John Michael
"Ozzy
" Osbourne
(born 3 December 1948) is an English singer-songwriter, whose career has now spanned four decades. Osbourne rose to prominence as lead vocalist of pioneering British heavy metal band Black Sabbath, and eventually achieved a multi-platinum solo career which revolutionized the heavy metal genre. [1] As a result he is known as the "Godfather of Heavy Metal", and, because of some of his material, the "Prince of Darkness". In the early 2000s, his career as a celebrity hit a new zenith when he became a star in his own reality show, The Osbournes
, alongside wife/manager Sharon and two of their three children, Kelly and Jack. In August 2008, Osbourne stated in USA Today
that he intends to retire from his music career after two more albums. [2]
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OZZY OSBOURNE TICKETS
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Early life
Osbourne was born in
Aston,
Birmingham, England. His father Jack worked shifts as a
toolmaker at
GEC and his mother Lillian for the car components firm
Lucas, to support him and his five siblings.
[3] [4] Osbourne reportedly suffered from learning difficulties (claiming to be
dyslexic [5] [6]) making life at Prince Albert Road Junior School and Birchfield Road
Secondary Modern School in
Perry Barr difficult for him. However, he did like music and took part in school plays. He also became a great fan of
The Beatles from the age of 14 when he heard their first hit single.
He left school at 15 and was then employed as a construction site labourer, trainee
plumber, apprentice toolmaker, car factory worker and
slaughterhouse worker.
He also spent a few weeks in
Winson Green Prison, when he was unable to pay a fine after being found guilty of
burglary of a clothes shop.
Osbourne would later form a band with former Birchfield Road School classmate
Tony Iommi after he auditioned for a lead singer. During this time,
psychedelic rock was enormously popular. To distinguish themselves from the norm, Iommi and his partners decided to play a heavy
blues-inspired style of music laced with gloomy lyrics.
[7] Names for the band included Polka Tulk and Earth. They later learned of another travelling band of the same name. One day during rehearsals, the band noticed people queueing up outside a cinema where a horror film was being shown, and bassist
Geezer Butler observed how curious it is that people like to be frightened. The film these fellows were waiting to see was the
Mario Bava-directed
Black Sabbath
. After reading an occult book that Osbourne had let Butler borrow, Butler had a dream of a dark figure at the end of his bed. Afterwards, Butler wrote the lyrics to "
Black Sabbath", one of their first songs in a darker vein. It was the prototype of the songs that became their main style later in their career.
[8]
Black Sabbath
right
Despite only a modest investment from US record label
Warner Bros. Records, Black Sabbath met with swift and enduring success. Built around Tony Iommi's guitar riffs, Geezer Butler's
lyrics, and topped by Osbourne's eerie vocals, early records such as
their eponymous debut album and
Paranoid
sold huge numbers, as well as getting airplay.
Early solo career
In 1979, Osbourne was fired from Black Sabbath largely for unreliability due to
substance abuse. All the members in the band did drugs, but Osbourne did them to a much greater extent than other members of the band. He was replaced by former
Rainbow singer
Ronnie James Dio.
In the late 1970s, the band Necromandus rehearsed with Ozzy Osbourne and briefly became the first incarnation of his
Blizzard of Ozz solo project. The Ozzy Osbourne Band began as The Blizzard of Ozz, formed by Osbourne's new manager and future wife,
Sharon Arden. The first line-up of the band featured drummer
Lee Kerslake (of
Uriah Heep), bassist/lyricist
Bob Daisley (of Rainbow and later Uriah Heep), keyboardist Don Airey and guitarist
Randy Rhoads (of
Quiet Riot). The record company would eventually title the record
Blizzard of Ozz
credited simply under Osbourne's name. Largely written by Daisley and Rhoads, Osbourne met with considerable success on his first solo effort, the debut collection selling well with heavy metal fans.
A second album,
Diary of a Madman
featured more of Bob Daisley's song writing and guitar work by Randy Rhoads,
who was ranked the 85th greatest guitarist of all time by
Rolling Stone
magazine in 2003.
[9]
In March 1982, while in Florida for the follow-up album
Diary of a Madman
tour, and a week away from playing
Madison Square Garden in New York City, a light aircraft taken without its owner's consent carrying guitarist
Randy Rhoads crashed while performing low passes over the band's tour bus. In a prank turned deadly, the right wing of the aircraft clipped the bus, causing the plane to crash into a tree and finally a nearby house, killing Rhoads as well as the pilot, Andrew Aycock, and the band's hairdresser, Rachel Youngblood. On autopsy, cocaine was found to be present in Aycock's urine.
[10] Learning of the death of his close friend and band mate, Osbourne once again fell into deep depression. The record company gave Osbourne a break from performing to mourn for his late band member, but Osbourne stopped work for only one week.
Ex-
Gillan guitarist
Bernie Torme was the first guitarist to replace Randy once the tour resumed. Torme however, found the pressure of learning the band's songs so quickly and the idea of appearing before fans still mourning the loss of Rhoads unsettling. His tenure with the band would last less than one month.
During an audition for guitarists in a hotel room, Osbourne selected
Brad Gillis, (who went on to be one of two guitarists in Night Ranger) to finish the tour. The tour continued, culminating in the release of the 1982 live album,
Speak of the Devil
recorded at the Ritz in New York City. A
live tribute album for Rhoads was later released. This album would also feature a studio song by Randy, taken from studio outtakes, called "
Dee" in honour of his mother.
Also, in an August 2008 interview with Total Guitar Magazine Osbourne was asked if he wanted to say something about Randy Rhoads, the rock star said: "I have no regrets except I wasn't able to keep Randy from getting onto that plane."
Further solo career
In the 1980s and 1990s, Osbourne's career was an effort on two fronts: continuing to make music without Rhoads, and becoming sober. The 1981 concerts were recorded with a live album in mind. Entitled
Speak of the Devil
, known in the United Kingdom as
Talk of the Devil
, was originally planned to consist of live recordings from 1981, primarily from Osbourne's solo work. With news of Black Sabbath also about to release a live album titled "
Live Evil" however, Osbourne and Sharon decided to pre-empt his former band's efforts, and the album ended up consisting entirely of Black Sabbath cover material, recorded with Gillis, bassist Rudy Sarzo, and drummer Tommy Aldridge. In the same
Guitar Player
interview where Brad Gillis discussed how he came to play for Osbourne, he discussed the live album, and admitted that everyone in the band wanted to rework some parts, but were not given the opportunity.
Speak of the Devil
was musically left alone. Osbourne later commented (inside the cover of "Tribute") "I don't give a fuck about that album. It was just a bunch of bullshit Sabbath covers." He also stated that it was the recording company that wanted a new album, and that he was unwilling to release the tapes of performances live with Rhoads, believing this would dishonour his memory.
In 1982, Osbourne was the guest vocalist on the
Was (Not Was) pop dance track "Shake Your Head (Let's Go to Bed)" with
Madonna performing backing vocals. Osbourne's cut was remixed and re-released in the early 1990s for a Was (Not Was) greatest hits album in Europe, and it cracked the UK pop chart. Madonna asked that her vocal not be restored for the hits package, so new vocals by
Kim Basinger were added to complement Osbourne's lead.
Jake E. Lee, formerly of
Ratt and
Rough Cutt, was a more successful recruit than Torme or Gillis, recording 1983's
Bark at the Moon
(co-writing the album with Bob Daisley, and also featuring Tommy Aldridge, and former Rainbow keyboard player Don Airey). 1986's
The Ultimate Sin
followed (with bassist
Phil Soussan and drummer
Randy Castillo), and touring behind both albums with ex-Uriah Heep keyboardist John Sinclair joining prior to the Ultimate Sin tour.
In late 1986, Osbourne was the target in the first of a series of US lawsuits brought against him, alleging that one of his songs, "Suicide Solution", drove two more American teenagers to commit
suicide because of its "
subliminal lyrics". The cases were decided in Osbourne's favour, essentially on the premise that Osbourne cannot be held accountable for a listener's actions. It also helped that the song was clearly about alcohol abuse and "suicide solution" was a play on words. Soon after, Osbourne publicly acknowledged that he wrote the song about his friend,
AC/DC lead singer
Bon Scott, who died from alcohol abuse, and that
solution
referred to both alcohol as a
solution
to problems and as a
chemical solution. Bob Daisley, however, asserts that he wrote this song and that it was about his concerns over Osbourne's own ongoing battle with substance abuse.
Lee and Osbourne parted ways in 1987, however, reportedly due to musical differences. Osbourne continued to struggle with his chemical dependencies, and commemorated the fifth anniversary of Rhoads' death with
Tribute
, the live recordings from 1981 that had gone unreleased for years. In 1988, Osbourne appeared in
The Decline of Western Civilization II: The Metal Years
and told the director,
Penelope Spheeris, that "sobriety fucking sucks." Meanwhile, Osbourne found his most enduring replacement for Rhoads to date — a guitarist named
Zakk Wylde. Wylde joined Osbourne for his 1988 effort,
No Rest for the Wicked
, in which Castillo remained on drums, Sinclair on keyboards and Daisley once more returned to co-writing/bass duties fresh from a stint in Black Sabbath the previous year. The subsequent tour saw Osbourne reunited with erstwhile Black Sabbath bandmate Geezer Butler on bass, and a live EP (entitled
Just Say Ozzy
) featuring this lineup was released two years later. Geezer continued to tour with Osbourne for the subsequent four tours, and was a major stage presence throughout. In 1989, Ozzy Osbourne performed as part of the
Moscow Music Peace Festival.
Later solo career and Black Sabbath reunion
While very successful as a heavy metal act through the 1980s, Osbourne sustained commercial success into the 1990s, starting with 1991's
No More Tears
, which enjoyed much radio and
MTV exposure. It also initiated a practice of bringing in outside composers to help pen Osbourne's solo material, instead of relying solely upon his recording ensemble to write and arrange the music. The album was mixed by veteran rock producer Michael Wagener, who also mixed the
Live and Loud
album which followed in 1993. It went
platinum four times over,
[11] and ranked at number 10 on that year's
Billboard rock charts. Osbourne was awarded his only
Grammy for the track "I Don't Want to Change the World" from
No More Tears
for
Best Metal Performance of
1994.
[12]
At this point Osbourne expressed his fatigue with the process of touring, and proclaimed his "retirement tour" (which was to be short-lived). It was comically called "No More Tours", a pun on his No More Tears album. Prior to the tour Mike Inez took over on bass and Kevin Jones on keyboards as Sinclair was touring with The Cult. Osbourne's entire CD catalogue was remastered and reissued in 1995. Also that year, he released
Ozzmosis
and went on stage again, dubbing his concert performances "The Retirement Sucks Tour". The lineup on "Ozzmosis" was Wylde, Butler (who had just quit Black Sabbath again) and ex-Bad English, Steve Vai and Hardline drummer Deen Castronovo, now in Journey. Keyboards were played by Yes's Rick Wakeman and producer Michael Beinhorn. The tour maintained Butler and Castronovo and saw Sinclair return, but a major change was new guitarist ex-David Lee Roth man Joe Holmes. Wylde was debating on an offer to join Guns N' Roses and Ozzy could wait no longer and replaced him. In early 1996, Butler and Castronovo left and Inez (by now in Alice In Chains since 1993)and Castillo filled in. Ultimately, Faith No More's Mike Bordin and ex-Suicidal Tendencies bassist Robert Trujillo joined on drums and bass respectively. A greatest hits package,
The Ozzman Cometh
was issued in 1997.
Osbourne's biggest financial success of the 1990s was a venture named
Ozzfest, created and managed by his wife/manager Sharon and assisted loosely by his son
Jack. Ozzfest was a quick hit with metal fans, spurring up-and-coming groups like
Incubus and
Slipknot to broad exposure and commercial success. Some acts shared the bill with a reformed Black Sabbath during the 1997 Ozzfest tour, beginning in West Palm Beach, Florida. Osbourne reunited with the original members of Sabbath in 1997 and has performed periodically with the band ever since.
Since its start, five million people have attended Ozzfest, which has grossed over US$100 million. The festival also helped promote many new hard rock and heavy metal acts of the late 1990s and early 2000s, including
System of a Down,
Drowning Pool,
Limp Bizkit,
Korn,
Disturbed,
HIM,
Linkin Park,
Atreyu,
Papa Roach,
P.O.D.,
Velvet Revolver,
Godsmack,
Avenged Sevenfold,
Otep, and
Slipknot. Up until the 2006 tour, Osbourne was always the headlining artist (either solo or with Black Sabbath), and it has featured other artists such as
Metallica,
Danzig,
Sepultura,
Marilyn Manson,
Pantera,
Iron Maiden,
Judas Priest,
Slayer, and
Megadeth. Ozzfest helped Osbourne to become the first hard rock and heavy metal star to hit $50 million in merchandise sales.
Osbourne's first album of new studio material in seven years, 2001's
Down to Earth
, met with only moderate success, as did its live follow up,
Live at Budokan
.
In 2003, Osbourne recruited former Metallica bassist Jason Newsted after he left the band in 2000. Both Newsted and Osbourne were enthusiastic about recording an album together, despite the fact that Newsted left shortly after touring with Osbourne towards the end of 2003.
On 8 December 2003, Osbourne was rushed into emergency
surgery at Wexham Park Hospital in
Slough, England when he had an accident with his
all-terrain vehicle on his estate in
Chalfont St Peter in
Buckinghamshire. Osbourne broke his
collar bone, eight
ribs, and a
neck vertebra. An operation was performed to lift the collarbone, which was believed to be resting on a major artery and interrupting blood flow to the arm. Sharon later revealed that Osbourne had stopped breathing following the crash and was resuscitated by Osbourne's then personal bodyguard, Sam Ruston.
While in the hospital, Osbourne achieved his first ever UK number one single, a duet of the Black Sabbath ballad, "Changes" with daughter Kelly. In doing so, he broke the record of the longest period between an artist's first UK chart appearance (with Black Sabbath's "
Paranoid", number four in August 1970) and their first number one hit: a gap of 33 years.
Since the accident, he has fully recovered and headlined the 2004 Ozzfest, where he again reunited with Black Sabbath. He has also written a Broadway musical. The reputed topic is that of the Russian monk
Grigory Rasputin, who held sway with Russia's last royal
Romanov family. In 2005, he released a box set called
Prince of Darkness
. The first and second discs are collections of live performances, B-sides, demos and singles. The third disc contained duets and other odd tracks with other artists, including "
Born to Be Wild" with
Miss Piggy. The fourth disc is entirely new material where Osbourne covers his favourite songs by his biggest influences and favourite bands, including
The Beatles,
John Lennon,
David Bowie and others.
He and wife Sharon starred in yet another MTV show, this time a competition reality show entitled "
Battle for Ozzfest". A number of yet unsigned bands send one member to compete in a challenge to win a spot on the 2005 Ozzfest and a possible recording contract.
In 2004, Osbourne received an
NME
award for "godlike genius".
Shortly after
Ozzfest 2005, Osbourne announced that he will no longer headline Ozzfest. Although he announced his retirement from Ozzfest, Osbourne came back for one more year, 2006, albeit only closing for just over half the concerts, leaving the others to be closed by
System of a Down. He also played the closing act for the second stage at Shoreline Amphitheatre in Mountain View, CA on 1 July as well as Randall's Island, NY on 29 July. After the concert in Bristow, Virginia, Osbourne announced he would return for another year of Ozzfest in 2007. Tickets for the
2007 tour were offered to fans free of charge, which led to some controversy. In 2008, Ozzfest was reduced to a one-day event in
Dallas, Texas, where Osbourne played, along with Metallica.
In 2005, he was inducted into the
UK Music Hall of Fame along with Black Sabbath where he
mooned the crowd because of their poor reception while they were playing.
In March 2006, he said that he hopes to release a new studio album soon with long time on-off guitarist,
Zakk Wylde of Black Label Society. In October 2006, it was announced that Tony Iommi, Ronnie James Dio,
Vinny Appice, and Geezer Butler would be touring together again, though not as Black Sabbath, but under the moniker 'Heaven and Hell (the title of Dio's first Black Sabbath album). The response to the news on Osbourne's website was that Osbourne wished Tony and Ronnie well and that there is only one Sabbath.
The album, titled
Black Rain
, was released on 22 May 2007. Osbourne's first new studio album in almost six years, it featured a more serious tone than previous albums. "I thought I'd never write again without any stimulation...But you know what? Instead of picking up the bottle I just got honest and said, 'I don't want life to go (to pieces)'", Osbourne stated in a
Billboard
interview.
[13]
left
right.
On 24 May 2007, Osbourne was honoured at the second annual
VH1 Rock Honors, along with
Genesis,
Heart, and
ZZ Top. It was announced on 18 May 2007 that Osbourne would be the first inductee into The Birmingham Walk of Stars. In a ceremony conducted on 6 July 2007, a bronze star honouring Osbourne was placed on Broad Street in his home city of Birmingham, England, in his presence. Ozzy Osbourne is the first artist to be honoured on Birmingham's Hollywood-style Walk of Fame. He was presented with the honour by the Lord Mayor of Birmingham. "I am really honoured," he said, "All my family is here and I thank everyone for this reception - I'm absolutely knocked out".
[14]
Osbourne was also a judge for the 6th annual
Independent Music Awards to support independent artists' careers.
[15]
In July 2008, it was announced that Ozzy Osbourne would be the recipient of the prestigious 'Living Legend' award in the Classic Rock Roll of Honour this year. Osbourne follows the likes of
Jimmy Page and
Alice Cooper.
On 20 August 2008,
Affliction Clothing announced that Osbourne would be the musical guest at their 11 October
Affliction: Day of Reckoning mixed martial arts event to be held at the Thomas and Mack Center in Las Vegas.
[16]
In late December 2008,
Slash's wife announced that, along with
Fergie, Osbourne would be appearing on the guitarist's solo album.
In 2009 it was announced that there would not be an Ozzfest 2009, but that Ozzfest would return in 2010
[17]
Osbourne revealed in July 2009 that he was currently seeking a new guitar player. While he states that he has not fallen out with Zakk Wylde, he said he felt his songs were beginning to sound like
Black Label Society and fancied a change.
[18]
Osbourne performed at the gaming festival,
BlizzCon 2009.
[19]
Osbourne is set to perform at the Sunset Strip Music Festival on September 9 through 12.
Personal life
Osbourne has been married twice and is the father of seven children (five biological, and two adopted). He was first married to Thelma Riley (now a teacher in Leicestershire) and adopted her son Elliot Kingsley (1966); together they had Jessica Starshine Osbourne Hobbs (20 January 1972) and
Louis John Osbourne (1975).
thumb
He later married
Sharon Arden and had three children with her. They are
Aimee Osbourne (2 September 1983),
Kelly Osbourne (27 October 1984) and
Jack Osbourne (8 November 1985). They also took in family friend
Robert Marcato after his mother died, but never legally adopted him. Osbourne also has three grandchildren, Isabelle and Harry from his daughter Jessica and granddaughter Maia from son Louis. He wrote a song for his daughter, Aimee, which appeared as a b-side on the album Ozzmosis. He divides his time between Los Angeles and Buckinghamshire, England.
It was reported in 1992 that Osbourne was a member of the
Church of England and prayed before each show.
[20]
Osbourne achieved greater
celebrity status by the unlikely success of his own brand of
reality television.
The Osbournes
, a series featuring the domestic life of Osbourne and his family (wife Sharon, children Jack and Kelly and special guest appearances from his son Louis, but not their eldest daughter Aimee, who declined to participate). The program became one of MTV's greatest hits. It premiered on 5 March 2002, and the final episode aired 21 March 2005.
In 2002, Osbourne and wife Sharon were invited to the
White House Correspondents' Association dinner by
Fox News Channel correspondent
Greta Van Susteren for that year's event. President Bush noted Osbourne's presence by joking: "The thing about Ozzy is, he's made a lot of big hit recordings – 'Party with the Animals', '
Sabbath, Bloody Sabbath', 'Facing Hell', 'Black Skies' and 'Bloodbath in Paradise'. Ozzy, Mom loves your stuff."
[21]
He has over 15
tattoos, the letters O-Z-Z-Y across the knuckles of his left hand was the first he had done as a teenager, by means of a
sewing needle and
pencil lead.
Ozzy and Sharon Osbourne are one of the UK's richest couples, according to the
Sunday Times
Rich List. They ranked at number 458 in 2005, with an estimated
£100 million earned from recording, touring and TV shows. They ranked above most British music stars, such as
Rod Stewart,
George Michael,
Robbie Williams, the Rolling Stones'
Charlie Watts and
Ronnie Wood, and
Pink Floyd,
Queen, and
Dire Straits members.
Osbourne experienced tremors for some years and linked them to his continuous drug abuse. In May 2005 he found out it was actually
Parkin Syndrome, a genetic condition, the symptoms of which are very similar to
Parkinson's disease. Osbourne will have to take daily medication for the rest of his life to combat the involuntary shudders associated with the condition.
[22] Osbourne has shown symptoms of a mild hearing loss, as evidenced in the television show,
The Osbournes
, as he often asks his family members to repeat what they say.
Osbourne is a supporter of English
association football club
Aston Villa, as he grew up in the
Aston area close to
Villa Park.
[23]
Career troubles
Ozzy Osbourne found himself under fire in his controversial concert and stage acts that some parent-teacher associations, media content watchdog activist groups, including many
Christian groups accused Osbourne of being a negative influence for teenagers. They claimed messages on his songs, actions (the infamous "
horned hand") and stage decorations are portrayals of devil worship and glorified
Satanism, but Osbourne denies these accusations and he claims it was done in good fun, symbolised teenage rebellion and for shock value. In actuality, Osbourne flashed a peace sign with each hand, while his Sabbath replacement,
Ronnie James Dio, was better known for flashing the "horns", which is actually an Italian tradition. At least one scholar has compared the controversy surrounding Osbourne and accusations of Satanism to those leveled against the renowned occultist,
Aleister Crowley, and how both were demonized by the media and the
Christian Right for their antics. Osbourne tempts the comparison with his song "
Mr. Crowley". Both Osbourne and Crowley enjoyed the infamy of being labeled Satanists, though both denied the charge. Still, they accepted labels such as Prince of Darkness (Osbourne) and The Great Beast (Crowley), terms cited by critics to condemn both men as
anti-Christian.
[24]
Osbourne was thought to have performed songs that promoted or condoned suicide. In 1985,
California teenager John McCollum committed suicide while listening to Ozzy Osbourne's "
Suicide Solution," a song about the dangers of alcohol abuse. Although McCollum suffered clinical depression, his parents sued Ozzy Osbourne (
McCollum v. CBS
[25]) for their son's death, claiming the lyrics in the song, "Where to hide, suicide is the only way out. Don't you know what it's really about?" convinced McCollum to commit suicide. Although the family lawyer suggested that Osbourne should be criminally charged for encouraging a young person to commit suicide, the courts ruled in Osbourne's favor saying there was no connection between the song and McCollum's suicide. Osbourne was sued yet again for the same reason in 1991 (
Waller v. Osbourne
), by the parents of Michael Waller, for $9 million, but the courts ruled in Osbourne's favor in that case as well.
[26]
He has also come under fire from former musicians such as Bob Daisley, Lee Kerslake, and Phil Soussan for not paying them royalties and giving them credit on the albums they played on.
[27] [28] Bob Daisley and Lee Kerslake sued the Osbournes in 1986 for outstanding royalties from songs written for the Blizzard of Ozz releases, and for reinstatement of performance credits. Litigation continued in 2002 when Daisley and Kerslake (and bassist Phil Soussan) once again sued for unpaid royalties. The Osbournes responded by erasing their contributions on the original masters and re-issuing new versions with the bass and drum tracks re-recorded by
Robert Trujillo and
Mike Bordin.
[29] Phil Soussan also brought a lawsuit against Osbourne and even got into a physical confrontation with Sharon at
Randy Castillo's funeral.
[30]
Drug, alcohol, and animal abuse
According to the press, Osbourne's antics progressively reached a more dangerous point during the 1980s; his
alcoholism and drug abuse continued. He later underwent a number of treatments for alcoholism and drug abuse.
After signing his first solo career record deal he came in to meet some of the people who worked at the record company. His plan was to release doves into the air to get people to notice him, but when no one noticed, he changed his plans. He grabbed a
dove, bit its head off, then spat the head out.
[31] Then, with blood still dripping from his lips, a security guard came to remove him. Despite its controversy, this act has been parodied and alluded to several times throughout his career and is part of what made Ozzy Osbourne famous.
[32]
He gained further notoriety on 20 January 1982, when he bit the head off a
bat he thought was rubber while performing at the
Veterans Memorial Auditorium in
Des Moines,
Iowa.
Rolling Stone
magazine in 2004 ranked this incident number two on its list of "Rock's Wildest Myths."
[33] While the
Rolling Stone
article stated the bat was alive, the person who threw it onto the stage said it was brought to the show dead.
[34] According to Osbourne himself in the booklet to the 2002 edition of
Diary of a Madman
, the bat was not only alive, but also managed to bite Osbourne, resulting in him having to take rabies shots.
During a tour stop in Texas in 1982, while wearing future wife Sharon's dress, Ozzy drunkenly urinated on a
cenotaph erected in honor of those who died at the
Alamo across the street from the
actual building.
[35] A police officer arrested him,
and Osbourne was subsequently banned from the city of
San Antonio for a decade.
[36]
Osbourne's alcohol problem also came to a very serious peak in 1989 after he became violently drunk and attempted to strangle his wife and manager
Sharon.
Osbourne later admitted that, at the height of his drug addiction, he shot his family's pets saying: "I was taking drugs so much I was a wreck. The final straw came when I shot all our cats. We had about 17, and I went crazy and shot them all. My wife found me under the piano in a white suit, a shotgun in one hand and a knife in the other."
[37]
Discography
See: Ozzy Osbourne discography
Remastering and print status of solo releases
Osbourne's solo material (up to 1993) was remastered for
CD release in August 1995.
In the wake of a lawsuit by former band members Daisley and Kerslake over unpaid royalties for songwriting credit, Osbourne's catalogue was remastered and reissued again in spring 2001. This time, the original bass guitar and drum tracks on Osbourne's
Blizzard of Ozz
and
Diary of a Madman
were removed and re-recorded entirely by bassist
Robert Trujillo (
Suicidal Tendencies,
Infectious Grooves,
Black Label Society, currently of
Metallica) and drummer Mike Bordin (
Faith No More).
[38] The pair also played on Osbourne's studio album,
Down to Earth
from 2001. Other releases, such as
Speak of the Devil
,
The Ultimate Sin
,
Just Say Ozzy
and
Live and Loud
were deleted from Osbourne's catalogue entirely, though they are still on iTunes.
Backing band
See: List of Ozzy Osbourne band members
Current line up
- Rob "Blasko" Nicholson - bass (2003, 2006-present)
- Mike Bordin - drums (since 1997)
- Adam Wakeman - keyboards (since 2004)
Former band members
Guitarists
- Zakk Wylde (1987-1992, 1995, 1998, 2001-2004, 2006-2009)
- Randy Rhoads (1979-1982)
- Bernie Tormé (1982)
- Brad Gillis (1982)
- Jake E. Lee (1982-1987)
- Steve Vai (1994-1995)
- Joe Holmes (1995-1998, 2000)
- Alex Skolnick (1995)
- Jerry Cantrell (2004-2005)
Bassists
- Rudy Sarzo (1981-1982)
- Bob Daisley (1979-1981, 1983-1991)
- Phil Soussan (1986-1987)
- James LoMenzo (1994)
- Mike Inez (1989-1993)
- Geezer Butler (1988, 1995-1996)
- Robert Trujillo (1996-2003)
- Jason Newsted (2003)
- Chris Wyse (2003-2005)
|
;
Drummers
- Lee Kerslake (1979-1981)
- Tommy Aldridge (1981-1983)
- Carmine Appice (1983)
- Randy Castillo (1983-1993, 1995)
- Deen Castronovo (1993-1997)
Keyboardists
- Johnny Cook (1981)
- Don Airey (1980, 1983)
- Mike Moran (1985-1986)
- John Sinclair (1988-1991)
- Kevin Jones (1991-1992)
- Rick Wakeman (1995)
- Michael Railo (2001)
|
References
- Diary of a Madman - The Official Biography
- Ozzy 'retiring after two more albums'
- Sue Crawford (2003),"Ozzy Unauthorized" ISBN 978-1-84317-016-7
- What I've Learned: Ozzy Osbourne
- Blizzard of Oz
- Profiles of Ozzy Osbourne, Elvis Costello, David Bowie, Norah Jones
- Ozzy Osbourne - Biography
- Black Sabbath - Biography
- The 100 Greatest Guitarists of All Time
- Title Unavailable
- RIAA Gold & Platinum database-''No More Tears''
- AllMusic ''No More Tears''-awards
- Ozzy Osbourne: New Album First I've done Sober
- BBC NEWS | England | West Midlands | Brum 'Walk of Fame' star for Ozzy
- Title Unavailable
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- Ozzy Seeks New Guitarist: I Felt Like My Stuff Was Beginning To Sound Like Black Label Society
- Ozzy to end BlizzCon 2009
- AT TEA WITH: Ozzy Osbourne; Family Man. Fights Fat, Is Good With Kids. - The New York Times
- W rocked by Ozzy at dinner
- Ozzy Osbourne - Osbourne Diagnosed With Parkin Syndrome
- http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0005285/bio
- Devil Music and the Great Beast: Ozzy Osbourne, Aleister Crowley, and the Christian Right
- Listed at FindLaw.com: 202 Cal.App.3d 989, McCollum v. CBS, Inc., 12 July 1988. No. B025565
- Parental Advisory: Music Censorship in America
- Cosmic Debris Magazine Bob Daisley. Retrieved on 4 August 2008
- Yahoo! Music Ozzy Osbourne Lawsuit Dismissed, But 'Not Over Yet'. Retrieved on 4 August 2008
- Blabbermouth BOB DAISLEY: Recent OZZY Reissues Are Insult To RANDY RHOADS' Memory. Retrieved on 4 August 2008
- Ultimate Guitar Ozzy And Sharron Osbourne Make Big Noise About Exes. Retrieved on 4 August 2008
- Controversy & Madness
- Highs and lows of superstar Ozzy
- Ozzy Bites Head Off Bat!
- Ozzy left his mark
- Notorious story of Ozzy at The Alamo is mostly all wet
- Ozzy Osbourne
- Ozzy Osbourne - The rest of the story
- Class Action Suit For Ozzy Remasters