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January 12, 2025

TIM ‘RIPPER’ OWENS Is Open To Writing Autobiography: ‘I’ll Probably Hurt Some Feelings Doing That Book’

In a new interview with Australia’s “Everblack” podcast, former JUDAS PRIEST and current KK’S PRIEST vocalist Tim “Ripper” Owens was asked if he has any plans to write an autobiography. He responded (as transcribed by BLABBERMOUTH.NET): “I’ve never been offered it. I’m not writing a book unless I get paid money, ’cause they loosely made a movie about me; I didn’t get paid nothing for that. So, they would have to pay me some money. But I don’t know how to do it ’cause I don’t wanna… I’ll probably hurt some feelings doing that book. But I won’t spill all the beans. I might be in trouble if I spill all the beans.”He continued: “I would be nice about it. But it is a great story, isn’t it? I mean, it’s an amazing story. And it’s continued to be. I love when people go, ‘What have you done since JUDAS PRIEST?’ More? I don’t know. I’ve toured the world more. I’ve played in front of the same amount of crowds, sold more records. This is all after JUDAS PRIEST. So I think it’s pretty crazy when someone says, ‘What have you done?’ Or they diss me by saying, ‘Oh, the guy that used to be somebody.’ I’m, like, ‘What do you mean used…?’ I’m doing more now than I ever did in my life. So it’s kind of, like, ‘I don’t know what you’re talking about.'”I’ve done a lot,” Owens added. “I said I’ve been fired from more bands than people have been in, so it’s kind of funny. But, yeah, I’ve met so many great people. And I always say JUDAS PRIEST was my college, and they opened up the door for me to make a living out of it. And I’ve worked hard at trying to make sure I’m in top form and ready to go.”Asked what 2025 will look like for him after he tours Australia with his solo band, Tim said: “Well, I think I leave on February 4th to get there. I think I come back like March 11th here. And then I go to Central America. I can’t remember where I’m going. Then I’m probably gonna do South America. And a little bit of everything going on. So, I may be working on some [new] KK’S PRIEST [music]. I have to work on a new solo full-length. ‘Cause I did RIPPER ‘Return To Death Row’ [EP] — two years ago it came out, I think. And so the goal is to work on a full-length now… [HATEBREED’s] Jamey Jasta is supposed to be getting me some material that he has going on, ’cause he did the first record, the first one. It’s a little heavier. So I’m just waiting for him to get back to me.”The 2001 Warner Bros. movie “Rock Star”, starring Mark Wahlberg as a salesman-turned-rock star, was loosely based on Owens, who fronted a JUDAS PRIEST cover band before being tapped to become the new lead singer of the actual group.Asked in a 2014 interview with Russia’s Classic Rock magazine how much of “Rock Star” was styled after him, Tim said: “When they first [got the idea to do] the ‘Rock Star’ movie [under its original name ‘Metal God’], it was really gonna be about me. And then JUDAS PRIEST pulled away from it, because they didn’t like some things. So [the producers] really made their own movie, I think. The similarities were that I auditioned for JUDAS PRIEST and I sang one line of a song and hit a note and made the band. But then a lot of the things, they kind of went out… I mean, I wasn’t that kind of fan when I made the band, because I was that kind of crazy kid in high school in the ’80s. But this was 1996, so I wasn’t living at my parents’ with posters on the walls. I mean, it was still pretty cool. I mean, to have a movie loosely based on you is pretty cool.”Regarding whether it was ironic that the “Rock Star” movie became almost prophetic in the sense that Mark Wahlberg’s character in the film ends up playing small clubs with his own material after the band’s original lead singer rejoins the group, Owens said: “For me, the movie was almost [like real life]. Rob [Halford] came back [to JUDAS PRIEST], which was good for me, to be honest. My career, I went on to do a lot of stuff. It was better for the band, it was better for Rob. So it was kind of funny. I think I became a little bit bigger than the coffee shop singer that Mark Wahlberg was in the movie in the end, just playing there. I still get to play in front of thousands of people in Russia. But it is similar how he went on to do his own thing.”Owens joined PRIEST in 1996 after being discovered when PRIEST drummer Scott Travis was given a videotape of Tim performing with the PRIEST cover band BRITISH STEEL. JUDAS PRIEST at the time was seeking a replacement for Halford, who has since rejoined the band. Asked in an interview with The Vinyl Guide podcast what kind of advice or preparation he had for stepping into those shoes, Owens said: “Well, listen, I was confident. They were confident with my voice. I knew some fans wouldn’t like me, but I also knew that I could sing really good, and I could sing really good live. One advantage I felt I had as a singer was I could sing what I recorded in the studio; whatever I recorded, I’m gonna be able to sing that live. And I felt when fans came to the show, they would be happy that they have someone who’s coming in the JUDAS PRIEST that could still keep the voice going. So if someone didn’t like me, there’s nothing I could do. K.K. [Downing, then-PRIEST guitarist] used to always say, ”The proof is in the pudding. Come to the show and see.’ And I think a lot of people used to come to the shows and they just couldn’t wait to hate me. They hated me showing up and wanted me to fail. And so many of ’em, I’d win ’em over when I started singing, because they could tell that I loved it; I loved what I was singing, and I wanted to do the songs justice. So I always felt confident.”Addressing the fact that the two albums PRIEST recorded with Owens — 1997’s “Jugulator” and 2001’s “Demolition” — sold poorly, and he was ultimately pushed out to clear the way for the return of Halford, Tim said: “It was a really bad time of heavy metal. So it wasn’t like I joined them in the heyday. I mean, when Rob left JUDAS PRIEST, they were playing in front of a couple thousand people on the ‘Painkiller’ tour, a lot of shows So, it really wasn’t a great time of heavy metal. So I understood that, and I understood people would want Rob back. But all I cared about was getting on stage and sound[ing good]. I just wanted the band to be happy and me to be happy with me doing it. That’s all I worried about.”He added: “I know a lot of the the musicians at the time, especially the hair metal bands, because hair metal was gone at that time, they hated me in L.A., ’cause they were, like, ‘Who’s this guy? He comes from Akron, Ohio. What’s he done? How’s he here?’ And I still am the same Ohio guy, [with the] same friends. I have the same attitude. And all of us are the same. I tell musicians this all the time: we’re all the same. I mean, nothing different.”Asked if he had any sort of communication or relation with Halford at that time, Owens said: “No, just in the press. They always tried to get us to say mean things and bad things. And every now and then, one of us would say something. Now, this was pre-Internet. So, I couldn’t imagine doing that nowadays, how screwed up it would be. But, no, because there was a respect. I don’t think Rob liked me much, probably at the time, because someone’s going to his band, his songs and singing this, but we always had this respect. And when we met each other, we always had great talks. And I think it made a lot of people mad that we liked each other. I think it made a lot of people mad, and I think it still does. But whenever I’ve seen him, I love talking to him, and he knows what’s going on with me, and he’s, like, ‘Oh, I see that you’re playing in Russia,’ whatever.”Tim continued: “Back in those days, [journalists] would have the old tape recorder hidden. Now they could just turn their phone on, and no one would know it. But you would do an interview, and then they go, ‘All right, the interview’s over.’ And then they’d turn the tape recorder off, but they’d have another one going in their pocket trying to get you to say stuff. And you know this, doing interviews, you get people to feel comfortable so you talk like you’re friends. And then you just start saying stuff. And I put my foot in my mouth a few times. Oh, now I do all the time, because now — I always do.”In 2019, Owens told Ultimate Guitar that he believes his era of JUDAS PRIEST is largely overlooked. “Yeah, I think it definitely deserves more [attention],” he said. “I mean, they don’t do anything. [Laughs] It’s kind of amazing that they just totally erased it that they won’t play… I mean, ‘Burn In Hell’ [off ‘Jugulator’], the crowd would like to hear ‘Burn In Hell’.”They don’t have to give me a tribute or anything, but it would be nice to play a song from… You know, that was a pretty big thing, I did two studio records, two live records, and a DVD, starting from ’96 to 2004. So it’s kind of crazy that it’s just been erased and they won’t even play a song from it live, because it is JUDAS PRIEST.””Demolition” and “Jugulator” are included on “50 Heavy Metal Years Of Music”, JUDAS PRIEST’s limited-edition box set which contains every official live and studio album to date plus 13 unreleased discs. Released in October 2021, it is the most extensive release of previously unreleased music the band has made from its vast archives.[embedded content]