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Tony Iommi on changing the Black Sabbath line up

As part of Â鶹ÊÓƵAV Four's Heavy Metal Britannia series, Tony Iommi talks about changing the original black sabbath lineup and the circumstances that led to ozzy osbourne leaving in 1979.

As part of Â鶹ÊÓƵAV Four's Heavy Metal Britannia series, Tony Iommi talks about changing the original black sabbath lineup and the circumstances that led to ozzy osbourne leaving in 1979.

In the late 60s a number of British bands were forging a new kind of sound. Known as hard rock, it was loud, tough, energetic and sometimes dark in outlook. They didn't know it, but Deep Purple, Uriah Heep and, most significantly, Black Sabbath were defining what first became heavy rock and then eventually heavy metal.

Inspired by blues rock, progressive rock, classical music and high energy American rock, they synthesised the sound that would inspire bands like Judas Priest to take metal even further during the 70s.

By the 80s its originators had fallen foul of punk rock, creative stasis or drug and alcohol abuse. But a new wave of British heavy metal was ready to take up the crusade. With the success of bands like Iron Maiden, it went global.

Contributors include Lemmy, Sabbath's Tony Iommi, Ian Gillan from Deep Purple, Judas Priest singer Rob Halford, Bruce Dickinson from Iron Maiden and Saxon's Biff Byford.

Release date:

Duration:

2 minutes

Credits

Role Contributor
Performer Black Sabbath

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