Tony Iommi & Ozzy Osbourne MTV Interview 1986 Analogs Of Anarchy
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- Опубліковано 23 лис 2024
- Black Sabbath founders Ozzy Osbourne and Tony Iommi sit down with MTV's Martha Quinn to discuss their upcoming albums The Ultimate Sin and Seventh Star. Let's have a look back at the legends and the state of their careers 40 years ago. Sourced from my large VHS collection spanning the world. L
1986 saw them in Toronto, the 'Gardens', Ray Gillen had this HUGE boomy voice that filled the stadium, we were so confused on who he was, we were expecting Glenn Hughes
A lot of people have told me the same thing.
Exactly Toronto,Montreal are the real deal when come to metal.
Same in Montreal the forum was packed 16 000 people.
I dont know what that guy is talking about really.
Both Ozzy on his side and Sabbath filled arenas in the mid 80s.
Yes we did expect Hugues but i think he did only 5 or 6 days like end of March that year.
Cheers bro
Interesting when Ozzy mentioned his band lineup he didn't say anything about Jake E Lee. I suppose the tension between Sharon and Jake was peaking at this point. Nice classic vids. Life time Sabbath and Ozzy fan here. Never seen these vids before. Thanks for sharing.
@@gabenickelson3029 i have other Sabbath and Ozzy vids on my channel, with more coming!!!
God the 80's were tough sledding for Iommi/ Sabbath.
I was a 1 percenter and I would get so frustrated that they were barely a blip on the metal map.
Such an incredible pedigree and arguably they did more to forge that metal revolution than any other band but were barely even a part of it.
But cream always rises to the top right? And it did
Ozzy was only riding high thanks to song writing/lyrics by bob daisley and guitarist randy Rhodes and Jake E lee.
Seventh Star was supposed to be an Iommi solo record with multiple singers. Warner Bros forced the Sab name continuation. If Glenn wasn't coked out of his head the tour would've been magnificent. Ray did a great job tho. His demo vocals on the next record were fantastic.
I like the Ultimate Sin. Title track,Killer Of Giants,Lightning Strikes and Shot In The Dark are great songs and hold up against anything before or since. I think a big issue is Ozzy's look at the time. Also,a shame he says he never had a son. Hope Louis wasn't watching.
Became a Sab fan in late '85 at age 13. First album was the NEMS "Greatest Hits" albums(with the Triumph Of Death Cover). Loved it. Hooked me immediately. Second album was Seventh Star. First concert ever was "Sabbath" at the Meadowlands in March of '86. Pretty bad. Even as a young newbie I knew it was a fraud.
One of the worst part of Iommi : ultra-psychotic play with a slaughter dog, and big manspreading.
Martha, read up on Sabbath history before you speak to the Iron Man!
She's lucky Tony's pet dog didn't eat her.
You probably know already for having been thers in the heydays of it that this guy is up here and that band here is going down its all bs.
Real fans who bought magazines,t shirts,patches,records,ect name it
Many saw Black Sabbath or any other bands specially Ozzy on same levels.
86?
Ultimate Sin i love most dont.
Ozzy looked like a fat truck driver dressed like Liberace on that tour.
Sabbath had Born Again 83-84 with touring.
That album has the darkest and most melodic evil riffed song Zero the Hero.
After that Iommi brought Sabbath to a more Meta era with Tony Martin.
Where Ozzy began to bring his career down with that Zakk clown.
No rest for the wicked came out i was 17 and felt it was album for the 10-14 years old kids and radio play.
Ozzy kept going down after that.
No more tears was good and that was it.
Any album after that had few good songs only on each.
Maybe Iommi should have called the band some other name when Martin was in.
Songs like the Shining,Headless Cross,Anno Mundi to name very little here are masterpiece that Ozzy could only dream to have in that era.
Friendly note here.
No religion its just music.
Your thoughts?