Judas Priest: Redeemer of Souls Tour with Mastodon on November 12 at 7 p.m.
Similar deals
Amenities
Metal legends behind “Breaking the Law” rock out alongside progressive heavy-metal act of “Blood and Thunder” fame
The Deal
- $35 for one G-Pass for seating in sections 101–105 (up to $66.50 value)
- $45 for one G-Pass for seating section 107 or 120 (up to $87 value)
- Click here to view the seating chart
How G-Pass Works: Your G-Pass will be ready to print 48 hours after the deal ends. Print the G-Pass and use it to enter the venue directly; you won’t need to redeem at will call. Due to security restrictions, G-Passes cannot be redeemed through the mobile app. Discount reflects the merchant’s current ticket prices - price may differ on day of event.
Judas Priest
- 1969: the year that Judas Priest formed in Birmingham, England to rock the petals off flower children’s heads and put an end to the Summer of Love
- The formula that made them metal gods: twin lead guitars from Glenn Tipton and Richie Faulkner, Rob Halford’s operatic vocals, and a love of biking that informs their fashion sense and songs like “Hell Bent for Leather”
- 1980: the year that the US caught on to the band with “Breaking the Law” and “Living After Midnight”
- 2010: the year Halford and co. received a long-overdue Grammy for “Dissident Aggressor”
- 2014: the year the band returned with all engines revving with their back-to-basics album, Redeemer of Souls, which Rolling Stone said “is proof that Priest can still call themselves metal’s defenders of the faith.”
Mastodon
- Their Sound: hardcore stoner metal that toggles between breakneck speeds and being sludgier than an oil slick strained though a coffee filter
- Their Lyrics: high-concept and laden with fantasy themes as well as literary references, as exhibited by the quest narrative Blood Mountain and Leviathan—a concept album based around Moby Dick
- Their Acclaim: three Grammy nods for Best Metal Performance and praise from Rolling Stone, who heralds Mastodon as “the greatest metal band of their generation—no one else comes close.”
- Their Latest: Once More ‘Round the Sun, which doesn’t have a prog-rock storyline like Leviathan, Blood Mountain, or Crack the Skye, but carries just as much punishing weight
Metal legends behind “Breaking the Law” rock out alongside progressive heavy-metal act of “Blood and Thunder” fame
The Deal
- $35 for one G-Pass for seating in sections 101–105 (up to $66.50 value)
- $45 for one G-Pass for seating section 107 or 120 (up to $87 value)
- Click here to view the seating chart
How G-Pass Works: Your G-Pass will be ready to print 48 hours after the deal ends. Print the G-Pass and use it to enter the venue directly; you won’t need to redeem at will call. Due to security restrictions, G-Passes cannot be redeemed through the mobile app. Discount reflects the merchant’s current ticket prices - price may differ on day of event.
Judas Priest
- 1969: the year that Judas Priest formed in Birmingham, England to rock the petals off flower children’s heads and put an end to the Summer of Love
- The formula that made them metal gods: twin lead guitars from Glenn Tipton and Richie Faulkner, Rob Halford’s operatic vocals, and a love of biking that informs their fashion sense and songs like “Hell Bent for Leather”
- 1980: the year that the US caught on to the band with “Breaking the Law” and “Living After Midnight”
- 2010: the year Halford and co. received a long-overdue Grammy for “Dissident Aggressor”
- 2014: the year the band returned with all engines revving with their back-to-basics album, Redeemer of Souls, which Rolling Stone said “is proof that Priest can still call themselves metal’s defenders of the faith.”
Mastodon
- Their Sound: hardcore stoner metal that toggles between breakneck speeds and being sludgier than an oil slick strained though a coffee filter
- Their Lyrics: high-concept and laden with fantasy themes as well as literary references, as exhibited by the quest narrative Blood Mountain and Leviathan—a concept album based around Moby Dick
- Their Acclaim: three Grammy nods for Best Metal Performance and praise from Rolling Stone, who heralds Mastodon as “the greatest metal band of their generation—no one else comes close.”
- Their Latest: Once More ‘Round the Sun, which doesn’t have a prog-rock storyline like Leviathan, Blood Mountain, or Crack the Skye, but carries just as much punishing weight