William Shatner Announces Star-Studded Heavy Metal Album for 2026
William Shatner has never treated music as a novelty side quest, and at 94, he’s doubling down with what he’s calling a full-blown heavy metal project.
The actor and recording artist announced plans for an as-yet-untitled metal album in 2026, describing it as “a heavy metal extravaganza” featuring roughly 35 guest performers. Early reports say the release will mix originals with reinterpretations of songs associated with Black Sabbath, Judas Priest and Iron Maiden, though a finalized tracklist and release date have not yet been made public.
Shatner framed the project as a deliberate creative move, not a one-off stunt. In announcement coverage, he said metal “demands honesty” and emphasized that he selected contributors for their distinctive voices and personalities. The reported guest list includes Zakk Wylde, Ritchie Blackmore and Henry Rollins, with additional names circulating in trade and fan press as the record takes shape.
How Shatner Got Here Musically
To anyone only familiar with his screen work, a Shatner metal album might sound improbable. But his catalog has long lived at the intersection of spoken-word performance, rock instrumentation and theatrical reinterpretation.
His first major musical release, The Transformed Man (1968), paired dramatic readings with reworked pop standards and established the signature Shatner style: narrative delivery, rhythmic speech and maximalist arrangement choices. Decades later, that same framework made him an unexpected cult figure in alternative and classic-rock circles.
In 2004, Shatner released Has Been, produced by Ben Folds, widely viewed as the record that reframed him from novelty act to credible spoken-word collaborator in modern rock. The album earned strong critical notice and introduced him to a younger audience through high-profile guests and more emotionally direct songwriting.
He continued that arc with Seeking Major Tom (2011), a space-themed covers project, then Ponder the Mystery (2013), a prog-leaning release produced by Billy Sherwood. Later projects including The Blues (2020) and Bill (2021) further underscored that Shatner’s recording output isn’t episodic, it’s continuous, collaborative and stylistically wide-ranging.
What’s Known About the New Metal Album
As of now, several details appear consistent across multiple reports:
- Status: In development for 2026 release.
- Format: Reportedly a blend of originals plus metal covers.
- Scale: Around 35 participating artists, according to launch coverage.
- Collaborators: Frequently cited names include Zakk Wylde, Ritchie Blackmore and Henry Rollins.
- Lead details pending: No official title, full credits, or final sequencing has been publicly confirmed.
The spark for the project reportedly came from Shatner’s participation in the upcoming Black Flame album by Nuclear Messiah, where he contributes narration on the opening piece “The Prophet of Fallout” with ex-Megadeth guitarist Chris Poland. In interviews and announcement copy, Shatner has described that session as a catalyst for pushing further into heavier material.
Even before hearing a single finished track, Shatner’s metal LP sits at a rare crossroads: legacy celebrity, cross-generational rock collaboration and a format (spoken-word-meets-metal) that can either crash or become genuinely compelling in the right hands.
For Shatner, it also fits a decades-long pattern. He has consistently used records as storytelling vehicles rather than traditional vocalist showcases, and metal’s theatricality, precision and scale may be a better fit for that approach than many would assume at first glance.
Until a lead single arrives, the album remains one of 2026’s more unusual but legitimately intriguing hard-rock wild cards.