HomeEntertainmentOzzy Bows Out: How Black Sabbath invented doom and changed rock forever

Ozzy Bows Out: How Black Sabbath invented doom and changed rock forever

Ozzy Osbourne’s final performance at Villa Park was a powerful, emotional farewell—seated on a gothic throne, he brought Black Sabbath full circle with a haunting rendition of “Paranoid.”

July 07, 2025 / 11:52 IST
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Ozzy Bows Out: How Black Sabbath invented doom and changed rock forever
Ozzy Bows Out: How Black Sabbath invented doom and changed rock forever

Ozzy Osbourne’s farewell performance at Villa Park was more than just a concert—it was a full-circle moment for heavy metal’s founding father. At 76, Ozzy took the stage one last time with Black Sabbath, seated on a gothic black throne crowned with a giant bat. As he sang the opening line of Paranoid, “Finished with my woman ‘cause she couldn’t help me with my mind…,” it wasn’t just a throwback. It was history repeating itself, one last time.

Black Sabbath’s impact wasn’t born from glamour. It was forged in the industrial smog of Birmingham in the late 1960s. While the Beatles sang about love and Led Zeppelin chased mysticism, Sabbath introduced the sound of existential dread. They invented heavy metal almost by accident—out of soot-stained streets, factory fumes, and a need to channel despair into something loud and liberating.

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Tony Iommi, after a factory accident severed the tips of two fingers, down-tuned his guitar to reduce tension and pain. That signature darker tone wasn’t just necessity—it became a new blueprint for doom. His riffs, rooted in the haunting tritone (once banned by churches for sounding too devilish), redefined rock’s boundaries. Without him, bands like Metallica or Slayer wouldn’t have sounded the same.

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