Details, Explanation and Meaning About Black Sabbath

Black Sabbath Guide, Meaning , Facts, Information and Description

This article is about the British heavy metal band. For the 1946 British arrests of Jewish paramilitaries, see Operation Agatha. For the 1963 film see Black Sabbath (movie)

Black Sabbath, sometimes simply called Sabbath, is a British heavy metal band originally composed of Ozzy Osbourne (vocals), Tony Iommi (guitar), Geezer Butler (bass), and Bill Ward (drums).

Black Sabbath formed in Birmingham, England in the late 1960s under the name Polka Tulk Blues Band (soon shortened to "Polka Tulk"), and later Earth. Initially a blues rock band, Earth moved in a darker direction when Geezer Butler, a fan of the black magic novels of Dennis Wheatley, wrote an occult-themed song titled "Black Sabbath" (some accounts report that the song name may have been inspired by a 1963 Boris Karloff horror film). When the band found themselves being confused with another local band called Earth, they adopted the song title as their new name.

The newly-named Black Sabbath adopted darker lyrical themes and a slower, ominous style, and became one of the definitive classic heavy metal bands, often ranked alongside Led Zeppelin, Deep Purple and Judas Priest in importance and influence.

Some have gone so far as to argue that Black Sabbath "invented" heavy metal. While this may be overstating the case, there is little argument that Black Sabbath were a profoundly important group in the music's development. A versatile group with many signature sounds, Black Sabbath are sometimes regarded as the ultimate source for the many subgenres (and sub-subgenres) of heavy metal music, including doom metal, death metal, stoner metal, and other forms.

Table of contents
1 History
2 Dio and after
3 Influence on later musicians
4 Influences
5 Personnel
6 Discography
7 UK hit singles
8 External links

History

With an extremely gifted rhythm section and the extraordinary on-stage antics of Ozzy Osbourne the band enjoyed success with memorable songs and brutal riffs beginning with their first album, the eponymous Black Sabbath (1970). Their follow-up album Paranoid (also 1970) brought them greater attention in America and the UK.

The content of the songs (both originals and cover versions) from both albums demonstrated an interest in the occult and black magic. This was a crucial step in establishing the "darkness" and "heavyness" of later heavy metal lyrics, and Black Sabbath were among the first groups to feature such lyrical content, almost to the exclusion of other topics. Led Zeppelin , The Doors and others might have hinted at magic or the occult, but few contemporaries could match Black Sabbath for directness, such as "My name is Lucifer/Please take my hand" (from Black Sabbaths "N.I.B."). Butler wrote many of the lyrics.

Another innovation was the by-product of an accident: Iommi's fretting fingers were injured in an industrial accident during his early tenure with Earth. He was working in a sheet metal factory at the time and the tops of the two middle fingers on his right hand were sliced off. His injured fingertips were often tender, so Iommi downtuned his Gibson guitar a from standard E to D. The resultant slackness of the string allowed Iommi to play with less bother to his fingertips. Butler also downtuned his bass guitar to more easily follow Iommi's playing. The lower pitch often seemed "heavier" or more substantive, and Black Sabbath were perhaps the first popular group to downtune. The practice of downtuning is now common — perhaps even standard — among metal groups.

Black Sabbath released a further three albums, Master of Reality (1971), Vol. 4 (1972), and Sabbath Bloody Sabbath (1973) before management problems and the a label change from Vertigo to WWA disrupted the band's release schedule. The remaining albums by the original line-up are generally less well-regarded by fans. The next album, Sabotage, was not released until 1975 and its follow-up, Technical Ecstasy (1976) would be the last Ozzy-Era album in the heavy Sabbath style.

In 1978 the band released Never Say Die and rumours that Osbourne was to leave the band were proved true in 1979 (Osbourne formed Blizzard of Ozz, swiftly renamed to Ozzy Osbourne Band). He was replaced by Ronnie James Dio but Osbourne's departure was clearly the end of an era for the band.

Dio and after

Black Sabbath's first album with Dio, Heaven and Hell, did much to bring back the Sabbath spirit and style of heavy metal. However, after the departure of original member Ward, with the Mob Rules album, they started to lose their touch, effectively fading into generic heavy metal oblivion. Eventually, Iommi was the only original member appearing on Black Sabbath's releases and tours.

A moderately-successful reunion of all the original Sabbath members was mounted in 1998.

Influence on later musicians

The band rarely received any critical praise ("blundering bozos" was one description) and Osbourne's vocal talent can be safely labelled as exuberant, but highly limited. Nonetheless, they are widely acknowledged, influential pioneers in the heavy metal field.

Some of the incidents and characters in the spoof rock documentary This Is Spinal Tap are based on Black Sabbath. For example the Stonehenge stage set idea in the film was taken from a real stage used Black Sabbath for their Born Again Tour.

Influences

Black Sabbath had a unique sound that emerged from diverse influences. Tony Iommi was greatly influenced both by Hank Marvin's playing on Cliff Richard and the Shadows' heavy-guitar based recordings and by jazz guitar, particularly that of Django Reinhardt. Bill Ward has also expressed a fondness for jazz music in general, and for drummer Buddy Rich especially; this jazz influence may be heard on some of Ward's playing with Black Sabbath. Early incarnations of Black Sabbath merged elements of blues, jazz, and rock and paid their dues playing cover versions of songs by heavy rock acts including Jimi Hendrix, Blue Cheer, and Cream.

Personnel

Original Personnel:
Others
  • Geoff Nichols - keyboards
  • Rick Wakeman - keyboards (guest musician)
  • Dave Walker - vocals (never recorded)
  • Don Airey - keyboards (guest musician)
  • Ronnie James Dio - vocals
  • Vinny Appice - drums
  • Ian Gillan - vocals
  • Bev Bevan - drums
  • Dave Donato - vocals (never recorded)
  • Jeff Fenholt - vocals (never officially released)
  • Glenn Hughes - vocals
  • Ray Gillen - vocals (recorded "Eternal Idol," vocals redone by Tony Martin)
  • Dave Spitz - bass
  • Eric Singer - drums
  • Jo Burt - bass (never recorded)
  • Terry Chimes - drums (never recorded)
  • Gordon Copley - bass
  • Tony Martin - vocals
  • Bob Daisley - bass
  • Laurence Cottle - bass
  • Cozy Powell - drums
  • Rob Halford - vocals (never recorded, but bootlegged)
  • Neil Murray - bass
  • Bobby Rondinelli - drums
  • Joey DeMaio - bass/light-effects technician ("Heaven and Hell" Tour)
  • Adam Wakeman - keyboards during the Ozzfest 2004 tour (he is the son of Rick Wakeman)

Discography

  • 1970 Black Sabbath (Iommi, Osbourne, Butler, Ward); #8 UK, #23 US
  • 1970 Paranoid (Iommi, Osbourne, Butler, Ward); #1 UK, #12 US
  • 1971 Master of Reality (Iommi, Osbourne, Butler, Ward); #5 UK, #8 US
  • 1972 Vol. 4 (Iommi, Osbourne, Butler, Ward); #8 UK, #13 US
  • 1973 Sabbath Bloody Sabbath (Iommi, Osbourne, Butler, Ward); #4 UK, #11 US
  • 1975 Sabotage (Iommi, Osbourne, Butler, Ward); #7 UK, #28 US
  • 1976 We Sold Our Souls For Rock 'n' Roll (Iommi, Osbourne, Butler, Ward); #35 UK, #48 US
  • 1976 Technical Ecstasy (Iommi, Osbourne, Butler, Ward); #13 UK, #51 US
  • 1978 Never Say Die (Iommi, Osbourne, Butler, Ward); #12 UK, #69 US
  • 1980 Heaven and Hell (Iommi, Dio, Butler, Ward); #9 UK, #28 US
  • 1980 Live at Last (Iommi, Osbourne, Butler, Ward); #5 UK
  • 1981 Mob Rules (Iommi, Dio, Butler, Appice); #12 UK, #29 US
  • 1982 Live Evil (live - Iommi, Osbourne, Butler, Appice); #13 UK, #37 US
  • 1983 Born Again (Iommi, Gillan, Butler, Ward, Nicholls); #4 UK, #39 US
  • 1986 Seventh Star (Iommi, Hughes, Spitz, Singer, Nicholls, Copley); #27 UK, #78 US
  • 1987 The Eternal Idol (Iommi, Martin, Spitz, Daisley, Singer, Bevan, Nicholls) #168 US
  • 1989 Headless Cross (Iommi, Martin, Cottle, Powell, Nicholls); #31 UK, #115 US
  • 1990 Tyr (Iommi, Martin, Murray, Powell, Nicholls); #24 UK
  • 1992 Dehumanizer (Iommi, Dio, Butler, Appice, Nicholls); #28 UK, #44 US
  • 1994 Cross Purposes (Iommi, Martin, Butler, Rondinelli, Nicholls); #122 US
  • 1995 Cross Purposes Live (live - Iommi, Martin, Butler, Rondinelli, Nicholls)
  • 1995 Forbidden (Iommi, Martin, Murray, Powell, Nicholls)
  • 1996 (4-disc compilation)
  • 1996 The Sabbath Stones (compilation of later works)
  • 1998 Reunion (live - Iommi, Osbourne, Butler, Ward); #11 US
  • 2000 The Best of Black Sabbath; #24 UK
  • 2002 Past Lives (live - Iommi, Osbourne, Butler, Ward); #114 US

UK hit singles

  • 1970 "Paranoid" #4
  • 1978 "Never Say Die" #21
  • 1978 "Hard Road" #33
  • 1980 "Neon Knights" #22
  • 1980 "Paranoid" (re-issue) #14
  • 1982 "Turn up the Night" #37
  • 1992 "TV Crimes" #33

Did not have a US Top 40 hit.

External links


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