
When Ozzy Osbourne came to NZ he had just one wild request
The Black Sabbath frontman and solo artist has died aged 76, just weeks after a massive farewell concert in his hometown of Birmingham.
Coburn said Osbourne and Black Sabbath laid the foundations for heavy metal and – 50 years after the band first played New Zealand – he still saw and heard the singer's influence in hard rock music all over the world.
'To think that two weeks after the final shows he's gone – it seemed like – did he want to hang on and do these final shows? But he's just this iconic figure that's so singularly unique. There'll never be another Ozzy Osbourne," Coburn said.
Speaking to RNZ from his home in Nashville, Coburn said that despite the band's ominous image and Osbourne's wild, drug-fuelled reputation, the band were affable and 'jovial' on their first New Zealand visit.
Ozzy Osbourne onstage during the 2019 American Music Awards in Los Angeles. Photo / Getty Images
'They were decent, they were just young English guys. They didn't cause any of the grief that John Bonham and Led Zeppelin caused. Televisions thrown in the swimming pool at the White Heron Hotel and the like,' the promoter said.
'I don't have any memories of Ozzy and the guys being anything other than jovial and amused by everything. They just seemed to be in good humour and I've got great memories of that.'
Coburn said he still went to heavy metal shows – his son performs in American sludge metal band Thou – and said Osbourne and Black Sabbath's influence was still as strong as ever.
'They were such a primary foundation of what became heavy metal. I've been to so many shows, and there are still always people wearing Black Sabbath T-shirts.
'They really were the beginning of it all – of the whole metal scene. When I go to see bands, it's [still] not unusual to hear Paranoid or something,' Coburn said.
Marty Duda, founder of New Zealand music publication 13th Floor, said Osbourne's impact was 'immense' and would continue after his death.
Duda remembered first hearing the band on a cassette recording of Paranoid while at a Boy Scouts camp and 'it changed everything – blew my mind'.
Osbourne's voice was exactly what a teenager wanted to hear: 'He nailed it.'
The musician went on to create a strong persona for himself, later making the transition to a solo career.
He said Osbourne's wife, Sharon, needed to be given credit for the role she played in his career because he had many problems, including drug addiction, but she saw his potential as a solo artist.
Duda recalled being present when Osbourne was preparing for a concert, wanted to gargle and then consumed a whole bottle of mouthwash.
'He drank the whole thing, almost choked to death, puked all over the place and then went on stage – he didn't even know how to gargle. He needed to be watched.'
Duda said that on his TV hit reality show, The Osbournes, Osbourne was 'lovable'.
'You wanted him to be your dad ... and knowing that he had this background as the guy who helped start heavy metal didn't hurt at all. Those Black Sabbath albums hold up very well today.'
The president of the NZ Promoters Association, Layton Lillas, was shocked to hear of Osbourne's death.
He told RNZ's Morning Report it was 'horrible news' to wake up to, coming so soon after Osbourne's farewell concert at Villa Park in Birmingham just two weeks ago.
Lillas recalled becoming a fan of Osbourne when he launched a solo career.
He had 'amazing guitar players' and 'a unique voice'.
'The guy was the godfather of hard rock and heavy metal – just an amazing life from a guy who started in the poor suburbs of Birmingham after the war, and to do what he did and achieved, amazing.'
Lillas said the singer had a unique voice with 'an incredibly high range'.
'No one sounds like Ozzy Osbourne ... the range was something to behold and for a guy that abused his body like he did for so many years ...'
He last saw Osbourne perform in Wellington in 2008, and 'he was certainly on fire that night'.
In the late 90s, Lillas had a habit of popping out to Auckland Airport to try to get the autographs of famous rock stars.
All he wanted was a photo of Osbourne, but he ended up with a photograph of his late wife with the musician, and it takes pride of place in his music room.
The Black Sabbath frontman was apologetic but said he couldn't do any more as he needed to board his flight.
– RNZ
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1News
2 days ago
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Both were still performing after their 80th birthdays. Dankworth died in 2010 at 82. ADVERTISEMENT In 1997, Laine became the first British jazz artist to be made a dame, the female equivalent of a knight. "It is British jazz that should have received the accolade for its service to me," she said when the honour was announced. "It has given me a wonderful life, a successful career and an opportunity to travel the globe doing what I love to do." Laine was born Clementina Dinah Campbell in 1927. Her father, Alexander Campbell, was a Jamaican who loved opera and earned money during the Depression as a street singer. Despite hard times, her British mother, Minnie, made sure that her daughter had piano, voice and dance lessons. She began performing at local events at age 3, and at age 12, she got a role as a movie extra in The Thief of Bagdad. Leaving school at 14, Laine went to work as a hairdresser and faced repeated rejection in her efforts to get a job as a singer. 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It was just that having come from the sticks, I didn't know how to put things together as well as the other singers of the day," she told the Irish Independent. "And anyway, I didn't have the money, because they weren't paying me enough." Recognition came swiftly. Laine was runner-up in Melody Maker's "girl singer" category in 1952, and topped the list in 1956 and 1957. She married Dankworth — and quit his band — in 1958, a year after her divorce from her first husband, George Langridge. As Dankworth's band prospered, Laine began to feel underused. "I thought, no, I'm not going to just sit on the band and be a singer of songs every now and again when he fancied it. So it was then that I decided I wasn't going to stay with the band and I was going to go off and try to do something solo-wise," she said in a BBC documentary. ADVERTISEMENT "When I said I was leaving, he said, 'Will you marry me?' That was a good ploy, wasn't it, huh?" They were married on March 18, 1958. A son, Alec, was born in 1960, and daughter Jacqueline followed in 1963. Despite her happy marriage, Laine forged a career independent of Dankworth. "Whenever anybody starts putting a label on me, I say, 'Oh, no you don't,' and I go and do something different," Laine told The Associated Press in 1985 when she was appearing on stage in New York in "The Mystery of Edwin Drood." Her stage career began in 1958 when she was invited to join the cast of a West Indian play, Flesh to a Tiger, at the Royal Court Theatre, and was surprised to find herself in the lead role. She won a Moscow Arts Theatre Award for her performance. Valmouth followed in 1959, The Seven Deadly Sins in 1961, The Trojan Women in 1966 and Hedda Gabler in 1970. The role of Julie in Jerome Kern's Show Boat in 1971 provided Laine with a show-stopping song, Bill. ADVERTISEMENT Laine began winning a following in the United States in 1972 with a concert at the Alice Tully Hall in New York. It wasn't well-attended, but The New York Times gave her a glowing review. The following year, she and Dankworth drew a sold-out audience at Carnegie Hall, launching a series of popular appearances. Cleo at Carnegie won a Grammy award in 1986, the same year she was a Tony nominee for The Mystery of Edwin Drood. A reviewer for Variety in 2002 found her voice going strong: "a dark, creamy voice, remarkable range and control from bottomless contralto to a sweet clear soprano. Her perfect pitch and phrasing is always framed with musical imagination and good taste." Perhaps Laine's most difficult performance of all was on February 6, 2010, at a concert celebrating the 40th anniversary of the concert venue she and Dankworth had founded at their home, during which Laine and both of her children performed. "I'm terribly sorry that Sir John can't be here today," Laine told the crowd at the end of the show. 'But earlier on my husband died in hospital.' 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