Web www.pit5.com
Home
Auction
Artist List A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9

Main News Albums Comments Buy Links Ranking
Ozzy Osbourne Information
Ozzy Osbourne
'Ozzy Osbourne' (born December 3 1948, in Aston, West Midlands, England), born as John Michael Osbourne, was the lead singer of the rock band Black Sabbath and later a popular solo artist and reality television star. Osbourne has been married twice and is father to five children: Jessica Hobbs and Louis Osbourne by first wife Thelma Riley; and Aimee, Kelly and Jack, by current wife Sharon.
History
Early career
When Ozzy was in school he was classmates with his future guitarist Tony Iommi. Ozzy and Tony had terrible conflicts. "I hated the sight of him," said Iommi in an interview with Guitar World. Ozzy earned his nickname in his youth, sought a career as a rock singer after hearing The Beatles on the radio, hoping that it would lift him out of his difficult working-class existence, in which he had some scrapes with the law. Ozzy was not a particularly talented criminal. He wore gloves to steal from houses and shops so as not to leave fingerprints, but they were fingerless gloves and he was soon arrested. He was sentenced to six weeks at Winson Green Prison. He used his time there to give himself his now famous tattoos: OZZY across his knuckles and a smiling face on each knee to cheer himself up.
Before turning to music Ozzy held several other jobs, including testing car horns in the Lucas car factory and working on the kill floor of an abattoir.
Osbourne slowly began to realize his ambitions in 1967; after filling in on vocals for a band called The Music Machine, he landed the singer's duties in an outfit called The Approach, playing R&B tunes in a church basement. Personal differences led Ozzy to split with the group, however. Thanks in part to the advantage of owning his own P.A. equipment his next gig was with a group called Rare Breed, where he met and played with future Black Sabbath bandmate, bassist Terence "Geezer" Butler.
Rare Breed didn't last a long time, but Osbourne's collaboration with Butler did; in late 1968, Butler was invited to form a new group with guitarist Tony Iommi and drummer Bill Ward, both formerly of a fairly local group called Mythology.
Iommi at the time didn't know who he was about to meet. When he met Ozzy he told Bill Ward "No, I know this guy" but Ward insisted at giving him a chance. At Butler's urgings, Osbourne was brought on board, along with saxophonist Alan Clarke and another guitar player, Jim Phillips, to form the Polka Tulk Blues Band. Ozzy came up with the name after seeing it on a can of talcum powder, though it is also said it came from a Pakistani clothing store in his hometown called The Polka Tulk Clothing Company.
Iommi's style of guitar playing did not mesh well with Phillips's, however, nor with Clarke's saxophone. Polka Tulk disbanded, to reform almost immediately as a four-piece called Earth consisting of Osbourne, Iommi, Butler, and Ward. They later moved the sound of the music in a darker direction to scare people after realizing that people pay money to see horror movies and get scared. The name Black Sabbath was inspired by the 1963 Boris Karloff film of the same name.
Black Sabbath
Black Sabbath met with swift and enduring success; their early records such as their self-titled debut, Paranoid and Masters of Reality in particular are considered heavy metal canon despite modest investment by their record label; in particular, the Paranoid album was to be named War Pigs after the first track, and thus featured cover art of a man in a pig snout holding aloft a sword. The album was renamed but the cover art was not.
Several of their early singles, especially Paranoid and Iron Man, continue to draw significant radio airplay to this day. Osbourne himself continued to perform these hits during his lengthy solo career.
Ozzy Osbourne was kicked out of the band because of his overuse of drugs in 1979, to be replaced by Ronnie James Dio. Depressed, his drug and alcohol abuse continued. He divorced his first wife, Thelma, and developed bipolar disorder. Undaunted, Osbourne attempted to launch a solo career, and met with considerable success on his very first effort.
Controversy
According to press accounts, Osbourne's antics progressively worsened during the 1980s, his alcohol and drug abuse continuing. He famously bit off the head of a live dove during a meeting with his newly signed record company. He was banned from the building but he still retained his contract with CBS - though it has been speculated that this was a calculated stunt meant to intimidate the label executives into giving Osbourne more favorable contractual terms. Ozzy was also hospitalized for rabies vaccinations after biting the head off of a stunned bat (which he later claimed to have thought was a rubber toy) thrown on stage by a fan. He was arrested after urinating near the base of the Cenotaph, a monument located in front of The Alamo, while wearing one of his wife's dresses, for which he was banned from San Antonio, Texas for the next ten years. He later underwent a number of treatments for alcoholism and drug abuse.
The Ozzy Osbourne Band actually started out as Blizzard of Ozz. When the first album, which was supposed to be a self-titled album, was to be released they had agreed to name it Blizzard of Ozz, featuring Ozzy Osbourne, but instead the record company wrote Ozzy Osbourne in big letters, and Blizzard of Ozz in small letters. After this they just named it The Ozzy Osbourne Band, and called it off as a mistake. Lee Kerslake and Bob Daisley, however, still refer to that era as the "Blizzard of Ozz".
In March 1982, while in Florida for the Diary of A Madman tour, a light aircraft carrying Ozzy's guitarist Randy Rhoads crashed while performing low passes over the band's tour bus. The pilot (also the tour bus driver) clipped the parked bus and crashed into a nearby house, killing himself, Rhoads, and the band's tour hairdresser. Osbourne subsequently fell into a deep depression, because of the death of his friend and bandmate. The record company gave Ozzy a break from performing to mourn for his late band member; a tribute album was later released in which Osbourne talks about his relationship with Rhoads.
Recovery...?
In the 1980s and 1990s, Osbourne's career was an effort on two fronts: continuing to make music without Rhoads, and getting clean. Rhoads's first replacement was Bernie Torme (who reportedly could not cope with the pressures of live performance, and who never recorded with Ozzy), followed by Brad Gillis of Night Ranger, who filled in for an album called Speak of the Devil. This live title, known in the United Kingdom as Talk of the Devil, was originally planned to consist of live recordings from 1981, primarily of Ozzy's solo material. After Rhoads' death, however, Osbourne changed his mind, and the album ended up consisting entirely of Ozzy's Black Sabbath material, recorded with Gillis, Rudy Sarzo, and Tommy Aldridge.
In 1982, Ozzy was the guest vocalist on the Was (not Was) pop dance track Shake Your Head (Let's Go To Bed). Madonna performed backing vocals on this song (this was before her solo career was launched). Ozzy'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 the Ozzy lead.
Jake E. Lee, formerly of Ratt and Rough Cutt, was a more successful recruit than Torme, recording 1983's Bark at the Moon (with Daisley, Aldridge, and keyboard player Don Airey) and 1986's The Ultimate Sin (with bassist Phil Soussan and drummer Randy Castillo) and touring behind both albums.
Meanwhile, Ozzy was involved in a legal battle of his own. In late 1986, he was the target in the first of a series of lawsuits brought against him, alleging that one of his songs, Suicide Solution, drove two teenagers to commit suicide because of its subliminal lyrics. Ozzy would ultimately prevail in all of the suits, which the judges would basically rule that Ozzy cannot be held accountable for a listener's actions. Soon after, Ozzy publicly acknowledged he wrote Suicide Solution about his friend, AC/DC lead singer Bon Scott, who died from alcohol abuse, and that alcohol as a solution to one's problems is not the answer (hence the song's title). However Bob Daisley claims he wrote this song about Ozzy's drug abuse, and basically killing himself.
Jake E. Lee and Osbourne parted ways in 1987, however, reportedly due to musical differences. Ozzy continued to struggle with his chemical dependencies, and commemorated the fifth anniversary of Rhoads's death with Tribute, the live recordings from 1981 that had gone unreleased for years. Excellently recorded, the album cemented Rhoads's legendary stature as an imaginative and talented musician. Meanwhile, Ozzy found his most enduring replacement for Rhoads to date, a guitarist named Zakk Wylde, plucked from a New Jersey bar. Wylde joined Ozzy for his 1988 effort, No Rest for the Wicked, in which Castillo remained on drums and Daisley returned to bass duties. 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.
In May 2005 the bodily shivers he experienced and always linked to his continuous drug abuse were diagnosed as a form of Parkinsons disease. He will have to take medication every day for the rest of his life.
Commercial success
While quite successful as a heavy metal act in the 1980s, Osbourne began to enjoy much broader commercial success in 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 pen much of Ozzy's solo material, instead of relying solely upon the recording ensemble to write and arrange the music. Yet another live album followed in 1993, Live and Loud. At this point Osbourne expressed his fatigue with the process of touring, and proclaimed his "retirement", which was to be short-lived. Osbourne's entire CD catalog 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". A greatest hits package, The Ozzman Cometh was issued in 1997.
Ozzy's biggest financial success of the 1990s was a venture named Ozzfest, created by his wife Sharon and managed loosely by his son Jack. Ozzfest was a quick hit with metal fans, spurring groups like Incubus and Black Label Society to broad exposure and commercial success. Some acts even had the pleasure to share the bill with a reformed, yet much older Black Sabbath.
Osbourne's first album of new studio material in seven years, 2001's Down to Earth met with only mediocre success, as did its live followup, Live at Budokan.
In the wake of a lawsuit by former band members Daisley and Kerslake, reportedly for unpaid royalties, Osbourne's catalogue was "remastered" again in 2002. The bass guitar and drum tracks from Osbourne's first two albums were re-recorded entirely, and the original versions (which featured Daisley and Kerslake) were dropped. At least two titles, Speak of the Devil and The Ultimate Sin, were permitted to go out of print entirely.
TV show
Osbourne garnered still greater celebrity status by the unlikely success of his own bizarre brand of reality television. The Osbournes, a program featuring the domestic life of Osbourne and his family (wife Sharon, children Jack and Kelly, but not daughter Aimee, who declined to participate), has turned into one of MTV's greatest hits.
Recent news
During 2003, a member of Birmingham City Council campaigned for him to be given Freedom of the City.
On December 8, 2003, Osbourne was rushed into emergency surgery when he was involved in an accident involving the use of his all-terrain vehicle on his estate in Chalfont St Peter, Buckinghamshire, UK. 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 Ozzy's then personal bodyguard, Sam Ruston.
While in the hospital, Osborne achieved his first ever UK number one single, a duet of the Black Sabbath song Changes with daughter Kelly. In doing so, he broke the record of the longest period between an artists's first UK chart appearance (with Black Sabbath, 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 turned his hand to writing a Broadway musical. The reputed topic is that of the Russian mad monk, Grigory Rasputin, who held sway with Russia's last royal Romanov family. In 2005, he released a box set called Prince Of Darkness. It contains four long-awaited discs, 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 and covers on other bands such as: The Beatles, John Lennon, David Bowie, and others. He and wife Sharon are also on 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, Ozzy received an NME award for "godlike genius."
Shortly after Ozzfest 2005, Ozzy announced that he will no longer headline Ozzfest.
In 2005 he was inducted into the UK Hall Of Fame along with Black Sabbath where he decided to 'moon' the crowd because of their poor reception while they were playing. This led to a standing ovation.
Facts
The Numbers
Ozzy Osbourne's attitude was always the focus of attention. It gave him nicknames such as "the madman" (in the 1980s, thanks to the commercial success of Diary of a Madman), "the Godfather of heavy metal (in the 90s, due to his long lasting contribution to rock music) and "Prince of Darkness" (in the 2000s, as he started calling himself).
Despite media criticism, Ozzy's charisma managed to turn Black Sabbath in a major act, hitting #1 in UK with the landmark album Paranoid and selling 8 million copies during the 70s. The four Black Sabbath founders are widely considered the creators of heavy metal style. Since 1969, the band sold over 70 million copies worldwide, and over 25 million in the US alone; their biggest album, Paranoid, is 4x platinum in US since 1995.
During his solo career, Ozzy's only #1 single hit was a re-recording of his 1972 classic "Changes", performed in a duet with his daughter Kelly in 2003. However, he managed to hit #4 in US with his last two studio albums.
Ozzy sold over 27 million albums in the US, by far his biggest market, and over 50 million worldwide, more than any other hard rock/heavy metal solo act. Two albums, Blizzard of Ozz (1981) and No More Tears (1991) are certified 4x platinum, for sales of over 4 million copies in US.
5 million people have attended Ozzfest and it grossed over US$ 100 million. It helped discover most hard rock/heavy metal acts of late 1990s and early 2000s, including Marilyn Manson, Limp Bizkit, Korn, Linkin Park, Papa Roach, Velvet Revolver, Godsmack, and Slipknot in spite of always having Ozzy Osbourne (either solo or with Black Sabbath) as the headliner, it also featured other famous artists such as Iron Maiden, Judas Priest, Rob Zombie, and Megadeth. Ozzfest also helped Ozzy to become the first hard rock star to hit US$ 50 million in merchandise sales.
Ozzy and Sharon Osbourne are one of UK's richest couples, according to The Sunday Times Rich List. They rank #485 in the 2005 list, with an estimated £100 million earned from recording, touring, and TV shows. They rank above most music stars, such as Rod Stewart, George Michael, Robbie Williams, the Stones Charlie Watts and Ron Wood, and Pink Floyd, Led Zeppelin, Queen, and Dire Straits members.
Favourite British albums
In June 2004 British newspaper The Observer asked Osbourne to name his top ten favourite British albums of all time. He named:
#Revolver - The Beatles
#Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band - The Beatles
#Band on the Run - Paul McCartney & Wings
#So - Peter Gabriel
#Dark Side of the Moon - Pink Floyd
#Abbey Road - The Beatles
#Imagine - John Lennon
#Blizzard of Ozz - Ozzy Osbourne/Randy Rhoads
#Led Zeppelin - Led Zeppelin
#A Different Beat - Boyzone
Discography
Solo discography
*Blizzard of Ozz - 1980, #7 UK, #21 US (4x Platinum in US)
*Diary of a Madman - 1981, #14 UK, #16 US (3x Platinum in US)
*Speak of the Devil - 1982 (live), #21 UK, #14 US (Platinum in US)
*Bark at the Moon - 1983, #24 UK, #19 US (3x Platinum in US)
*The Ultimate Sin - 1986, #8 UK, #1 US (2x Platinum in US)
*Tribute - 1987 (live), #13 UK, #1 US (2x Platinum in US)
*No Rest for the Wicked - 1988, #23 UK, #13 US, (2x Platinum in US)
*Best of Ozz - 1989 (compilation, released in Japan only)
*Ten Commandments - 1990, (rare out of print, greatest hits)
*Just Say Ozzy - 1990 (live, EP), #58 US (Gold in US)
*No More Tears - 1991, #17 UK, #7 US (4x Platinum in US)
*Live and Loud - 1993 (live), #22 US (Platinum in US)
*Ozzmosis - 1995, #22 UK, #4 US (2x Platinum in US)
*The Ozzman Cometh - 1997 (compilation), #13 US (2x Platinum in US)
*The Ozzfest - 1997 (compilation, out of print)
*Down to Earth - 2001, #19 UK, #4 US (Platinum in US)
*Ozzfest - Second Stage Live - 2001 (compilation)
*Ozzfest 2001 The Second Millennium - 2001 (compilation)
*The Osbournes Family Album - 2002 (compilation)
*Live at Budokan - 2002 (live), #70 US
*The Essential Ozzy Osbourne - 2003 (compilation), #21 UK, #81 US
*Prince of Darkness - 2005 (box), #36 US
*Under Cover - 2005 (4th disc from Prince of Darkness with 4 new songs)
Solo hit singles
* 1983 "Bark at the Moon" #21 UK
* 1984 "So Tired" #20 UK
* 1986 "Shot in the Dark" #20 UK
* 1991 "No More Tears" #31 UK
* 1992 "Mama, I'm Coming Home" #28 US
* 1995 "Perry Mason" #23 UK
* 2002 " Dreamer/Gets Me Through" #18 UK
Duet
* 1988 "Close My Eyes Forever" (with Lita Ford) #29 in America
* 1989 "Led Clones" (with Gary Moore)
* 1992 "I ain't no nice guy" (with Lemmy Kilmister)
* 2003 "Changes" (with Kelly Osbourne) #1 UK
* 1988 "Crazy train" #1 US