People like to say that but I have no trouble understanding him or any other Brummie. I'm American but I can generally tell from where in the UK a guy is from by his accent.
With so much early great footage, so many interviews with the band, all the members still alive and well, isn't time this band got a decent documentary made about them. If I was a film maker or had any means of doing it, I would make it my life's work. They deserve better than this. The whole story needs to be told in a professional and artistic way. Black Sabbath are as important to popular music as any band in the latter half of the 20th century. Enough said.
I was in Marine corps and in march of 1970 a friend said you got to hear this band Black Sabbath so we jumped in his 69 mustang and cranked it up and as they say the rest is history.
In 1973 Black Sabbath was my first concert. A bunch of us kids from high school jumped into a shit Chevy Corvair and off we went. I saw this woman at the show that had *the hugest* blonde afro I'd ever seen, this thing almost went to the floor no lie, black robe and wearing an inverted cross. Never seen anyone like her in my life lol.
@Steven Last Glad you made it back! Thank you for your service! I worked with a Vietnam vet. We were trying to restart his business in Florida. Coming from Pennsylvania, we had to stay in hotels for a few weeks. We had to share beds (4 of us) He had to have his own bed. Didn't understand why. In the middle of the night I woke to the most horrible scream. He proceeded to tell a story of a friend who was blown up right in front of him. This was in 1985. I'm crying now, just telling this story. God Bless you and your family! 🙏❤
I was 9 years old and my friends dad would buy the records, we'd listen on the suitcase record player, by 15 I began the record clubs, getting the newest music, so my first 3 Sabbath records were everything Dio, I loved that stuff and began to order the earlier stuff, such a grand history of great music, great musicians and several good singers, breaking up was the best gift to heavy metal, even Ozzy's solo career was awesome, still is actually
When Ozzy is talking about when he was fired, you can still see the hurt in his eyes, even through the purple glasses. I know the feeling, because it has happened to me, for exactly the same reason.
I was just about to make a comment about that. That’s a testament to how timeless their music is. I’m 34 years old, and my fiancée, who listens to mostly alternative, los crazy about them as well.
Love these guys! I was fortunate to see them many times as early as 1972, my first concert, I was a Sabbath loving eighth grader...thank you mom! I went with my older brother (who turned me on to Sabbath) and three friends. It was an eye opener.
My late partner Mary was a regular at Henry's Blues House in Birmingham where they payed regularly..She was that show when they opened for Ten Years After and were advised to change their name..You want history, there, you got it
To graduate High School I had to do a research paper on someone not from the United States. I picked Ozzy to do my paper on. And it's crazy, I remember all of this stuff. How poor he was growing up. And Tonys fingers. The earth name thing.
I’m an Englishman but nowadays I don’t feel much connection to our country, because of our vile, Tory government who disregard the poor and our Royal Family who still sit as a symbol of inequality in my opinion. But there’s something about these young British bands, a lot from very poor backgrounds, who tried to conquer the world of music and paved the way that makes you very proud. The Beatles, Black Sabbath, The Who, Pink Floyd, The Rolling Stones. Changed the face of music forever. Incredible. That’s what Britain should be proud of.
IMO one of the worst names in the business is Dream Theater. It associates with girly music. Who wants to wear a T-shirt with that name on it? Took me many years to realize what super band that really is.
@@jacobbarnes1453 No big deal. Me and another two guys basically keeping people away from them. On one occasion they were in a bar with live music and they had like three/four tables, eating and getting drunk like crazy. The road manager carried a wad of cash in his pocket and at the end of the night gave us each a $100 tip, which was a lot of money then.
@@jacobbarnes1453 I was USAF Security at Myrtle Beach AFB and we were allowed to moonlight for a security company. One of my roommates was security for a weekend for the Rolling Stones, and had to carry Keith Richards to his room.
These guys are came was nowhere now there are legends. My big respect to tony he is now the king of Riffs in the Back he hast break his fingercups he is my Idol. Never give up and make your way.
Ovplivnili miliony po celom svete.Žil som za železnou oponou,ale bolo to omnoho,omnoho krajšie ako sme ziskavali LP,alebo prehravali kotúče z magnetofonov!Bolo to fantastické po burzach zháňať plagáty,platne.Dokazal som sabbath počúvať cele noci a rano nevyspaty do prace!
@FREE SPEECH Tony Martin was the second longest vocalist for Black Sabbath behind Ozzy Osborne. Serving from 1987-1997 and appearing on five studio albums.
There is at least one recent video on "AXS TV" where Ozzy frustratedly answers a question regarding his/the bands, Spiritual Orientation, with -- "... Not all the music we did was about [evil] and death..." :))))) And I read this in one of the many Circus magazine interviews in the early 1970's. It was an answer to the interviewer's question on the bands S. O. 'One of the boys' uncle's was a silversmith and he made them all those big silver crosses to protect them, just in case,' I believe he might have been an occultist , etc. But, I can't remember that part of the interview, still looking for it online. I do remember that some of the writer's comments about the band were unique and kept me coming back. Like -- "... Ozzy's voice sounds like it's coming from under a 12 foot deep pit of ooze" [Technically a Kudo for the engineer but, it became his trademark sound,] and his opinion on the talents of the rest of the guys was of someone in awe!! ... " :D
Back in the 70's ( and today also most likely) if a Critic said they suck you could bet they were great. Lester Bangs was one of the great foreseers' of giant awesome band's, if he hated them they became huge. He said Alice cooper was a tragic waste of vinyl and right after they took of to be number 1 in 73'.
The most motivating anecdote was how Tony Iommi had an accident in the factory, the doctors tell him his guitar playing days are over, but Tony doesn't give up. He makes finger tips with plastic bottle caps. Today and forever, he will be remembered as the godfather of heavy metal. If this isn't motivating enough, I don't know what is !!!
Why'd they completely overlook Tony Martin in this? They talked about Ozzy's solo stuff but not Martin in the band? I'm glad they talked a little bit about Dio but dang...Martin was just as big a part of Sabbath as Ozzy.
Of course Black Sabbath made people's arses pucker. They were punching their best music out when "The Exorcist" was still on screen. Anyone remember how much THAT movie scared the fuck out of everyone!
I've never really considered Led Zeppelin and Deep Purple as metal, but more like something you hear at a pub. Sabbath were more like what came after like Dio, Venum, Iron Maiden, Metal Church, Metallica, Motorhead, and all these darker, heavier bands of that era.
Black Sabbath was my first concert in Philly 1978. I think Blue Oyster Cult & Black Sabbath concert Blessed to have seen the band before they broke up.
It was a good point... "people pay to see movies that are scary... why not music?" ...writers and directors and other movie makers who make horror films don't get accused of Satanism because of their movies... why do musicians when their music is dark or horror-themed?
@@stevenjaynes72 seventh star is not their worst. I’ll hold keep that distinction to either 13, forbidden or Never Say Die. Seventh star wasn’t even suppose to be a Sabbath album. It was meant to be a Iommi Solo album, but the record label forced him to put the Sabbath name on it
I saw the first album in a store with the woman and the house and bought it. Played the album and my whole musical world changed forever. There was nothing remotely close to Black Sabbath maybe Uriah Heep was close but thats it. Saw them live on their first US tour and I had never actually felt music hit me in the chest like that. I was hooked on metal music and still am 51 years later. I had seen the Beatles in the 60s and Paul Revere and the Raiders, Hendrix and many more but Black Sabbath was so raw and different. The lyrics didn't seem satanist at all to me so where people got that idea I don't know but my guess they never really listened to the lyrics.
music one of the only things that binds all people's of the world.every person on earth can relate to any kind of music.its part of humans genetics.the people that create music for greed or to make people happy or even wardrums that are about to kickoff a gruesome war.its ingrained in humanities dna.i would find it hard to beilieve that one single person does not listen to music at least once a day for there entire life.even humming or thinking about a song counts.thats how important music is to human beings in this world.there is more music created than any other art form.its a beautiful thing.
If they got the best out of each other why was it little more than a nostalgic Vegas act? Ten years of touring with two new songs! Dio comes back and three were written immediately! Followed by an album that blew 13 away!
Black Sabbath is Ozzy,Tony, Billy and Geezer. No Dio and co. I listen Sabbath 53y and I know what I said. Only and thrue Black Sabbath is hand first 10y. Amen!!!❤
Wasn’t anything like them? I don’t get why people say they invented metal when they just got it popular and obviously changed rock and metal a lot, but didn’t invent it . Listen to The MC5, Stooges, Blue Cheer, and Alice Cooper.
maybe Alice Cooper in '71 maybe had hints of Metal, Blue Cheer was just loud Blues Rock,Stooges and MC5 were hard rock'n'roll/proto-punk;The Who,Cream and Deep purple etc are also in the same bracket,but there was absolutely nothing like Sabbath in 1969/70. They were the template for Heavy Metal, Doom,and Thrash...I don't see what the problem is, its obvious.
@@richardhincemon9423 that's right ,put simply....Black Sabbath Invented Heavy Metal,there are no other candidates. In fact i played an Alice Cooper record last night..."Killer".... from 1971 no less, and it sounded like a Pub Rock band but wearing sillier clothes. Rock'n'roll yes, but metal? absolutely nowhere near.
@@richardhincemon9423 I don't have that one,but i know what you're getting at.Its Alice being weird innit? You wouldn't catch sabbath doing that....maybe a bit of dark Folk,but,nothing too psych.
Because her father was their manager, so she was involved at least tangentially. I’m not defending any of her actions, just explaining that she did have a connection to the band.
Glad there were English subtitles for Ozzy
still more coherent than joey biden
@@davidebrown3186 bro what this a black sabbath documentary
People like to say that but I have no trouble understanding him or any other Brummie. I'm American but I can generally tell from where in the UK a guy is from by his accent.
He’s a Stephen hawking away.
Hahaha
Bill Ward was an amazing percussionist. He doesn't get the recognition he most certainly deserves.
Bill Wards Drum Fills Were Killer 🥁
in literally every black sabbath video on youtube people are calling him a god at the drums
bill wards chops are on another level.i would love to know who taught him.its obvious he was schooled at a young age.
Bill is drumer par exelance. He druming for Tony and for Geezer one set of drums.
@@markusshoggunever gets mentioned amongst the best drummers
With so much early great footage, so many interviews with the band, all the members still alive and well, isn't time this band got a decent documentary made about them. If I was a film maker or had any means of doing it, I would make it my life's work. They deserve better than this. The whole story needs to be told in a professional and artistic way. Black Sabbath are as important to popular music as any band in the latter half of the 20th century. Enough said.
Couldn't agree more
There were plans to do that then covid-19 hit hard in the United Kingdom
@@richardhincemon9423 I hope someday we see a definitive document of their lives worthy of their greatness...COVID or no COVID!
We need a biopic made by oliver stone with the dude who played ozzy in the dirt. That movie would do Bits.
Fucking EHHHH!! SPEAK THE TRUTH! SABBATH RULES!
Black Sabbath documentary, with Finnish subtitles.
You can't get more metal than that.
I was in Marine corps and in march of 1970 a friend said you got to hear this band Black Sabbath so we jumped in his 69 mustang and cranked it up and as they say the rest is history.
In 1973 Black Sabbath was my first concert. A bunch of us kids from high school jumped into a shit Chevy Corvair and off we went. I saw this woman at the show that had *the hugest* blonde afro I'd ever seen, this thing almost went to the floor no lie, black robe and wearing an inverted cross. Never seen anyone like her in my life lol.
@Steven Last Glad you made it back! Thank you for your service! I worked with a Vietnam vet. We were trying to restart his business in Florida. Coming from Pennsylvania, we had to stay in hotels for a few weeks. We had to share beds (4 of us) He had to have his own bed. Didn't understand why. In the middle of the night I woke to the most horrible scream. He proceeded to tell a story of a friend who was blown up right in front of him. This was in 1985. I'm crying now, just telling this story. God Bless you and your family! 🙏❤
Semper Fuckin Fi 👊🇺🇸🍻
@@spaceman61 OO RAH
I was 9 years old and my friends dad would buy the records, we'd listen on the suitcase record player, by 15 I began the record clubs, getting the newest music, so my first 3 Sabbath records were everything Dio, I loved that stuff and began to order the earlier stuff, such a grand history of great music, great musicians and several good singers, breaking up was the best gift to heavy metal, even Ozzy's solo career was awesome, still is actually
I was in like 12 when I first listened to Sabbath immediately liked them. This was back in the 70's
Ozzy so amplifies his whole disoriented persona. Look how coherent, and engaged he is throughout this.
When Ozzy is talking about when he was fired, you can still see the hurt in his eyes, even through the purple glasses. I know the feeling, because it has happened to me, for exactly the same reason.
But he didn’t stay down. Ozzy is a fighter thus I love the man!!!
you didn't turn up for six weeks?
He tipped purple paint on himself once.
“We used to play like from 2 in the morning to 2 in the morning”, that’s one hell of a show ozzy! Lol
The greatest heavy metal band ever.
The impact Black Sabbath can never be replicated. What they did with music changed the world forever.
Geezer cracked me up when he said about the crowd looking the same age like Dorian Gray lol lol lol
At what point in the documentary does that happen?
@@Maul-kh4ek Try 44.34 mins in
@@michaelholmes8226 Saw it myself hillarious
I was just about to make a comment about that. That’s a testament to how timeless their music is. I’m 34 years old, and my fiancée, who listens to mostly alternative, los crazy about them as well.
Geezer is an underrated bass monster
Tony IS the undisputed Riff Master.
And Bill Ward is the Greatest Drummer.
Riff merchant **
Him and the riff miester Keith Richards
Love these guys! I was fortunate to see them many times as early as 1972, my first concert, I was a Sabbath loving eighth grader...thank you mom! I went with my older brother (who turned me on to Sabbath) and three friends. It was an eye opener.
That's very cool you saw them so early on!! Thanks for sharing that 😊
My late partner Mary was a regular at Henry's Blues House in Birmingham where they payed regularly..She was that show when they opened for Ten Years After and were advised to change their name..You want history, there, you got it
As far as I now they changed the name because there was already another band called Earth
To graduate High School I had to do a research paper on someone not from the United States. I picked Ozzy to do my paper on. And it's crazy, I remember all of this stuff. How poor he was growing up. And Tonys fingers. The earth name thing.
Original lineup was magical
Black Sabbath for life.
I swear, Henry Rollins is in every rock documentary.
Just the ones Dave Grohl or Tom Morello won't do
@@jamalwest7658 Or Scott Ian
As he should be.
Henry likes Ozzy a lot.
Purporting himself as an obsessive fan.....lol
This may be the most coherent thing I have ever heard from Ozzy - outstanding!
Olipas upee dokumentti, kyyneleet vaa valui.. Jumalauta nää oli, ja on vieläkin kovia jätkiä!!! 🤘🤘
This band deserves a biopic
That Guy Who Played Ozzy In The Motley Crue Movie Would Be Perfect for Ozzy In A Sabbath Biopic
"The Wizard" -- a carry-over from the band's original Blues-based format.
I’m an Englishman but nowadays I don’t feel much connection to our country, because of our vile, Tory government who disregard the poor and our Royal Family who still sit as a symbol of inequality in my opinion. But there’s something about these young British bands, a lot from very poor backgrounds, who tried to conquer the world of music and paved the way that makes you very proud. The Beatles, Black Sabbath, The Who, Pink Floyd, The Rolling Stones. Changed the face of music forever. Incredible. That’s what Britain should be proud of.
25:03 yea your one to talk Sharon..
Mita Kuuluu suomalainen,, greetings from Detroit..sisu
Just the name Black Sabbath is great. It sounds dark and sinister and fits well with the music they played.
IMO one of the worst names in the business is Dream Theater. It associates with girly music. Who wants to wear a T-shirt with that name on it? Took me many years to realize what super band that really is.
It's the title of an old Boris Karloff movie.
I don't consider Born Again to be Sabbath. But, that record kicks ass
It should have been a new band name like a supergroup. It's such a gem. I'd love a remix though.
There will never be another ozzy
I was security for Black Sabbath and Judas Priest for a weekend.
What was it like.
@@jacobbarnes1453 No big deal. Me and another two guys basically keeping people away from them. On one occasion they were in a bar with live music and they had like three/four tables, eating and getting drunk like crazy. The road manager carried a wad of cash in his pocket and at the end of the night gave us each a $100 tip, which was a lot of money then.
@@veritasetlibertas7889 lots of fun.
@@jacobbarnes1453 I was USAF Security at Myrtle Beach AFB and we were allowed to moonlight for a security company. One of my roommates was security for a weekend for the Rolling Stones, and had to carry Keith Richards to his room.
These guys are came was nowhere now there are legends. My big respect to tony he is now the king of Riffs in the Back he hast break his fingercups he is my Idol. Never give up and make your way.
Ovplivnili miliony po celom svete.Žil som za železnou oponou,ale bolo to omnoho,omnoho krajšie ako sme ziskavali LP,alebo prehravali kotúče z magnetofonov!Bolo to fantastické po burzach zháňať plagáty,platne.Dokazal som sabbath počúvať cele noci a rano nevyspaty do prace!
To skip Technical Ecstasy and Bill Leaving. Tony Martin was the frontman for almost 10 years! This doc misses a lot of important beats in the story.
I know!
So disrespectful to not even mention Martin
We all know why and it's a shame
Sabotage..
@FREE SPEECH Tony Martin was the second longest vocalist for Black Sabbath behind Ozzy Osborne. Serving from 1987-1997 and appearing on five studio albums.
Master of Reality is their best in my opinion.
Agree. Their pinnacle.
Sabotage
@@rabola55 Sabatage
@@rabola55 Sorry, I ment to say Sabotage was pretty good too!
Mob rules
There is at least one recent video on "AXS TV" where Ozzy frustratedly answers a question regarding his/the bands, Spiritual Orientation, with -- "... Not all the music we did was about [evil] and death..." :))))) And I read this in one of the many Circus magazine interviews in the early 1970's. It was an answer to the interviewer's question on the bands S. O. 'One of the boys' uncle's was a silversmith and he made them all those big silver crosses to protect them, just in case,' I believe he might have been an occultist , etc. But, I can't remember that part of the interview, still looking for it online. I do remember that some of the writer's comments about the band were unique and kept me coming back. Like -- "... Ozzy's voice sounds like it's coming from under a 12 foot deep pit of ooze" [Technically a Kudo for the engineer but, it became his trademark sound,] and his opinion on the talents of the rest of the guys was of someone in awe!! ... " :D
Kiitos tästä, varsin informatiivisesta dokumentista!
Back in the 70's ( and today also most likely) if a Critic said they suck you could bet they were great. Lester Bangs was one of the great foreseers' of giant awesome band's, if he hated them they became huge. He said Alice cooper was a tragic waste of vinyl and right after they took of to be number 1 in 73'.
Kiitos, että jaoit tämän. Joskus oon tän nähny kyllä telkkaristakin, mutta kyllä tän uudelleen katsoi. 🤘
Kyllä, hyvä että näitä dokkareita jää elämään yt:nkin ❤
The most motivating anecdote was how Tony Iommi had an accident in the factory, the doctors tell him his guitar playing days are over, but Tony doesn't give up. He makes finger tips with plastic bottle caps. Today and forever, he will be remembered as the godfather of heavy metal. If this isn't motivating enough, I don't know what is !!!
I never took it like these guys were satanists. If you actually listen to the lyrics of the songs, they were warnings AGAINST evil.
Why'd they completely overlook Tony Martin in this? They talked about Ozzy's solo stuff but not Martin in the band? I'm glad they talked a little bit about Dio but dang...Martin was just as big a part of Sabbath as Ozzy.
That was the most awesome band...
People call Sabbath satanists but at the end of every single show, Ozzy would say "Good night and god bless you"
Their songs are often like parables...... very moral too....they are totally a Christian band
Thanks for sharing!
Of course Black Sabbath made people's arses pucker. They were punching their best music out when "The Exorcist" was still on screen. Anyone remember how much THAT movie scared the fuck out of everyone!
I have a pic of them with Linda Blair
Awesome Sharon. What a woman.
I've never really considered Led Zeppelin and Deep Purple as metal, but more like something you hear at a pub. Sabbath were more like what came after like Dio, Venum, Iron Maiden, Metal Church, Metallica, Motorhead, and all these darker, heavier bands of that era.
Black Sabbath was my first concert in Philly 1978. I think Blue Oyster Cult & Black Sabbath concert Blessed to have seen the band before they broke up.
It was a good point... "people pay to see movies that are scary... why not music?" ...writers and directors and other movie makers who make horror films don't get accused of Satanism because of their movies... why do musicians when their music is dark or horror-themed?
loved watching this.
Imagine if Peter Grant managed them..lol...smh.. Sabbath is the best, one of my favourites but they needed a manager like grant.
25:16 -- That's Heaven and Hell's back cover... Minus Ozzy, of course.
this whole documentary reeks of Sharon Osbourne
Born again was a good album! Ian Gillan is a monster, what are you talking dude?
Agreed! That album has some downright unsettling tracks on it.
No, it was not.
@@turefromfinland3264 yes it was haha
Born again kicks total ass
I loved that album
The 13 album makes this documentary age like milk.
Kiitos tästä.
Love the Dio era of Sabbath
Dio does sound nice in Sabbath but the Ozzy Era is just so fucking Iconic.
Ozzy era is the best tho
@@jcjlewis7086 dio is better imo
The only Dio-fronted album I like is Dehumanizer. Heaven & Hell just simply doesn't sound like Sabbath to me.
No Dio no Sabbath for me.
Can we talk about how they skipped Seventh Star (feat Glen Hughes) and the Tony Martin era of Sabbath? I mean Come on!
To me the album with Glen Hughes was not a Sabbath album but a good Iommi solo album. Did not fit the band
Well there's a reason they skipped both of them,because true sabbath fans don't remember those 2 and seventh. Was there worst record!
@@stevenjaynes72 seventh star is not their worst. I’ll hold keep that distinction to either 13, forbidden or Never Say Die. Seventh star wasn’t even suppose to be a Sabbath album. It was meant to be a Iommi Solo album, but the record label forced him to put the Sabbath name on it
@stevenjaynes72 wtf is a "true Sabbath fan" sounds like gatekeeping
No mention of the Tony Martin Era, huh?
He could sing rings around Ozzy
Why would they? His era was terrible...
Yes. Tyr is so great.
Awesome.
Wheres the video gone? I cant see anything. Just a bunch of coloured lines
One of the best
Kiitos
i saw an interview with Ozzy where he said that Toni was intimidating and his riffs so heavy, Ozzy was kinda scared of him!
I like how Lord Iommi is being interviewed in a church
Great!
I remember my first African American Sabbath concert
What great f..king video 👍✌
I saw the first album in a store with the woman and the house and bought it.
Played the album and my whole musical world changed forever.
There was nothing remotely close to Black Sabbath maybe Uriah Heep was close but thats it.
Saw them live on their first US tour and I had never actually felt music hit me in the chest like that. I was hooked on metal music and still am 51 years later.
I had seen the Beatles in the 60s and Paul Revere and the Raiders, Hendrix and many more but Black Sabbath was so raw and different.
The lyrics didn't seem satanist at all to me so where people got that idea I don't know but my guess they never really listened to the lyrics.
Black Sabbath scared the hell out of me, I'm glad for that, who wants to be full of hell.
30:27 WHERE THE F****** HELL ARE YA
IM IN ME ROOM
DEAD🤣😂🤣😂🤣😂🤣😂
Sharon’s opinions really tie the documentary together!
😆
😂
Bill was a good drummer with the original lineup. He didn't fit in when they got heavier and faster after Ozzy.
Bullshit! You can't be serious
@Death4Metal46 no fucking way.
@@stevenjaynes72 yeah, in your face serious.
music one of the only things that binds all people's of the world.every person on earth can relate to any kind of music.its part of humans genetics.the people that create music for greed or to make people happy or even wardrums that are about to kickoff a gruesome war.its ingrained in humanities dna.i would find it hard to beilieve that one single person does not listen to music at least once a day for there entire life.even humming or thinking about a song counts.thats how important music is to human beings in this world.there is more music created than any other art form.its a beautiful thing.
They failed to mention Tony Martin. Five studio albums and a live one too.
They're brothers . Brothers fight against each others but in the end , they're still brothers..
The Last Supper---- greatest DVD ever
@@richardhincemon9423 I like hearing them talk
Nice doc!
I love how they subtitle the Brummie accent 😂
If they got the best out of each other why was it little more than a nostalgic Vegas act? Ten years of touring with two new songs! Dio comes back and three were written immediately! Followed by an album that blew 13 away!
There are metal bands around these days that are into the occult, but Sabbath weren't devil worshippers!
What’s the songs playing behind when they are talking about England being violent and rough?
Why only English subs for Ozzy? Is he speaking Chinese?
In fairness Sharon… fucking never goes out of style!!!
5:38 close your eyes and he sounds exactly like Saul Goodman from breaking bad/better call Saul lol
🤘
Black Sabbath is Ozzy,Tony, Billy and Geezer. No Dio and co.
I listen Sabbath 53y and I know what I said. Only and thrue Black Sabbath is hand first 10y. Amen!!!❤
An anthem when I was in college
Every human should feel Sabbath’s vibes before they parish
Wasn’t anything like them? I don’t get why people say they invented metal when they just got it popular and obviously changed rock and metal a lot, but didn’t invent it . Listen to The MC5, Stooges, Blue Cheer, and Alice Cooper.
maybe Alice Cooper in '71 maybe had hints of Metal, Blue Cheer was just loud Blues Rock,Stooges and MC5 were hard rock'n'roll/proto-punk;The Who,Cream and Deep purple etc are also in the same bracket,but there was absolutely nothing like Sabbath in 1969/70. They were the template for Heavy Metal, Doom,and Thrash...I don't see what the problem is, its obvious.
@@richardhincemon9423 that's right ,put simply....Black Sabbath Invented Heavy Metal,there are no other candidates. In fact i played an Alice Cooper record last night..."Killer".... from 1971 no less, and it sounded like a Pub Rock band but wearing sillier clothes. Rock'n'roll yes, but metal? absolutely nowhere near.
@@richardhincemon9423 I don't have that one,but i know what you're getting at.Its Alice being weird innit? You wouldn't catch sabbath doing that....maybe a bit of dark Folk,but,nothing too psych.
Paula Terry dig this...
you have to be more than a musician to get the money you deserve back then.
kind of strange their first album was released on friday the 13th ! i wonder if that was planned ?
Wish they could have talked more about Dio
The Dio Years are wonderful also 😊😊😊😊😊😊
Gooooöd!
Aww, EVH😓😓🥰🥰
One of the best.
Black Sabbath 👌
Why is Sharon commenting on Sabbath?
Because her father was their manager, so she was involved at least tangentially. I’m not defending any of her actions, just explaining that she did have a connection to the band.