Jealous Haters Since 1998!
Home | News | Reviews | Day In Rock | Photos | RockNewsWire | antiTainment Wire | Feeds


I Want to Know What You Meant.

By DeadSun

Following the release of Black Sabbath’s Never Say Die (1978), Ozzy Osbourne left the pioneering metal outfit, and quickly found himself out on his own. What followed for Ozzy was--- essentially--- months of locking himself in a Los Angeles hotel room, sustaining his despair with a (rather) steady diet of alcohol and cocaine, with no sign of a rebound in sight. He had been knocked down, and at the time, it seemed like it would be but a matter of time before the public declared him down for the count, once and for all. That was, of course, before Sharon Arden--- daughter of Black Sabbath’s ex-manager--- was able to pull Ozzy from the shipwreck of his own creation, and convinced him to form another band.

… and thus the search was on for a guitarist.

After auditioning countless throngs of  Toni Iommi clones, Dana Strum introduced Ozzy to a 23 year-old, who had been making a lot of waves in the LA scene, and had garnered a reputation as a madman on the electric six-string. Legend has it this audition in particular lasted for roughly five minutes before Ozzy made up his mind, and is somewhat easy to believe, considering just who this axeman was--- Randy Rhoads. Further arming himself with a first-class rhythm section which consisted of Bob Daisley on bass, and Lee Kerslake behind the drum kit, Blizzard of Ozz became a reality in 1980, laid to tape in jolly old England, and released via Don Arden’s JET Record label.

In terms of plain Rock and Roll, Blizzard of Ozz is, with little occurrence of dissention, what I refer to as a High Classic. This is an album which we were all expected to know--- cover to cover--- before we could pass “Rock and Roll Kindergarten”. Who cannot--- in a matter of .005 seconds--- identify the first glorious notes to the opening riff on “Crazy Train”, or not know the feeling brought on when hearing the guitar soloing on “Mr. Crowley”? Say what you will about the limitations of Ozzy’s voice--- the man knew how to make the most out of what he was born with. The musicianship on this album held fast to the premiums that heavy metal fans have ALWAYS demanded of their listening choices. Randy Rhoads’ playing, as brilliant as it was brief, inspired a generation of aspiring guitarists, in the manner of peer innovators such as Ritchie Blackmore and Eddie Van Halen. It was exciting, classically-laced, and stocked well with fresh perspective. Verily, on March 19th, 1982, the world forever lost one of it’s most promising young musical talents--- one who probably deserves more credit for making Ozzy’s comeback a reality than anyone else. 

Rest in peace, Randy Rhoads (12.6.56 - 3.19.82).  

Blizzard of Ozz, needless to say proved to the world that there was indeed a “life after Black Sabbath”, as far as Ozzy was concerned, and has gone on to become a musical impetus behind the evolution of hard rock and heavy metal, as the two styles are presently performed and understood. 

That having been said--- I think that what was done to both Blizzard of Ozz, as well as Diary of a Madman, back in 2002, was fraudulent, and downright CRIMINAL. I understand that Ozzy and Sharon have financial interests. I understand the legal controversies that are swirling around bassist Bob Daisley’s seemingly legitimate claims to co-authoring many of the songs on those albums--- but I look upon the re-recording of Blizzard and Diary, replacing the original rhythm sections with “new” tracks, laid down by ex-Faith No More drummer Mike Bordin, and ex-Suicidal Tendencies bassist Mike Trujillo, as an act of war. The Osbournes have taken two of heavy metal’s most cherished musical sacraments, and tampered with them. This isn’t pop music--- this is heavy metal, and heavy metal fans have long, long memories--- memories that will last longer than the fair-weather popularity the Osbournes are presently celebrating. The sound mix for Randy Rhoads’ guitar tracks has been changed. The raw, informal feel of Max Norman’s original production has been contaminated. 

This will NOT do. 

Do not--- I repeat--- DO NOT buy the re-recordings from 2002. The 2002 recordings are an insult to the memory of Randy Rhoads, and soil the integrity of the original recordings--- the recordings which, I’ll remind you, got Ozzy where he is on this very day. If Blizzard of Ozz isn’t already a part of your music library, it simply MUST be acquired. Look for the re-masters from 1995. They are easily distinguishable from the newer counterfeit remakes, in that “OZZY” is scrawled down the side of the front cover in very large letters.

Keep this High Classic pure. 

Hear this High Classic as was intended to be heard by the world.

Insure that this High Classic REMAINS just that.

Until next month… this is DS, signing off.

DS
 



Waiting on Satan's Call

By Keavin Wiggins

"It's not how you play the game, it's if you win or lose". When it came time to make his mark as a solo artist, Ozzy played the game to win and he did. Ozzy may have only set out to prove that there was life after Sabbath but he achieved much more than that--he helped moved the metal genre forward into a new era and created a masterpiece.  

A lot of the greatness that resulted from this recording can be attributed to the "Blizzard of Ozz" group, not just Ozzy. It was the perfect pairing of music visionaries. Don Airey gave the album a distinctive keyboard sound, Bob Daisley and Lee Kerslake provided the perfect backdrop and aided in the songwriting. But it was the young guitar virtuoso Randy Rhoads that elevated this effort into a whole new realm. 

Hard rock and metal to this point was primarily based on blues rock, just turned up to 11. Guitarists like Iommi, Blackmore and Van Halen brought their own unique touch to the genre and did employ various influences but the underpinning was always the blues. Randy Rhoads broke that mold when expanding the musical reach of metal by utilizing classical guitar. It was the perfect marriage of styles. Blackmore had introduced elements of classical music into metal previously, especially with his signature use of minor-key scales, but Rhoads took that into an entirely new realm. A gifted guitarist, Rhoads not only provided the music with mindblowing solo work but his meticulous leads and classical influence really made the songs standout from all hard rock and metal that had come before. 

Blizzard of Ozz was Ozzy's finest hour as a vocalist as well. While Ozzy has a truly unique voice and style, he isn't particular known as a virtuoso vocalist. But on Blizzard of Ozz he stretched his instrument to its limits and really showcased what he was capable of. 

The thing that really sets Blizzard of Ozz apart from other recordings isn't so much the virtuosity, but how it was utilized to make the songs stronger. Plenty of virtuosos will go into overkill to highlight their skills and the songs suffer because of it. On this album, the pieces all fit together to make a greater whole and everyone shined as a result. The songwriting on this album is again some of Ozzy's finest. The range and depth is still pretty amazing to this day when you consider that this is considered a metal album, when it was so much more. Rockers like "Crazy Train" and "I Don't Know" are set against elegant ballads like "Revelation (Mother Earth)" and "Goodbye To Romance" and then the somber and powerful "Mr. Crowley" compliments Randy's classical showpiece "Dee". 

Blizzard of Ozz is not only a classic; it is an absolutely essential part of any rock fan's collection. The reasons it stood out 25 years ago are still just as valid today, if not more so. When set against other metal releases and even rock releases of the past quarter century, there is a lot more depth to this album than most that came after.  Perhaps Ozzy was hungry and needed to prove what he was made of and in choosing the right team to make that statement, he not only showed that there was life after Sabbath, he expanded the scope of metal while making the album of his career and one of greatest rock albums of all time. 
 


Album Info

Ozzy Osbourne - Blizzard of Oz
Label: Jet / Sony
 
Tracks:
I Don't Know
Crazy Train
Goodbye To Romance
Dee
Suicide Solution
Mr. Crowley
No Bone Movies
Revelation (Mother Earth)
Steal Away (The Night)

Listen to samples and Purchase this CD online
 
 

Your Turn, what do you think?


They call you 
What do you think ?:

Fan Speak:

 




.
.
News Reports
.
Day in Rock:
Chickenfoot The Movie- Alice In Chains 2010 Tour Plans- Nickelback, Breaking Benjamin, Shinedown Team Up For Tour- Bonnaroo- Green Day Revamp and more

Yesterday's Report: 11/19: Aerosmith Members Fear Tyler May Be Back On Drugs- Bon Jovi Back On Top- Live Daughtry Webcast Tonight- Metallica Add to 2010 World Tour Plans and more

 Subscribe To Day in Rock

Quicks: Ringo, McCartney Duet- Fall Out Boy on Hiatus- Slash N' Adler Jam- The Analyst Guitarist Injured In Fall- Oscars Snub Anvil- Interpol Eye 2010 Release and more

Day in Pop 11/20: Taylor Swift Vs Bar- John Mayer To Beat Bon Jovi- Oprah Show No More- Susan Boyle Sets Record- Morrissey Vs Fan- Alicia Keys- Jay-Z and more


Your Ad Here for Just $10
.
 
Reviews
.

Road Trip: Ireland

Rock Reads: Bruce Springsteen: The Light in Darkness

SwampDaWamp - Rock This Country

Keith Urban Live in Chicago Nov 2009

The Official Heavy Metal Book of Lists

Megadeth Live

Hot In The City: Age of Evil, Triple Double Band, blessthefall and The Word Alive

On The Record: New Tales to Tell---A Tribute to Love & Rockets- Wax Tailor

The Fall Of Troy - In The Unlikely Event

Rammstein - Liebe Ist Fur Alle Da

KISS Live in Chicago Nov 2009

Creedence Clearwater Revival - The Singles Collection

Kelly Clarkson Live October 2009

Pithy Reviews: Karen O and the Kids (Where the Wild Things Are Soundtrack), Lita Ford, Everclear, Beatallica, Livan, State Radio, and the Riverwinds

Death Row Rarities: Dr. Dre and Snoop Dogg

Bon Jovi - The Circle


.
.
.

Search for Tickets

Or Browse For Tickets

.
.
Today's News
.

Chickenfoot The Movie

Alice In Chains 2010 Tour Plans

Nickelback, Breaking Benjamin, Shinedown Team Up For Tour

Ringo, McCartney Duet- Fall Out Boy on Hiatus- Slash N' Adler Jam- The Analyst Guitarist Injured In Fall- Oscars Snub Anvil- Interpol Eye 2010 Release and more

Green Day Revamp 21 Guns With Idiot Musical Guests

Bonnaroo 2010

Bruce Kulick Taps Members Of KISS, The Knack, Motley Crue For New Album

Smile Empty Soul Announce Headlining Tour With Burn Halo (Ex-Eighteen Visions) & The Last Vegas

Metallica Member Quits- Slayer Blamed for Teen Slaying- High Schooler Threatens To Kill Rocker- Guns N' Roses Return- Ozzy Sitcom and more top stories from 2001

Nils Lofgren Discusses Springsteen Tour Finale

Crash Kings Hitting The Road With Rooney

The Devil Wears Prada Kick Off Napalm & Noise Tour

Warner Bros. Whip Up Some Deluxe Devo for the Holidays

Never Shout Never Acoustic Tour

Daryl Hall, John Oates and Cleveland

Cavo Winning Fans on Radio and on Tour with Daughtry

2009 Taco Bell Feed The Beat Program Winners Are Announce

Nebula Mini Tour

Wesley Willis DVD Set For Release

The Shambles Announce Free Release Party

Taylor Swift Vs Bar- John Mayer To Beat Bon Jovi- Oprah Show No More- Susan Boyle Sets Record- Morrissey Vs Fan and more

Alicia Keys Calls Fan To Digital Action

Idle Warship (Talib Kweli, Res & Graph Nobel) Offer Up Mixtape

Turkey, Football and Motown for Thanksgiving

Jay-Z Platinum State Of Mind

Two Brand New Black Sheep Projects Coming Soon

Eric Hutchinson EP Coming

Susan Boyle To Take Over Rockefeller Plaza

David Guetta Cleans Up For First U.S. Hit

Barry Harris Remixes Billie Myers

Charlie Alex March Set February Release

More News

Subscribe to Day in Rock Report by Email

.
 
Day in Rockers
. Sites that feature the Day in Rock

94WYSP PhillyKFLY Real Rock97.9 WCPR Biloxi107thebone.fmX92.5 FM Maui100.1 The EdgeRock 105.994.7 The End96.3 The Blaze104.9 The WolfKROQWTOS Pure Rock!trakkrz.com

.
 
anti Worthy Links
.
The Screen DoorLloyd Zeffler blogGary GonzoLonn FriendTalking MetalNightwatcher's House of RockCJ Chilvers: passionate music journalist and photographerDeja Voodoothecopycat.bizKeavin.comantiMusic Myspace

.
 
Merch
.

Posters and Rock T-Shirts!



 

Tell a Friend about this page - Contact Us - Privacy - antiMusic Email - Job Postings - Advertising

Copyright© 1998 - 2009 Iconoclast Entertainment Group All rights reserved. antiMusic works on a free link policy for reprinting of our original articles, click here for details. Please click here for legal restrictions and terms of use applicable to this site. Use of this site signifies your agreement to the terms of use.