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Colby Cosh: The tortured vulnerability of Ozzy Osbourne

Colby Cosh: The tortured vulnerability of Ozzy Osbourne

National Post26-07-2025
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Sharon has become a global celebrity in her own right, and you can underline those last four words if you like, but that's not Sharon on 'Crazy Train' or 'Mr. Crowley,' either. It almost feels like a category mistake for Ozzy's obituaries to emphasize heavy metal per se, because most metal vocalists aren't anything like Ozzy and can't do what he did, even though many of them have far more pure singing talent.
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The accepted model of the metal frontman is a strutting peacock of a man, an avatar of imperative power and toughness. On his best records Ozzy is more of a mad prophetic conduit, someone lifted onto a higher plane and brought back to Earth in an obviously damaged state, raving in Blakean riddles as the music thunders ominously around him.
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In other words, he possessed a tortured vulnerability that really suited the Sabbatarian horror movies. Nobody else could have represented quite the same attitude while singing of being lost in the wheels of confusion or looking through the hole in the sky. A particularly fine example occurs on 'Snowblind' from the album Black Sabbath Vol. 4 (1972). 'Snowblind' is a song about cocaine, written (by Butler) for the single most cocaine-influenced record ever made in a heavily cocaine-dependent musical genre. Cocaine is thanked in the liner notes of that LP. And the song starts off with a shimmering Sibelius quality that kind of makes you want to try cocaine:
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But a few minutes into the track, Bill Ward pulls his boots on, the stillness lurches into a pell-mell boogie, the schoolboy snow metaphor is dropped, and all of a sudden Ozzy becomes a whining alleyway junkie, defending himself exasperatedly — perhaps in the face of what we would now call an intervention.
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Ozzy, who continued struggling with drug use for three more decades, must have said stupid self-justifying words like these with total conviction a thousand times. They ring so true that you wonder whether Geezer Butler transcribed them directly. And they can only have been addressed to a concerned loved one, to a parent or sweetheart or comrade who had said something like 'Hey, ease up, I don't want you to die.' Notice how every line strikes a different note about drug addiction. 'You think you're better than me?'; 'You don't understand how bad I need it'; 'To hell with all you squares anyway'; 'It brings me a peace I've never known when sober.'
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Somehow this stanza fell into a love letter to cocaine made by cokeheads while on industrial amounts of coke. Are these words in earnest, or are they an ironic acknowledgment that Black Sabbath has cornered itself in a bad place? Ozzy's pleading vocals preserve the priceless ambiguity, the sense of fragility: 'Snowblind' would never have turned out that way at any other time or with any other singer. It's not a coincidence that Lester Bangs, the magisterial drug-abusing critic who had previously complained of Sabbath's leadenness, suddenly started comparing them to Dylan when Vol. 4 came out.
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Create an account or sign in to continue with your reading experience. Access articles from across Canada with one account Share your thoughts and join the conversation in the comments Enjoy additional articles per month Get email updates from your favourite authors Don't have an account? Create Account The report, which was submitted by the musician's daughter Aimee Osbourne to a registry in London, lists cardiac arrest and coronary artery disease among Ozzy's cause of death, also noting that he was suffering from Parkinson's disease. The document, the Times reports, says Ozzy died as a result of '(a) Out of hospital cardiac arrest (b) Acute myocardial infarction (c) Coronary artery disease and Parkinson's disease with autonomic dysfunction (Joint Causes).' His profession was listed as 'Songwriter, Performer and Rock Legend.' 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Please try again This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. After previously denying her dad was near death, Ozzy's daughter, Kelly, paid tribute to her father in a message shared to her Instagram Story this week. 'I've sat down to write this a hundred times and still don't know if the words will ever feel like enough.. but from the bottom of my heart, thank you,' she wrote. 'Grief is a strange thing-it sneaks up on you in waves. I will not be ok for a while — but knowing my family are not alone in our pain makes a difference. I'm holding on tight to the love, the light, and the legacy left behind.' After rumours swirled for years that he was unwell, Ozzy announced he was battling Parkinson's in January 2020. His wife, Sharon, told Good Morning America at the time that the diagnosis 'was not a death sentence,' but acknowledged her husband had good days and bad days. This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. Earlier this year, Ozzy announced he would perform one last time in Birmingham, England, with his former bandmates in Black Sabbath, the heavy metal band he helped form in 1968. 'He's very happy to be coming back and very emotional about this,' Sharon told the at U.K. Sun this past February. 'Parkinson's is a progressive disease. It's not something you can stabilize. It affects different parts of the body and it's affected his legs,' she added. 'But his voice is as good as it's ever been.' Ozzy, who performed two sets at the Back to the Beginning show, also confirmed that he could no longer walk. 'I have made it to 2025,' he said during a February episode of his Sirius XM radio show, according to The Independent . 'I can't walk, but you know what I was thinking over the holidays? For all my complaining, I'm still alive. I may be moaning that I can't walk but I look down the road and there's people that didn't do half as much as me and didn't make it.' This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. Following his death, Black Sabbath bassist Geezer Butler wrote in a post on The Sunday Times that he was surprised how 'frail' Ozzy was in the leadup to the Back to the Beginning concert. ' I knew he wasn't in good health, but I wasn't prepared to see how frail he was … he was really quiet compared with the Ozzy of old,' Butler wrote. But 'the strangest part of that show was the end,' Butler, who co-founded the band alongside Osbourne, guitarist Tony Iommi and drummer Bill Ward, wrote. This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. 'Normally, we would all hug each other and take a bow to the audience. But Ozzy was on his throne and we hadn't thought that out … it was such a strange feeling to end our story like that,' Butler said. 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'I don't know what to say, man, I've been laid up for like six years. You have no idea how I feel — thank you from the bottom of my heart,' Ozzy said at the farewell concert . 'You're all … special.' mdaniell@ Read More Love concerts, but can't make it to the venue? Stream live shows and events from your couch with VEEPS, a music-first streaming service now operating in Canada. Click here for an introductory offer of 30% off. Explore upcoming concerts and the extensive archive of past performances. Columnists World Sunshine Girls Toronto & GTA Opinion

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