logo
Black Sabbath frontman Ozzy Osbourne dies at 76

Black Sabbath frontman Ozzy Osbourne dies at 76

France 243 days ago
Ozzy Osbourne, frontman of 1970s heavy metal band Black Sabbath, died Tuesday, just weeks after his farewell show. He was 76.
'It is with more sadness than mere words can convey that we have to report that our beloved Ozzy Osbourne has passed away this morning. He was with his family and surrounded by love. We ask everyone to respect our family privacy at this time,' a family statement said. In 2020, he revealed he had Parkinson's disease after suffering a fall.
Known to fans as "The Prince of Darkness" and the "Godfather of Heavy Metal", Osbourne earned his infamy biting the head off a bat on stage and pursuing a drug-fuelled lifestyle before reinventing himself as a loveable if often foul-mouthed reality TV star.
He kicked off his career blaring out Black Sabbath's hits, from "Paranoid" to "War Pigs" to "Sabbath Bloody Sabbath". Those plus a string of solo releases saw him sell more than 100 million records worldwide.
The hard riffs and dark subject matter – from depression to war to apocalypse – combined with an instinct for Halloween theatrics. As a performer, Osbourne sprinkled audiences with raw meat and, in 1982, had his encounter with a bat thrown on stage by a fan.
He always insisted he thought it was a toy until he bit into it, realised his mistake and rushed to hospital for a rabies shot. He later sold branded bat soft toys with a removable head.
The original Sabbath lineup reunited for the first time in 20 years in July 2025 in Osbourne's hometown of Birmingham in the UK for what Osborne said would be his final concert. 'Let the madness begin!' he told 42,000 fans.
Rock heavyweights Metallica, Guns N Roses, Slayer, Tool and Pantera all played as the concert as did veteran rockers Steven Tyler, Billy Corgan, Ronnie Wood and Travis Barker.
At the concert Osbourne performed sitting, at times appearing to have difficulties speaking as he thanked thousands of adoring fans, some of whom were visibly emotional.
"Thanks for your support over the years. Thank you from the bottom of my heart. I love you," said Osbourne.
Wood wrote on social media on Tuesday: "I am so very sad to hear of the death of Ozzy Osbourne. What a lovely goodbye concert he had at Back To The Beginning in Birmingham."
'Looking for a good time'
Osbourne was a regular target for conservative and religious groups concerned about the negative impact of rock music on young people. He always acknowledged the excesses of his lifestyle and lyrics – but poured scorn on the wilder reports that he was an actual devil-worshipper.
"I've done some bad things in my time. But I ain't the devil. I'm just John Osbourne: a working class kid from Aston who quit his job in the factory and went looking for a good time," he said in a 2010 biography.
John Michael Osbourne was the fourth of six children, growing up in Aston, in the city of Birmingham in central England. He struggled with dyslexia, left school at age 15, did a series of menial jobs, and at one point served a brief prison sentence for burglary. Then came Black Sabbath.
"When I was growing up, if you'd have put me up against a wall with the other kids from my street and asked me which one of us was gonna make it to the age of 60, with five kids and four grandkids and houses in Buckinghamshire and California, I wouldn't have put money on me, no fucking way."
Britain's Justice Secretary Shabana Mahmood, a member of parliament representing a Birmingham constituency, said on social media platform X that she was devastated to hear the news of his death.
"One of the greatest gifts my city gave the world," Mahmood wrote. "My thoughts are with his family."
It was those latter stages of his life that provided the setting for his reinvention in 2002 as the star of US TV show "The Osbournes".
Cameras followed the aging rock god ambling round his huge house, pronouncing on events in his heavy Birmingham accent and looking on bemused at the antics of his family - a format that won them all legions of new fans.
Osbourne's family included wife and manager Sharon, five children including Jack, Kelly and Aimee, and several grandchildren.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Wax lyrical: Taylor Swift gets lucky 13 Madame Tussauds statues
Wax lyrical: Taylor Swift gets lucky 13 Madame Tussauds statues

France 24

time2 days ago

  • France 24

Wax lyrical: Taylor Swift gets lucky 13 Madame Tussauds statues

In honour of Swift's lucky number, 13 of the waxwork museum's 22 branches will each receive a statue of the "Love Story" and "Blank Space" singer, in what it called the "most ambitious project" of its 250-year history. The statues were inspired by some of the 35-year-old songwriting sensation's looks from her record-shattering "Eras Tour" from 2023 to 2024. With 149 shows across the world over nearly two years, the tour raked in $2 billion, making it the most lucrative in music history to date. More than 40 artists worked for more than a year on the statues of Swift, one of the most acclaimed artists of her generation with 14 Grammy Awards. "This is the most ambitious project in Madame Tussauds' 250-year history, which only feels right to reflect the stratospheric status of Taylor Swift," said Danielle Cullen, the museum's senior figure stylist. UK-based Swifties are well served, with one waxwork slated for London and another for the northern seaside resort town of Blackpool. Another 10 will find a permanent home at the branches of Madame Tussauds in Amsterdam, Berlin, Budapest, Los Angeles, Hong Kong, Las Vegas, Nashville, New York, Orlando and Sydney. The thirteenth statue, which will travel around the remaining museums, will begin its worldwide walkabout with a residency at Madame Tussauds Shanghai.

Ozzy Osbourne's home city hails star who 'lived life in rock n' roll'
Ozzy Osbourne's home city hails star who 'lived life in rock n' roll'

France 24

time2 days ago

  • France 24

Ozzy Osbourne's home city hails star who 'lived life in rock n' roll'

Floral tributes piled up for the legendary Black Sabbath frontman, just over two weeks after he and his fellow band mates filled a stadium in the central English city for a memorable reunion concert. Nigel O'Connell, 63, visiting a mural honouring the group with his grandson, told AFP he was saddened to hear of Osbourne's death on Tuesday but not surprised "because he lived his life in rock and roll". "Ozzy was just a bit of an icon of the city -- he was a bit of a fool, but everybody loved him!" he said, adding Osbourne had "done the city proud". Elsewhere in the city centre, posters of the singer sprang up on walls while flowers also appeared at the Black Sabbath canal bridge. Fans left lit candles, flowers, soft toys and even cans of beer at a bench on the bridge decorated with the faces of the four band members. Fresh in everyone's mind is the July 5 concert at Birmingham's Villa Park football stadium in front of tens of thousands of adoring heavy metal fans from around the world. Weak from Parkinson's disease, the 76-year-old singer had to stay seated throughout the sell-out gig, the first they had performed in 20 years. His performance moved many in the crowd to tears. 'Mad days, good memories' Rebecca Brownell and her 13-year-old son Billy, a recent convert to heavy metal, were among those leaving flowers at the mural. The 45-year-old seamstress described Osbourne's death as both "sad and not sad because, you know, he had a great last few months". She said the heavy metal scene was "big for Birmingham" and the concert had "brought it all back". "Hopefully that will carry on for a little while ... and a new generation of kids will learn all about it," she said. Black Sabbath's first manager Jim Simpson, visiting the bridge, said the number and range of people who had turned out following his death showed the impact his music had on people. "There are people here who are 80 years of age or eight years of age and all stages in between and it shows he had a remarkable way of contacting people," he said. "It has been 55 years and still (Black Sabbath) are more popular than ever." The world had lost "an inordinately nice, balanced, human being" in Osbourne, he said. "All the concerts were mad, everyone was just jumping around and having a good time... mad days, but it was good fun, good memories," he said. © 2025 AFP

Texas's Alamo honors Ozzy despite notorious urination incident
Texas's Alamo honors Ozzy despite notorious urination incident

France 24

time2 days ago

  • France 24

Texas's Alamo honors Ozzy despite notorious urination incident

The stunt earned him a years-long ban from playing in San Antonio but after repeated apologies, the organization behind the Alamo site paid homage to Osbourne's journey "from regret to reconciliation" in light of his death on Tuesday. "We at the Alamo are saddened to hear of the passing of legendary musician Ozzy Osbourne. His relationship with the Alamo was marked initially by a deeply disrespectful incident in 1982," the institution posted on social media. "However, redemption and reconciliation eventually became part of his history as well." The incident saw the self-styled "Prince of Darkness" -- who was wearing his wife Sharon's dress, in defiance of her bid to prevent him from going out by hiding his own clothes -- relieve himself on the 60-foot cenotaph that stands as a Texas war memorial. The Alamo was the setting of a much-mythologized battle between Mexican and Texan troops in 1836. Osbourne was arrested and barred for years from performing in San Antonio. But a decade later, he personally apologized to the then-mayor "and expressed genuine remorse for his actions," including donating $10,000 to the Daughters of the Republic of Texas. In 2015 he revisited the Alamo grounds "to learn and appreciate the site's history," said the institution, which added that Osbourne "openly demonstrated humility and understanding." That visit was filmed for a television show on The History Channel. "At the Alamo, we honor history in all its complexities," read the statement. "Today, we acknowledge Ozzy Osbourne's journey from regret to reconciliation at the historic site, and we extend our condolences to his family, friends, and fans around the world. May he rest in peace." The British metal trailblazer died Tuesday at age 76, mere weeks after he played his final show in his home city of Birmingham.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store