Ronnie James Dio was firing on all cylinders (as both a singer and a lyricist), as were the newly reunited Geezer Butler and Tony Iommi (backed here by drummer Vinny Appice), when Sabbath returned to... more
In the New Wave of British Heavy Metal you get the best Vinyl offerings from 1970's English Metal bands Iron Maiden, Judas Priest, And ..... Get out of the way, here they come, the greatest metal... more
Bursting out of the gate with that killer title track (and their most overtly satanic imagery yet), Sabbath upped the songwriting ante on their hit 1974 LP. "Killing Yourself to Live" and "A National... more
Synthesizers, pop melodies, acoustic passages and Ozzy’s most high-flying vocal performances yet perplexed those who wanted their Sabbath dark and gloomy only. But this 1975 LP boasts many sinister... more
One of the watershed moments in metal (and arguably the birth of Doom), this 1971 smash sent Sabbath to the top and introduced the world to "Iron Man" and "Paranoid." This masterpiece also includes... more
Keyboards, strings and melodic vocals by drummer Bill Ward entered Sabbath’s domain, mixing with their now signature riffage on this 1976 LP. Raging (and we'll say it, underappreciated) rockers like... more
1970 debut album from the masters of metal featuring plenty of the gothic colorings and blues-heavy riffs that put Sabbath on the map. The birth of stoner-rock begins here: "Black Sabbath," "The... more
It’s been 18 years since Black Sabbath put out a new studio album—and 35 years (!) since they released one with a singer named Ozzy. But what drummer is backing Osbourne, Iommi and Butler here, being... more
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