Turbo is the 10th studio album by British heavy metal band Judas Priest.
The album was recorded at Compass Point Studios in Nassau, Bahamas and mixed January - February 1986 at Record Plant Studios in Los Angeles, California. This album was first released on April 15, 1986. A remastered CD was released in 2002, adding two bonus tracks. The album marked the band's first use of guitar synthesizers.
Following the success of their previous album, Defenders of the Faith, Judas Priest initially reco...
Turbo is the 10th studio album by British heavy metal band Judas Priest.
The album was recorded at Compass Point Studios in Nassau, Bahamas and mixed January - February 1986 at Record Plant Studios in Los Angeles, California. This album was first released on April 15, 1986. A remastered CD was released in 2002, adding two bonus tracks. The album marked the band's first use of guitar synthesizers.
Following the success of their previous album, Defenders of the Faith, Judas Priest initially recorded a double album called "Twin Turbos", which was never released. Instead, the material was split, with the more commercial songs appearing on Turbo. While it sold well initially, going Gold (RIAA) on June 10, 1986 and Platinum on July 24, 1987 and reaching #33 in the UK and #17 on Billboard 200, the reaction from fans was negative. Sales tapered off and the live album from the subsequent tour tanked.
"Reckless" was asked to be on the Top Gun soundtrack, but Judas Priest declined, both because they thought the film would flop and because it would have meant leaving the song off Turbo. The Album 'Ram It Down' had a release of Johnny Be Goode for the movie of the same title that was a box office flop.
"Parental Guidance" was written and recorded in response to Tipper Gore's attack on the band. Her organization, the Parents Music Resource Center (PMRC), placed "Eat Me Alive" (from Defenders of the Faith) at #3 on their list of offensive songs (a.k.a. the "Filthy Fifteen"), as it allegedly was about performing oral sex at gunpoint.
"Turbo Lover" was featured as one of the songs in the U.S. release of the 2001 PlayStation 2 game Gran Turismo 3.
The album was ranked #39 on Metal-Rules.com list over the 50 greatest glam metal albums.
The line at the end of "Parental Guidance", One life I'm gonna live it up!, is a nod to the earlier Judas Priest song "You've Got Another Thing Comin'".
In the first season of the Polish edition of Big Brother, the housemates were to form a band and write and perform a song. Prompted by two of the housemates who were rock/metal fans, they named both the band and the song "TurboLovers" (originally "TurboLoversi"), an obvious reference to the album's title song. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.