Black Sabbath
Black Sabbath are an
English Heavy metal band, who were pioneers of
Heavy Metal. The band was originally comprised of
Ozzy Osbourne (vocals),
Tony Iommi (guitar),
Terence "Geezer" Butler (bass), and
Bill Ward (drums).
One of the definitive
heavy metal bands, Black Sabbath remains a dominant influence in the genre they helped originate.[
1]
VH1's
100 Greatest Artists of Hard Rock ranked them second, behind
Led Zeppelin. [
2]
1960s
Black Sabbath formed in
Birmingham, England in 1968 under the name
Polka Tulk Blues Band (soon shortened to "
Polka Tulk"), and later
Earth, playing
blues rock and
hard rock.
Black Sabbath had a unique sound that emerged from diverse influences. Iommi was greatly influenced both by
Hank Marvin's playing on
Cliff Richard and the Shadows' heavy-guitar based recordings and by
jazz guitar, particularly that of
Django Reinhardt.[
3] Ward has also expressed a fondness for
jazz music, especially drummers like
Buddy Rich and
Gene Krupa.[
4] Geezer Butler cites bassist/vocalist
Jack Bruce of British blues band
Cream as a major influence on him: "He was the first player I ever saw who bent the strings and played the bass as a totally independent instrument".[
5] Early incarnations of Black Sabbath merged elements of
blues,
jazz, and rock and paid their dues playing cover versions of songs by heavy rock acts including
Jimi Hendrix,
Blue Cheer, and the previously mentioned
Cream. Osbourne says he was deeply influenced by
The Beatles and his favourite album of all time is
Revolver.[
6]
Earth moved in a darker direction when their bassist, Geezer Butler, a fan of the black magic novels of
Dennis Wheatley, wrote an occult-themed song titled "
Black Sabbath" (the song name was apparently inspired by a
1963 Mario Bava film). (In their reunion concert film, the band stated that the song is based on an experience Butler had one night when he saw a black object at the end of his bed and noticed the next day that an occult book Osbourne had given him was missing). When the band found themselves being confused with another local band called Earth, they adopted the song title as their new name.
The group found its signature sound almost by accident. When the group was rehearsing in a studio which was situated opposite a cinema showing a horror movie, Osbourne recalls that
Tony Iommi said to the rest of the band, "Innit it weird man that people pay money to see a movie that scares the shit out of them?" [
7]. The band began to purposely write dark, ominous songs in an attempt to be music's answer to
horror films.
1970s
Pairing their new heavy sound and the on-stage antics of Ozzy Osbourne, the band found success beginning with their first album, the eponymous
Black Sabbath, released in 1970. They signed to
Warner Bros. Records in the
U.S. and
Canada, and
Vertigo Records for the rest of the world. Their follow-up album,
Paranoid (also 1970), brought them even greater attention in America and the UK. The song
War Pigs was written in protest against the
Vietnam war and was originally planned as the title track. The band recorded
Paranoid at the last minute simply to add length to the album. The song ended up becoming the title track for the album and the band's first single to garner substantial radio airplay.[
8]
The content of the songs (both originals and
cover versions) from both albums demonstrated a tongue in cheek interest in the
occult and
black magic. This was a crucial step in establishing the 'darkness' and 'heaviness' of later heavy metal lyrics. Black Sabbath was one of the first groups to feature such lyrical content, almost to the exclusion of other topics.
Led Zeppelin,
The Doors and others hinted at magic or the occult in their lyrical content, but very few contemporaries could match Black Sabbath's lyrics (penned for the most part by Geezer Butler) for their direct references to the topic.
Another innovation was the by-product of an accident. Tony Iommi lost the tips of two fingers on his
fretting hand while working in a sheet metal factory. Initially, he forged himself
prosthetics from a melted plastic detergent bottle. The injured fingers were understandably tender, so Iommi
downtuned his Gibson guitar from standard E to C# (starting with the third album,
Master of Reality). The reduced tension of the strings allowed him to play with less pain to his fingertips. Butler lowered his bass tuning to match Iommi's. The lower pitch gave the music a "heavier" or more substantive tone matching the music of the bands lyrics.
Black Sabbath released another album in 1971,
Master of Reality. This was the first Sabbath album to feature a significant amount of
acoustic material ("Solitude" contained a flute solo by Iommi). This is an often overlooked switch in style by Black Sabbath, as they are largely known only for their simple, heavy, dark riffs. They added more varying musical elements by the time the band released
Black Sabbath, Vol. 4 in 1972. Featuring the ballad "Changes" (containing only vocal, bass, piano and mellotron) and hard rock anthems like "Supernaut" and "Snowblind" (which included strings),
Black Sabbath, Vol. 4 was the group's most mature record to date.
|
Tony Iommi and Ozzy Osbourne in 1973 |
By 1973, the group was one of the most popular Heavy Metal bands in the world, and were a major concert attraction. Their next release,
Sabbath Bloody Sabbath, saw the band working with
Yes keyboardist
Rick Wakeman. The album contains some of the best known Black Sabbath material. Along with the title track, the album also included the space-rock styled, "Spiral Architect," and the prog-rock inspired, "A National Acrobat".
By this time the band was heavily addicted to drugs and Osbourne and Ward supposedly took
LSD every day for two years. Towards the end of Osbourne's tenure in 1978, he was so embroiled in drugs that he claims he was "very unhappy and got drunk and stoned every day". Many of the band's songs address drugs, both explicitly and implicitly.
The band was suffering major management problems (the group was managed by Osbourne's future father-in-law,
Don Arden). The management problems and then a label change in the UK from Vertigo to WWA disrupted the release schedule of the band's new album while the band was still with Warner Brothers in the US and Canada. Despite the troubles,
Sabotage was released in 1975 with continued success. However, drug problems, continued experimentation in their music style (
Gregorian chants and a chorale of monks highlighted "Supertzar"), the hard rock scene's changing environment, and some internal issues were affecting the stability and output of the band.
Technical Ecstasy (1976) turned out to be a commercial failure. The album was laden with symphony orchestras, synthesisers, and vocals from drummer
Bill Ward following a brief departure from Osbourne during the recording sessions. After the 1977 tour, Ozzy Osbourne stopped turning up at band rehearsals and the remaining band members recorded some music with singer
Dave Walker, formerly of
Fleetwood Mac. Osbourne returned to the band prior to recording the album,
Never Say Die!, released in 1978. By far the band's most experimental release, the album contained elements of many genres. Like the previous album, its sales were poor.
Due to internal conflicts and an evident lack of commitment, Ozzy Osbourne was asked to leave the band in 1979. He was replaced by former
Rainbow vocalist,
Ronnie James Dio.
1980s
Black Sabbath's next album (and first with singer
Ronnie James Dio),
Heaven and Hell, proved to be a revitalising success for the band with the band's highest charting since 1975's
Sabotage. It was on this tour that Dio popularised the
mano cornuto hand gesture, which has since become a symbol of heavy metal music in general. The album also marked the inclusion of
Quartz's guitarist-turned-keyboardist
Geoff Nicholls (Nicholls has not been consistently credited as an official member, and has often been forced to play live shows from backstage for supposed aesthetic purposes, but he has co-written many songs and has stayed with Black Sabbath through all subsequent incarnations). Also during the tour, drummer
Bill Ward quit the band for personal reasons (both his parents died within a rather short period, and Ward was struggling with
alcoholism and other addictions). Drummer
Vinny Appice joined to complete the tour and then record the next album
Mob Rules, whose title track appeared in the movie
Heavy Metal.
The unauthorised release in 1980 of the live bootleg
Live at Last (recorded in the
Ozzy Osbourne era during the 1972 Volume 4 tour) prompted the band to properly record a live album on the Mob Rules tour, titled
Live Evil. However, during the mixing of Live Evil, internal band problems and nasty accusations developed, which led to Dio and Appice quitting the band to form
Dio. Bill Ward returned to the drum throne and
Ian Gillan of
Deep Purple fame became the new singer. To quote the singer ; "I had no plans to join Black Sabbath. I went out with Geezer and Tony and we got drunk, and I found out the next day that I agreed to join the band. And they're such nice guys. It was great fun and it paid the bills, I had a lovely year with them and that was it."
This line-up recorded the album
Born Again, but
Bill Ward again dropped out of the band before the tour, being replaced by
Bev Bevan of
Electric Light Orchestra. Although the album surprisingly ended up being one of their most successful ones to date (hitting #4 in the UK charts), things did not last, as
Ian Gillan left to reunite with
Deep Purple. Drummer
Bill Ward once again returned to the fold, and the hiring of new singer
David Donato was officially announced in 1984. However, after six months worth of rehearsals, American Donato was discharged by management when Iommi and Butler squabbled over financial issues.
At this point, the band's credibility-destroying line-up changes,
Ozzy Osbourne's increasing success in his solo career and side-taking from music critics combined to put the band under Osbourne's shadow. Founding member
Geezer Butler quit and formed the
Geezer Butler Band, which did not end up releasing any albums. The original line-up of Black Sabbath reunited for one three-song show at
Live Aid in 1985. After this, Tony Iommi decided to record a solo album and enlisted the help of long-time Sabbath keyboardist
Geoff Nicholls (who was finally made an official member) and vocalist
Glenn Hughes, formerly of
Deep Purple and
Trapeze.
Tony Iommi also got engaged to famous female heavy metal star
Lita Ford, and enlisted the help of her band's bassist (
Dave "The Beast" Spitz) and drummer
Eric Singer, (later of
KISS and
Alice Cooper) to round off the line-up. However, management and record company pressure caused the album
Seventh Star to be released as
Black Sabbath featuring Tony Iommi.
There is a certain amount of controversy around the
Seventh Star album involving
Jeff Fenholt, who claims to have been Sabbath's lead singer for about seven months[
9]. He claims that he left the band due to its incompatability with his
faith. Sabbath members maintain that he was never actually part of the band, only that he recorded some demos for Iommi's solo album. Supposedly some of the material on
Seventh Star was written by an uncredited Fenholt.
Early in the tour for
Seventh Star in 1986,
Glenn Hughes got into a fist fight, and suffered severe blood clotting in his throat which made him lose his voice. An unknown young American singer by the name of
Ray Gillen (no relation to
Ian Gillan) was tapped for the job and finished the tour. The morale in the band was very high when they started recording
The Eternal Idol (former drummer
Bev Bevan had returned as a percussionist, and a second bassist,
Bob Daisley, was also involved), but the new Black Sabbath hit a devastating series of catastrophes involving mismanagement and financial debt, mainly from poorly planned use of expensive recording studios. As a result
Ray Gillen left the band during the recording sessions. He later hooked up with ex-Ozzy Osbourne guitarist
Jake E. Lee to form the rather successful band
Badlands (which would later include Eric Singer).
Birmingham-born singer
Tony Martin (ex The Alliance) was brought in to re-record all of Gillen's original vocals on the
Eternal Idol tapes, and the album was finally released. Tony "The Cat" Martin proved to be the perfect vocalist for the newly revitalised Black Sabbath. Though he somewhat resembled Dio, Martin clearly had his own style.
After the recording of
The Eternal Idol, most of the band quit Sabbath, leaving Iommi, Martin, and Nicholls to recruit bassist
Jo Burt and former
Clash drummer
Terry Chimes for the short-lived 1987
Eternal Idol tour.
In early 1988,
Kerrang! magazine ran a story that Vegas-lounge singer
Tom Jones had joined
Tony Iommi and
Bill Ward in Black Sabbath. This later became known as a hoax, possibly due to the fact that it was the April issue of the magazine and during the shifting lineups of the 1980s, the
Kerrang! staff seemed to enjoy poking fun at Black Sabbath as it then existed.
1990s, 2000s
However, some degree of band stability finally came back to Black Sabbath by 1988 with the retention of
Tony Martin and
Geoff Nicholls and the addition of loyal drummer
Cozy Powell, who replaced
Terry Chimes. Powell, a legendary drummer, had had success with his own band, as well as with
Rainbow,
Whitesnake,
ELP and many others. With bassist
Laurence Cottle replacing Jo Burt, Sabbath released the critically acclaimed
Headless Cross album in 1989, their most Satanic and occult-based album so far. An
MTV video for the title track received considerable airplay, and was released to mostly positive reviews. After the
Headless Cross sessions, Laurence Cottle was replaced by veteran bassist
Neil Murray (a former bandmate of
Cozy Powell's in
Whitesnake). Sabbath released
Tyr in 1990. The group toured extensively throughout 1990 and 1991 to support the
Tyr album.
Tony Iommi cleaned house in 1992 to reunite the classic 1980s lineup of Black Sabbath (although what was to become the
Dehumanizer line-up had originally been Iommi/Butler/Powell before
Cozy Powell suffered a hip injury) Founding member
Geezer Butler, along with
Ronnie James Dio and
Vinny Appice, joined up with
Tony Iommi once again (this was the same line-up from 1981's
Mob Rules and 1982's
Live Evil) and together they recorded
Dehumanizer (1992). Playing to larger audiences than they had in nearly a decade, the rejuvenated Sabbath enjoyed renewed success with the
Dehumanizer album and tour. It was around this time that Ozzy Osbourne announced his retirement from touring and proposed that Black Sabbath open his final two shows at
Costa Mesa. When Dio refused to participate, Iommi, Butler and Appice agreed to appear without him.
Dio quit to return to his highly successful solo band, and
Rob Halford,
Judas Priest singer, was brought in as a last-minute replacement (specifically for this event only). The original Black Sabbath lineup, including
Bill Ward, reunited to close the second night of performances, on November 15, 1992, performing four songs. In the end,
Ozzy Osbourne decided not to retire (following his "No More Tours" tour with the aptly titled "Retirement Sucks" tour), and contracts were all ready for a new album and tour from the original Black Sabbath line-up, but then Osbourne decided at the last minute that he did not want to do it.
After the Dio/Halford debacle,
Vinny Appice was replaced by former
Rainbow drummer
Bobby Rondinelli. Vocalist
Tony Martin and keyboardist
Geoff Nicholls returned to the band and Black Sabbath recorded
Cross Purposes, and
Cross Purposes Live, a CD and video combination, which was released in late 1994, after which
Bobby Rondinelli left the group mid-tour. His replacement for the rest of the tour was, surprisingly, original Black Sabbath drummer
Bill Ward. After the tour, both Ward and Butler parted ways with Iommi, Martin, and Nicholls.
Another reunion was on tap in 1995. This time the
Tyr-era group would again join forces, as drummer
Cozy Powell and bassist
Neil Murray rejoined Iommi, Martin, and Nicholls for
Forbidden. The album was produced by
Ernie C of the pioneering
rap metal group
Body Count. To date,
Forbidden remains Black Sabbath's last full-length studio album recorded by any line-up. After the recording of the album, Cozy Powell left again and was replaced for the tour by a returning
Bobby Rondinelli.
In 1996,
Castle Records outside the U.S. and Canada remastered and re-released Black Sabbath's catalogue on CD up through
Eternal Idol (1987), and a 1988-1995 compilation titled
The Sabbath Stones was released to finish
Tony Iommi's contract with the record label.
In 1996,
Ozzy Osbourne launched his wildly successful
Ozzfest metal festival tour, which he headlined on a nightly basis. On the 1997 tour, for the last part of his set each night, he was joined by Geezer Butler and Tony Iommi for a rundown on several Sabbath classics (
Faith No More drummer
Mike Bordin was on drums). However, in December 1997, original drummer Bill Ward joined forces with Osbourne, Iommi, and Butler to reform the original Black Sabbath for the first time since their brief reunion at Live-Aid in 1985 and 1992.
Black Sabbath have since released at least one authorised double-CD compilation, one double-CD live compilation, and an eight CD box set. The band had writing sessions together in 2001, and played one new song ("Scary Dreams") on the subsequent tour. However, a new studio album has yet to be released. The band initially began work on a new album in 2001 with legendary producer
Rick Rubin, but Ozzy's solo contract has delayed, and perhaps killed, further progress on the album. The band took three years off before returning to the road in 2004 to headline yet another
Ozzfest tour, celebrating their 35th anniversary. For 2005,
Ozzy Osbourne performed with Black Sabbath in his Ozzfest tour, which also featured
Iron Maiden. On keyboards for 2005 shows was
Rick Wakeman's son
Adam.
In November 2005, Black Sabbath were inducted into the
UK Music Hall of Fame, and the original line-up played at the awards ceremony. That same month it was also announced that they would be inducted into the US
Rock and Roll Hall of Fame on
March 13,
2006.
In 1985, the original members of Black Sabbath (Iommi/Butler/Osbourne/Ward) reunited for the
Live Aid benefit concert. They played only three songs ("Children Of The Grave", "
Iron Man" and "
Paranoid").
|
Black Sabbath on stage, "Reunion Tour" 1999 |
In 1992, the 1980-1982 version of Black Sabbath (Iommi/Butler/Dio/Appice) reunited and toured for the album
Dehumanizer.
In 1992, the original members of Black Sabbath played three songs after one of Ozzy Osbourne's "retirement" concerts in Costa Mesa, California.
In 1995, the 1989-1991 version of the band (Iommi/Powell/Martin/Murray/Nicholls) reunited for the album and tour for
Forbidden.
In 1997-98, the original members of Black Sabbath reunited, toured and released
Reunion. In 1999, 2001, 2004 and 2005 the original Black Sabbath reunited again and toured on Osbourne's Ozzfest. Since at least 2001, there have been rumors of new album with new songs, but to date, nothing has surfaced, and no formal plans to record have been made. In late December
2005, [
10] has reported that Osbourne was afraid that a new album would not match the same standard as the old albums, making it unlikely that a new one will ever surface.
For most of their career, Black Sabbath rarely received any critical praise ("blundering bozos" was one description). But the late 1980s and early 1990s saw a fairly radical reappraisal of the group: not only of their instrumental skills (which were better than they were generally given credit for) but also because they had become widely acknowledged as some of the most influential pioneers in the heavy metal field. Osbourne himself received an
NME award for "godlike genius" in 2004.
Heavy metal sub-genres
Doom metal,
Stoner metal, and
Sludge metal reflect a direct influence from Black Sabbath, especially the slower, heavier style on the band's earlier albums.
Some of the incidents and characters in the spoof rock documentary
This Is Spinal Tap are based on Black Sabbath. For example the Stonehenge stage set idea in the film was taken from a real stage used by Black Sabbath for their Born Again Tour. In contrast to the set in the film, in which Stonehenge was made too small to be very imposing on stage, the Black Sabbath version of Stonehenge was in fact
too large to fit in many of the arenas the band played in. The eventual fate of the set is not clear, although Iommi has said it was probably abandoned on a loading dock somewhere.
Some
grunge and
alternative rock groups such as
Alice in Chains,
Soundgarden and
Silverchair are influenced by the Sabbath sound. Hardcore legends
Black Flag have claimed Black Sabbath as one of their major influences. Black Flag vocalist
Henry Rollins wrote the liner notes for
Black Box: The Complete Original Black Sabbath (1970-1978) released in 2004. "
Sweet Leaf's" main riff was played by the
Red Hot Chili Peppers at the end of their own number "Give It Away".
Soundgarden, alongside bands such as
Corrosion of Conformity,
Soulfly,
Therapy?,
White Zombie,
Megadeth,
Ugly Kid Joe and others including
Iron Maiden vocalist
Bruce Dickinson appeared on the "Nativity in Black: Tribute to Black Sabbath" series, proving that the legendary band continues to be an inspiration.
Black Sabbath has also inspired bands outside of the heavy metal or hard rock genres.
The Cardigans, for instance, have occasionally covered their songs on their own albums.
Shooter Jennings included a riff from "Sweet Leaf" in his 2005 song, "Busted in Baylor County."
In
1987 Anthrax covered "Sabbath Bloody Sabbath" on their
EP single "
I'm The Man."
In
1993, the
American death metal band
Cannibal Corpse covered "Zero the Hero" on the single
EP Hammer Smashed Face.
In
1994, the heavy metal band
Pantera released a cover of "Planet Caravan" on their album
Far Beyond Driven.
Also in
1994,
Danzig guitarist
John Christ has told
Guitar School that the song "Her Black Wings", which appears on their second album
Danzig II: Lucifuge, compares the riff of "Zero the Hero".
Danzig has also released a song cover of "Hand of Doom" on their
1996 album
Blackacidevil.
Black Sabbath have also heavily influenced
Alternative Metal band
System of a down.
SOAD have covered many
Black Sabbath songs, including
Snowblind (song),
Iron Man (song), and Children of the Grave.
After repeatedly being passed over by the
Rock and Roll Hall of Fame since becoming eligible in 1997,
Ozzy Osbourne famously demanded that Black Sabbath be removed from consideration for the institution. In 1999, Osbourne said after Black Sabbath was passed over their second year of eligibility, "Just take our name off the list. Save the ink." His basis for this position was that because the fans did not select the members, it was "totally irrelevant". The
Rock & Roll Hall of Fame ignored this request and Black Sabbath was finally inducted by
Metallica members
James Hetfield and
Lars Ulrich on March 13, 2006.
Elton John is a huge fan of Black Sabbath, and once said it is the only
hard rock group he likes.
The albums in this section are official "band sponsored" albums, and are released with the cooperation and authorization of the band that existed at the time of the release.
Albums
Compilation albums
*1975 -
We Sold Our Soul for Rock 'n' Roll (Iommi, Osbourne, Butler, Ward); #35 UK, #48 US
*1996 -
Under Wheels of Confusion (compilation 1970-1987)
*1996 -
The Sabbath Stones (compilation of 1983-1995 material)
*2002 -
Symptom of the Universe: The Original Black Sabbath 1970-1978 (compilation - Iommi, Osbourne, Butler, Ward)
*2004 -
Black Box: The Complete Original Black Sabbath (1970-1978) (box set - Iommi, Osbourne, Butler, Ward)
*2006 -
Greatest Hits 1970-1978 (compilation - Iommi, Osbourne, Butler, Ward)
The albums in this section are not official, as they were not released with the cooperation of band management, and are generally released by record companies, not the band itself.
*1980 -
Live at Last (Live from 1973 - Iommi, Osbourne, Butler, Ward); #5 UK. Eventually remastered and officially released as one of the two
Past Lives discs.
*1973, 1976, 2000 -
The Best of Black Sabbath (several different compilation albums under this title)
*1976 -
The Original (compilation, Germany)
*1978 -
Rock Heavies (compilation, Germany)
*1983 -
The Best (compilation, Australia)
*1983 -
The Very Best of Black Sabbath (compilation, South Africa)
*1984, 1987 -
The Kings of Hell (compilation, Brazil)
*1985 -
The Collection (compilation, UK)
*1991 -
Backtrackin (compilation, Australia)
*1991 -
Children of the Grave (essentially the
Vol. 4 album with an added live version of "Children of the Grave")
*2006 -
Paranoid (
DVD)
* 1970 - "
Paranoid" #4
* 1978 - "
Never Say Die" #21
* 1978 - "Hard Road" #33
* 1980 - "Neon Knights" #22
* 1980 - "Paranoid" (re-issue) #14
* 1982 - "Turn up the Night" #37
* 1992 - "TV Crimes" #33
*
Official Tony Iommi webpage*
Authorized band info site