Published: January 12, 2021
How a British metal classic landed on the PMRC’s infamous “Filthy Fifteen” list—and sparked a cultural battle over artistic freedom, morality, and the future of heavy music
In the mid-1980s, heavy metal was exploding across the world louder, faster, and more provocative than ever before. Riding that momentum, Judas Priest released their now-legendary album Defenders of the Faith through Columbia Records. Its blistering opening track, “Freewheel Burning,” became a thunderous calling card, helping Priest cement their reputation across Europe and North America.
Lyrically, Judas Priest had always mixed personal experiences, rebellion, fantasy, and bold imagery. Defenders of the Faith continued that tradition unapologetically but the album arrived at a moment when the United States was entering a moral panic over popular music.
That panic had a name: the Parents Music Resource Center, better known as the PMRC.
Founded by Tipper Gore after claiming she was shocked when her 11-year-old daughter heard Prince’s “Darling Nikki”, the PMRC was created to flag songs they believed contained explicit sexual, violent, drug-related, or occult themes. Gore, wife of politician Al Gore, rallied other influential Washington figures to push for content labeling and censorship.
The PMRC soon released its controversial blacklist: the “Filthy Fifteen.”
These were the 15 songs the committee considered the most “harmful” to American youth.
Among them was Judas Priest’s “Eat Me Alive,” accused by Gore of depicting oral sex “at gunpoint.” The band’s intent, however, was far more tongue-in-cheek and rooted in the theatrical world of hard rock.
Guitarist K.K. Downing later addressed the controversy:
“In a uniquely British way, Rob’s S&M lyrics were intended to be tongue in cheek—and certainly not ‘corrupting,’ as Tipper Gore and the PMRC took them to be. They certainly didn’t warrant being included on the PMRC’s ‘Filthy 15’ list. For us, the song was a bit of fun—but I won’t deny that we included it with full knowledge that it would get media attention.”
Priest quickly found themselves thrust into a broader cultural battle over censorship, morality, and artistic expression. The PMRC hearings sparked heated debates about whether music could or should be regulated by government influence.
Rather than retreat, Judas Priest fired back creatively.
Their response arrived on the Turbo album, the follow-up to Defenders of the Faith: the defiant track “Parental Guidance.”
The message was clear:
artists, not bureaucrats, should define the boundaries of their art.
While the PMRC ultimately led to the now-famous “Parental Advisory” sticker, history has largely viewed its crusade as overreaching and misguided. Meanwhile, songs like “Eat Me Alive” have become cultural artifacts reminders of a time when heavy metal challenged authority and won.
Decades later, Defenders of the Faith stands stronger than ever and Judas Priest’s clash with censorship remains a defining chapter in rock history a moment when guitars, leather, and lyrics rattled the halls of American politics.
Metal didn’t just survive the era.
It became louder.