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Black Sabbath Blocked From No. 1 — By Ozzy Osbourne

Black Sabbath Blocked From No. 1 — By Ozzy Osbourne

Forbes2 days ago
Following Ozzy Osbourne's passing, both the rocker and his band Black Sabbath soar onto charts all around the planet, as millions of people buy and stream everything the legendary artist left behind. There's room for both acts on the charts, but in some instances, the two, which are counted separately, compete with one another, as Osbourne and Black Sabbath appear on multiple rock and hard rock rankings published by Billboard.
In one instance, the soloist even keeps the group that brought him to fame from reaching No. 1.
Ozzy Osbourne's New No. 1 Album
This week's Top Hard Rock Albums chart is ruled by The Essential Ozzy Osbourne. That compilation of many of Osbourne's most successful singles surges from No. 9 to the top spot – and it's not the only effort from the late rocker to rise dramatically.
Black Sabbath Forced to Settle for No. 2
Black Sabbath's Paranoid advances to the runner-up spot on Billboard's ranking of the most consumed hard rock projects in the United States, jumping from No. 18 to No. 2. Paranoid has always been one of Black Sabbath's most famous releases, but it has never managed to conquer the Top Hard Rock Albums chart. The set enters the top 10 on the tally for the first time this week, and only Osbourne himself keeps the group from scoring a new No. 1 album.
Black Sabbath's Sole No. 1
Black Sabbath has only ever ruled the Top Hard Rock Albums list once before. In the summer of 2013, the group's appropriately-titled release 13 debuted in first place. It went on to live there for two frames, and still stands as the group's longest-running success on the Top Hard Rock Albums chart, with 23 frames spent on the roster.
Paranoid Reappears on Multiple Charts
Paranoid returns to two Billboard lists, reentering both the Billboard 200 and Top Album Sales charts inside the top 40 as it surges to the runner-up space on the Top Hard Rock Albums list. The full-length also opens inside the top 10 on both the Top Rock & Alternative Albums and Top Rock Albums rankings.
Black Sabbath's Multiple Wins
Black Sabbath only manages to occupy two spaces on a single Billboard tally this week, and it's the Top Hard Rock Albums chart. As Paranoid almost becomes another No. 1, The Ultimate Collection also reappears at No. 23.
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time4 hours ago

  • Yahoo

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With Doug Sahm, Augie Meyers and fellow Tejano chingón Freddy Fender, Jiménez formed the Texas Tornadoes, whose oeuvre blasts at every third-rate barbecue joint from the Texas Hill Country to Southern California. Jiménez was a titan of American music, something his obits understood. One important thing they missed, however, was his politics. He unleashed his Hohner accordion not just at concerts but for benefits ranging from student scholarships to the successful campaign of L.A. County Superior Court Judge David B. Finkel to Lawyers' Committee, a nonprofit formed during the civil rights era to combat structural racism in the American legal system. Jiménez and the Texas Tornadoes performed at Bill Clinton's 1992 inauguration ball; 'Chulas Fronteras,' captured Jiménez as the headliner at a fundraiser for John Treviño Jr., who would go on to become Austin's first Mexican American council member. 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There are great somber songs about illegal immigration, from La Santa Cecilia's haunting bossa nova 'El Hielo (ICE)' to Woody Guthrie's 'Deportee (Plane Wreck at Los Gatos),' which has been recorded by everyone from the Byrds to Dolly Parton to Jiménez when he was a member of Los Super Seven. But the ones people hum are the funny ones, the ones you can polka or waltz or mosh to, the ones that pep you up. In the face of terror, you need to sway and smile to take a break from the weeping and the gnashing of teeth that's the rest of the day. I saw 'Chulas Fronteras' as a college student fighting anti-immigrant goons in Orange County and immediately loved the film but especially 'Un Mojado Sin Licencia.' Too many of my fellow travelers back then felt that to party even for a song was to betray the revolution. Thankfully, that's not the thinking among pro-immigrant activists these days, who have incorporated music and dancing into their strategy as much as lawsuits and neighborhood patrols. The sidewalks outside the Metropolitan Detention Center in downtown L.A., where hundreds of immigrants are detained in conditions better suited for a decrepit dog pound, have transformed into a makeshift concert hall that has hosted classical Arabic musicians and Los Jornaleros del Norte, the house band of the National Day Laborer Organizing Network. Down the 5 Freeway, the OC Rapid Response Network holds regular fundraisers in bars around downtown Santa Ana featuring everything from rockabilly quartets to female DJs spinning cumbias. While some music festivals have been canceled or postponed for fear of migra raids, others have gone on as planned lest ICE win. Musicians like Pepe Aguilar, who dropped a treacly cover of Calibre 50's 'Corrido de Juanito' a few weeks ago, are rushing to meet the moment with benefit concerts and pledges to support nonprofits. That's great, but I urge them to keep 'Un Mojado Sin Licencia' on a loop as they're jotting down lyrics or laying down beats. There's enough sadness in the fight against la migra. Be like Flaco: Make us laugh. Make us dance. Keep us from slipping into the abyss. Give us hope. Get notified when the biggest stories in Hollywood, culture and entertainment go live. Sign up for L.A. Times entertainment alerts. This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times. Solve the daily Crossword

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