Why Judas Priest keep ignoring them?

Judas Priest has always been a band which tries to not only play live their most popular tunes, such as Living After Midnight, Breaking the Law or Painkiller. And yet with more than 220 songs in Judas Priest catalogue, there are still quite a bunch of songs that the Metal Gods have never played live, and if in case of some of them it's pretty understandable, others remain a hidden gem of the Judas Priest catalog… so let's take a look at all of them! We will discuss the songs Judas Priest never played or rarely played from each of their albums, starting with Rocka Rolla and up until Invincible Shield, talking about the songs Dissident Aggressor and Saints in Hell live, and songs from Point of Entry, Ram It Down, Nostradamus and Firepower that the band has never performed on stage, counting them all. And which song out of the ones Judas Priest never played live do you think the band should perform some time soon? 00:00 - Intro 00:36 - The early days 04:33 - Major label breakthrough 11:05 - Flawless Victory 13:40 - The Golden Era 18:00 - Cinematic dillemas 21:56 - Well, of course! 23:58 - Tim Ripper Owens Era 26:55 - Judas is rising 29:10 - How is that even possible? 31:48 - Verdict -------- 🤘 Become a Patreon and support the show -   / metal_pilgrim   ...or become a YouTube Channel Member -    / @metalpilgrim   THANK YOU FOR ALL YOUR SUPPORT! 👕 Metal Pilgrim merch for your next concert - https://metalpilgrim.net/ 📷 Instagram -   / metal_pilgrim   👍 Facebook -   / metalpilgrimofficial   🆇 Twitter/X - https://x.com/MetalPilgrimOFC 🤖 Discord -   / discord   🎶 Metal 365 Playlist - https://metalpilgrim.net/Metal365 🇺🇦 Support our volunteer efforts here on the ground in Ukraine by donating to Steel Wings Foundation (I am the founder and personally responsible for every penny spent) - https://steelwings.net/en/ -------- Background music: "Uberpunch" Alexander Nakarada (serpentsoundstudios.com) Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 4.0 License -------- All content falls under fair use: any copying of copyrighted material done for a limited and “transformative” purpose, such as to comment upon, criticize, or parody a copyrighted work. Such uses can be done without permission from the copyright owner.