as you were going into the studio with these songs?
Tipton: Nothing really. The last studio album was a conceptual album, Nostradamus. And we wanted to do a basic Judas Priest album, full of Judas Priest heavy metal character. And we just sat down and wrote naturally, and it just emerged. It evolved, and just showed itself. We just very much wanted to do a metal album this time.
Guitar.com: Do you do the writing in the studio or ahead of time?
Tipton: What we normally do is we all go away and do our own thing, write our own bits and get riffs and sections of songs down, and what we think would make a good verse or a good chorus. And then Rob will go away and do the same with his lyrics and song titles. And then we just get together and pull everything in, and songs just sort of emerge from that.
Guitar.com: So do you have a studio at home that you put ideas down with?
Tipton: Yeah. I think everybody has a studio at home now.
Guitar.com: So are you guys sending each other files through the Internet?
Tipton: We do, ’cause Richie and Rob have boards, so we exchange ideas on the Internet.
Guitar.com: When you’re in a writing mode, what is your process?
Tipton: Just mess around on the guitar, listen to a lot of stuff, and get some effects down on the guitar to give me inspiration. Maybe some unusual effects or something. They don’t always end up being used, but creating an atmosphere that breeds ideas. And then I just jot them down and record them. I usually put them in categories of fast, medium, and slow.
Guitar.com: Do you record most of your ideas?
Tipton: I do, to get them. If I get what I think is a strong idea for a song, I record it.
Guitar.com: I’ve found that if I’m coming up with ideas, if I don’t record them, later on I may remember the notes, but I can never recapture the magic of the rhythm I played them with. Does that happen to you?
Tipton: Yeah. That’s why I put everything down. When I get what I think is a good idea, I always put it down somewhere, because, yeah, you can remember the notes, but you can’t remember how they were played, particularly. I’ve got a bad memory anyways, so there’s a lot of good riffs gone into space that I never jotted down (laughs).
Guitar.com: Right. What do you use to record?
Tipton: Pro Tools.
Guitar.com: You probably have your rig all set up and just ready to hit “go,” right?
Tipton: Yeah. I’ve got a couple of Pro Tools systems. One is for just jotting stuff down. And I’ve got a personal assistant to record them.
Guitar.com: What do you use in your home studio when you’re playing? Do you use guitars that we don’t see on tour?
Tipton: I do if I need to. But normally I use the Hamer guitars that I use on tour. Or I’ll use Gibson SGs, or Strats, or anything that gives me the sound. If it’s an acoustic section I might use a Taylor. Whatever suits the track. I don’t believe it’s totally important to reproduce exactly on stage what you do in the studio, so I always give the studio preference, or precedence, I should say. I get the sound that is recorded on the album, on the song.
Guitar.com: What guitars did you use on Redeemer of Souls?
Tipton: Hamer, Gibson. I did use a Taylor for an acoustic section at the start of “To Hell And Back.” And that’s it really. I probably used a Strat in places to get some of the quieter sounds. But I didn’t use a hell of a lot of guitars. We wanted this album to sound natural and fresh, and we didn’t want to lace it with all sorts of effects or different guitars. We wanted to give it a solid sound that flowed through the album and didn’t disrupt. Sometimes you can have too many diversities on the album and it’s tough to play the album [on tour].