Ozzy Osbourne’s Childhood Bedroom is Available for Rent
Ozzy Osbourne was asked in a new interview about how his childhood bedroom is available for rent.
Speaking with British GQ, the Prince of Darkness responded, “[The person that lives in my childhood home] charges Ā£400 a night [to sleep in my old bedroom.]Ā The f—ing house werenāt worth Ā£300!Ā They must be doing an expensive extension on the bathroom.”
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Osbourne added, “I tell you what was really weird: I went back to that house many years after I left. When youāre little everything seems massive. But that house was me, my mum and dad and my five sisters and brothers ā eight of us in this house. Itās so tiny, Iām going, ‘How the hell did we do this?'”
Ozzy is still recovering from a number of health issues that have hit him hard since 2018, including spinal surgery following a fall in his home last year. However, he’s already eyeing a return to the stage in 2022 to resume his “No More Tours 2” farewell tour, hopefully after the world has recovered from the coronavirus pandemic. Sharon Osbourne said in a recent interview, “Ozzyās tour has been rebooked.Ā The British tour, he’ll be back in [20]22. You know, we just carry on as normal…When they do get the vaccine and people do start going [to gigs], can you imagine how many tours are going to be out at once?!”
Sharon added, “Everybody’s booking their tours again for like 2022, and to find availabilities right now, it’s crazy!Ā Agents and facilities are going nuts, trying to get everybody back. It will be exciting. I think it will be a very exciting time when bands do go back and it’ll be joyous.”
Ozzy Osbourne: His Top 40 Solo Songs Ranked
The kick-off song from Ozzyās last album for a decade, āScream.ā Producer Kevin Churko (Disturbed, Five Finger Death Punch) gave Ozzyās sound a bit of a modern metal sheen here, with a more processed guitar sound, a funky cowbell line, and even some guttural vocals, although the song soon veers into a pretty intense jam that could have been an outtake from a classic Black Sabbath era.
The title track from one of Ozzyās less-popular albums, this song is a highlight mainly because of Ozzyās quick return to harmonica playing. Ozzy isnāt really an instrumentalist, but he also played harmonica on Black Sabbathās āThe Wizard,ā 37 years earlier.
We can hear the complaints coming already about the inclusion of this one: lighten up and have fun with this, Ozzy clearly did. Itās one of many goofy Ozzy collabs: heās also worked with Was (Not Was) and Kim Bassinger (āShake Your Headā), DMX and Olā Dirty Bastard (āNowhere To Runā), the Wu-Tang Clan (āFor Heavenās Sake 2000ā) and even Miss Piggy (āBorn To Be Wildā). And yeah, Post Malone.
No one has more āworking classā cred than Ozzy; the artist formerly known as John Michael Osbourne grew up to a poor family in post-World War II Birmingham, England, one of six siblings living in a two-bedroom house. This understated version of the John Lennon classic doesnāt need power from big guitars or drums; the pain in Ozzyās voice tells the story.
By the early ā90s, hair metal was dead. Generally speaking, so were power ballads. But āRoad To Nowhereā saw Ozzy looking back on his life (much like in the newer and better āOrdinary Manā); the lyrics rang true and felt less cheesy than many of hard rockās slow jams that dominated radio in the late ā80s.
Ozzyās fourth solo album was a difficult one; heād just emerged from rehab and he was fighting with current and former members of his solo band. The title track and lead-off song from the album was a strong start to the record, most of which didnāt really hold up.
The last song and the easy highlight from Ozzyās most pop-metal album.
By 1988, everyone -- regardless of music taste -- knew who Ozzy Osbourne was. But this ballad was the first time heād had a legit pop hit. His duet with former Runaways guitarist-turned-pop-metal-hitmaker Lita Ford was a number 8 hit (decades later, heād reach number 8 again with āTake What You Want,ā a collaboration with Post Malone (a song that, youāll note, did not make this list).
Ozzy revisited this underrated Black Sabbath piano ballad as a duet with his daughter, Kelly. Altering the lyrics is usually an awful move, but thereās a bit of sweetness here, listening to the famous father and daughter singing to each other.
This was Ozzyās take on John Lennonās āImagineā (āYour higher power may be God or Jesus Christ/It doesn't really matter much to me/Without each otherās help there ain't no hope for us. The song, co-written with Mick Jones of Foreigner and Aerosmith collaborator Marti Frederiksen was definitely aimed at radio, and ended it up with more gravitas than anyone could have imagined, as it was released just a month after 9/11.
Ozzy has tons of live albums where he revisits his Black Sabbath songs with his current band, but as great as Ozzyās bands are, itās tough to match Sabbath. But this version of āN.I.B.ā is fun, because you can hear how much fun Les Claypool and Primus are having, jamming with the āPrince of F***ing Darkness.ā
Black Sabbath released their self-titled debut in England in February of 1970 (it would be released in the U.S. in June of that year). Meanwhile, Mountain released their debut, āClimbing,ā including this jam, in March of 1970. Both albums are pillars of hard rock and metal. Ozzyās take on Mountainās classic is a blast, and features Mountain main man Leslie West on guitar (along with Jerry Cantrell of Alice In Chains, who played on the entire āUnder Coverā album).
Ozzy had been yelling this at his fan for decades, it only made sense that he turned it into a song. Itās basically an anthem for rock fans, and who better to sing it than Ozzy?
From the first songs released from āOrdinary Man,ā Ozzy seems to be in a reflective mood, which makes sense for a 70-something-year-old metal icon.
Ozzyās original backing band -- bassist Bob Daisley, drummer Lee Kerslake and of course, guitarist Randy Rhoads -- were unbeatable for the short time that they were together. And even if they werenāt as scary as Black Sabbath, Ozzy still sounds haunted here, wailing from the perspective of a doll being tortured by a sadistic master using needles and pins. āIt's a pity/You'll pray for your death/But he's in no hurry.ā
Ozzy apparently hated the version created for the flick; electronic artist Moby produced the track, but he was being too harsh. It was better than most of his previous album, 1995ās āOzzmosis.ā
Probably the scariest prog-rock epic ever; itās from King Crimsonās 1969 debut, āIn The Court of the Crimson King,ā and both Ozzy and guitarist Jerry Cantrell really get to sink their teeth into this, as does jam-band steel guitarist Robert Randolph, who guests on the track.
As Ozzy and Elton John are wrapping up their touring careers, they united for this song where they look back on their insane lives. Cynics might say that 70-year olds canāt sing metal (or rock), but this is an honest and powerful song that a younger person could not sing. Itās a miracle that both of these guys lived to hit the big seven-oh, and neither of them are in any danger of dying āan ordinary man.ā
It provided the perfect ending to Ozzyās classic solo debut, charging straight out of āRevelation (Mother Earth),ā it leaves you wanting more. Luckily fans just had a few months to go before the followup, āDiary of A Madman.ā
In 1992, if you had Ozzy, Lemmy and Slash in a room, a ballad probably isnāt the first thing that youād come up with. But Lemmy had been writing with Ozzy at that point - including Ozzyās āMama, Iām Coming Home,ā and this was an extension of that partnership. Given that Ozzy was enjoying a huge resurgence in popularity in ā92 and Slash was (and still is) one of the hottest guitarists on the planet, this should have been a huge hit.
This, of course, is something of a mantra for Ozzy, and also for guitarist Zakk Wylde, who returned to Ozzyās band for the āBlack Rainā album.
One of the two ballads that redeemed āOzzmosis,ā Ozzy co-wrote this with Bryan Adamsā collaborator, but the Canadian hitmaker didnāt crank out lyrics like āThere are no unbeatable odds/There are no believable gods!ā Ozzyās passionate vocals, along with Zakkās George Harrison-esque guitar solo makes this one of Ozzyās most interesting and powerful songs of the ā90s.
In which Ozzy addresses a porn addiction: āCan't kick the habit obsession of smut/Voyeur straining in love with his hand/A poison passion a pulsating gland.ā Poetry with a purpose!
You might think that ballads are wimpy, but would you have said that to Ozzy, Lemmy and Zakk, who co-wrote the song? This one avoids the sap that ballads by the hair metal bands specialized in.
Beneath the thunder of Randy Rhoads, Bob Daisley and Lee Kerslake, āTonightā is a classic ballad. Not a power ballad, but a Sinatra ballad, circa āIn The Wee Small Hours.ā While Ozzyās original writing team - Ozzy/Randy/Daisley - are rightfully thought of as the scribes of timeless metal classics, their songs really transcend genres. āTonightā also features one of Randy Rhoadsā greatest solos.
While Ozzy looked a bit cartoonish on the cover of his second solo album, on the title track he revealed that his struggles with mental illness -- something that discussed openly in 1981 -- were real. The lyrics include the line āVoices in the darkness/Scream away my mental health,ā are much scarier in retrospect; we now know that he has struggled with addiction, depression and anxiety. Ozzy was always theatrical, but those painful groans at the end of the song were real.
Legend has it that the song stands for āSharon Arden, Thelma Osbourneā -- Arden being Sharonās maiden name and Thelma Osbourne being Ozzyās first wife. With that in mind, lyrics like āI can't conceal it like I know I did before /I got to tell you now the ship is ready/Waiting on the shoreā -- and their sense of moving on -- makes more sense. Whatever the song is about, itās one of many classics on Ozzyās flawless second album - which will always live in the shadow of his debut.
Bob Daisley got co-writing credit -- rightfully -- for the songs on āDiary Of A Madman,ā but for years, he didnāt get credit for playing bass on the album. The original album credited Randy Rhoadsā ex-Quiet Riot bandmate Rudy Sarzo (who joined for the tour but didnāt play on the album). Today, thatās been sorted, and rightfully so, as āBelieverā features a nasty Daisley bassline that he deserves his credit for.
An anthem for any kid who has a hard time expressing himself/herself, but they find their truth in rock and roll. Itās timeless.
Ozzy was counted out by many after he was ousted from Black Sabbath; this song became an anthem celebrating his incredible and improbably success in the wake of his debut solo effort, 1980ās āBlizzard Of Ozz.ā
Is it about the late AC/DC frontman Bon Scott, as Ozzy has suggested? Or, is it about Ozzy himself, as bassist Bob Daisley (who wrote the lyrics) suggests? Either way, it isnāt advocating drinking or suicide, although Ozzy was sued by the parents of a young man who took his own life, allegedly after listening to the song. If anything, the song is a warning about the dangers of alcohol dependency.
For a very unconventional singer, Ozzy Osbourne has pulled off a lot of great ballads in his solo career. āGoodbye To Romanceā is one of his best, and it wouldnāt sound out of place in a cocktail lounge, minus the solos by guitarist Randy Rhoads and keyboardist Don Airey.
Another mantra from Ozzy, thanking the fans and the music for getting him into his 50s. Written by Ozzy with producer Tim Palmer, it features one of Zakk Wyldeās most monstrous riffs.
The highlight of Ozzyās brief era with guitarist Jake E. Lee. While following in the footsteps of Ozzyās late guitarist Randy Rhoads would be impossible, Lee at least co-wrote and played on one song that held up to the Rhoads era.
The opening track off of Ozzyās second solo album, it immediately let the world know that āBlizzard Of Ozzā wasnāt a fluke. Like much of the first album, it featured a commanding Randy Rhoads riff along with a soaring solo.
Zakk Wyldeās finest moment. By the end of the ā80s, Ozzy was in danger of becoming obsolete; 1986ās āThe Ultimate Sinā and 1988ās āNo Rest For The Wickedā made him seem out of step with a music scene that was getting heavier and that was, frankly, embarrassed by and disdainful of the hair metal that dominated the ā80s. The song and video saw Ozzy staking his claim as the godfather of heavy music, and also showed that he could compete with his musical offspring.
The first song from the first Ozzy solo album announced that he actually might be able to have a great second act, post-Black Sabbath. It also announced the arrival of a new guitar hero in Randy Rhoads, who not only didnāt try to mimic Black Sabbathās Tony Iommi, he seemed to be a rare metal guitarist who wasnāt even influenced by him. Black Sabbath could never be topped, but Randy Rhoads (and bassist Bob Daisley and drummer Lee Kerslake) helped Ozzy to get out of their shadow.
This ode to Aleister Crowley would be great no matter what, but itās Randy Rhoadsā solo -- his greatest ever -- that really puts this song over the top, and earns it its status as one of Ozzyās greatest.
Ozzy and his band put everything and the kitchen sink into this one -- which was impressive given that they produced the album themselves. Randy flexes his classically inspired acoustic chops here, but also plays some fearsome riffs. Don Airey uses then-modern synthesizers, but also grand piano. Lee Kerslake throws percussive instruments like chimes in, but also pounds the drums furiously.
Ozzyās solo career might not have been more influential than what he did with Black Sabbath, but with āCrazy Train,ā he soon began eclipsing his former band in popularity. It has one of the greatest riffs in metal, one of Randy Rhoadsā greatest guitar solos; Bob Daisleyās bass is minimal but scary and itās one of Lee Kerslakeās best performances. But Ozzyās melodic wailing is what makes the song a classic, and the best of his post-Sabbath career.