A Rock's Backpages Reader.
Ozzy Osbourne is the undisputed heavyweight godfather of Planet Metal. When his band Black Sabbath emerged from working-class Birmingham in the late Sixties, there were no precedents for their sludgy, barbiturated, Hammer Horror Rock. Three and a half decades on, no one has topped the awesome grind of 'Paranoid', 'Sweet Leaf', 'Iron Man', 'War Pigs', 'Supernaut' and other Sabbath classics. Sabbath remain the template for rock as much of an influence on grunge as on Nu Metal.
Few gave Ozzy much chance of carving out a meaningful solo career when he departed Sabbath in the late Seventies. Drunk and overweight, snacking on bats, he was in danger of turning into metal's saddest clown. Into his life stepped Sharon Arden, soon to become his manager and wife. From the annual Ozzfest tour to MTV phenomenon 'The Osbournes', the couple have masterminded one of the most enduring careers in the rock and roll business.
Rock's Backpages, the Online Library of Rock & Roll, here collects the best pieces ever written on Ozzy and Sabbath. From the early days of Earth and Polka Tulk to the televisual triumph of 'The Osbournes', writers such as Lester Bangs, Mike Saunders, Glenn O'Brien, Simon Reynolds, John Walsh, Chris Welch and David Dalton observe, analyse and converse with Ozzy and his sometime bandmates Tony Iommi, Geezer Butler and Bill Ward.