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"text": "Here is a conversation with Ronnie James Dio's bandmates, Vinny Appice and Jimmy Bain, about the band and Dio's solo career: https://www.loudersound.com/features/ronnie-james-dio-solo-band-career-history"
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"text": "Bill Ward's drumming on this track is most excellent. That's Ronnie James Dio on lead vocals here. \n--\nR.I.P., Ronnie James Dio, who died of stomach cancer in 2010 at age 67: https://www.theguardian.com/music/2010/may/17/ronnie-james-dio-obituary"
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"text": "Bill Ward, whose crumbling marriage inspired this song, didn't play on it because there are no drums on the track. The lead instrument is a piano played by Sabbath guitarist Tony Iommi. The drone in the background that sounds like a string section is actually a Mellotron, which is essentially a tape-based sampler. In this case, it was used to play back the sounds of string instruments. \n--\nOzzy and Kelly Osbourne reworked \"Changes\" as a father-daughter duet in 2003, turning into a song about daddy's little girl leaving the nest:\nKelly:\nI love you daddy\nBut I found my way\nOzzy:\nMy baby is grown now\nShe's found her way\n\nThis version was a #1 hit in the UK, a chart position no Black Sabbath or Ozzy Osbourne song never reached. It got a bump from the reality show The Osbournes, which explored the dynamic between Ozzy and Kelly."
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"text": "Busta Rhymes: \"He (Ozzy) was great. I remember when I first heard the song 'Iron Man.' The lyrics like 'Is he live or is he dead?' just affected me. The power he puts behind it. The intensity, the effect - it's the same way I approach my sh**, whether I'm recording or performing. To be able to do this on E.L.E. blew me away.\"\n--\nBusta Rhymes: \"Just to bring it even more so closer to the home plate of undisputed full blast hot record, I reached out to Ozzy.\"\nOzzy Osbourne: \"Busta Rhymes is a trip. The rap world is totally different, not very rock and roll. But, Busta Rhymes was nothing but a gentleman, a really good guy to be around.\"\n--\nThe music was performed by The Lordz of Brooklyn."
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"text": "Did you know that Ozzy Osbourne complimented this Black Sabbath cover as \"creepy\" and \"wonderful\"?\n--\nAre you aware of The Cardigans' metal roots? Peter Svensson and Magnus Sveningsson, both heavy metal musicians, formed the group in October 1992 in Jönköping, Sweden, with drummer Bengt Lagerberg, keyboardist Lars-Olof Johansson and lead singer Nina Persson."
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"text": "Game recognizes game!\n---\nThis is American thrash metal band Anthrax covering British heavy metal pioneers Black Sabbath. It features Joey Belladonna on vocals."
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"text": "Chuck D really likes heavy metal. \"Metal has attitude and it has speed, and that's two things that I like.\" He also said, \"Metal records give a lot more in terms of sleeve information and imagery. That's why metal groups stay tight with their audiences for so long. In rap, groups are treated like they're disposable, and so they become disposable. Heavy metal groups are involved in how their music is presented, packaged, marketed. They have control of the merchandising and their logos, whereas the vast majority of rap groups have no control at all.\""
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"text": "Chuck D of Public Enemy explained to Melody Maker in 1991: \"'Shut 'Em Down' is about major corporations like Nike taking profits from the black community, but not giving anything back, never opening businesses in black areas. And it's saying that the best way to boycott a business is to start your own.\"\n--\nWatch the video: https://youtu.be/LXCrkY5WNA0"
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"text": "\"Fear Of A Brown Planet\" was not Brownout’s idea. The funk instrumental troupe from Austin, Texas — whose Black Sabbath tribute album \"Brown Sabbath\" came out during 2014 — was approached by Fat Beats Records with the idea of reimagining favorites from the Public Enemy catalog. But the label couldn’t have made a better offer, as evidenced by Brownout’s version of “Fight The Power.\""
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"text": "An 8 or 9-piece outfit formed in Austin, Texas by members of Grammy Award-winning Latin revival orchestra Grupo Fantasma....\n---\nWatch Brown Sabbath performing the Black Sabbath cover,\"Supernaut,\" live in the KEXP studio:\nhttps://youtu.be/0NYy82Corvk"
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"text": "\"Children Of The Grave\" is one of Black Sabbath's most popular songs. It has all the ingredients of Sabbath goodness: Beastly drumming by Bill Ward, the mighty guitar of Tony Iommi, and an incisive lyric by Geezer Butler delivered with conviction by Ozzy Osbourne.\n--\nTommy Iommi lost the tips of the middle and ring fingers on his right hand to an industrial accident before the Sabs took flight. So while Black Sabbath and Paranoid had been recorded in standard tuning, Iommi found it less painful to drop the tuning of his light-gauge custom Picato strings to a bowel-emptying C# for this brutal riff. “I tuned down because playing at standard pitch used to hurt,” he recalls."
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"text": "Bassist Geezer Butler: \"The most prophetic lyrics I have ever written. The Western world going down in the East, a hole in the ozone layer, no future in cars. It seemed to me that everything east of Europe was becoming a threat. Japan was rising in the business world, Chairman Mao was building up China, the Soviet Union was threatening nuclear war, and the Middle East was in turmoil as usual. At the time, oil was on everyone's minds and petrol was being rationed. ー We were burned out by the time the album was finished.\"\n--\nSee Black Sabbath perform this one live in California in 1975: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xbyohIKIsoU"
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