Existing Customers: Login | Forgotten Password

You are in: Home > Find By Artist

Black Sabbath

Description

Black Sabbath are an English heavy metal band from Birmingham. Although there have been many personnel shifts over the years, the band was formed in 1968 by Ozzy Osbourne (vocals), Tony Iommi (guitar), Terence "Geezer" Butler (bass), and Bill Ward (drums). Originally formed as a heavy blues band named Polka Tulk, the band began incorporating occult and horror-inspired lyrics with doomy, detuned guitars, changing their name to Black Sabbath and releasing a string of gold and platinum records in the 1970s. As one of the most influential heavy metal bands of all time, Black Sabbath helped define the genre with releases such as 1971's quadruple-platinum Paranoid. Black Sabbath has sold more than 100 million albums worldwide, and were named second only to Led Zeppelin in VH1's 100 Greatest Artists of Hard Rock. Ozzy Osbourne was fired from the band in 1979, and while initially replaced by former Rainbow vocalist Ronnie James Dio, Black Sabbath would see a revolving lineup in the 1980s and 1990s that included vocalists Ian Gillan, David Donato, Glenn Hughes, Ray Gillen and Tony Martin. The original lineup reunited with Osbourne in 1997 and released a live album, Reunion, which spawned the Grammy Award winning single "Iron Man", 30 years after the songs initial release on Paranoid. Currently, the early 1980s line-up featuring Iommi, Butler, Dio, and Vinny Appice are touring under the moniker Heaven and Hell, a title taken from the 1980 Black Sabbath album of the same name.

Black Sabbath
The original and present Black Sabbath, from left to right: Geezer Butler, Ozzy Osbourne, Tony Iommi and Bill Ward
The original and present Black Sabbath, from left to right: Geezer Butler, Ozzy Osbourne, Tony Iommi and Bill Ward
Background information
Origin Birmingham, England
Genre(s) Heavy metal
Years active 1968–present
Label(s) Vertigo, Warner Bros., Sanctuary, I.R.S., Reprise, Epic
Associated acts Deep Purple, Heaven and Hell, GZR, Rainbow, Dio, Electric Light Orchestra
Website www.blacksabbath.com
Band Members
Ozzy Osbourne
Tony Iommi
Geezer Butler
Bill Ward
Former Band members
See: List of Black Sabbath band members

Members

Current line-up

Discography
Official band discography

The albums in this section are official "band sponsored" albums, and are released with the cooperation/contribution and authorization of the band that existed at the time of the release.

Studio albums

Many of Black Sabbath's albums, including their first eight albums with Ozzy Osbourne and their first two albums with Ronnie James Dio, are considered Heavy metal classics, the latter only being recognized within the last few years. Most of the other albums (especially Born Again and the albums from the Tony Martin era) have gained that of an extreme cult following by die-hard Black Sabbath fans.

Date of release Title Label Chart positions Certification Vocalist
1970 Black Sabbath Warner Bros. Records #8 UK
#23 US
Platinum US, Platinum UK Ozzy Osbourne
1970 (UK),
1971 (U.S.)
Paranoid Warner Bros. Records #1 UK
#12 US
4xPlatinum US, 6xPlatinum UK
1971 Master of Reality Warner Bros. Records #5 UK
#8 US
2xPlatinum US, 3xPlatinum UK
1972 Black Sabbath, Vol. 4 Warner Bros. Records #8 UK
#13 US
Platinum US, 2xPlatinum UK
1973 Sabbath Bloody Sabbath Warner Bros. Records #4 UK
#11 US
Platinum US, 3xPlatinum UK
1975 Sabotage Warner Bros. Records #7 UK
#28 US
Gold US, Platinum UK
1976 Technical Ecstasy Warner Bros. Records #13 UK
#51 US
Gold US, Platinum UK
1978 Never Say Die! Warner Bros. Records #12 UK
#69 US
Gold US, Platinum UK
1980 Heaven and Hell Warner Bros. Records #9 UK
#28 US
Platinum US, 2xPlatinum UK Ronnie James Dio
1981 Mob Rules Warner Bros. Records #12 UK
#29 US
Gold US, Platinum UK
1983 Born Again Warner Bros. Records #4 UK
#39 US
Platinum UK Ian Gillan
1986 Seventh Star Warner Bros. Records #27 UK
#78 US
Glenn Hughes
1987 The Eternal Idol Warner Bros. Records #66 UK
#168 US
Tony Martin
1989 Headless Cross I.R.S. #10 UK
#115 US
Gold UK
1990 Tyr I.R.S. #24 UK
#117 US
1992 Dehumanizer Warner Bros. Records #28 UK
#44 US
Platinum UK Ronnie James Dio
1994 Cross Purposes I.R.S. #41 UK
#122 US
Tony Martin
1995 Forbidden I.R.S. #71 UK
#199 US

Live albums

Date of release Title Label Chart positions Certification Vocalist
1982 Live Evil Warner Bros. Records #13 UK
#37 US
Platinum UK Ronnie James Dio
1995 Cross Purposes Live I.R.S. - - Tony Martin
1998 Reunion Epic Records #41 UK
#11 US
Platinum US Ozzy Osbourne
2002 Past Lives Sanctuary Records #114 US -
2007 Live at Hammersmith Odeon Rhino Handmade - - Ronnie James Dio
  • The album Live at Last was billed as the first live album by Black Sabbath, but it was released without any knowledge of the band and is thus not official. The recording was never considered an official album until it was re-released on the two-disc set Past Lives in 2002.
  • Heaven and Hell, the reunited 3rd line-up of Black Sabbath, released the live album Live from Radio City Music Hall in 2007. However, because it was released under the name "Heaven and Hell" it is technically not considered a "Black Sabbath" album.

Compilation albums

Date of release Title Label Chart positions Certification
1975 We Sold Our Soul for Rock 'n' Roll Warner Bros. Records #35 UK, #48 US 2xPlatinum US, Silver UK
1996 The Sabbath Stones I.R.S. Records
2002 Symptom of the Universe: The Original Black Sabbath 1970-1978 Warner Bros. Records/Rhino Records
2004 Black Box: The Complete Original Black Sabbath (1970-1978) Warner Bros. Records
2006 Greatest Hits 1970-1978 Rhino Records #96 U.S.
2007 Black Sabbath: The Dio Years Rhino Records #54 U.S.

Unofficial / other discography

The albums in this section are not official, as they were not released with the cooperation of band management.

  • 1970 - Come To The Sabbath. A bootleg of their Paris concert from the same year.
  • 1980 - Live at Last (Live from 1973 - Iommi, Osbourne, Butler, Ward); #5 UK. Eventually remastered and officially released as one of the two Past Lives discs.
  • 1977 - Greatest Hits. Not to be confused with the official release Greatest Hits 1970-1978, this 10-track compilation only spans the first five albums and used a section of Pieter Brueghel the Elder's "El triunfo de la muerte" for the front cover.
  • 1974 - Bagdad (live recording from California Jam, Germany)
  • 1976 - The Original (compilation, Germany)
  • 1978 - Rock Heavies (compilation, Germany)
  • 1978 - Rock Legends (compilation)
  • 1983 - The Best (compilation, Australia)
  • 1983 - The Very Best of Black Sabbath (compilation, South Africa)
  • 1984, 1987 - The Kings of Hell (compilation, Brazil)
  • 1985 - The Sabbath Collection (compilation, UK)
  • 1991 - Backtrackin (compilation, Australia)
  • 1991 - Children of the Grave (essentially the Vol. 4 album with an added live version of "Children of the Grave")
  • 1994 - The Ozzy Osbourne Years (3 disc set from Japan, containing all of the songs from the first six studio albums, minus the instrumentals and including "Evil Woman" in place of "Wicked World")
  • 1996 - Under Wheels of Confusion (4 disc compilation spanning 1970-1987, which were the band's years on Warner Bros. Records)
  • 2000 - The Best of Black Sabbath (two other compilations were released under this title, in 1973 and 1976)
  • 2006 - Paranoid (DVD)

Singles

Year Song Chart positions Album
US Singles Chart US Mainstream Rock US Modern Rock UK Singles Chart
1969 "Evil Woman" - - - - Black Sabbath
1970 "Black Sabbath" - - - -
"N.I.B." - - - -
"The Wizard" - - - -
"Paranoid" #61 - - #4 Paranoid
1971 "Iron Man" #52 - - -
"War Pigs" - - - -
"Fairies Wear Boots" - - - -
"Sweet Leaf" - - - - Master of Reality
"Children of the Grave" - - - -
1972 "After Forever" - - - -
"Snowblind" - - - - Black Sabbath, Vol. 4
"Tomorrow's Dream" - - - -
1973 "Supernaut" - - - -
"Changes" - - - -
"Sabbath Bloody Sabbath" - - - - Sabbath Bloody Sabbath
1974 "Sabbra Cadabra" - - - -
1975 "Am I Going Insane? (Radio)" - - - - Sabotage
"Hole in the Sky" - - - -
"Symptom of the Universe" - - - -
1976 "Rock 'n' Roll Doctor" - - - - Technical Ecstasy
"Dirty Women" - - - -
1978 "Never Say Die!" - - - #21 Never Say Die!
"A Hard Road" - - - #33
1980 "Neon Knights" - #17 - #22 Heaven and Hell
"Heaven and Hell" - - - -
"Children of the Sea" - - - -
"Die Young" - - - #41