They are preserved perfectly in vinyl. The best Black Sabbath album of all time is their self-titled debut, ‘Black Sabbath’.
When Ozzy Osbourne was fired from Black Sabbath in 1979, it threw the band’s future in doubt – but they returned with a new ...
But it wouldn’t sound nearly as menacing or as dark (or as awesome) if Black Sabbath didn’t set the template in the early ‘70s. Starting with their self-titled debut album in 1970 ...
The title track to Black Sabbath's most recognized album. It might not be a true signature song from the band, but it packs a mighty punch for a 2-minute, 48-second running time.
The story continues: Jazz Sabbath's eponymous debut (Blacklake, 2020) introduced the premise of a progressive-minded late-'60s piano trio whose unreleased material was plagiarized and adapted in heavy ...
A picturesque watermill, which featured on the cover of a Black Sabbath album, has been vandalised. The picture adorning the band's 1970 debut album, depicting a woman in a black cloak ...
As Anno Domini: 1989-1995 succeeds upon its arrival, the album that made the band famous is back. Black Sabbath’s self-titled debut also manages to return to a pair of lists, reaching a new peak ...
Black Sabbath released “Paranoid” in 1970, and it gave the band their first real smash single. The track, which is taken from their second album of the same name, gave the outfit their first ...
Black Sabbath are rightly enshrined as one of the forefathers of heavy metal. The band’s original line-up – singer Ozzy Osbourne, guitarist Tony Iommi, bassist Geezer Butler and drummer Bill Ward – ...
The Burlington singer-songwriter and keyboardist drops a concept album decades in the making, backed by a bevy of local ...
Beginning with their eponymous debut and seminal sophomore LP ... for the recording of Black Sabbath’s latest album, ’13’ (minus Bill Ward). Now, with a career spanning nearly five ...