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@EbonyPope2 ай бұрын
The buzzing sound is an octavia. It splits the signal of the guitar and transposes it one octave up or down depending on what sound you want to achieve. It sounds really crazy.
@Dylan_Lanckman2 ай бұрын
@@EbonyPope a harmonic in stereo with a slight delay, and a different distortion on each channel.
@anargyrosntotas52172 ай бұрын
Elizabeth, you haven't analyse Slayer yet why? You should try :"Angel of death", "Raining blood or "Dead skin mask" for example..
@ingobordewick64802 ай бұрын
Don't know if you know them, but on another channel "GinxReacts" we did a reaction to "Fields Of The Nephilim" and Ginx said, that she would really like to hear your opinion on the voice of the vocalist Carl McCoy. The track we did is "From The Fire" kzbin.info/www/bejne/opameol3hcZmnKs
@YouLoseSir2 ай бұрын
@@EbonyPope plus its fuzz instead of distortion. Tony also had a habit of not quite doubling a solo or having two similar solos playing at the same time
@UncleD1532 ай бұрын
Ozzy, Tony Iommi, Geezer Butler, and Bill Ward. From poverty in Birmingham to one of the greatest bands ever!! What a crew!!
@jezcuffy2 ай бұрын
@ozzymandius666it’s actually in Birmingham on Broad Steet.
@deantodd81032 ай бұрын
Well they did sell their souls for rock and roll. 🤣
@joehutchisson31302 ай бұрын
The birth of heavy metal I can barely understand him talking, but when he sings, it's crystal clear
@xyz-yf2krАй бұрын
Lol
@audiophileman70472 ай бұрын
Tony Iommi, "the riff master" suffered a workplace injury where the tips of his fingers were cut off on his fretting hand. He almost gave up on playing his guitar until he heard about Django Reinhardt's injury in a fire that caused him to relearn how to play guitar with just three fingers for fretting. Tony wears prosthetic pieces on the tips of his fingers. His ear and timing are terrific as demonstrated on this song. 😻 Thank you for reviewing one of metal's greatest songs! Your insights are always marvelous. 👍👍👍
@ilionreactor10792 ай бұрын
Tony also invented drop tuning, which loosens up the strings, making it easier for him.
@mostlyharmless19182 ай бұрын
Elizabeth, this is the innovation you're hearing in that discordant guitar solo.
@nucleargrizzly17762 ай бұрын
Rather than feeling sorry for himself and giving up Iomi tuned down a step and created Heavy Metal.
@scottmcley51112 ай бұрын
Dude really is something else, isn't he!? No shade to Ozzy, but Iommi is the real treasure in Sabbath.
@Imurai2 ай бұрын
Step 1: an Englishman has a workplace mishap Step 2: ??? Step 3: music has been transformed forever
@jannjordan37872 ай бұрын
The man when he is talking you can't understand him with his mumbling British accent, but then he starts singing and it's like he has clear and perfect pronunciation. That always trips me out.
@floydkingi4364Ай бұрын
Saw them back in 2016, being totally convinced we were going to get ripped off with Ozzy sounding like a dementia patient on vocals. Decided to take my chances anyway, the show was brilliant, Ozzy sounded 💯 like Ozzy!
@vurttv641521 күн бұрын
That's just a Birmingham accent.
@metalmark12142 ай бұрын
A popular Black Sabbath song that was meant to be a filler song for the album. War Pigs was originally the album title and changed to Paranoid. Geezer Butler told Guitar World magazine, March 2004, "The song 'Paranoid' was written as an afterthought. We basically needed a 3-minute filler for the album, and Tony came up with the riff. I quickly did the lyrics, and Ozzy was reading them as he was singing."
@SylviusTheMad2 ай бұрын
Geezer even admits the lyrics don't make any sense. He didn't really know what paranoia was, and conflated it with depression.
@cabobs20002 ай бұрын
He is basically just reading the lyrics isn't he.
@niclasvestman2 ай бұрын
@metalmark1214 I heard the same story, and for me it is the reason to why Ozzy seems to often slightly lagg behind in the phrasing/rhythm, or at least being a bit off, besides the syncopation. But at the same time, it is what makes it so awesome. Perfect imperfections. And the added delay/echo on Ozzy's voice further messes with the perception of his timing. 😎🤘 Basically learning the lyrics on the spot while recording in a few takes, would for most of us naturally lead to being slightly behind. Not sure if that applies to Ozzy as well since he is such an amazing singer.... 🤷
@durangodave2 ай бұрын
Love Hurts (Nazareth) was also a filler they did on a moments notice and like Paranoid was not envisioned to be so very popular. 😁
@janandersson94112 ай бұрын
@@durangodaveWell… Love hurts is an older song that Nazareth made a cover of. Was it the Everly Brothers? Not sure, but Gram Parsons recorded it with Emmylou Harris prior to Nazareth.
@TonyHavenMusic2 ай бұрын
An Ozzy interview on this channel would be absolutely incredible, he always gets asked about drugs and regrets and legal issues, I’d love to hear him just talk about his passion for singing his entire life
@scottmcley51112 ай бұрын
*With subtitles
@grilledspaghetti2 ай бұрын
Oh hell yes.
@deanb612 ай бұрын
I'm a brummie, and I can't understand a work he says :)
@roichir76992 ай бұрын
@@scottmcley5111 And subtitles for the subtitles.
@brendantoungate82872 ай бұрын
I don't know how much he'd have to say; he was never particularly technical in his approach to music. Honestly, Tony Iommi would be the more interesting interview, discussing all of the different singers in Sabbath and how he worked with them (Ozzy, Dio, Ian Gillan, Glenn Hughes, etc.).
@Damien.Young462 ай бұрын
Best thing about this video.. is Ozzys smile.. you can see he loves it.. it's what he was meant to do ..long live Ozzy Osbourne
@davidgessin-mccully39192 ай бұрын
When Ozzy was debating on whether he’d perform anymore he credits Post Malone as being his inspiration to continue and on the collab live video for Take What You Want you can see that smile just beaming from Ozzy’s face it was great to see again.
@grilledspaghetti2 ай бұрын
Right after singing "I am frowning all the time" they cut to him smiling that big grin. Sorry if weird, but typical Ozzy.
@scottstevens76392 ай бұрын
That buzzing sound during the guitar solo sounds a lot like a blown amp speaker to my ears…
@tsmartin2 ай бұрын
He's grinning probably because he knows he is lip syncing to the studio track and going along with the joke.
@Damien.Young462 ай бұрын
@@tsmartin yea that must be why he always smiles during his concerts too
@jona75042 ай бұрын
My beautiful partner, whilst I was suffering from depression, would say to me when I was going through it, go and listen to your music. Take some time out and just listen your music, and later I realized that if I hadn't been listening to music I would get very low. So she would send me off by myself to just binge on my favorite songs and I would feel better. Often times before I realized I was in a funk, and it would lift me out of it. A powerful realization that helped me get out of the depths of depression
@Cadinho932 ай бұрын
"We recorded the whole thing (the album) in about 2 or 3 days, live in the studio. The song "Paranoid" was written as an afterthought. We basically needed a 3 minute filler for the album and Tony came up with the riff. I quickly did the lyrics and Ozzy was reading them as he was singing." -Geezer Butler (bass) Without a doubt one of the greatest rock songs ever written, especially since it was completely spontaneous.
@LN-Lifer2 ай бұрын
Yeah but as a cynic I rarely believe these stories Every band has a similar story
@time39472 ай бұрын
Hey Elizabeth, Tim the guitar player here with some more insights for you. The effect you are hearing on the guitar solo is called a 'ring modulator'. What it is doing is taking the original guitar solo audio signal and creating a carrier wave to go with it. This creates the dissonant effect. Then it is multiplying these signal to play them against each other and, depending upon how the effect 's controls are set' it is causing some signals to be cancelled out, thus creating this fuzzy chaos. The second signal sounds like it is set an octave lower than the original guitar signal. Hope that helps, Cheers, Tim
@ggreig2 ай бұрын
The only thing that could be added here, for people who've been exposed to it, is that the Dalek voice effect is achieved using a ring modulator.
@modernmedeamedia2 ай бұрын
Correct. The ring modulator was used on Ozzy’s Iron Man vocals too. Iommi always said he didn’t care for the effect in the solo.
2 ай бұрын
And this is very much how grunge was influenced. The musical idea is to create as much dissonance as possible with the ugliest chord combinations, then resolve them.
@edwardmunoz78532 ай бұрын
Idk what you said but it sounds fkn cool 🤘
@davidg42882 ай бұрын
I was looking for this comment. It's ring modulation, as you said. In the radio world it's called single or double sideband modulation. It's still used by amateur radio operators and CB hobbyists. Incorrectly tuned single sideband destroys the harmonic structure of music such that notes and harmonics are no longer multiples of one another rendering music completely unintelligible but still leaving the spoken word understandable. Ring modulation can be applied to an electronic instrument using a "stomp box" designed for the purpose, just like a fuzz box (distortion generator) or wah pedal (variable bandpass filter). Analog ring modulators were available 50 years ago, but they were expensive. Synthesizers could of course generate the effect internally. Used gently ring modulation could produce a beautiful haunting tremolo, used in the extreme they produce jarring dissonant noise. Acoustic instruments mostly produce even multiple overtones except for things like bells and gongs.
@inspectre272 ай бұрын
I just figured out why i like this channel so much. It's not really that you apply your knowledge of music theory and vocal science to music that may have never had that treatment, though that is really cool, it's more that you apply fresh ears to things i've heard so many times that i no longer hear them. You give me back treasures i didn't know i had lost.
@dennypayne2 ай бұрын
YES! like the comment about not finding the beat during the intro. I know the opening riff so well now that I don't get the disorienting feeling she's describing anymore. Same with Judas Priest "Victim of Changes" where the triplet riff becomes a 4/4 riff and the downbeat comes in at a totally confusing place - until you know it's coming and then you don't get that "WTF?" anymore. Treasures I didn't know I had lost is the perfect way to describe this.
@johne24042 ай бұрын
Good observation. I think this is the reason all sorts of reaction channels are appealing. Check out Lost in Vegas too for this same feeling. A couple of hip-hop heads who are discovering rock and metal for the first time. Their channel's been going for a number of years now, so they are getting to be veterans of the genre, but always more to explore and I get this same feeling from their content as well.
@karowolkenschaufler76592 ай бұрын
like the doctor taking on a companion bebcause the universe has become their back yard, but with fresh eyes there is new wonder and awe. and I have noticed that I listen differently to music I don't know to as well. I notice more details now.
@eightiefiv32 ай бұрын
agree !! 🎉
@edwardmunoz78532 ай бұрын
She's awesome 🤘
@v2gbob2 ай бұрын
Black Sabbath was light years ahead of most bands of the era. And, unsurprisingly, their music holds up well today.
@gregbrayman2 ай бұрын
Ozzy has an amazing voice. It’s so unique it sounds like no one else
@buddhamack14912 ай бұрын
Yep. Doesn't have to be the most technically great voice but no one else could sing his songs and sound as good. I like when singers utilize their unique sound instead of trying to sound like everyone else.
@shanester18322 ай бұрын
It's piercing & high pitched yet full bodied and smooth. The perfect tone to cut through the band's downtuned leviathon sound. There is nobody that sounds like he does. His ability to find a vocal melody to interweave with, what's actually quite unusual music, is top tier.
@its1ofthosedays5622 ай бұрын
Agreed. Him and Lemmy will never be duplicated. Their voices are/were (RIP Lemmy) so unique.
@phillsmith92552 ай бұрын
Ozzy's voice matches the music perfectly, it's like hand in glove.
@GrimlyFandango2 ай бұрын
my mother suffers fromn dementia, her short term memory is only minutes, but i can play most songs from the 60s and she will know every word and sing along, so yes i believe music is great for mental health
@TimelessjewelbyDebra2 ай бұрын
My husband is the same way
@Wolfsblood11382 ай бұрын
My father had alzheimers. He didn't know who anyone around him was, including family but he could sing the songs he sang in church choir on pitch. Music is magic. ❤ Music is life. ❤
@Gary-zt9cp2 ай бұрын
In the Bob Newhart episode, on NCIS, Bob's character suffered from this. I won't spoil it, but a great watch.
@buddhamack14912 ай бұрын
Yes it definitely is. It's a recognized therapy now for people with Alzheimer's, dementia and some other things to do with the brain. Does it help her memory if you speak with her after she has listened to the music? There's a number of documentaries on YT showing them using music therapy to help people, it's amazing how well it works
@krispypriest51162 ай бұрын
NICE!!!! Music is magical!!! Hope your Mom is doing good (and everyone else in the thread).
@philipoconnell64132 ай бұрын
I think you have wrecked me for any other analysis out there. Your in-depth detailed explanation of vocals and joyful discovery of great music is unmatched.
@TwistedThor1872 ай бұрын
Geezer Butler never gets enough credit for his bass playing.
@genenoud90482 ай бұрын
No kidding. You do t see many cover bands doing these songs
@misterwirez77312 ай бұрын
He doesn't and he wrote most of the lyrics too. Paranoid included.
@jongoffinet85112 ай бұрын
Bill Ward is underrated also.
@buzzbomb672 ай бұрын
And Bill Ward’s brilliant drumming! People say Bonham is better… I disagree.
@beatmet23552 ай бұрын
They’re basically (no pun intended lol) a jazz band and geezer is a jazz bassist. I wouldn’t be surprised if Paul Chambers or Ron Carter influenced him. I saw that Jaco P. and Jack Bruce were influences, so there you go.
@bokononbokomaru81562 ай бұрын
Ozzy's is voice is unique & fits the music perfectly.
@ryancampbell21922 ай бұрын
I always loved that right after the line "people think I'm insane because I am frowning all the time..." he immediately starts smiling 😂
@TooMuchBSToo2 ай бұрын
He's like "shit shit gotta look normal"
@theodosios26152 ай бұрын
For years I thought he was saying "because I am from another time."
@robmitchell30392 ай бұрын
I think a lot of metal fans (of course metal didn't really exist, but their music was definitely different from everything else out there, and they drew different fans than other bands) can kinda relate to being thought weird, or crazy, or not smiking enough. And I think Ozzy has always been aware of that.
@lamer67672 ай бұрын
this song helped so many brains I don't have any figures but just speaking as a metalhead, black sabbath has saved lives
@OLDSCHOOLROGUE2 ай бұрын
Without a doubt! 😊😊😊🥰🥰🥰
@EbonyPope2 ай бұрын
The buzzing sound is an octavia. It splits the signal of the guitar and transposes it one octave up or down depending on what sound you want to achieve. It sounds really crazy.
@louismarina72252 ай бұрын
Sounds like it is also heavily ring modulated
@booneh2 ай бұрын
@@louismarina7225 That’s an artifact of analog octave effects. The more complex your sound wave is (like when you bend notes), the more harmonics are being generated, causing intermodulation that leads to sidebanding, which is what ring modulation is also doing.
@andychisarick68792 ай бұрын
An octavia- is that what's sounding kind of like razor blades? There's a Zappa song I can't remember the title, but Dweezil Zappa, in an interview for his Zappa does Zappa album, talks about Frank playing a song & it really DID sound like razor blades. I mean a hundred times more than here, so I wonder if Zappa used an octavia too. Don't suppose you know WHAT the heck I'm talking about...I gotta go find that song. Picture, uh, w/ your ears, Frank Zappa jamming w/ a razor blade instead of a pick. Anyway thanks for the insight, if I can find that song I'll let you know, I'm sure you'd love it
@kostaskritsilas26812 ай бұрын
I have always thought this was a fuzz effect. Considering that this is from 1970, were Octavia’s even out? I know fuzz boxes were (like the famous Dallas Arbiter Fuzz face).
@danshepard50832 ай бұрын
@@kostaskritsilas2681 Based on a pedal created for Hendrix (He called the Octavia) The Octavia came out mid 1970s, after Hendrix's death. That's pretty tight timing for Black Sabbath to have it in the Studio in time to record Paranoid (Released August 1970) using it.
@donnaallen49252 ай бұрын
OMG The passion I see in your eyes and face is how I felt listening to this music over the years .....each time. BRAVO
@antivanti2 ай бұрын
I love that because they didn't really know anything about recording an album they basically just went in, played the songs live in the studio and that was it. It gives it a really organic energy sort of like a really good live album can have
@darkcritter0762 ай бұрын
The reason why our brains light up when we listen to music is because we get a dopamine hit along with the vibrations of all the instruments and vocals. Our bodies love vibrations of all kinds of frequencies! Love the video Elizabeth!
@metalmark12142 ай бұрын
Tony Iommi is properly named "riff master"
@szeleddie2 ай бұрын
RIFF GOD!!!
@jacovichstabs8412 ай бұрын
Love how Ozzy's voice sits clear on top of the guitars. It's mixed brilliantly!
@GrayNeko2 ай бұрын
Black Sabbath is to heavy metal what HP Lovecraft was to modern horror. They got there first and did it better than at least 95 percent of those that followed them. Every time some kid tries to tell me how simple their music is, I always say the same thing. "Trying playing RIGHT!" 'Paranoid' will absolutely rip the lungs out of most rhythm sections. Tony Iommi probably didn't invent the double tracked guitar, but he used it in a way no-one else ever had. There's a solo in one ear, and an opposing solo in the other. Absolute genius, made all the more fascinating by the fact that they were making it all up as they went. ^_^ !m! Cheers!
@alexandrorocca71422 ай бұрын
I never really paid attention to the lyrics, but now I realize this song is about mental health. The music may be aggressive, but the same lyrics could easily fit a country song. So many people were prejudiced against hard rock or metal just because of the band names or imagery, but most of the songs are actually insightful and still relevant.
@drlukewhite2 ай бұрын
I think I'd like to hear the Country version!
@trespire2 ай бұрын
If Bach were allive today, he would be in a Heavy Metal band.
@CosmicPhilosopher2 ай бұрын
@@trespire Absolutely. I can also see Beethoven doing the same.
@CosmicPhilosopher2 ай бұрын
I can understand not liking heavy metal because the sound just doesn't work for you, but I do get upset when someone just derides it as "meaningless sound." There is a ton of metal about deep topics like life, war, death, religion, and the search for meaning.
@elemar52 ай бұрын
@@drlukewhite Hayseed Dixie do a version of it. It's on youtube.
@lucky7-1-12 ай бұрын
OMG one of my favorite songs by Sabbath and off of my favorite album by him . I have to say my favorite song off that album is ferries wear boots . Love that song . But I know you are gonna love paranoid Elizabeth ❣️ . Rock and roll forever girl 🤘🤘🤘🤘🤘🤘🤘🤘🤘🤘🤘🤘🤘🤘🤘🤘🤘🤘🤘✌️✌️✌️✌️✌️✌️✌️✌️✌️✌️✌️✌️✌️✌️
@MrUnsolvedMystery2 ай бұрын
The birth of metal!Hard to believe this song is almost 55 years old since it’s release
@modernmedeamedia2 ай бұрын
So glad you’re doing the dive into Sabbath. Such an amazing band. The solo sound is a ring modulator effect that the producer Roger Bain added. Iommi apparently never liked it. Bain used it on Ozzy’s vocals as well on a different song. Some other great Sabbath songs to check out - the Writ, snowblind, fairies wear boots, children of the grave, symptom of the universe , and of course sabbath bloody sabbath. 🖤
@815scorpius72 ай бұрын
"Make a joke and I will sigh and you will laugh and I will cry" always reminded me of someone being bullied. Also, people thought he said "I tell you to end your life I wish I could but it's too late" but he says "enjoy life"
@debbylou57292 ай бұрын
Really? I don’t get that at all. It sounds like someone wanting to connect but others find what he says is funny…..not taking him seriously
@Doom14912 ай бұрын
The first 4 songs of the Paranoid Album are the best Intro to a Metal Album ever
@brianstack1832 ай бұрын
👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻
@hannahstevenson272 ай бұрын
Led zeppelin 1 has the best first track of any album ever. And yes they’re labelled metal and blues And it’s correct
@pleaseshutup70532 ай бұрын
@@hannahstevenson27no
@PUNKinDRUBLIC722 ай бұрын
I agree!🏴
@C4L3D0N2 ай бұрын
And the last four tracks are the best way to end a metal album.
@mattneil42112 ай бұрын
Great job on the riffs, the emotional processing center, the voice, and syncopated structure. I have heard this song thousands of times and never noticed that. You are the best.
@Rick-yk1pp2 ай бұрын
It really warms my heart to watch your journey of discovery of the music I have loved my whole life while at the same time giving me a whole new appreciation of it.
@brheinfeldt2 ай бұрын
Well said! I completely agree!
@silverjaw1382 ай бұрын
Ozzy doesn’t get enough credit for his actual singing ability. It’s raw, unique, powerful and like she said, his pitch is always excellent. Legend
@photobob19612 ай бұрын
I love seeing a young Ozzy. Younger people just know him from the Osbournes, he was a pioneer.
@YouLoseSir2 ай бұрын
those "younger people" are in their 30s and 40s, lol. Gen Z doesn't know what MTV is and are certainly not watching episodes of the Osbournes XD
@seanj36672 ай бұрын
“That’s not Ozzy, it’s Ozzy’s son.” -Butthead, circa 1993
@jazziered1422 ай бұрын
@@YouLoseSir When you're 60, 70, people in their thirties and '40s are younger people. 🤷♀️
@YouLoseSir2 ай бұрын
@@jazziered142 my point is that The Osbournes was a generational thing of a unique time period, and that "younger people" encompasses more than just that generation who "know Ozzy from the Osbournes"
@erpece2 ай бұрын
Nerd alert: The buzzing sound in the right channel during the guitar solo is a ring modulator. The original guitar signal is mixed with a sine wave produced by the modulator resulting in a weird, constantly changing effect where the two frequencies seem to battle. For this song, a Fuzz distortion pedal was used before going into the ring modulator...
@johndrake21472 ай бұрын
Imagine you're there in 1970 hearing Bridge over Troubled water, the Carpenters, Neil Diamond, and then this comes on with Ozzy singing about how he had to leave his girlfriend because he's insane (which ended up being true later on with Sharonnnnn!). It must have been mind blowing
@ChrisLegner-qp1yh2 ай бұрын
Well said. As a youngster, I was a little bit scared of them. Which of course made me curious to hear more of them.
@sneakerset2 ай бұрын
Oct. 10, 1969 - King Crimson releases "In the Court of the Crimson King".
@misterwirez77312 ай бұрын
I was a child, but remember my dad and his buddy listening to this album, when it was brand new. He was about 25 in 1970.. He grew up listening to Sinatra at my grandparents house.. and I grew up listening to Sabbath!! Thank you Dad and Ozzy
@VielFart2 ай бұрын
@@sneakerset And ... ?
@ThePolecat19552 ай бұрын
It was. And still is after all these years!
@Wolfsblood11382 ай бұрын
So many of these lyrics hit home for me for most of my life. Things are getting better, but the "Happiness I cannot feel, and love to me is so unreal. As you hear these words, telling you of my fate. I tell you to enjoy life, i wish i could but it's too late" still plague me. The driving riff, the syncopated vocals, the detuned "harmony" buzz during the solo all sonically create the feel of paranoia. The amazing thing is that this song almost didn't happen. They needed another song to fill out their album, and so Tony started noodling around with a riff that he'd been using at sound checks. The band joined in, and they asked Bill to come up with some lyrics. And much like Smoke on the Water an epic was born from a song the band initially didn't think much of.
@andyschnell582 ай бұрын
This song brings me back to Junior High School. Had a battle of the bands in 1971 where 3 bands played Black Sabbath and one played Grateful Dead.
@louf71782 ай бұрын
You are an excellent analyst. You identify and describe things very well.
@GoDrex2 ай бұрын
I've been listening to this song for almost 45 years and it still sounds so good to me. Black Sabbath for life. 🤘
@starchitin2 ай бұрын
I didn't discover Black Sabbath until my late teens, almost 30 years after this was recorded. Between the guitars and Ozzy's voice, I had this song going on a loop for almost an hour the first time I heard it.... I just couldn't get enough of it.
@Out_of_My_Head2 ай бұрын
Bill Ward is an underrated drummer. His drumming really helped frame the songs in subtle ways.
@xyz-yf2krАй бұрын
Bill to Sabbath is like Bill to Yes. The Bills are just excellent.
@garyjamnicki92182 ай бұрын
Elizabeth, I’m almost 70 years old and I’m still rocked by Ozzi but I’m even more excited seeing your exuberance and out right joy in you reacting to one of the greatest masters of rock . I love your expressions that I catch when you’re rocking and bouncing to the beat. You go Opera Girl , you go !
@waynebenedict57852 ай бұрын
Man, I just feel older now, as I was a kid when this first came out, 54 years old, wow! Was just listening to "The Road To Nowhere" from later Ozzy, really cool! Ozzy's voice is iconic, for sure!
@tomasjohansson4482 ай бұрын
Before this video i just knew it was a great song, now i know WHY this is a great song! Thanks Elisabeth!!
@donnysarian2 ай бұрын
Elizabeth, you are amazing! I've been listening to this album since the day it was released and your analysis bring new insights that I've never thought of before. And, that's what's so great about your natural aptitude for analysis. I always look forward to hearing your take on every new video you post and I want to thank you. ❣
@jamesaldrich9754Ай бұрын
Thank you for talking about the lyrics "the meaning of the song".I just listened to 3 reactions in a row and not one mentioned the meaning of the song,"the Lyrics" like they never even heard them.The music speaks for itself,but this group carried a message and that was what all the music was about in the mid sixties to 70,s because it was revolution music, the sound spoke of this and most importantly so did the lyrics.
@imfrcd2 ай бұрын
I saw them live in a 3,500 seat auditorium... way back in 1971.
@gruu2 ай бұрын
wow... I'm so envious
@seanj36672 ай бұрын
I saw Ozzy in the Orpheum Theater in Boston, 2,700 capacity, on the No More Teas tour. I think that was his abs Zakk’s peak.
@nealamesbury79532 ай бұрын
Must have been great !
@Tinus-pi3il2 ай бұрын
Finally. I always wondered what makes me listen tot this song over and over again. It's not his voice, it's not the riffs. The syncopated singing is what sets it apart. Thank you.
@Kakyrock6662 ай бұрын
This is Good👍Thanks Elizabeth🌹
@97GibsonsgOhyeah2 ай бұрын
I adore you, and your exuberance for music! This song was the anthem for my bandmates when I was a teenager. By 1984 they were both gone because of suicide. My heart has been broken ever since. Two of the most phenomenal rock musicians I had ever heard, much less, having the blessing of working with. They thought I was awesome, but I KNEW they were!
@andreahirschmann6852 ай бұрын
I am not a vocal nerd but simply know that Black Sabbath and Ozzy's singing always make me feel good and give me energy😊
@robarment71332 ай бұрын
The way Ozzy sings The Thrill of It All on Black Sabbath’s Sabotage album might remind you of one of the late great grunge singers. I think The Thrill of It All is his greatest vocal performance.
@rodhester21662 ай бұрын
54 years old and still hits as hard as anything out there. .The guitar sound makes me almost smell the metal of the strings if that makes any sense.
@MarkBenefield-iq2pm2 ай бұрын
Your enthusiasm is contagious about music, and I think I love it ❤❤❤
@user-scott-pearce2 ай бұрын
Awesome to see your finally getting to this song
@keith6179Ай бұрын
Greastest metal/rock singer ever! The band is incredible! So, underappreciated. It's just incredible. The first 7 albums with Ozzy transcended Music. Thank you so much, Elizabeth, for being open-minded. I know you're a Dio fan, but I will take Ozzy every time.
@energ8t2 ай бұрын
I’m so glad I made the effort to see Sabbath in 97. Truly legendary band. Before the show, my friends and I bought a 79 Lincoln for $200 for Halloween, glued a tape deck to the dashboard that only played Sabbath and turned the interior lights to red. Painted black flames on the hood over the pea green color and added a skull over the hood ornament.
@justingamble38762 ай бұрын
Thank you so much Elizabeth. To those old enough, there was a world before and then a new one after "Paranoid".
@misterwirez77312 ай бұрын
I've had so many different copies of this LP. I've bought OG vinyl, 8 track, cassette, CD, and back to vinyl.. It is that great and important to have, for me. It never gets old.
@zackkullis55552 ай бұрын
I LOVE your giddiness and excitement with music. It’s absolutely contagious and pure.
@HiFiListener2 ай бұрын
A funny thing is, when this title came out, it was banned from some radio stations, because it was too hard (and the bands name). One or two years ago, it was used for a car commercial that was broadcasted every day. How times change.
@vernonbrazle10702 ай бұрын
Yeah, you could have knocked me over with a feather when I heard Motörhead’s “Ace of Spades” behind a Kia commercial……
@Patrick-8572 ай бұрын
This channel makes me listen to these songs with new ears. This sing has been with me for more than half my life, so I take it for granted a bit. Today I was struck by just how tight this band was. Their timing and rhythm is stunning. I think everyone recognises them for inventing metal as we know it today, but I think their musicianship gets overlooked too often. These guys sound deceptively simple, which may be why. They weren't flashy, but they had serious groove.
@JoMoRising132 ай бұрын
Greatest song ever.
@lassevaltanen74362 ай бұрын
It is amazing that after decades I found something new about this song. Thank you, I just appreciate professionalism so much!!
@phantomf47472 ай бұрын
Syncopated rhythms are indeed jarring but when used in a musical style like Rush they have more of a unique and theatrical effect. Neil Peart was a master at this.
@olddog3302 ай бұрын
To me, that and the use of the octavia are prosody for the unsettled state of mind the verses describe.
@phantomf47472 ай бұрын
@@olddog330 Good point!👍
@6401gabriel2 ай бұрын
I've been binge watching a lot of your videos and they're awesome. Maybe you could react to Mark Lanegan and screaming trees. Maybe troubled times
@djwaco26232 ай бұрын
I saw them in concert when they were touring the songs on this album ( Black Sabbath- Parinoid, the album), and others. I was 13, it was at the Denver Colosseum, which held 10,000 fans. It was such a blast! In that same year and venue, I also saw Led Zeppelin for their III album, Santana for “Abraxas”, and Ten Years After- A Space in Time. Back then it was amazing fun! Now, I realize what an epic concert run that was, and how fortunate I am to have seen all that! Please consider reacting to “I’d Love to Change the World”, by Ten Years After, or any song from their “A Space in Time” album. Thanks! 😎
@jeffdempsey64782 ай бұрын
Love his voice😊
@BigDaddyAlan2 ай бұрын
This is a pretty short cut, but it's one of my favorite Sabbath songs. Ozzy just lays it out there: clear, concise and in your face.
@davepetrusma55172 ай бұрын
Yet another great song that made up the soundtrack of my youth! Still sounds great today! Bill and Geezer really keep this kicking along!
@leonardofelippine97812 ай бұрын
I cannot wait to see her reaction to No More Tears
@oskar162 ай бұрын
Thank you for analyzing this song. It has great meaning to me, not only because of everything you've mentioned, but also because it was the first song we played when we formed a band with my high school friends. Such great memories, and how differently I experienced that song back then.
@geob39632 ай бұрын
This is your brain on Black Sabbath.
@kevinbrown18932 ай бұрын
This is your brain on Black Sabbath and fried eggs. Any questions?
@iaincrawford80042 ай бұрын
@@kevinbrown1893Yeah, can I have more, please?
@ricoeugene-uu1bs2 ай бұрын
..one of the simplest guitar riff ever . But one of the Greatest!! And Elizabeth making this whole song / video : Larger then it is! Thank You Elizabeth!! ..thank You for Your analisys...
@ricoeugene-uu1bs2 ай бұрын
..analysis..
@justice4all7722 ай бұрын
This song was written at the last moment to fill in time on the album
@brucedickinson122 ай бұрын
no really
@stephenm87252 ай бұрын
oddly, yes if I recall correctly. One of the last songs on the album and man, that's crazy
@MarkBenefield-iq2pm2 ай бұрын
"Across the pond" reminds me of how much we're more in tune with each other 💗!!!
@johnathansaegal31562 ай бұрын
What really blows me away is this song (1970) was Ozzy only 14 years before I saw him in concert, yet that concert was 40 years ago. Dang, I've gotten old. I don't feel it, but looking at the numbers it has been half a century plus.
@barrytdrake2 ай бұрын
Wow, you just made me realize i've been listening to Sabbath for 50 years! Thank you!
@LordEriolTolkien2 ай бұрын
And thus a music genre is born
@metalmark12142 ай бұрын
The Grandfathers of Metal
@hevytimes2 ай бұрын
You can take it even further too. A lot of subgenres can be seen in songs on this album. IE; thrash here, Pigs death metal, Iron Man could be argued for Power, etc.
@UltimateGamerCC2 ай бұрын
@@hevytimes Iron Man would be more Death Metal sounding imo.
@Brettwbeyer142 ай бұрын
@@hevytimes i think of war pigs as doom metal
@michaelleahey27592 ай бұрын
I would go as far as to say that the first 6 albums have had influence on every sub-genre of metal. You can listen to every song on all 6 and say, this is the birth of_______
@markpr732 ай бұрын
I can’t get enough of this woman’s facial expressions as she’s listening to all of the various artists she covers in her videos. She’s extremely attractive and her knowledge of all things related to singing is very impressive. Thank God there are only 12,634,829 songs out there for her to analyze! I need MORE! MUCH MORE!
@ericfielding25402 ай бұрын
Geezer Butler and Tony Iommi have their bass and guitar lines incredibly well interweaved on this song, so the syncopated vocal line by Ozzie stands out even more.
@SuperDalton722 ай бұрын
I learnd to love Ozzys voice from back to now with his solo albums betwen groups..this song came out 2 years before i was born..
@OhMysticOh2 ай бұрын
Please check out Ozzy Osbourne - No More Tears (Live) on his KZbin VEVO. The guitar solo is amazing and Ozzy's voice sounds like the studio version. He's got such a consistent voice.
@Patrick-8572 ай бұрын
That main guitar riff by Zack Wilde is insane. Definitely one of main introductions to the world of metal guitar.
@alejandrojuarez7962 ай бұрын
LOVED THEY WAY YOU REACTED TO A MASTERPIECE OF HUMANITY!!!
@JoMoRising132 ай бұрын
I always get caught up in the sound of the last sentence. Famously people thought Ozzy said, "I tell you to end your life..." When he is actually saying, "enjoy life..."
@tubasaur2 ай бұрын
I thought that until right now. Wow. Makes way more sense, too.
@Skeletron72 ай бұрын
I never thought that
@JoMoRising132 ай бұрын
@@tubasaur Yeah, "end your life" but in the next part, "but it's too late." Wouldn't make much literal sense.
@keithdean91492 ай бұрын
Was that during the time people were blaming Ozzy for kids committing suicide?
@JoMoRising132 ай бұрын
@@keithdean9149 Could be, although I remember that being more from the 80's, 10 years after this song came out.
@GenXNick2 ай бұрын
Always a great song. The first time I heard the song was back in 1984 when I started to fine tune my interest in all types of music.
@michaelhartman7382 ай бұрын
Look Elizabeth , this is the original Black Sabbath 👍😎
@justingamble38762 ай бұрын
Thank you so much Elizabeth. Great reaction as always. It is very hard to over-state the importance of this song in rock\metal history. The song is early heavy metal, the words are universal and immortal...the human condition. People 1000 years from now will understand and feel the emotion in these words like it was just released (and I predict their heads will bang a little).
@shanebracken84312 ай бұрын
a cool old song to cover would be "into the mystic - Van Morrison" if you ever got the chance, beautiful song that can pull a tear
@iainmcclure4162 ай бұрын
Good call. Van's voice at its best!
@shanebracken67512 ай бұрын
@@iainmcclure416 Yeah for sure, and this one highlights it well i reckon
@loklokoppa92552 ай бұрын
So glad you analyzed this song. One of a very few songs I truly don’t mind a stop and replay over and over again. ❤
@energ8t2 ай бұрын
That “buzz” you hear is simply black magic 😂 It’s the power of metal
@dimeolas7772 ай бұрын
Music and dementia....I took care of my dad for 4 years and his dementia worsened. Music always reached him and h would come alive for the songs of his youth, music is a magic tonic for the soul.
@Greywarpfrog2 ай бұрын
No way you've never heard this masterpiece of music history! How the hell did you do that??
@dabhidhm40932 ай бұрын
HOW IS THIS SONG SO GOOD. I've heard it a thousand times, it's still electrifying! That guitar - SAVAGE!