Label: Epic Records (Japan), EICP 779
Style: Heavy Metal, Hard Rock
Country: Marston Green, Warwickshire, England (3 December 1948)
Time: 43:52
Format: Flac Tracks 16/44,1 kHz
Size: 325 Mb
'I’m
going off the rails', sings Ozzy on the riff-tastic rock-radio staple
“Crazy Train”, and, as a description of his life leading up to this, his
first solo album, it’s apt enough, but the real surprise for long-term
Black Sabbath fans was Ozzy’s career resurrection following Blizzard of
Ozz’s 1980 release. Ozzy Osbourne’s life, as we all know by now, is an
interesting for the off-stage drama as it is for the musical tracks, but
this album was, and is, a triumphant affirmation of the bat-biter’s
diabolical musical vision.
After Black Sabbath’s implosion, Ozzy’s
reclusive and addictive lifestyle did not bode well, and it took Sharon
Arden, daughter of his former manager, to pull him out of depression and
get him back in the studio, where, in creative partnership with
guitarist Randy Rhoads (ex-Quiet Riot), drummer Lee Kerslake (ex-Uriah
Heep) and bassist / lyricist Bob Kerslake (ex-Rainbow), he reinvented
his musical persona, presenting a set of lyrical caricatures over
ferocious rock riffing through which blow Rhoads’ virtuoso guitar runs.
As
well as “Crazy Train” the album’s highlights include “Revelation
(Mother Earth),” “I Don’t’ Know,” “Mr Crowley” and “Suicide Solution.”
The latter two tracks proved the most controversial, the former for its
celebration of the infamous occultist Alistair Crowley, and the latter
for its supposed encouragement of suicide, after a US teenager killed
himself while listening to the track. Ozzy successfully defended the
subsequent suit, noting that it was about Bon Scott’s (AC/DC’s lead
singer) death from alcohol abuse, although Ozzy’s co-writer, Bob Daisley
claimed it was about Ozzy himself. More generally, the album refueled
the debate over Osbourne’s alleged Satanism, charges that the man
himself arguably encouraged by his various onstage antics during the
course of his subsequent solo career. Whether the Blizzard Of Ozz was a
genuine diabolist, or whether he was merely playing up its shock value
for rebellious teenagers, you will have listen again, and decide for
yourself.
(bbc.co.uk/music/reviews/zmjw/)
01. I Don't Know (05:17)
02. Crazy Train (04:54)
03. Goodbye To Romance (05:35)
04. Dee (00:50)
05. Suicide Solution (04:19)
06. Mr. Crowley (04:56)
07. No Bone Movies (03:59)
08. Revelation (Mother Earth) (06:09)
09. Steal Away (The Night) (03:29)
10. You Lookin' At Me Lookin' At You (04:19)
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