Mind to throw actual reasoning into it or is it just a troll comment cause from a guitarist this is literally wild to just come up with at a time where that sound wasn't around
The way he jumps out of his seat, because through the power of technology, just for those few seconds, his buddy was standing in that room playing. Very emotional.
Imagine sitting with Ozzy Osbourne, listening to his original, unmixed recording of a timeless, classic piece of art for the 1st time since he created that magic... And then talking over it lol.
When they isolated the solo and Ozzy stood up it was like he was standing up to go look at what his friend was doing. Can't imagine how much he misses Randy Rhoades.
It brings me peace to know that when ozzy does go we will miss him but he's gonna be so happy to see randy Rhoades again. it hurts my heart seeing how much he misses his friend
A proper gentleman. He seemed (rightly) upset at the spectacle they were trying to make out of his reaction. Poor chap was hearing a recording of a friend who tragically passed away at such a young age. Imagine that was you, there in that moment. I'd snap
Your comment just jumped up and gripped me by the throat...the emotion of it all. I grew up idolizing Randy's guitar playing. Crazy train belongs somewhere at the very top of the Mount Everest of music...where the air is so thin you don't get to stay there very long.
666th like. If I recall correctly, shortly before Randy Passed away, he was teaching kids how to play classical guitar. Him and Chuck Schuldiner (singer/guitarist for death) are arguably some of the best metal guitar players to exist.
I'm less than convinced he'd have recorded too many more albums with Ozzy if he had lived. (Maybe 2 or 3) He seemed genuinely interested in teaching and stretching out beyond hard rock/metal...but it would have been nice to see (hear)
@@jasonggabbott Yeah if you watch the Ozzy and Jack world tour thing, he is always jumping up getting ready to go before he should be like he gets impatient or something.
Looking at Ozzie with his head down during that solo, that moment of silence and reverence... It got me to tears. It's like losing a brother or something
Same here, the true emotion and spiritual like look on Ozzy's face was surreal. He said he had never listened to that since the recording. So I can only imagine what he saw and felt right there. So much heart in this crazy man. I grew up learning about Ozzy and Black Sabbath and the legacy from my dad. I didn't fully understand it until I got older but even from the very beginning I just knew my dad was being honest the way he described moments of their prime. Now I understand it. To me at least. Ozzy was and still is just a dreamer. My grandma has never been a fan of metal or even rock music by no means. Just not of her understanding. But for a very long time she will tell me how much she loves Ozzy's song Dreamer. When she passes I hope to listen to it alone to feel her spirit is still near.
It's a pretty dick move that these guys, whatever the comparison is for ambulance chasing, basically force him to listen for internet clicks. his first reaction was, "No [i don't need to hear it]"
I just noticed this recently, but a lot of Sabbath and his solo work is about love. Look at the end of Children of The Grave for example. Ozzy really is a loving man.
Lol he died as an enemy but lived as a brother. Randy did a lot of things to demean Ozzy in the time before he died. He slept with Sharon and did some other things.
What a terrible loss. You can tell Ozzy really honestly misses him. That whole era represents a Phoenix rising from the ashes..as Ozzy made his comeback from the death of Black Sabbath. It's amazing he survived through that, let alone he's still alive now.
I think it's partly regret. They had a fight the night before Randy died about Ozzy's drinking and the last thing Randy said to him was "You'll kill yourself one of these day."
When Ozzy said "He died" it wasn't because he didn't think anyone knew you could just tell he was about to get choked up and he just had to say something about his friend in that moment. I have moments like that with a friend I lost recently and seeing it in someone else really just made it hit home.
@@chrisadmaley I think that’s a little disrespectful given that he’s had a long ass career with so much happen in it and even if drugs and alcohol weren’t part of it he wouldn’t remember everything AND that Randy died a long time ago, he probably didn’t know just how much these younger lads knew.
He's an old guy, he was literally just telling someone who might not know that he died. In that forthright way old people do. But Internet people gotta manufacture deeper meanings in everything. Edgy.
Jack is cool because he doesn't have the bitterness of not achieving all the great things his Dad did --- he just appreciates them like a loving son would
was looking for a comment like this.. i still have chills running through my body up n down. truly amazing getting to hear the master... truly amazing musician
I understand him fine. But I'm from Western Pennsylvanian and I grew up dealing with how Amish people talk. And being literally between Pittsburgh and Youngstown you deal with accents daily. But hey I apparently got one too I just don't notice it.
It’s insane how much just a single guitar can fill an entire room with sound. It’s like it didn’t even need any background. The solo alone was so full sounding
I felt it welled up in Ozzy the swagger they both had all those decades ago... time dulls our edges, but hearing it, re-sharpened Ozzy's edge for just that moment...
TBH, I think he got up thinking they were leaving or wanting to leave and then he looked around and saw everyone was still standing and listening so he did too.
superchef78 thinking about how someone’s good friend died unexpectedly in a plane crash in not even his mid 20s while seeing the emotion in his surviving friend’s actions here? I didn’t well up from it but it is sad to think about this guy suddenly cut down in his absolute prime.
I watched this the other night it was really quite sad, you could tell after all those years just how much Ozzy still misses him and how much the music took him back in time
Charlie Longley There were rumors that Randy wanted to leave after the Diary tour to get a degree in classical guitar and eventually become a teacher so it's likely he wouldn't be with Ozzy now. Maybe he would've left and eventually come back, maybe not. Unfortunately, we will never know.
Ozzy still misses Randy Rhoads to this day. Ozzy's major structure to his success was Randy and his awesome guitar playing and outrageous picking solos. Randy and Ozzy really had that brother relationship when they made music and performed together. Randy was like a twin brother separated from birth to Ozzy. Ozzy has a lot of gratitude to Rhoads to his success in his solo career. Ozzy even has flowers sent and delivered to his grave every year on the anniversary of his death. Ozzy and Sharon used to take them in person, but fans picked up on it, so they don't do it anymore because there would be Ozzy fans waiting for them to show up on that day, they think it's rude for people to wait around and stalk them when they're supposed to be celebrating an anniversary and grieving for the loss of their dear friend. Rhoads will always be Ozzy's favorite guitar player because he knew the sound Ozzy wanted and enjoyed when they wrote songs, it was like Randy had Ozzy's brain plugged into his that was also plugged into his guitar
I love Ozzy because he's such an unlikely survivor, a rock star who beat the odds, and managed to grow old on his terms. Granted he bears the scars of his past, but when so many of his contemporaries either succumbed to the excesses that were the elements of being a rock star in the '70's (and '80's, '90's, etc) he's managed to not only survive - not only keep his ties with his band mates - but to keep on producing music that's relevant within his genre. Yeah, just like Lemmy, Ozzy is a part of my own life's history, and is as much family as he is a rock god.
Randy was kind of a freak accident though. He didn't go out like most Rockstar's but you are still right about it being a result of the lifestyle. Randy's body was tested and they only found nicotine so he was clean at the time. They even lied to him and said they would take it easy and he believed them because one of the people on the plane had a heart condition.
I remember reading somewhere that a large reason for ozzy still being alive is he has a genetic mutation and that his life style would of killed a normal man years ago. Can’t confirm this to be true but is crazy if it is.
That smile at 2:54 anyone who loves music and the skill it takes to play something like that solo knows that feeling, happy enough to put a smile on but them chills and a lump in the throat came with it. One of the best solos ever.
My jaw hit the ground when that started. That thing just absolutely blisters, screams and roars! The mixed version sounds like crap by comparison. They should really issue a remix.
@@TheWitchOvAgnesi it sounds good because it is solo'd. When you have all the tracks and you have to mix it down and master it, a lot of compression & eq has to happen for everything to "fit" in the mix. When there are major frequency overlaps of vocals, bass, guitar & drums it sounds like a muddy mess.
@@dfpguitar Exactly. Which is why they should take another look at it now and use a different mixing approach and re-evaluate the gain and frequency structures for everything. Then again, maybe it'd only improve a minor amount. But with 192K now, you'd think they could still improve it somehow.
@@TheWitchOvAgnesi In the 00s record companies released DVD / Hi Res audio discs of all the big classic records that people love, stuff like the Beatles, queen, the who, led Zeppelin, black Sabbath etc.. But they were never popular anywhere outside of Japan. In the rest of the world most people ditched the concept of large quality home hifi for the convenience of highly compressed MP3 on portable players. This continues to this day, where almost no one has a home stereo with proper amp and speakers anymore. People have those little Bluetooth speakers and are very content. You should see if you can get hold of one of those DVD audio discs, sometimes they are mixed in 5.1 so you can hear all the instruments better.
@@dfpguitar Sadly, every single thing you say is once again true. Audiophile-dom is rare today. I used to work in a high-end audio-visual store (Thiel, Martin-Logan, Nautilus-era B&W, etc.), but when I mentioned this to non-audiophiles, inevitably their reaction was either "I can't tell the difference" or "How can you tell the difference?" It's only gotten worse... I'll look into the DVDs you mention. I know of their existence, but my path in music has shifted to the more extreme end of metal since my days in that store, so I don't necessarily spend my time in the genres that would benefit most from hi-fidelity (although the trend is slowly changing with some acts in metal). And I do still have a home system, but it is very humble and admittedly mainly used for home theater applications more than music appreciation. But that's more of a reflection of not having enough free time to simply sit and enjoy music as I used to. Thankfully what I listen to today doesn't suffer as much on junk audio... LOL
For a lot of us, it takes going through years of addiction and loss to fully decide that we are ready to grow up. Choosing to self medicate doesn’t make you a weak person, but overcoming addiction 100% makes you a strong one!
Jack has ( had ) a Family - he also has MS, But he cleaned up long ago and had a career in Television on it's first year when he woke up blind one day...MS does things like that..his sight was only gone for a day, but it was not the result of Dugs etc...Ozzy Blamed himself for Jacks MS - becaise of all the drugs and such he did prior to jack being born,,,But he was assured by Docs the MS is NOT his fault..
@@bryananderson3772 he might be slurring his words (not to mention the Brummie accent) and he's keeping a stiff upper lip....but his gestures tell the tale. Rhoads was a once-in-a-lifetime talent, and Ozzy knew it.
There is something about hearing isolated tracks on famous songs. You kind of take the music for granted until you hear the musicians out of the mix and realize how unbelievable they really are. I was lucky enough to hear some of Freddy Mercury's isolated tracks, and while I was always a fan, that day he became a legend to me. Ungodly power.
I always recommend people listen to some of the beatles ones. Some of the drums and bass riffs sound insane when they're isolated. They were doing way more experimental stuff than how it sounds all mixed together.
I like that as well because it humanizes the player. Listening to those isolated tracks, you hear how they weren't doubled perfectly like the magazines said. You hear unwanted string noise, but it all gets buried in the mix. It goes to show that not even the greats are perfect, and just how important attitude is in your playing.
Wow!! Ozzy stands up so fast at one point and you can see the sadness in his body language and the amazement how great RR is. My heart breaks for all of connected to him. To hear Rudy say he was sitting in a church after then incident and Ozzy was in the back crying by himself. Such a sad time, but what Randy left us is timeless and my kids will know and hear his music.
Back in the 90's he did a meet and greet signing after his show at a local record store. I had a tour book and I gave my GF a Randy Rhodes poster. He was moving along with the signing of items. When it came to the poster he stopped stared at it looked up at us, smiled and just took a pause to reminisce.
The best part of that solo is its layered, recorded 2x overlayed. the end of it after the tapping, he purposely played the riff one fret off. To make it sound more chaotic. And so many people that tried to cover it failed because you cant with 1 guitar.
at 2:33 when they isolate the track, you can see Ozzy stand up because he is almost uncomfortable with the flood of nostalgia and emotion even after all these years and he takes on an almost reverent posture. Put a lump in my throat and almost brought a tear to my eye because I too wish I could have seen how much more Randy had to offer to the world of music and sad that he was taken so quickly.
Ozzie is still really suffering from the loss. It's raw to him. I knew it was hard on him after watching how close they were on stage. RIP Randy. We'll see you again someday.
I noticed Ozzys fur go up as well .. got to be tough to listen to the friend/guitar player that brought you back your fame ,,, and not having him there to share it with you .. I bought both Blizzard and Diary a week after they came out .. Randy changed the way hard rock guitar was played .. the only other guy at the time was Eddie VH .. But Randy was a scholared classical musician ,, his first true love .. and brought the two together … ICON
@Marque Markofthebeast You are a WEAPONS GRADE MORON - I was in the Industry in Los Angeles when it happened and Randy had countless Friends that like Ozzy that STILL think of him,...Tell us all something, WHY would Randy NEED to fake a Death ???...I REALLY Can't wait to hear your educated ( yet unconnected ) explanation...one more thing...He is STILL considered a part of Ozzy's life because his Talent left an influence on Ozzy and his music.
That's *guilt* because he punched Randy in the face a few days before his bus driver killed him in a freak accident high on coke ( yes coke was found in AYcock's system) The story that Sharon and Ozzy has been putting out for decades is one of some kind of romance between Randy and Ozzy. It couldn't be further from the truth, Randy desperately wanted to leave, Ozzy punched him in the face and made everything 10 times worse, then his bus driver killed him.
I think the isolated solo made him uncomfortable, in a very emotional and personal way that the others in the room (and ourselves watching) can't even imagine. He must have heard Randy playing isolated like that back in the recording/writing days and I think for those few moments he felt that special connection with his friend again. I feel like it was that, combined with his obvious love and respect, that compelled him to stand up and be as present as he could to listen to it and enjoy that moment. It's pretty obvious he knew how hearing the recording would affect him because of his relunctance to even hear it in the first place. I'm glad he did though, I know it's hard but he should celebrate the time he shared with him, not the time he lost
When you lose someone that you loved dearly, you don't really want to be confronted with a reminder of them that is gonna unlock all those feelings that you kept hidden for years. Because part of moving on with life, is that you come to terms with losing that love one and not having to face the hurt all the time. You can remember then fondly, yes. But it has to be on your own terms, tho.
For me, I'm happy to be able to hear raw unmixed tape of my favorite guitarist, for Ozzy it was reliving the tragic loss of a close friend. I think he was afraid he might lose his composure, and didn't want to do it on camera, which I don't blame him.
when Ozzy stood up during the isolated solo... It hit me how even after all these years, it blew Ozzy's mind how amazing that solo was and just how talented Randy was.. to make this old guy pop up from his chair.. stirs the emotions for sure. Awesome stuff
I think he more started getting emotional because he wanted Randy to be there. That solo reminds him of Randy being alive and writing songs with him. Truly was a great guitarist but you can sense… he just wants his friend back so they can make music.
Music can be a time machine. I think he may have stood up to flee the studio as decades old wounds came to life for Ozzy. He stayed because for those precious few seconds his brain toldd him his friend was still alive...just my speculation. Truly heartbreaking.
I think it was both, like you want to go out but at same time you didn't resist to listen that magic sounds. Big hard emotions may surface and I think it worth judging them at all.
@@aatsista it doesn't have anything to do with the tape other than the fact that because it was limited, people strived to get the source as good as possible. Whenever you hear a mix that's incredible, it's actually mainly because the recording sounds good in the first place, then the mixer makes everything mesh perfectly.
Yes. When you’re in the studio and someone is recording their part, you’re sitting with the engineer just jamming. It probably took him right back to that moment and he jumped out his seat. ❤
When Jack asked him to listen to the tape Ozzy reacted the same way my mom does whenever we suggest to look at old photographs or talk about anything related to her parents and siblings (They've all passed away now). That "Nooo!" Is pure grief right there, doesn't mean they don't want to remember, it's just that it's still too painful, like pouring salt on an open wound.
I unexpectedly lost my wife Chris 4 years ago this past Dec 23rd 2019. Not wanting to look at videos or listen to audio or look at pictures with other people, Its self protection mode. It been 4 years and I love her more today than I did when she died. For me, I don't want people to see me break down.... it's private. Ozzy might have felt that way. I don't doubt he wanted to listen to it.....but in private.
I think it's really dependent on the person...one of my grandmas was the same, while the other loved to look through old pictures and tell us stories. And my uncle passed fairly recently, and my aunt keeps his picture everywhere and has his greeting on her answering machine. Grief sucks, but the one thing I've noticed and experienced is that everyone deals with it in completely different ways.
ina way its even more tough then looking at a old photo of the person; Ozzy is hearing his beloved friend playing his passion here. and also playing a song they wrote together that was probably THE song that transformed ozzys life and indirectly ended Randy's
The fact that he stood up and bowed his head during the entirety of that Solo tells you just how much respect he had for a man younger than himself, and only around and playing for a very short time. That man earned the respect of one of the loosest cannons on the planet, one of the few things that could ground Ozzy it would seem
The fact that Ozzy Osborne is still alive and in music videos with Post Malone is a miracle in and of itself. We should cherish that we still have 1 or 2 rock gods left.
He was Pre Malone, is now Post Malone, and presumably will be Post Post Malone. Quantum Physicists theorize that his presence in our spacetime is a projection from outside the Post Malone universe. This Malonian superposition is known as the quantum state of Meta Malone
I went to Jr high school in Burbank where he grew up. I remember hearing about his death in PE class and guys who were his neighbors and people who actually knew him were balling their eyes out. As I have lived here for 40 years I have gotten to know a lot of people and every once in awhile someone breaks out an old picture of Randy. He made quite the mark in this little town. His mom used to come into my work and write checks...I would always look at them but never got the courage to tell her how great her son was. The fact she kept coming to me for help told me I had made the right decision. It must have been hard for her to hear from people all the time about him. Like a bandaid being torn off daily. When she passed I was glad for her as she would get to see her son again and be at peace.
@@NuclearNuke41 thats foolish.. you will NOT know.. until it is "too late" perhaps.. so then what good would faith do you then? And all the forced silencing while on earth..?
@@serhafiye7046 Ya, he was obviously standing to leave and when he saw that others were still engaged he just decided to finish listening to it. I couldn't say what emotions were going through him.
@@dragonpup1 I had a panic attack this one time once I thought it was over, I got up and I was looking for a buddy that passed away in a car crash 4 years prior. Reading that made me cry man.
I think RR's death affected him deeply and it still does. That's why his later videos, music and literally everyrhing is so much different and kind of bleak compared to the stuff he did when he was with RR.
had nothing to do with respect .. he was remembering the time of the recording and got into the music and prob taken aback abit as well. a lot of feelings. i guess. But i am very confident ozzy getting up from that chair, had absolutely nothing to with him "showing respect" like some of you seem to think. he did what most people would do when having an experience like this - they get emotional.
That solo sounds so unbelievably clean. The musicianship to play it that well for the recording in a day when mixing multiple takes was fairly rare. Just a killer sound and played beautifully.
Go back and listen to it again and compare it to a cover or someone else in the band playing it. You can hear how many notes get missed. That isolated solo changed the whole dynamic of the song so much that I can never unhear it.
@@XMorbidReignX Are you seriously trying to say the person who wrote the part and recorded it for the album got it wrong, but the people covering got it right because they added notes? Yeah, that logic doesn't work. You can argue that they improved on what he wrote, but it's pretty dang silly to assume the guy who wrote it missed notes while cover bands got it right.
@@bobdole4916 It may have been poorly written. What I was trying to say is that you can tell how many notes OTHERS have missed when you compare it to this recording.
But listening to that isolated solo, all it did for me was prove, without question every cover or play after Randy is just insignificant. I can hear how many notes people miss now and I can never EVER unhear that.
That solo, honestly🥺 When Ozzy stands up, it shows how much he meant to him. Incredible respect. Randy Rhoads was an unbelievably good guitarist who was taken from us much too soon.
Ozzy is tormented by the fact that Randy's death was senseless. Of all the way musicians go, there was no downward spiral. It was a damn shame we lost him so young.
I still remember that day, cried like a baby. I was 11 and Randy and EVH were Idols, both awesome and both in different ways. I often wondered what an album with Eddie and Randy would've sounded like lol.
Man... hearing Ozzy say "He died.." Like they didn't know, and he hadn't *just* told them about how much he had meant to him and thought about him maybe a minute before... My heart broke. Then him standing up during the isolated solo and look around like "Where is he?!" I couldn't even focus on the music. The human condition is a bitch.
I remember playing basketball in my driveway when they announced his death on the radio that day. We were mouth open for at least five minutes. Randy’s style was very unique, that much is obvious. What some people don’t know is that what made it so unique (other than his beautiful classical trained ability to play, and write like a genius), is that he always double recorded all of his leads. The slight differences between recordings would give it that full stereo but slightly off unique sound. Was brilliant.
I've worked in recording studios and know how hard it is for anyone to match solos note for note, and Randy was someone who could do that repeatedly without effort. Truly a guitar genius.
@@Ampelmannchen42 The best part is each recording was a little melodically different in a few places, and people to this day wonder whether it was mere human error from an improvised solo, or intentional harmony to add depth to the track. Either way, divine.
I never met my half uncle, but for some reason every time I listen to him, I feel like I really miss him. I’ve only ever been told stories from my Dad growing up and from his sister Kathy. He was a bit timid and shy, but had such a sweet heart. If he wasn’t the best I’m not sure who was. I can’t even begin to imagine what he would have accomplished by now. I really wish I could have met him. Love you Uncle Randy ❤️
I've heard Crazy Train since I was a kid. But, this is the first time I hear Randy's solo isolated. This is so freaky hearing it so crisp, clear and alone. It's as if Randy was recording it at this exact moment. No wonder Ozzy had to stand up out of respect to Randy to hear the solo.
Are you differentiating people based on whether they have picked up the instrument or not? As to preserve the unknown potential within each living being?
@@Awes0m3n3s5 Oh, i thought he might have made some meta comment on our fit to frame culture and the untold loss of potential caused by the school system and enforcement of a large working class population.
I feel, that when he stood up, he was right back at the day they were recording! He's visioning Randy right there! That had to be a powerful moment for Ozzy and one that not many get to experience.
I can actually understand what Ozzy is feeling there because i feel the same thing. Lost my brother about 3 years ago to suicide, and he was an Amazing guitar player, and when i hear songs that he used to play (Crazy train being one of them) i can hear him playing and its almost like he was in another room just around the corner, and it feels like hes there again for just a brief little while. when they isolated the guitar solo that actually made me cry because all i could hear was my Brother Scott and it brought me back to when we were teenagers and he was learning to play and eventually mastered that solo.
i lost my mom to suicide when i was 8 years old and she was a bass player so i can relate sometimes i feel like i can hear the rumbling of her bass in the other room
When I was 15/16 years old, in the early 80's, my band let a girl guitarist join. She told us her guitar teacher was Randy Rhoads (I don't remember for how many years), but we didn't know his name at the time. For a teenager, she rocked her Les Paul pretty hard and I've always wondered how much of a difference it made in her playing, having Rhoads as a teacher. She was definitely too metal for us.
@@darth9302 he's not talking about an age gap pr anything like that; just that talking about 15 year olds smashing is a little weird if you think about it.
It literally sounds so raw, amazing but with enough imperfections that it sounds like it's being played by a real person standing right in front of you in the moment. That's fucking wild. You can tell my man is tearing up behind those shades
He stood up like remembering the times when they were close together at the studio. I can FEEL his fingers playing the guitar in that solo. We always miss you Randy, we always did.
Ozzy shows here that he’s a really good friend. It’s one thing to say things when they are here and alive. It’s entirely different to keep their memory alive 40+ years later. Saying he still a big part of his life decades later is amazing.
If Randy would still be alive he probably could have been the best guitar player ever. I mean just listen to what he is playing right there. damn. Every time Randy is mentioned not only this video but others too. Ozzy is just a completely different person.
Malmsteen is a genius in his own right musically but in my opinion the thing that separates randy from yngwie is that yngwie's music will never be "bad-ass" you know what i mean?
You're comparing apples to oranges between RR and YJM. RR was a glam guitarist turned metal guitarist, YJM was a power metal guitarist turned pop metal guitarist. Both are great in their own right, but in terms of originality nobody was doing the things that RR and EVH were doing up to the time of RR's death. Actually YJM was in the music industry and wasn't even in the public eye until after RR's death because the music industry tried to replace a giant that was lost and instead sought to promote unknown virtuoso's like YJM, Steve Vai, Vinnie Vincent, Paul Gilbert and Kirk Hammet. Those 5 guys to this day couldn't even compare, but again different players different styles. Plus add in the fact that RR had his own guitar line that to this day is selling above and beyond and also the RR marshall amplifier line while YJM just copied what Ritchie Blackmore did with the scalloped stratocaster frets or played reverse body or reversed headstock strats like Jimi Hendrix did. I'm a fan of both but YJM was intimidated by Dimebag Darrell on a nightly basis when he toured in support of Pantera, there's no way he could've held a torch to what RR has done, his ego would have gotten in the way.
If you ever need proof that Ozzy Osbourne is an amazing person with a huge heart just watch this video. The pain he still feels to this day over Rhodes' passing and how he treats his fans is more than enough.
Yeah, I read that he triple tracked his guitar parts & blended them into one.this stuff his grabbed music fans by the throat when it was released; Ozzy probably would have drank himself to death if this band did not form.this was leading edge metal at the time.still relevant today.I was fortunate to see this band on tour with Motorhead, back in grade 10/11...?
I know Ozzy went right back to when Randy was first riffing out that solo. He stood up and was in such a different space. It was just him and Randy, all those decades ago, in a van, purely ROCKING! Fly high Brothers. Your story was cut short but your legend lives on forever and ever. Never to be forgotten and always to be retold. Cheers to the whole community. We celebrate a life once more anytime we hear his music
Randy was not just a great guitarist. He was a gifted composer as well. Criminally underrated. He was a smart guy on how metal works. He also had a great feel for arranging the songs. He's still deeply missed to this day
King Randy was taken entirely to soon. The talent lost that day will never be replaced. Fingers can be fast, riffs can be memorable...but the way Randy composed the songs was for fullness, beginning to end. And no one does like it he did.
Crazy train is possibly the worst song ever made.
Mind to throw actual reasoning into it or is it just a troll comment cause from a guitarist this is literally wild to just come up with at a time where that sound wasn't around
pin of shame
That’s ok go listen to your baby shark and let the rest of the world appreciate actual music kiddo
@@LegatoBlue It sucks
Ok, maybe you don't like it, but don't go trying to troll a comment section almost entirely dedicated to fans of this song.
The way he jumps out of his seat, because through the power of technology, just for those few seconds, his buddy was standing in that room playing. Very emotional.
Aw man this made me tear up
he looked around as if to see Randy standing beside him on stage
Where?
He turned around like huh?
Dam crazy that you know what a another human is thinking or feeling.
Imagine sitting with Ozzy Osbourne, listening to his original, unmixed recording of a timeless, classic piece of art for the 1st time since he created that magic... And then talking over it lol.
"You sound good!"
"I think he sounds great!"
"It sounds unmixed."
"It's unreal."
OmG, they won't shut up.
dont do drugs kids, even if all the cool rockstars, and politicians, and constructio...just dont!
They are in love with the sounds of their own voices
I KNOW RIGHT it pissed me off
I imagine they have to fill time so they put stuff on the show and not just them staring at the music
Love the way he says “fucking awesome” like he’s never gotten tired of that gem of a solo randy wrote
like me
Who has?
Who gets tired of that..
Even after performing it 1000 times it still amazes him 🔥
He had to stand up so he could step back from it.
When they isolated the solo and Ozzy stood up it was like he was standing up to go look at what his friend was doing. Can't imagine how much he misses Randy Rhoades.
It's like when the GoD stand in reverence to Goku achieving true ultra instinct.
Ozzy has always let his body be controlled by the music. He's been doing the shit for so long that I think its literally built into him now.
@@JohnDoe-ym5lywhat do u mean
It brings me peace to know that when ozzy does go we will miss him but he's gonna be so happy to see randy Rhoades again. it hurts my heart seeing how much he misses his friend
Great respect.
“I just wish he had been around a little bit longer.”
So pure.
It's a very English way of speaking
A proper gentleman. He seemed (rightly) upset at the spectacle they were trying to make out of his reaction. Poor chap was hearing a recording of a friend who tragically passed away at such a young age. Imagine that was you, there in that moment. I'd snap
@@mcgrudo that's the moral fiber and ethical nature of social media my man. They knew what kind of reaction they'd get
@@mcgrudo No you wouldn't.
That was too real.
One of the most recognizable solos in Rock's history. It sounded insane isolated like that
RR was a classical guitarist first, according to legend.
goosebumps
It sounds insanely good however you listen.
I always wondered how he got his guitar to sound like that as a kid. Now I know it's several takes put together and panned. Sounds massive.
Randy triple tracked his solos, you can hear if you listen closely as he soloed the tracks at one point in the video.
He stood up for the solo like it was the national anthem
Thats how much he respects randy
I'd stand for it before I did so for the national anthem
I got goosebumps
I could see the pure joy in his eyes the second the track was isolated.
@@thefallofranny good for you bud.
@@thefallofranny okay edgelord
He stood for a solo like he was standing for a national anthem. I'm not crying, you're crying
Your comment just jumped up and gripped me by the throat...the emotion of it all. I grew up idolizing Randy's guitar playing. Crazy train belongs somewhere at the very top of the Mount Everest of music...where the air is so thin you don't get to stay there very long.
No mate I got maced in the face I’m not crying
I'm fucking sobbing
He wasnt the only one! As soon as he down-faded and Randy came roaring through those speakers, i stood up too and air guitared the fuck out of that.
😢😢😢
"I think about where he would be in the picture , if he was still around."
.
God , that hit me hard.
Same question with other greats such as Hendrix or SRV.
Ozzy would have been bigger and probably would have gotten sober sooner
@James Wright C'mon dude there's no reason to talk like that to fellow fans and admirers. We are all family.
666th like. If I recall correctly, shortly before Randy Passed away, he was teaching kids how to play classical guitar. Him and Chuck Schuldiner (singer/guitarist for death) are arguably some of the best metal guitar players to exist.
I'm less than convinced he'd have recorded too many more albums with Ozzy if he had lived. (Maybe 2 or 3) He seemed genuinely interested in teaching and stretching out beyond hard rock/metal...but it would have been nice to see (hear)
I like how Ozzy stood up during the solo. Respectful salute. Authentic man, Ozzy.
Fucking amazing, got teary eyed when he did that
I think he was getting ready to leave.
Where can I see this whole thing? Brought tears
@@jasonggabbott Yeah if you watch the Ozzy and Jack world tour thing, he is always jumping up getting ready to go before he should be like he gets impatient or something.
I love Ozzy he's good to the core what an awesome recording that was wow just wow
Looking at Ozzie with his head down during that solo, that moment of silence and reverence... It got me to tears. It's like losing a brother or something
From what I saw in this, to ozzy it was exactly like losing a brother. This actually made me sad.
I am in tears. It's like he was standing for a national anthem or something. Unbelievable
Just based on what we could see it looked like he had his hands together in front of him as well. A true sign of respect for his lost brother
We All Lost A Brother That Day...
NO MORE TEARS
I cried. He loved Randy Rhodes so much. You can see how it hurts him to listen or talk about him. Ozzy's heart is full of so much love.
Same here, the true emotion and spiritual like look on Ozzy's face was surreal. He said he had never listened to that since the recording. So I can only imagine what he saw and felt right there. So much heart in this crazy man. I grew up learning about Ozzy and Black Sabbath and the legacy from my dad. I didn't fully understand it until I got older but even from the very beginning I just knew my dad was being honest the way he described moments of their prime. Now I understand it. To me at least. Ozzy was and still is just a dreamer. My grandma has never been a fan of metal or even rock music by no means. Just not of her understanding. But for a very long time she will tell me how much she loves Ozzy's song Dreamer. When she passes I hope to listen to it alone to feel her spirit is still near.
It's a pretty dick move that these guys, whatever the comparison is for ambulance chasing, basically force him to listen for internet clicks. his first reaction was, "No [i don't need to hear it]"
Hahahahahahaha
@@ManyLegions88 I'm sure you will, and feel her close by each, and EVERY TIME. :)
I just noticed this recently, but a lot of Sabbath and his solo work is about love. Look at the end of Children of The Grave for example. Ozzy really is a loving man.
You can see the pain in Ozzy’s face still.... he genuinely loved this man 😞
He was his right hand.
Lol he died as an enemy but lived as a brother. Randy did a lot of things to demean Ozzy in the time before he died. He slept with Sharon and did some other things.
Ozzy can still barely talk of Randy without crying
@@rander2084 #SAYWHAT?!
@@yolondambrowm9803 unfortunately it’s true, Ozzy may reminisce and respect Randy for what he did, but he passed on bad terms.
- Randy
- He died
He says it like he still can't believe it
huh
Probably can’t. Ozzy loves him and I assume randy was a huge part of his life and probably his best friend.
@Marvin Gardens Seek help. Randy's death was a tragedy and you mock it.
@Marvin Gardens why do people like you seem to enjoy parading your stupidity around?
I took it as a dementia laden comment.
What a terrible loss. You can tell Ozzy really honestly misses him. That whole era represents a Phoenix rising from the ashes..as Ozzy made his comeback from the death of Black Sabbath. It's amazing he survived through that, let alone he's still alive now.
@Get on the cross and don’t look back bro your bot got out of the cage again.
@Get on the cross and don’t look back this video doesnt have a 3:23 buddy
I think it's partly regret. They had a fight the night before Randy died about Ozzy's drinking and the last thing Randy said to him was "You'll kill yourself one of these day."
The sheer amount of drugs in Ozzy's system have made him immortal
Death of sabbath??? Not exactly
When Ozzy said "He died" it wasn't because he didn't think anyone knew you could just tell he was about to get choked up and he just had to say something about his friend in that moment. I have moments like that with a friend I lost recently and seeing it in someone else really just made it hit home.
Uh...no, his brain is fried and he was informing everyone that he died lol. Dont do drugs kids.
@@chrisadmaley I think that’s a little disrespectful given that he’s had a long ass career with so much happen in it and even if drugs and alcohol weren’t part of it he wouldn’t remember everything AND that Randy died a long time ago, he probably didn’t know just how much these younger lads knew.
He's an old guy, he was literally just telling someone who might not know that he died. In that forthright way old people do.
But Internet people gotta manufacture deeper meanings in everything. Edgy.
@@OzzyOscyhow is it edgy to be an empathetic engaged person exactly?
@@-Teague- Never said that. Read the sentence directly before 'edgy' like a normal human.
What I find great about this is Ozzy’s son wanting to share these things with his dad. And being proud to be the son of Ozzy. That’s what I see.
What a great perspective!
Jack is cool because he doesn't have the bitterness of not achieving all the great things his Dad did --- he just appreciates them like a loving son would
@@tommitchell4570 Ya, like a rich, spoiled, profligate, demon worshiping loving son - gotta LOVE it!
@@1lacowboy Nice bait
@@tastychunks Yes, Master bait. Because he's a jerk off. I'll show myself out.
That unmixed solo gave me goosebumps even through I've heard this song many times before.
Same. Pretty amazing.
You're dead on the inside if you didn't get goosebumps from that isolated track
Simply awesome!
Same here. As soon as Ozzy stood, and that solo....man, I could seriously feel my hairs standing on end. Epic.
was looking for a comment like this.. i still have chills running through my body up n down. truly amazing getting to hear the master... truly amazing musician
I love the fact that English is Ozzy's first language yet all the videos of him have subtitles.
Drugs man
Lol
I heard rgat he once said that he didnt want to do the tv show so he was always drunk or high 99 to 100% of the time when they were recording
Combine legendary drug and drink abuse with a Parkinson's-like condition with being a Brummie from Birmingham, you get a foreign dialect
I understand him fine. But I'm from Western Pennsylvanian and I grew up dealing with how Amish people talk. And being literally between Pittsburgh and Youngstown you deal with accents daily. But hey I apparently got one too I just don't notice it.
It’s insane how much just a single guitar can fill an entire room with sound. It’s like it didn’t even need any background. The solo alone was so full sounding
..that's because it was doubled. Listen to the solo again and you can hear a slight time offset.
It’s actually tripled 😜
Bro - when he stood up, I choked up. That's how you know Randy meant the world to Ozzy. And still does. Respect.
I felt it welled up in Ozzy the swagger they both had all those decades ago... time dulls our edges, but hearing it, re-sharpened Ozzy's edge for just that moment...
You can't kill a real bromance and that's what they had
lol why would you choke up?
TBH, I think he got up thinking they were leaving or wanting to leave and then he looked around and saw everyone was still standing and listening so he did too.
superchef78 thinking about how someone’s good friend died unexpectedly in a plane crash in not even his mid 20s while seeing the emotion in his surviving friend’s actions here? I didn’t well up from it but it is sad to think about this guy suddenly cut down in his absolute prime.
I watched this the other night it was really quite sad, you could tell after all those years just how much Ozzy still misses him and how much the music took him back in time
Ian Atkinson what's this from? History channel Ozzy and Jack world detour? If so what episode
Absolutely no question he misses him. 35 years later and it still hurts. To me those two would still be together if not for his death
True...it feels like when james talks about cliff...
Charlie Longley There were rumors that Randy wanted to leave after the Diary tour to get a degree in classical guitar and eventually become a teacher so it's likely he wouldn't be with Ozzy now. Maybe he would've left and eventually come back, maybe not. Unfortunately, we will never know.
Ozzy still misses Randy Rhoads to this day. Ozzy's major structure to his success was Randy and his awesome guitar playing and outrageous picking solos. Randy and Ozzy really had that brother relationship when they made music and performed together. Randy was like a twin brother separated from birth to Ozzy. Ozzy has a lot of gratitude to Rhoads to his success in his solo career. Ozzy even has flowers sent and delivered to his grave every year on the anniversary of his death. Ozzy and Sharon used to take them in person, but fans picked up on it, so they don't do it anymore because there would be Ozzy fans waiting for them to show up on that day, they think it's rude for people to wait around and stalk them when they're supposed to be celebrating an anniversary and grieving for the loss of their dear friend. Rhoads will always be Ozzy's favorite guitar player because he knew the sound Ozzy wanted and enjoyed when they wrote songs, it was like Randy had Ozzy's brain plugged into his that was also plugged into his guitar
I love Ozzy because he's such an unlikely survivor, a rock star who beat the odds, and managed to grow old on his terms. Granted he bears the scars of his past, but when so many of his contemporaries either succumbed to the excesses that were the elements of being a rock star in the '70's (and '80's, '90's, etc) he's managed to not only survive - not only keep his ties with his band mates - but to keep on producing music that's relevant within his genre. Yeah, just like Lemmy, Ozzy is a part of my own life's history, and is as much family as he is a rock god.
Ozzy lived fast but didn't die young
Randy was kind of a freak accident though. He didn't go out like most Rockstar's but you are still right about it being a result of the lifestyle. Randy's body was tested and they only found nicotine so he was clean at the time. They even lied to him and said they would take it easy and he believed them because one of the people on the plane had a heart condition.
@@billfred9411 He wasn't referring to Randy specifically, but other rock stars contemporary to Ozzy.
I remember reading somewhere that a large reason for ozzy still being alive is he has a genetic mutation and that his life style would of killed a normal man years ago. Can’t confirm this to be true but is crazy if it is.
Absolutely...
That smile at 2:54
anyone who loves music and the skill it takes to play something like that solo knows that feeling, happy enough to put a smile on but them chills and a lump in the throat came with it. One of the best solos ever.
It really doesn't look like a smile. It's the illusion created by angle IMO. Still pretty sure he was happy and nostalgic for his lost friend.
He didn’t smile
Yeah it’s not a smile
That isolated solo unmixed was insane.
My jaw hit the ground when that started. That thing just absolutely blisters, screams and roars!
The mixed version sounds like crap by comparison. They should really issue a remix.
@@TheWitchOvAgnesi it sounds good because it is solo'd. When you have all the tracks and you have to mix it down and master it, a lot of compression & eq has to happen for everything to "fit" in the mix.
When there are major frequency overlaps of vocals, bass, guitar & drums it sounds like a muddy mess.
@@dfpguitar Exactly. Which is why they should take another look at it now and use a different mixing approach and re-evaluate the gain and frequency structures for everything. Then again, maybe it'd only improve a minor amount. But with 192K now, you'd think they could still improve it somehow.
@@TheWitchOvAgnesi In the 00s record companies released DVD / Hi Res audio discs of all the big classic records that people love, stuff like the Beatles, queen, the who, led Zeppelin, black Sabbath etc..
But they were never popular anywhere outside of Japan. In the rest of the world most people ditched the concept of large quality home hifi for the convenience of highly compressed MP3 on portable players. This continues to this day, where almost no one has a home stereo with proper amp and speakers anymore. People have those little Bluetooth speakers and are very content.
You should see if you can get hold of one of those DVD audio discs, sometimes they are mixed in 5.1 so you can hear all the instruments better.
@@dfpguitar Sadly, every single thing you say is once again true. Audiophile-dom is rare today. I used to work in a high-end audio-visual store (Thiel, Martin-Logan, Nautilus-era B&W, etc.), but when I mentioned this to non-audiophiles, inevitably their reaction was either "I can't tell the difference" or "How can you tell the difference?" It's only gotten worse...
I'll look into the DVDs you mention. I know of their existence, but my path in music has shifted to the more extreme end of metal since my days in that store, so I don't necessarily spend my time in the genres that would benefit most from hi-fidelity (although the trend is slowly changing with some acts in metal).
And I do still have a home system, but it is very humble and admittedly mainly used for home theater applications more than music appreciation. But that's more of a reflection of not having enough free time to simply sit and enjoy music as I used to. Thankfully what I listen to today doesn't suffer as much on junk audio... LOL
Jack has cleaned up a LOT; it's fantastic seeing him respect his father and take care of him
Yea instead of being a junkie
Yeah, when you get married and have kids im sure its either your in or your out. Im glad he did.
For a lot of us, it takes going through years of addiction and loss to fully decide that we are ready to grow up. Choosing to self medicate doesn’t make you a weak person, but overcoming addiction 100% makes you a strong one!
Jack has ( had ) a Family - he also has MS, But he cleaned up long ago and had a career in Television on it's first year when he woke up blind one day...MS does things like that..his sight was only gone for a day, but it was not the result of Dugs etc...Ozzy Blamed himself for Jacks MS - becaise of all the drugs and such he did prior to jack being born,,,But he was assured by Docs the MS is NOT his fault..
@P. Robinson Much like you shouldn’t HAVE skipped English grammar classes.
One of the most notable guitar solos of all time. Man that is just gold. Gave me chills when they faded everything down and it was just the solo
Same here 😎
Same
the solo was so clean even without the mixing, you could truly feel the emotion that Randy put into that solo, Ozzy felt that too
Yep
That solo is seriously one of the best ever. The notes melted into each other
hi
The flashback Ozzy got from that ending solo hit him like a bolt of lightning. I bet he could almost remember the smells from that recording session.
Him standing up at the end, just shell shocked, I was like "Jack hug your father!"
It's only smells
@@ksm1985 Its just noises and smells
@@ksm1985 you did not just reference Rocco Siffredi under this wholesome, video, you vile connoisseur of degenerate content. I love it.
@@guywithapencil 🤣🤣🤣
This certainly wasn't easy to watch. Ozzy never fakes emotions and one can see it really made him sad...
When ozzy stood up at that 2:35 solo, I know he was trying to hold it.
He knew what randy was
How can you tell with the slurring of the words
@@bryananderson3772 he might be slurring his words (not to mention the Brummie accent) and he's keeping a stiff upper lip....but his gestures tell the tale. Rhoads was a once-in-a-lifetime talent, and Ozzy knew it.
I was holding back tears for him
There is something about hearing isolated tracks on famous songs. You kind of take the music for granted until you hear the musicians out of the mix and realize how unbelievable they really are. I was lucky enough to hear some of Freddy Mercury's isolated tracks, and while I was always a fan, that day he became a legend to me. Ungodly power.
I happened to come into the stems from bohemian rhapsody, just mind blowing to hear the individual vocal layers.
Wow. I can only imagine!
I always recommend people listen to some of the beatles ones. Some of the drums and bass riffs sound insane when they're isolated. They were doing way more experimental stuff than how it sounds all mixed together.
Wow, sounds like a great opportunity, learned piano and take vocal lessons cuz of Mercury, hope to be half as good as him one day
I like that as well because it humanizes the player. Listening to those isolated tracks, you hear how they weren't doubled perfectly like the magazines said. You hear unwanted string noise, but it all gets buried in the mix. It goes to show that not even the greats are perfect, and just how important attitude is in your playing.
Wow!! Ozzy stands up so fast at one point and you can see the sadness in his body language and the amazement how great RR is. My heart breaks for all of connected to him. To hear Rudy say he was sitting in a church after then incident and Ozzy was in the back crying by himself. Such a sad time, but what Randy left us is timeless and my kids will know and hear his music.
Back in the 90's he did a meet and greet signing after his show at a local record store. I had a tour book and I gave my GF a Randy Rhodes poster. He was moving along with the signing of items. When it came to the poster he stopped stared at it looked up at us, smiled and just took a pause to reminisce.
Thanks for sharing this moment
That's awesome.
Wonderful memory. Thank you.
dreams man
I dream of that
I don't believe I ever truly appreciated the musicality of that solo. What a fantastic musician.
The best part of that solo is its layered, recorded 2x overlayed. the end of it after the tapping, he purposely played the riff one fret off. To make it sound more chaotic.
And so many people that tried to cover it failed because you cant with 1 guitar.
I always wanted to hear it isolated. it always seemed all the other instruments were in the way of it.
solo sounded like he randy recorded it twice and put both together, genius
he did!
he actually did it but three times
Pretty common practice now a days
It’s called double tracking
It's normal for vocals and guitars
at 2:33 when they isolate the track, you can see Ozzy stand up because he is almost uncomfortable with the flood of nostalgia and emotion even after all these years and he takes on an almost reverent posture. Put a lump in my throat and almost brought a tear to my eye because I too wish I could have seen how much more Randy had to offer to the world of music and sad that he was taken so quickly.
It's like hearing the Hallelujah chorus!
@@detaildon yea let's maybe not compare that to his masterpiece
@@Gronforsr check the history of Hallelujah chorus.
Ozzie is still really suffering from the loss. It's raw to him. I knew it was hard on him after watching how close they were on stage. RIP Randy. We'll see you again someday.
maybe it felt like he was back in the studio with randy
Ozzy gets up to leave and stops once Randy starts his magic with the guitar. You can see on his face its still very emotional for Ozzy.
RIP Randy
I noticed Ozzys fur go up as well .. got to be tough to listen to the friend/guitar player that brought you back your fame ,,, and not having him there to share it with you .. I bought both Blizzard and Diary a week after they came out .. Randy changed the way hard rock guitar was played .. the only other guy at the time was Eddie VH .. But Randy was a scholared classical musician ,, his first true love .. and brought the two together … ICON
Yes you can see it in his face... Still feeling the loss...
Marque Markofthebeast are you trolling, or seven days deep on an acid trip?
@Marque Markofthebeast You are a WEAPONS GRADE MORON - I was in the Industry in Los Angeles when it happened and Randy had countless Friends that like Ozzy that STILL think of him,...Tell us all something, WHY would Randy NEED to fake a Death ???...I REALLY Can't wait to hear your educated ( yet unconnected ) explanation...one more thing...He is STILL considered a part of Ozzy's life because his Talent left an influence on Ozzy and his music.
That's *guilt* because he punched Randy in the face a few days before his bus driver killed him in a freak accident high on coke ( yes coke was found in AYcock's system)
The story that Sharon and Ozzy has been putting out for decades is one of some kind of romance between Randy and Ozzy. It couldn't be further from the truth, Randy desperately wanted to leave, Ozzy punched him in the face and made everything 10 times worse, then his bus driver killed him.
I think the isolated solo made him uncomfortable, in a very emotional and personal way that the others in the room (and ourselves watching) can't even imagine. He must have heard Randy playing isolated like that back in the recording/writing days and I think for those few moments he felt that special connection with his friend again. I feel like it was that, combined with his obvious love and respect, that compelled him to stand up and be as present as he could to listen to it and enjoy that moment. It's pretty obvious he knew how hearing the recording would affect him because of his relunctance to even hear it in the first place. I'm glad he did though, I know it's hard but he should celebrate the time he shared with him, not the time he lost
well said
Well spoken, I second that notion
It reminded me of the opening scenes of Titanic, with Ozzy as the old English lady.
When you lose someone that you loved dearly, you don't really want to be confronted with a reminder of them that is gonna unlock all those feelings that you kept hidden for years.
Because part of moving on with life, is that you come to terms with losing that love one and not having to face the hurt all the time.
You can remember then fondly, yes. But it has to be on your own terms, tho.
For me, I'm happy to be able to hear raw unmixed tape of my favorite guitarist, for Ozzy it was reliving the tragic loss of a close friend. I think he was afraid he might lose his composure, and didn't want to do it on camera, which I don't blame him.
when Ozzy stood up during the isolated solo... It hit me how even after all these years, it blew Ozzy's mind how amazing that solo was and just how talented Randy was.. to make this old guy pop up from his chair.. stirs the emotions for sure. Awesome stuff
try again dumb fuck, he was getting up to leave lololol wow people are fucking stupid today
I think he more started getting emotional because he wanted Randy to be there. That solo reminds him of Randy being alive and writing songs with him.
Truly was a great guitarist but you can sense… he just wants his friend back so they can make music.
Ozzie standing up and paying his respects to a friend he once called a brother who's no longer here. You can tell how much he misses him.
got chills during the solo.
Yeah, the fact is, it's buried in the song. When you hear it soloed out.... man.
chills, goosebumps. ..little sad too.....Randy is one of my favorite players
honest to god did too
Same here
same here mate, kind of innevitable.
The way he stood up to show respect to Randy and his work. Feels man...feels.
Music can be a time machine.
I think he may have stood up to flee the studio as decades old wounds came to life for Ozzy. He stayed because for those precious few seconds his brain toldd him his friend was still alive...just my speculation. Truly heartbreaking.
He didn't stand up to pay his respect. He stood up because he wanted it to be over with. He didn't want to be there. How could you not see that?
I think it was both, like you want to go out but at same time you didn't resist to listen that magic sounds. Big hard emotions may surface and I think it worth judging them at all.
He wanted to split. He didn't want to listen to it in the first place. His body language told it all.
You're blind... He wanted out of there. Too weak.
That isolated solo and their reaction was like Randy came back from the dead just to play this one last time for his friend. Amazing
That was incredible. I feel honored just to have heard it.
Unreal59 Respect ❤️🙏
This expression was to me something like: no one can play like you Randy (pride)
I almost cried
It was easy to understand Ozzy's sadness because he exuded it . . . He really loved Randy. This video touched my heart.
He really loved Randy. This made me tear up a bit.....
For an unmixed take recorded in a mobile studio, that sounds bloody fantastic
Hardly anyone makes records like that anymore, on real tape. Slash does, a few others...
@@aatsista those tapes cost millions, apparently. even Slash can't get them now apparently lmao
Slash's last few albums also have some of the best mixes I've ever heard, with Living the Dream possibly being the best ever, imo.
@@aatsista it doesn't have anything to do with the tape other than the fact that because it was limited, people strived to get the source as good as possible. Whenever you hear a mix that's incredible, it's actually mainly because the recording sounds good in the first place, then the mixer makes everything mesh perfectly.
I think the foo fighters still record on tape
When he jumps out of his chair cause he hasn't heard that solo by itself since Randy died. Hits you right in the feels
For seconds he probably feel like his friend is alive playing in the moment
Yes. When you’re in the studio and someone is recording their part, you’re sitting with the engineer just jamming. It probably took him right back to that moment and he jumped out his seat. ❤
@@YourRival777 No, it's just a solemn act of honor. Just like you stand up for national anthem.
When the solo was isolated it probably felt like Randy was right there jammin with him
Please...he didn't hear it when he was alive. 😂
When Jack asked him to listen to the tape Ozzy reacted the same way my mom does whenever we suggest to look at old photographs or talk about anything related to her parents and siblings (They've all passed away now). That "Nooo!" Is pure grief right there, doesn't mean they don't want to remember, it's just that it's still too painful, like pouring salt on an open wound.
I unexpectedly lost my wife Chris 4 years ago this past Dec 23rd 2019. Not wanting to look at videos or listen to audio or look at pictures with other people, Its self protection mode. It been 4 years and I love her more today than I did when she died. For me, I don't want people to see me break down.... it's private.
Ozzy might have felt that way. I don't doubt he wanted to listen to it.....but in private.
I think it's really dependent on the person...one of my grandmas was the same, while the other loved to look through old pictures and tell us stories. And my uncle passed fairly recently, and my aunt keeps his picture everywhere and has his greeting on her answering machine. Grief sucks, but the one thing I've noticed and experienced is that everyone deals with it in completely different ways.
a personal thing that we all handle the way we have to.
ina way its even more tough then looking at a old photo of the person; Ozzy is hearing his beloved friend playing his passion here. and also playing a song they wrote together that was probably THE song that transformed ozzys life and indirectly ended Randy's
@diascrive Thank you, I appreciate that.
The pain and sadness in Ozzy is quite overwhelming to see even 35 years after Randy's passing.
The fact that he stood up and bowed his head during the entirety of that Solo tells you just how much respect he had for a man younger than himself, and only around and playing for a very short time. That man earned the respect of one of the loosest cannons on the planet, one of the few things that could ground Ozzy it would seem
The fact that Ozzy Osborne is still alive and in music videos with Post Malone is a miracle in and of itself. We should cherish that we still have 1 or 2 rock gods left.
@@sashabagdasarow497 him and Ozzy have a song together, pretty good too
@@jaredcoleman1788 yeah, I understand. I meant they're not a good company
We have more than 1 or 2
Page
Angus
Clapton
Trower
Just to name a few
@@Cooz-h1l Brian May, Jeff Lynne, David Gilmour, Steven Tyler...
He was Pre Malone, is now Post Malone, and presumably will be Post Post Malone. Quantum Physicists theorize that his presence in our spacetime is a projection from outside the Post Malone universe. This Malonian superposition is known as the quantum state of Meta Malone
God, that guitar tone sounds so good when it's isolated.
It's like Ozzy wanted to yell something as if Randy was in the same room as him.
I went to Jr high school in Burbank where he grew up. I remember hearing about his death in PE class and guys who were his neighbors and people who actually knew him were balling their eyes out. As I have lived here for 40 years I have gotten to know a lot of people and every once in awhile someone breaks out an old picture of Randy. He made quite the mark in this little town. His mom used to come into my work and write checks...I would always look at them but never got the courage to tell her how great her son was. The fact she kept coming to me for help told me I had made the right decision. It must have been hard for her to hear from people all the time about him. Like a bandaid being torn off daily. When she passed I was glad for her as she would get to see her son again and be at peace.
So beautiful written. Thank you for that!
Lets not assume such things until we know for certain "Heaven" is real.
@@NuclearNuke41 thats foolish.. you will NOT know.. until it is "too late" perhaps.. so then what good would faith do you then? And all the forced silencing while on earth..?
@@erxfav3197 Forced silence? What do you mean?
@@NuclearNuke41 I don't believe in heaven at all either but that was just uncalled for. Have some fucking respect
2:37 I love how Ozzy stands up like he just heard that solo for the first time in the studio
He just couldn't handle it, the playing is so good and the situation is so sad...
@@serhafiye7046 Ya, he was obviously standing to leave and when he saw that others were still engaged he just decided to finish listening to it. I couldn't say what emotions were going through him.
It's almost like he felt him in the room and he stood up to look for him
Almost like it was out of respect to Randy
@@dragonpup1 I had a panic attack this one time once I thought it was over, I got up and I was looking for a buddy that passed away in a car crash 4 years prior. Reading that made me cry man.
It's easy to think of Ozzy as a lunatic, but I think he's got a heart.
...even the chosen one has a heart.
You have to be blind to not see that.
He is a lunatic, but he truly does have heart
I freakin love Ozzy
I think RR's death affected him deeply and it still does. That's why his later videos, music and literally everyrhing is so much different and kind of bleak compared to the stuff he did when he was with RR.
The way Ozzy talks about Randy... man, that did hit hard. He genuinely misses him.
I’m not crying. You are.
That solo gives me goosebumps isolated like that. It was ahead of it's time, and still sounds so great today
“I’m always thinking about him” Ozzy just summed up loss in 5 word’s. He’s so right.
That's 6 words, but true.
@@Albert-wk8ts Doesn't a contraction count?
I love that he seemed to instinctively stand up for the guitar solo.
Guy Holland n head down that’s old school respect
The way he quickly stood up. That ladies and gentlemen, is respect.
had nothing to do with respect .. he was remembering the time of the recording and got into the music and prob taken aback abit as well. a lot of feelings. i guess. But i am very confident ozzy getting up from that chair, had absolutely nothing to with him "showing respect" like some of you seem to think. he did what most people would do when having an experience like this - they get emotional.
@@lillerosin2915 such an idiot he's completely doing this out of respect because he respects his friend as a guitar player don't be the bitter asshole
@@lillerosin2915 Yeah, i agree
So much respect. People can learn something from Ozzy
I cried like a baby just watching Ozzy and his genuine loving response when the board opp isolated the guitar. RIP RR
That solo sounds so unbelievably clean. The musicianship to play it that well for the recording in a day when mixing multiple takes was fairly rare. Just a killer sound and played beautifully.
Go back and listen to it again and compare it to a cover or someone else in the band playing it. You can hear how many notes get missed. That isolated solo changed the whole dynamic of the song so much that I can never unhear it.
randy was 23 at the time, imagine how good he couldv gotten
And he PERFECTLY doubled it! Unreal.
@@XMorbidReignX Are you seriously trying to say the person who wrote the part and recorded it for the album got it wrong, but the people covering got it right because they added notes?
Yeah, that logic doesn't work.
You can argue that they improved on what he wrote, but it's pretty dang silly to assume the guy who wrote it missed notes while cover bands got it right.
@@bobdole4916 It may have been poorly written. What I was trying to say is that you can tell how many notes OTHERS have missed when you compare it to this recording.
When they singled out Randy’s solo, ozzy jumped up like a ghost bit him.
A ghost probably did hit him....the ghost of Randy
@@DerekEvans1013 legends live on
I got chills during that part
But listening to that isolated solo, all it did for me was prove, without question every cover or play after Randy is just insignificant. I can hear how many notes people miss now and I can never EVER unhear that.
Ozzy felt it.
Why can't ppl stfu when an artist is having a moment? This applies to interviews too
People don't know how to shut up and listen to the music.
fuck I was thinking the same thing, no respect
Exactly, they shoulda been as quiet as possible... Dumbasses!
Yup
@@tnowak bearded guy is his son.
Damn it's crazy to see how much he's still visibly and audibly hurt that he lost Randy
That solo, honestly🥺 When Ozzy stands up, it shows how much he meant to him. Incredible respect. Randy Rhoads was an unbelievably good guitarist who was taken from us much too soon.
I'd never realized how haunted Ozzy was
As someone who's lost a lot of friends this is heartbreaking
Ozzy is tormented by the fact that Randy's death was senseless. Of all the way musicians go, there was no downward spiral. It was a damn shame we lost him so young.
The solo at the end was so cool to hear unedited
I still remember that day, cried like a baby. I was 11 and Randy and EVH were Idols, both awesome and both in different ways. I often wondered what an album with Eddie and Randy would've sounded like lol.
Man... hearing Ozzy say "He died.." Like they didn't know, and he hadn't *just* told them about how much he had meant to him and thought about him maybe a minute before... My heart broke. Then him standing up during the isolated solo and look around like "Where is he?!" I couldn't even focus on the music. The human condition is a bitch.
Yeah rewatching this and paying attention you really notice all of that suff, it's really touching to be honest
Animals suffer the loss of the dead too.
I think it was more him processing it than thinking he had to tell them.
You're the bitch. The human condition is what it is.
fuck dementia all my homies hate dementia
I think every Ozzy fan just got chills......amazing.
brought tears to my eyes
Indeed
I Got Chills
Tears and my back shivered, Rest in Peace Randy..
yea, but I'd think of it more like "I think every Randy fan just got chills"
I remember playing basketball in my driveway when they announced his death on the radio that day. We were mouth open for at least five minutes. Randy’s style was very unique, that much is obvious. What some people don’t know is that what made it so unique (other than his beautiful classical trained ability to play, and write like a genius), is that he always double recorded all of his leads. The slight differences between recordings would give it that full stereo but slightly off unique sound. Was brilliant.
Cool story bro.
I did not know that, very cool. Thanks for the enlightenment. 🤟 ✌
Was that solo double recorded? I swear it sounded like it might have been triple! Such an awesome and gigantic sound. Legend.
I've worked in recording studios and know how hard it is for anyone to match solos note for note, and Randy was someone who could do that repeatedly without effort. Truly a guitar genius.
@@Ampelmannchen42 The best part is each recording was a little melodically different in a few places, and people to this day wonder whether it was mere human error from an improvised solo, or intentional harmony to add depth to the track. Either way, divine.
I never met my half uncle, but for some reason every time I listen to him, I feel like I really miss him. I’ve only ever been told stories from my Dad growing up and from his sister Kathy. He was a bit timid and shy, but had such a sweet heart. If he wasn’t the best I’m not sure who was. I can’t even begin to imagine what he would have accomplished by now. I really wish I could have met him. Love you Uncle Randy ❤️
Your uncle was Randy Rhoads?
@@tyleracimovic823 Yes sir he was my half uncle
Omg. Really? That is so cool. He seemed like such a nice guy! I'm so sorry you never got to meet him. 😔
I've heard Crazy Train since I was a kid. But, this is the first time I hear Randy's solo isolated. This is so freaky hearing it so crisp, clear and alone. It's as if Randy was recording it at this exact moment. No wonder Ozzy had to stand up out of respect to Randy to hear the solo.
RR was one of the best guitarists to ever pick up the instrument. He was also a songwriter and a teacher who was very skilled at music theory. RIP RR.
Are you differentiating people based on whether they have picked up the instrument or not? As to preserve the unknown potential within each living being?
@@adrianflo6481 it's just a figure of speech
@@Awes0m3n3s5 Oh, i thought he might have made some meta comment on our fit to frame culture and the untold loss of potential caused by the school system and enforcement of a large working class population.
@@adrianflo6481 what
@@l.m.m.degroot6081 if you know you know
You can see Ozzy had a great respect for randy, He stood when the solo went and you can see him almost in tears
Audio Engeneer was soo cool, leaving only the solo and muting anything else... so much respect in that room!
Him saying it was kind of like remembering it out loud. Not like a "did you know". I thought it was sad.
The slight smile during the solo is everything, it's like he's seeing him play right there
I feel, that when he stood up, he was right back at the day they were recording! He's visioning Randy right there! That had to be a powerful moment for Ozzy and one that not many get to experience.
"C'mon listen to it."
"Nooo."
"Why?"
"It's just sad because it's Randy Rhoads, you know?"
Arda Dogru yeah we know : we have ears
@@ozzydoop1473 fucccckkkk youuuu, you sound SO fun at parties
@@nwpboy2082 I once took a poop in someone’s toilet at a party once & I didn’t even know em
@@ozzydoop1473 fck u 🖕🏽🎉
@@ozzydoop1473 lmfaoo
Ozzy still misses his dear friend. You really never get over the death of someone you love.
Especially when that death is so sudden like Randy's ending in a crash. You learn how to live without them but you never get over the loss.
I can actually understand what Ozzy is feeling there because i feel the same thing.
Lost my brother about 3 years ago to suicide, and he was an Amazing guitar player, and when i hear songs that he used to play (Crazy train being one of them) i can hear him playing and its almost like he was in another room just around the corner, and it feels like hes there again for just a brief little while. when they isolated the guitar solo that actually made me cry because all i could hear was my Brother Scott and it brought me back to when we were teenagers and he was learning to play and eventually mastered that solo.
i lost my mom to suicide when i was 8 years old and she was a bass player so i can relate sometimes i feel like i can hear the rumbling of her bass in the other room
stay strong you guys
your brother was a nobody, though. so only you miss him.
Fuck men. Im sorry for your lost
@@307180740I know you just want attention, but how much of a pathetic loser do you have to be to act like a douchebag just to get a reaction
When I was 15/16 years old, in the early 80's, my band let a girl guitarist join. She told us her guitar teacher was Randy Rhoads (I don't remember for how many years), but we didn't know his name at the time. For a teenager, she rocked her Les Paul pretty hard and I've always wondered how much of a difference it made in her playing, having Rhoads as a teacher. She was definitely too metal for us.
That is so cool, small world
But did you smash though?
@@Cyzure Jesus Christ dude, we are talking about 15/16 year olds, please stfu
@@konfu_ion he could of been 15-16 at the time too...
@@darth9302 he's not talking about an age gap pr anything like that; just that talking about 15 year olds smashing is a little weird if you think about it.
I would love to just sit with ozzy and chat about Randy and the old days, would be so amazing.
bakerXderek CHEEAAAAAAHHHHH
I don't think he would like talking about him to a great extent because Ozzy would probably get emotional!
I would love to sit with Izzy and try to understand what he says lol
+467sprite Iggy Azalea? Yeah, It'd be interesting to try and understand what he says...
467sprite izzy from guns n roses?
It literally sounds so raw, amazing but with enough imperfections that it sounds like it's being played by a real person standing right in front of you in the moment. That's fucking wild. You can tell my man is tearing up behind those shades
He stood up like remembering the times when they were close together at the studio. I can FEEL his fingers playing the guitar in that solo.
We always miss you Randy, we always did.
I got goosebumps, Can't imagine what that did to Ozzy
Ripped his soul out for sure
Marque Markofthebeast Just fuck off
Marque Markofthebeast how?
Ozzy shows here that he’s a really good friend. It’s one thing to say things when they are here and alive. It’s entirely different to keep their memory alive 40+ years later. Saying he still a big part of his life decades later is amazing.
Randy was a master at doubling his solos to make them sound bigger than life. So sweet and thick sounding without losing any bite!
The solo hits him so hard. It’s so good and it makes him so emotional that he stands up not knowing what to do with himself.
It broke my heart seeing Ozzy heartbroken. Amazing that this master recording was saved! Legends!
If Randy would still be alive he probably could have been the best guitar player ever. I mean just listen to what he is playing right there. damn. Every time Randy is mentioned not only this video but others too. Ozzy is just a completely different person.
He was competition to Van halen
I've always preferred Randy to Eddie. Eddie's great of course, but there's something magic about Randy's playing.
Malmsteen is a genius in his own right musically but in my opinion the thing that separates randy from yngwie is that yngwie's music will never be "bad-ass" you know what i mean?
You're comparing apples to oranges between RR and YJM. RR was a glam guitarist turned metal guitarist, YJM was a power metal guitarist turned pop metal guitarist. Both are great in their own right, but in terms of originality nobody was doing the things that RR and EVH were doing up to the time of RR's death. Actually YJM was in the music industry and wasn't even in the public eye until after RR's death because the music industry tried to replace a giant that was lost and instead sought to promote unknown virtuoso's like YJM, Steve Vai, Vinnie Vincent, Paul Gilbert and Kirk Hammet. Those 5 guys to this day couldn't even compare, but again different players different styles. Plus add in the fact that RR had his own guitar line that to this day is selling above and beyond and also the RR marshall amplifier line while YJM just copied what Ritchie Blackmore did with the scalloped stratocaster frets or played reverse body or reversed headstock strats like Jimi Hendrix did. I'm a fan of both but YJM was intimidated by Dimebag Darrell on a nightly basis when he toured in support of Pantera, there's no way he could've held a torch to what RR has done, his ego would have gotten in the way.
He IS the best guitarist ever in rock history
This is why preservation is so important, to produce moments like that.
If you ever need proof that Ozzy Osbourne is an amazing person with a huge heart just watch this video. The pain he still feels to this day over Rhodes' passing and how he treats his fans is more than enough.
Randys solo at the end gave me the chills, Randy is the greatest guitarist who ever walked this planet.
"Hey, let's listen to this master tape of such an emotional and important part of your life. But, we are going to talk through most of the song."
They were twats.
At least when he stood up they let it be silent
Is so incredible he “DOUBLED” and heard even TRIPLED some of his solos. Phenomenal!!!! Tragic loss to the universe.
Yeah, I read that he triple tracked his guitar parts & blended them into one.this stuff his grabbed music fans by the throat when it was released; Ozzy probably would have drank himself to death if this band did not form.this was leading edge metal at the time.still relevant today.I was fortunate to see this band on tour with Motorhead, back in grade 10/11...?
I too am grateful to have seen Ozzy many times in my younger years...
I know Ozzy went right back to when Randy was first riffing out that solo. He stood up and was in such a different space. It was just him and Randy, all those decades ago, in a van, purely ROCKING! Fly high Brothers. Your story was cut short but your legend lives on forever and ever. Never to be forgotten and always to be retold. Cheers to the whole community. We celebrate a life once more anytime we hear his music
he was light years ahead of the rest of them, sad that we will never know what could have been,
Not really hard...he would've been pushed to the side today like the rest of the old talents.
We know in our hearts what he is though. A legend.
Light years ahead? Your fucking delusional if you think that open mouth insert foot
So moving. I got such chills watching this..
me too
yes it is.....you can tell Ozzy was wanting tear up.....Randy Rhodes RIP
randy rhoads
Wow, me too.
Randy was not just a great guitarist. He was a gifted composer as well. Criminally underrated. He was a smart guy on how metal works. He also had a great feel for arranging the songs. He's still deeply missed to this day
King Randy was taken entirely to soon. The talent lost that day will never be replaced. Fingers can be fast, riffs can be memorable...but the way Randy composed the songs was for fullness, beginning to end. And no one does like it he did.
Yeah, I stood up when Ozzy did - 'nuf said.
You said it beautifully!! Here's Ozzy's recent Corona message, cheers! ua-cam.com/video/YDk20HZWogo/v-deo.html
He had no business trying g to be an aerobatic pilot. And buzzing the bus live it to the pros Capt s foley Fa18 super hornet top gun instructor
Playing guitar like that is almost a lost art. You NEVER hear guitar solos in songs anymore.
@@sterlingfoley4510 you expect people to believe you're a top gun pilot and you can't even fucking spell?