Episode Transcript
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(00:19):
What up dude? What's up, man?
I had to do some jamming for Ozzy.
That's cool. That's going to be one of your
(00:42):
verse riffs. Right on.
And I'm the asshole that makes you redo that every?
Week I've been. Meaning to tell you why, Because
that looks awesome. On the podcast.
It doesn't work for the short SO.
I. Haven't figured out a way to
save yours. I don't think there is a way so.
(01:05):
I you talking about? You talking about the
background? Yeah.
I'm not doing it to be a Dick. I.
Love it. And I'll tell you why, like at
the end of the show, when the screen would go black.
Now your background or our background, the one that you
put. On our background.
Is that's what they see while they listen to listen to your
saying now. That's cool.
(02:00):
You can sing over any of that, but.
That. All those together is going to
be one song. Just so you know, we've been
recording for about 2 1/2 minutes.
There you go, world. There's some new music that
we've promised you for a while. I really do play my guitar.
Hello everyone here we'll send you off with some.
(02:38):
Did you ever hear back from Rick?
I did not. We talked to Rick boys and
girls. Rick is the the Blades player
that completed the the Nemesis lineup.
He he did a random text yesterday.
Hi, Rick said he's been loving the show and he's down to help
us put some of our original music back, recording it, get it
(03:03):
back down recorded so we can stick it in all the platforms
that music's allowed to be on now that wasn't available to us
back in 1993 to whenever we weredone.
So that's kind of cool. So we're white.
We we pitched the option. He could come on today, but
unfortunately he had to do a meeting or something, go to work
and he wasn't sure if he'd get off so.
(03:24):
He did tell us he was going to come on, we're going to make it
happen and he's offered up his services of any kind.
However, he can be of help, which is in true Rick fashion.
That's one of the reasons why welove him.
Our commitment right now is definitely to re record the two
songs that you hear every week at the beginning and the end of
(03:45):
the show. So absolutely, if, if and
probably about four more that that I feel as the vocalist and
and lyricist of those songs thatare still relevant today, which
is maybe a little bit self-serving, but you know,
they're good songs. They they've stood the test of
time lyrically for sure. Music is music.
(04:05):
And then the beat behind them all or I was just driving an
amazing because Mike and Scott and Rick, you know, created some
badass music to support my vulnerable lyrics and all that
kind of fun stuff. So, you know, it's going to be
fun. And now that we got him kind of
back in the game because it was touch and go for a while there,
because, you know, we didn't know, you know.
(04:26):
Well, the one thing that I'll say is until I went back and
listened to those songs as a listener and not a player,
right, I didn't realize a lot ofthe cool shit that Rick did
because I was concentrating on what I was doing, you know?
Yeah. Oh yeah.
I mostly listen to you and Scottfor cues, you know, within the
(04:47):
song. If I ever forgot where I was at
or how many times something had went around, there was always
little cues there. But.
Sure. He played a lot of harmony that
I didn't realize, like Envision.Instead of playing the same
notes I was playing, he would play like 1/3 or 1/5, you know,
to build a chord instead of justplaying in unison is what they
(05:10):
would call it if you're playing the same note, you know.
Yeah, he was a talented individual for sure.
And at his audition, after it was all said and done, when we
were having an haunt about it that I remember hearing Carrie
from the other room saying that is the best you guys have ever.
Sounded as a fan. We didn't even see her all we
heard that we just heard. Her.
(05:30):
She's like, that is literally the best you have ever sounded
ever and. That was it.
There you go. And Kerry was, Kerry was there
the entire time because we rehearsed in Scott's living room
for the most part. So she heard every single
practice. She heard every single song.
Every single performance. Right and and I mean heard every
single discussion. I don't call them arguments
(05:51):
heard you know, I remember we were wrote.
I wrote a song called I Don't Know Why, which is about my
encounter with Rodger Klein fromback then The Refreshments and
now the Peacemakers, that that there was disturbance in his
band of time, the refreshments. And I sided with with the
drummer, but he and I had a little conflict during a show
and whatnot and he doesn't remember which, you know,
(06:13):
whatever. I wrote a song about it, so
that's why I remember. I'm sure he remembered it at the
time. Yeah.
So I, I there was a, there's a lyric that I would say over and
over towards just the GM parts as I, I don't fucking remember
now, but but Kerry, I remember Kerry chiming or Scott chiming
in saying you're singing that way too much.
And Kerry's like, shut up. They just let him be.
(06:39):
Because she had a good ear for what?
I guess she just had a good ear for music because there's no
other way to put it, you know? She knew what was cool and what
people would latch onto and whatthey wouldn't.
I remember that moment. Yeah, it was.
It was I. Think Bring it back.
Right. And I think I was thinking it's
are you ever, will you ever be? Will you ever be?
Are you going to ever be Ever. Be, but it was totally necessary
(07:02):
for the context. Of dynamical, right, right.
It was, it was dynamic, Yeah, yeah.
But it was. It was.
I used to refer to our songs as roller coaster rides because.
Do you remember that beat? Not to interrupt you, but do you
remember that beat? Underneath that?
It was just fucking pounding, man.
Yeah, Oh yeah. The whole thing was driving,
man. Because it was.
(07:22):
It was an angry song. That particular moment I I
remember that moment in the songwith the drums just he was
slamming his bass drum and his Toms constantly.
Yeah, and I was just like, will you ever be?
Will you ever be? Will you ever be shot Is fine.
That's the direction that band was headed because those are the
(07:44):
songs that we were writing afterFreeman Vision Listen to Your
Sin, because that music was pretty much done when you was
in. Those were the songs that the
four of us were writing togetherfor the first time.
Intervention of Vine. I don't know why.
Vision. No, Vision was one of yours.
I don't know why. Lost in the world.
(08:07):
Fuck. Never you never again.
I don't remember. I don't know if that was one of
ours or not. There's.
That was, yeah, I remember that one too.
That was a cool guitar part thatI'm not sure I even remember.
Yeah, and I still have, I still have all there.
So, so we had a guest on but I couldn't find him.
He he's from the UK and I'm surehe's mourning the loss of the
legendary Ozzy Osbourne today, which I mean.
As we all are. We all knew it was coming and
(08:29):
like, it's, it's, I mean, you know, it's, it's, it's not like
Ozzy lived a very healthy lifestyle.
Pretty much the polar opposite of that.
You know, but I was, I was, I was in a real estate class today
learning how to how to better position myself with, with
people going through divorce. And I looked at my phone and and
(08:51):
it was weird because it was Neanderthal.
Neanderthal's page came up. If you don't know Neanderthal,
he's a he's a diss jockey in Arizona for years.
Paul Marshall. Now he's in California and he
syndicates over four or five different stations.
All his posts said sad day, Ozzy.
And I knew you just, you knew, right?
He could have just put Ozzy downand I would have known because
it's it's, it's it's ironic to me that everything's being
(09:13):
posted, Ozzy Osbourne, Ozzy Osbourne, blah, blah, blah.
But I mean, all you have to do is say Ozzy.
But I'll tell you what, it's just like when I got to stop
saying that, I'm driving myself nuts the next time I say, But I
tell you what, smack me like virtually.
Excuse me? OK.
It was the same way when Eddie died to anybody that ever played
a guitar, right? I can imagine what the people
(09:34):
who worship not worship, but youknow what I mean.
The people that worship Hendrix as a musician.
Musician, right? We looked up to Eddie as an
innovator, a guy who taught us about tone, you know, the
playing was granted. He was one of the best players
in the world. You don't even need to talk
about that. It's everything else that he
did. You know, he always had a smile
(09:54):
on his face. He loved playing.
That was the key right there. I saw Van Halen three times, and
all three times that man had a smile on his face.
From the time he hit the stage until the time he left.
You could tell he's just a big kid up there.
He enjoyed every moment and I always tried to remember that
and emulate it. You know, we're having a good
(10:15):
time here. This is fun.
We chose to do this. So with that said, I haven't
been able to say anything but excuse me.
Two weeks ago, 3 weeks ago now, kid that I went to school with
played in a band over in Peoria who was super well known.
They were getting ready to open up for Theory of a Dead Man.
Oh nice. But they played a gig down in
(10:35):
the Ozarks and after the gig, I guess he was driving home and he
was the only one in the car and I don't know what happened, but
unfortunately lost his life. Monster bass player, better
human being. He was just one of those guys
that I spent a lot of time with Pete when we were mixing our
first demo. You remember, remember when I
flew back here to hook up with Bob, the guy that taught me how
(10:59):
to play? Well, he was playing in a band
with Pete at the time, so he wasat the studio.
And you know, that was in our early 20s.
So that was our partying days and we did a lot of that.
There was a bar behind it and just had a lot of really good
conversations about life and music and just definitely want
to give him a shout out. And that's a bummer.
(11:22):
It it sucks to lose not only a musician, but somebody that
brought that much good into the music scene.
You know, he was one of those guys that not only played in the
band, but he did what he could for the community of music to
keep it going and thriving. And you should have seen the
crowds they were drawing. Man, it was outstanding.
And this was recent. Yeah, within the last few weeks,
(11:43):
unfortunately. Was he?
Was he who you talked about coming on the show?
No, that's my buddy Gary Romero.I would have gladly had Pete on
the show. They were so busy.
I was kind of waiting for the weather to turn, you know, when
they weren't in their busy season.
They're one of the most sought after cover bands in this area
for. Sure.
Oh wow, that's outstanding. You don't open up for theory of
(12:03):
a dead man by accident. No, no.
So they're going to pursue on. I went to school with their
drummer too. So shout out to Gary.
Sorry for your loss, man Bummer.We all went to school together.
We all started playing at the same time.
It's just one of those things that it really hits you, man, to
enjoy every day. You know, don't sweat the small
(12:24):
stuff. As Chris says at the end,
tomorrow's a better day. Just go to bed.
Things will look up. Because you never know, you
know? I always make the joke today
could be the last day and peoplethink that's morbid.
It's not. I enjoy living more than I've
ever in my entire life. So when you hear me say things
that sound like they're self deprecating, it's just to remind
(12:46):
me that life is fragile, man. Well, it's everybody.
It's kind of like, and we lost Malcolm Jamal.
We, I say we the world lost Malcolm Jalt.
Oh my God, Malcolm. Malcolm Jamal Warner.
Which, which I was like when I first saw that, I was like,
well, how do you accidentally drown?
And somebody, my friend Steve Chen, he's like, well, we think
he hit his head. I'm like, Oh, that makes sense.
(13:06):
Because really I, I, you know, that just baffled my mind when I
read that accidental drowning. I'm like, you know, I don't, and
I wasn't saying it to be a Dick,but it's kind of like, how do
you accidentally die and why youdrown?
And that's, you know, that's oneof the ways.
And I didn't realize post Cos because, you know, I, I didn't
was a big Cosby Show fan. I wasn't a big Malcolm Jamal
(13:30):
Warner fan because none of the stuff.
No, I watched it on the fringes like.
Right, exactly I've. Seen it.
I know who he is. Yeah, but some of the stuff that
I saw posted about him once, once he passed, some of the
videos he made and reels he madeabout his family and and his
outlook on life and what he was doing.
He had a podcast that was kind of highlighting the different
parts of the black community. Because you know, the the world
(13:51):
just shows US1 part, right? That's like the world shows
shows the same with with all communities, right?
They don't focus on them, the totality of them.
They focus on these little pockets that they want to pick
and choose from. Either good or bad, We're going
to highlight the good or we're going to highlight the bad.
So that was cool that he was bringing some, some awareness to
all the different levels of of the black community, as he
(14:12):
called it. And he just seemed like a
genuine human. I didn't, you know, Again, I
didn't follow his career becauseI was never really big Cosby
Show fan. Well, I would hope that that's
something that we're doing here is showing people that, you
know, there's another way or side to look at things.
Right. Yeah, absolutely, absolutely.
And that's what so he had that impact and that some, like I
(14:33):
said, some of the so my, my acquaintances on Facebook
basically drop some stuff and it's like, yeah, he's, he's, he
had a, he had a really solid impact, which is cool.
That's awesome. It's always nice to hear when
somebody has success like that, that, that when they kind of
(14:55):
what we would consider fade fromthe public spotlight, they
continue to do good. Because, you know, his checks
just kept rolling in when you'reon a show like that.
I mean, unless he was completelystupid, he was set up for life
so he could have done whatever he wanted with his life.
And it's cool that, you know, like I said, we're trying to do
here, at least he was trying to spread some kind of positivity.
(15:17):
And and that's that's really thewrong word.
You just put you put it into a picture pretty well in that we
want to make sure that people don't look at life as just a
little tiny microcosm, you know,Right, right.
Like you hear people say the black community, it's like, what
is that? They're, they're people, man.
(15:39):
Yeah, let's. Let's forget about that
bullshit. We're all human beings.
Right. But that's just that was the
focus of his podcast. Because that's awesome, right?
Because the lack of right, we'veall we've talked about it and a
lot of the world has realized itthat journalism is no longer
journalism. It's it's entertainment,
correct? And because it's entertainment,
you're not, you're not really speaking truths anymore.
(16:00):
You're making shit up that you rely on, you know, the people
that read it to call you out or there's true or not because you
just want somebody to click the headline so that.
They are no different than what we're doing right here.
They're trying to get people to watch and entertain or not
entertain. They're getting, they're trying
to get people to watch and consume the message that they're
(16:20):
putting out there. Right.
Yeah. I mean, we're guilty of it, too.
We wouldn't be doing this if there's no other reason to do it
than to try to be successful in getting your message out there,
right? Right.
But I will say this, our approach is different than most
podcasts because they're doing it organically.
We're not. We're not feeding people
bullshit. We're feeding people the things
that interest. The best of our knowledge at the
(16:42):
time. Right.
Exactly. And so, but that's the thing,
right. Like we don't like, we don't
speculate anything for the most part it's stuff you've listened
to, read or watched. The same with myself.
And it's conversations that, right or wrong, it's
conversations we have and. But one of the constructive
positive things that I've heard about us is how we keep things
(17:05):
flowing right. I've heard that multiple times
I've. Heard that too, yeah.
So the reason that Chris and I are successful at doing that is
because when we were writing songs together, we literally had
to make decisions in seconds or minutes, otherwise you would
never get anything done, right? So we did.
He just said it earlier. We didn't say at practice and
(17:25):
argue I don't want you to do that there.
You're doing that too long there.
It was more like I don't think that really sounds that great
for the song. And then everybody had to pause
and say does it or doesn't, right.
If three other if Scott and you and Rick automatically said we
think it sounds great, I'm like,OK, just an idea.
(17:46):
I'm going to side with the majority, right?
You guys hear something that I don't.
I'll come around to your side, I'm sure, or I'll keep arguing
my point. Yep.
That wasn't an argument, it was a debate.
Absolutely. About what's best for the song.
Right, right. Because that was the thing we
wanted to put our best foot forward in the product we were
creating. We wanted to be able to play it
(18:07):
night after night, day after day.
And I don't, I don't personally,I never really grew tired of any
of our stuff because. I just thought about that the
other day. It's funny you say that.
Right. Nor did I, because it was for
me. It lyrically was all personal,
right? Whether you knew it or not.
Like, you didn't realize I neverdropped acid, you know, but I, I
still was able to write a song like listen to your Sin, which
(18:29):
has the elements and the visualizations of that.
But that's something I learned in college when I was going to
journalism school. I wondered, you know, to be a
writer. So I had a teacher who was
called descriptive writing and he taught me how to paint those
pictures with words. And that just that's how music
worked for me and carried it through with all the different
elements of. Your lyrics were very visual
(18:51):
after the music was set to it, for sure.
I mean, for the listener, you knew what you were trying to
convey from the get go. But for the listener, if they
just read those lyrics on a page, it would still mean
something to them because they were great lyrics, right?
They're going to take something out of it.
But then you hear it like a songlike Intervention Divine, when
(19:11):
you hear that message delivered with that music in that dynamic.
Holy shit, that song impressed me and I'm the one that was
there to write it, you know? And that was a poem.
That was a poem, man. That was a poem.
I was in. That thing became a beast.
Though, Dude, yeah, it did. It was, it was, it was.
I actually, it wasn't plagiarism, but it was just, it
was. I was in a scene in one of my
(19:32):
acting classes and, and some of the lyric in that song I wrote
based on that scene. I don't remember it now, but.
But if I looked at the lyrics, Icould pull it out.
But it was the first time I everhad to do a scene with a
partner, right? Because it was my first real
acting pursuit, right? And it was, I don't remember
(19:54):
what it is now. I can see it in my head.
I can see that the lady in my head, she was, she was probably
15 years old and a really nice, nice person and, and rehearsed
it and did some improvising shitbecause there was a the teacher,
the instructor handed us these scenes like this is what you're
going to do. So we didn't, she didn't want us
picking things that, you know, whatever.
Well, there's a, there was a part in the scene where we were
(20:15):
supposed to kiss and she wasn't comfortable that I was like, I'm
fine, I don't give a shit, you know?
But the way that we improvise that and just the way that scene
was, it was cool because it taught me that part of life, you
don't have to do exactly what iswritten down to have it be
effective. As long as you're putting
everything that you have into whatever you're doing.
Even that 15 minute scene was effective.
(20:38):
And even the instructor, Bev, said that was more effective
because we didn't kiss because the way that we had tweaked it
to make it that much more of a, of an awkward element, it just
carried through really cool. Which, you know, that was a
fucking squirrel tangent. We're here to talk about Ozzy.
Let's talk about Ozzy, Mike. No, that song was awesome.
(21:00):
So here's the thing. I just so so Ozzy passed away
today. This is July 22nd and we record
our shows on Tuesdays and Fridays.
So my time just comes out. He will have been will have been
pass for you know what couple weeks.
But here's the thing. OK?
But there's people watching live.
On YouTube, absolutely hello people watching live.
So we're going to I'm going to I'm going to dive into Rolling
(21:21):
Stones top 20 essential Ozzy Osbourne songs and I don't agree
with them. I do not agree with these Ozzy
Osbourne's 20 essential. Songs I rarely agree with
Rolling Stone. That's good.
Number and I, I don't. And because they don't do it in,
in here 20, they don't say whichis number 1 and which is #20 So
we're just going to say #1 I'm going to go down Black Sabbath.
(21:43):
Black Sabbath from 1970, which to me that introduced the world
to Black Sabbath. Oh, for sure.
So and that changed the trajectory of heavy metal as
because heavy metal wasn't a thing back then.
No, they invented heavy metal for sure, right?
That's where they tried to be a Blues band and no one was
(22:06):
listening, so they turned their amps up so the people couldn't
talk while they were playing. That's a true story.
Right, so it was, it was it was the the birth of heavy metal and
and it has never I I think it'd be hard pressed to find somebody
to argue that. So I'll agree with that one.
Absolutely paranoid. Oh yeah, every guitar player in
the world learned Paranoid. Right, and I'm doing this this
(22:28):
morning #3 Iron Man. Oh yeah, I.
Remember the man before you learned Paranoid?
I remember the video on MTV withwith the trippy background right
the the the neon green. What do they call it?
Saint Christopher's cross? It was upside down spinning.
Right, right with the watercolorart.
Right, going in the background, right.
(22:49):
Oh my God, you know, Black Sabbath Satanic.
You know, hide your children. They were marketing before KISS
was marketing. Right, right.
Changes from from Black Sabbath song changes, which the first
time I heard changes was actually at his No More Tours
tour, which was recorded live for Live and loud.
(23:10):
That's the first time I ever heard changes, believe it or
not. That's the first time I ever saw
Ozzy is on that tour. Wait on, that's the first time I
saw him as well. Nice.
Yeah. Makes the Amphitheatre, 2000.
People Peoria, IL Yeah, the Amphitheatre.
I saw Pantera there twice and they tore that place apart.
What a great place to see a bandlike that because it's nice and
(23:32):
tight sound. Well, and and see what what blew
my mind now looking back on it then thinking going then it did,
you know, I mean, we got ticketsthe day of the show and it was
general mission and we worked our way up to like, you know,
probably 10 people from the stage.
And you couldn't do that nowadays day of the show.
It's impossible. But the fact that if you look at
that now that where they played,where he played, it was the
(23:53):
opening leg of the tour for no more tours, no more No More
Tears tour, but to play at the at the Mesa Amphitheater.
I mean, this is a guy who. That's a warm up show for sure.
Right. It's like I sell out Dodger.
Stadium and and, you know, Madison Square Garden right out
of my mouth. And I'm playing this little
podunk place in Mesa, AZ. But you know, you know, we would
(24:16):
have done the same thing. Sure, you always want to play
your first show, intimate venue,make sure everything's going to
work. Yep, Yep.
What's next? So I think so.
He probably did some kind of little club tour like that.
Sabbath. Bloody Sabbath, yeah.
Metallica covered that one. Right on.
I don't know why? I'm sorry.
(24:37):
I don't. I don't know.
I don't know. I don't know.
I don't know. Great riff.
Yeah. That riff is like our Freeman
riff. It's simple and effective.
Yeah, yeah. So he, he told the planet Rock.
Ozzy did that. I'm not the kind of guy.
I'm a dyslexic fucking rock and roller.
So I don't know, is me saying don't ask me questions.
(24:58):
I don't know. You got to believe in someone.
He sings over a crisp guitar riff, asking who is right,
asking me who to follow. Don't ask me.
I don't know. That's such a great song.
And then. And then what?
Which a lot of people are going to.
Yeah. Oh yeah, which a lot of people
are going to say this launched his solo because it was his
first solo hit and it crazy train.
(25:20):
Yep, there you go. And you have to say it.
And you, you, you know that songfrom the first riff, kind of
like, you know, Sweet Child to mine, right?
There's certain. What's that instrument they use
at the beginning of the song? That's how you know it's all
drummers know what that is. But it's a percussion
instrument, and if used right, it's effective.
And he used it very effectively because that's what you hear
(25:41):
first in Crazy Train. Yeah.
Yeah, the video was cool too. Black and white.
You know, he was, he was heavilyintoxicated, still kind of in
not very healthy, but. Had his eye makeup like raccoon
eyes and a spiky hair. Yep, there was.
Oh yeah, 1980 man. He embraced the hair metal.
(26:02):
Mr. Crowley, the next. I just heard that today.
I did. Why?
When I came home from the office, I put on my ultimate
Aussie. Me too.
Yeah. Yeah, I see.
And this I never liked this songSuicide solution I.
Love that song. Yeah, I, I never liked it.
It was just one of those songs Ijust don't like, you know?
It's an anti suicide song. Oh, I know.
Yeah, I know what it's about. I just, I just, it's just never,
(26:25):
I just never gravitated towards that, you know, for whatever
reason. I don't know why.
Flying high again. Oh, yeah.
Now. Now what?
Are you trying? To say nothing, man, I will.
This is this is this is my firstAussie story, right?
OK, this is so my, my introduction to Ozzy Osbourne,
my brother, his friend Brendan, myself and this guy and his
(26:46):
other friend named Pat. We were in my elementary school
parking lot and I think it was Brendan's, you know, 1970
orange, K5, Bronco, blazer, whatever, right?
Orange, you know, white top. They were, they had Ozzy on the
cassette and and Over the Mountain came on and that was
(27:08):
the first time I ever took a hitoff a joint.
Sweet. So we basically smoked a joint
while listening to Ozzy. No better way to hear Ozzy.
I'm going back home and I felt like I was walking on the moon,
you know, I had. To I remember when marijuana did
that to me. Had to walk past the parent, the
(27:30):
parent, you know. And I don't remember what she
said, but I acknowledge, my brother said I know.
She probably sounded like she was a mile away.
Right and and delayed response and got our money.
Proceeded to go 711 and and munch it away.
That's my first ever introduction to Ozzy Osbourne.
Seeing when somebody thinks of somebody being high.
(27:51):
If you see somebody high for thefirst time, second time, maybe
even in their first year of smoking marijuana, and that is
your impression of people getting high, I understand why
you're confused. Right, Right.
Because the first time, you justdescribed the first time
perfectly. You feel like you're walking on
the moon. Yeah, it's the greatest feeling
ever. And you got to hear Ozzy at the
(28:12):
same time. Right, right.
And you know. So my introduction to Ozzy was
art. Well, I think he's still my mom
and dad's mailman, Mr. Mark Brewer.
We were jamming out tunes in hisroom one day.
We're probably junior high high school.
OK. And I think it was the fact that
(28:32):
he didn't like the live album. I don't think it wasn't that he
didn't like Ozzy, but it was theRandy Rhodes Ozzy Osbourne
tribute album. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
He just flipped it to me and he's like here, man.
Maybe it was like meant to be, you know, fate.
I had recently started playing guitar and you never know why
things happen, but he's like here.
I don't really care for this. I think you'll enjoy it.
(28:55):
So I've popped that in the cassette player and holy shit,
man, I got to hear Randy Rhodes and really listen to him for the
first time. And in a live setting where
people, you know, like myself, are able to cut loose as a
player, you don't always play the same solos when you're live
is on the record. A lot of times you don't even
play the same rhythm. You throw little things in
there. And he did a lot of that.
(29:16):
And it gave me ideas of what to do in between the beats, you
know? Yeah, music happens in between
the beats. It's the silence that actually
makes the music. People don't realize that if you
just kept playing straight through and there was no breaks,
it wouldn't be music, right? Yeah.
So Mozart taught us that, that it's the silence, it's the
(29:38):
notes, it's the silence in between the notes that actually
makes the music. It's how long you pause and
where your brakes are, right? Yeah, I'm Speaking of tribute.
I lost my virginity to Ozzy Osbourne's tribute album.
That's awesome. That's a better story than mine.
I think we're probably lighting our farts on fire in junior high
(29:58):
or something like. That so next one, which is
which, which to me was it epitomized It epitomized him at
the time for me, because it was this song was so dark, but it
was so it was so, so eerie and storytelling vibe that it it
hunked, it hooked me like because once, once once I heard
(30:20):
over the mountain right then it's like, OK, I got to buy
this. I got to buy the cassette, you
know, sure got it. Diary of a Mad Men.
What a fucking epic song dude. Another Randy Rhodes.
Beautiful. Yeah, this is funny, too.
Once, while Rhodes was taking a classical guitar lesson.
You're going to like this, Osbourne ambled in and asked
what he was playing, as he latertold the magazine Revolver.
(30:45):
Mozart, Rhodes said. Right, we're nicking it, Osborne
replied. Worked.
We can't nick Mozart, Rhodes said.
They worked on it basis. Bob Daisy wrote some lyrics
reflecting a nervous breakdown. He had had a 16 and Osborne
channeled the words into a Munchlike scream.
By the time Randy had finished messing around with it, there
(31:05):
was hardly any work, any Mozart left.
That would be me. How can I wreck this?
But that's the thing. So you said.
That's why I thought that was a good thing to read, because
that's a great story. You reference Mozart?
Yeah, that was a. Great story man, Randy was a
huge lover of classical and anybody who is a lover of music
is, and anybody who is a player that doesn't study or at least
(31:27):
appreciate classical music, you're doing yourself a
disservice. Well, classical music is
awesome. I had it on Monday at the
office. It was just me and Christy, the
she's like helps Nick run the whole thing and it was rare.
It was just her and I, So I put on she can't hear.
She's got a hearing aid. So I usually put on like Alter
Bridge station or something Rocky when it's just me, but
(31:48):
actually put on, I put on Mozart's station and just it was
it's it's amazing how. As a musician, the appreciation
you have for it when you hear itis just mind blowing.
Yeah, because if you ever just sit down and listen to classical
music, like just turn the world off, you'll be amazed at the
sounds they can create. Yes, with such a massive, you
(32:10):
know, amount of musicians in theorchestra and just it's, it
fills the space like you wouldn't believe.
So that's, that's what it does for me, dude.
As a musician, it makes me realize how simplistic and you
know, as cool as what I think I do, when I hear that music, I'm
like, whoa, you know, we're super simple here.
(32:30):
If we go to 6-8 time, people freak out or three, four or
something, you know, right. They're playing in multiple time
signatures within the same measure sometimes.
Yeah. But I agree with what you said,
the fullness of the sound and what they can create with the
percussion and the all the way down to the chimes and the
triangle and you know, just outstanding.
(32:52):
Well, I mean, it's like what Metallica did with with Michael
Kamen, you know, beautiful. Yeah.
I mean and. The second one is good too, but
that first one, like you said onthe last show, it shocked the
world. It's like, wow, Metallica is
powerful. Yeah, when you when you hear
Metallica in an elevator, it's it's, it's a little ridiculous,
but but it shows you that, that the ability of that's there
(33:14):
because of of how they they didn't.
And again, we talked about it last show, they didn't realize
how they were writing. They just thought it sounded
cool, which I think a lot of musicians don't have that.
I can't, can't read music. So I just I play by ear.
I couldn't tell you what we're doing sound right.
It's just, it's what feels good at what feels right at what's
what sounds good. And it's filling the space and
(33:36):
you know, so next one bark at the moon. 01 of the hardest
songs to play on guitar ever. Really.
Oh yeah, Well, Jake was the master.
Jake got screwed because he camein after Randy Rhodes and those
are huge shoes to fill. But I challenge anyone to come
on here and tell me that Jakey Lee was not one of the greatest
(33:56):
guitar players Ozzy ever had because his rhythm work was so
unique. It was hard to put your finger
on how he played because he did things.
That was just, I did the same thing.
However, he learned to play was out of the ordinary, right?
The way I learned to play was out of the ordinary because I
was by myself a lot. I think he was by himself a lot,
(34:19):
too. You learn to fill in spaces that
people who just grow up playing organized, structured music, or
they start off playing in a bandright away.
They don't do those things because they're used to just
holding down the rhythm or whatever.
Bark at the Moon is moving #1 the tempo is way up there, and
(34:40):
it's a constant pedal tone on the A string, like alternate
picking all the time. And then you're playing this
huge full chord underneath it atthe same time, like he's
stabbing at the beats underneathit, but he's always keeping that
A string going all the time. Interesting.
(35:01):
So then we got shot in the dark.Ultimate send album.
Which he hated. I remember, I remember.
You know why? Because he wasn't.
I just read that he wasn't involved in almost zero of that.
Bob Daisley and Jakey Lee wrote that whole album because Ozzy
was in rehab. He came in and most of the music
was done. I love that album, but I
(35:23):
understand why he doesn't like it because I think he was forced
into here's what we have and we need to get it out because you
got to get out on the road, you know, blah blah blah.
Yeah. He wasn't in a position to be
the guy who could say, I'm goingto take another year and rewrite
this the way I would like it. Well, and he wrote in the liner
(35:46):
notes that I laugh so much everytime I see the video for the
song Shot in the dark. I looked like a tattooed truck
driver in a sequin dress. That one was ridiculous.
Videos were definitely 80s cheesy.
Oh, but but ultimate sin is I see I that's one of the albums
I've listened to like I listenedto it I what when I was doing
yard work the other day because.I love the album.
(36:06):
Yeah. I'm a huge Jakey Lee fan.
His work in Badlands is another one people should go check out.
It's hard to find now, but he was a monster player that just
didn't get the credit he deserved because he was in the
shadows of reindeer. Yeah, yeah, this is a really
good song too. And it's a duet.
Close my eyes forever. With I just heard that too
(36:27):
today. Do you know that that was an
accident that that song was everdone?
They were both recording in the same studios.
Just, you know, they had like a studio A, studio B.
They got all fucked up one nightand went in the studio together
and hammered that song out. Nice.
Yeah, so. I think that was Ozzy's only
number one single. We'll look that up when we're
(36:50):
done. So Lita Ford's first concert was
singing Black Sabbath at age 13 and 71.
That I'm reading the the notes on this.
Nearly two decades later, after she established herself with the
Runaways and as a solo artist, she found herself jamming and
getting drunk with Sabbath's lead singer and his wife at her
new house. There was a little side room
with a guitar and a keyboard. And we started messing around,
singing, playing, and we wrote close My Eyes Forever.
(37:13):
She once recalled. The song features Forge Spyder,
a guitar playing, and the two artists share vocals about
contemplating love and eternity.Next thing I know, the sun was
coming up, she recalled. I looked at him and I went, uh
oh, we're in trouble. Sharon had been waiting all
night. But then we had this hit song.
It peaked #8 on Billboard's pop chart. close My Eyes Forever.
(37:36):
OK. So you're close, and then and.
Then this is only top ten single.
Maybe because here's so well, I don't know, we're going to I
because I could've swore patient#9 debuted at #1 but maybe that
was the album this one, this andthis is the cool thing about
Ozzy. If if if you followed his career
like like Black Sabbath, right? They hit the scene and boom
(37:57):
world changed, right? Crazy Train hit the scene, boom
world change right And then thissong, Mama, I'm Coming Home,
boom world change. It's like he got.
He reestablished himself as a true rock'n'roll legend because.
He had to keep reinventing himself because he almost became
a parody of himself. Right, especially in the 80s.
(38:19):
That's it right there. The 80s and the early 90s, he
really had to keep struggling toreinvent himself.
And I agree with you, man. It's fascinating the way he did
it. Yeah, yeah.
And then so this that this part of it, he talks, he wrote it.
This is this song actually is the one and only time that one
of his solo tunes enter the Top 40.
(38:41):
He wrote it with Zack Wyden, Lemmy.
Everyone thinks it's about my mother, Osborne, Soul planet
rock, but it's not. I call my wife Sharon.
Mama. I had the idea for this.
And Lemmy wrote the lyrics in about 3 hours.
The song became a main stand MTVand helped Osborne win over an
entirely new audience, which we just said remained part of his
live shows. I mean, he played his last show
(39:02):
ever. He played it.
And I, I didn't realize that he was, it was his Mama was Sharon.
I did. So that's cool.
Another, another figured it out watching The Osbournes 'cause
you hear him call her that all the time.
I thought it was about his mother too till I started
watching The Osbournes and I'm like, oh, he calls Sharon Mama
I. Didn't think about that.
No next one. I don't want to change the
(39:24):
world. What a great song.
Yeah, let me wrote the lyrics and and and see this this I
mean, here's the power of Ozzy. Tell me I'm a sin.
And I got news for you. I spoke to God this morning and
he don't like you. That's.
Such a great lyric. That's so Lemmy too.
Yeah, Yep. But that's the that's yeah,
(39:48):
just. And then, of course, the the the
mainstay of that album. No more tears.
You know, that video was great too.
Great video. That was a band that that was a
force to be reckoned with, man. I, I saw him twice with Zach and
I think Newstead was playing bass one time.
(40:09):
And Rob, actually I did. I saw him with both Metallica
bass players. I saw him with Newstead once and
I saw him with Rob Trujillo once.
Oh wow. And Tommy Aldridge was playing
drums for most of it. I mean, you just couldn't find a
better band. Yeah.
Gotcha. Next one I just want you another
(40:29):
another. Oh yeah, you can feel the
emotion in that song. From Osmosis, I don't ask much,
I just want you Dreamer 2001 released at Dreamer.
That's a good one. And people say Dreamers like
Ozzy's is is like Ozzy's imaginefrom from John Lennon.
(40:50):
I can see that. Osborne said he takes that as a
compliment. I would too.
It's got the gentle piano line, George Martin esque
orchestrations. That's where he lived out his
fantasies of becoming his, you know, part of his favorite band,
which was The Beatles. It's a great.
I'm just a dreamer. I dream my life away.
I'm just a dreamer who dreams ofbetter days.
Just like The Beatles song, you know it's cool.
(41:14):
That's a good song for. Sure, it is a great song.
And then and see, This is why I don't necessarily agree with us,
because now it's patient #9 goodsong, really good song.
That's right. But but oh, there's there's the
other, there's another track on on on patient number 90.
Fuck, I can't think of the name now, but but the lyric is it's
(41:36):
just one of those days where I don't believe in Jesus.
So if if you, if you just hear that line, you think, oh, you
know, he's fucking slamming God again, but he's not.
He's just the the lyrics. It's just he's the song is about
you. Just you have a shitty day and
it's just, it's today's just oneof those days.
I just, I just don't believe in Jesus.
When you see, you know, 75 kids drown in a, in a massive flood
(41:58):
in Texas. Like it's hard to have faith if
you're a Christian because whereare you God?
You're letting 75 children ages,you know, 7 to 11 die in a
flood, right. So that's like when that the,
the one song I, I, I, I think, what is it?
The window of hell, whatever that one song I wrote about the
guy. That was another one we wrote
(42:19):
together. Yeah, that thing, that thing
wrote itself. Yeah, but that dude took his
daughter to the desert, you know, and to burner under the
preclusive. You're going to go see Santa
Claus. That's those elements where.
But that song could have been taken out of context.
Very. Sure, sure.
But but again, when I'm going with that, that's one of those
contexts where you, you, you have to read the lyric to
(42:43):
understand as best you can what,what the lyricist is portraying,
you know, So the, I'm going to look up the fucking lyrics of
that song. That's driving me nuts now.
Well, I'm thinking if you don't understand what the song's about
and you have a bad interpretation of it, don't
listen to that song anymore. Don't, don't, don't chastise the
(43:03):
songwriter and make your own opinion as to what songs are
about negatively. Yeah, there's no need for that.
Just don't listen to it, you know?
Yeah, because you probably. Don't know what the song's about
anyway. Right, It's called One of Those
Days. And Eric Clapton played on it
and then patient #9 patient, Yeah, patient #9 played, had
Jeff Beck on it. And then Jeff Beck, he passed
(43:24):
away right shortly after that album was.
Released, it is a great song. Yeah, yeah.
But the two this I like go. Ahead.
I like the Post Malone song on there too.
Which one was that? I don't know, you got the tracks
up there. Yeah, Jeff, Jeff, Jeff, Mike,
Derek, Zach. I just heard him.
(43:45):
Dark side Blues Maybe no. Oh, maybe it's not on that
album. Maybe it's on.
I don't think it's on. Maybe that was just a single.
OK yeah, but One of those days, impatient #9 are are the 2 songs
I like on that now. Take one back on it.
Yeah, yeah, I was one catalog. That was from 2019.
(44:08):
OK, gotcha. That's a great song.
So I just I want to open up his his songs because there's so
many songs listen missed. I bet that's the problem with
Ozzy dude. There's He's so he has so many
good songs, man. Yeah, not very many of them are
bad. No, so so ultimate sin.
(44:31):
Thank God for the bombs. One of my.
On. That one.
I just heard that today too. That's what people I don't want
to think a lot of people under realize that.
I mean I'm making a broad statement there, but Ozzy was
very in tune with what was goingon around him in the world.
Thank God for the Bomb is an anti nuclear weapon song but
(44:55):
it's. The wall had just come down when
he wrote that. Right.
But it's also, he's basically saying like, thank God for the
bomb, because if we didn't have the threat of using the bomb,
all chaos could ensue in the world.
Correct. So that was the thing.
Yeah. So the ultimate saying, thank
God for the bomb Killer Giants. Great song.
There's another, right? There's another track that
(45:16):
nobody ever talks about that's akiller Ozzy song, no pun
intended. No, it is though.
It is though, lightning striking, shot in the dark full
for you just OK, that's ultimatesin.
So right there, there's more often than not good.
There's no filler on that album.No.
Bark at the moon. We're at bark at the moon now.
(45:36):
Bark at the moon. You're no different than me.
That's a great song, right? Rock'n'roll Rebel.
Another great song. Waiting for Darkness, that was
an E. That was an EP.
Dude. That's 8 songs.
The other ones on there now you see it now you don't.
Center of Eternity and Slow down.
But you have you have 5 of the 8songs you can just, you know,
(46:00):
kill. Yeah, yeah.
No rest for the wicked miracle man crazy babies, demon alcohol,
Devil's daughter, breaking all, breaking all the rules, Fire in
the sky. Holy shit.
I love. Fire another another great slow
dynamic build up. Oh yeah.
Just just a great album. Fire in the Sky, man, now your.
(46:21):
Castles are burning. Just and then then we got Diary
of a Madman, which which Over the Mountain, Flying high again,
You can't Kill Rock'n'roll Believer Little Dolls.
I wasn't into that tonight, wasn't into that song.
Yeah, Diver Man, but again as AEP 8 tracks and you have at
least six of those tracks held up.
(46:41):
Those were considered full length albums back then though,
right? Right then, no more tears, Mr.
Tanker Train. Great song, Desire.
Great song, Hellraiser. I don't want to rule the world
no more. Let me, wrote Hellraiser too.
Tommy time after time See, This is why I'm saying those twenty
time after time. Great song mom, I'm coming home.
(47:04):
Great song send. There was no filler on No more
tears. No zombies song every.
Song was like. No.
That's a great riff. Right.
Just. Do the zombie stomp.
Who gets away with that other than Oz?
Nobody, nobody, Blizzard of Oz, you have, I don't know, great
song, crazy train, great song, goodbye to romance.
(47:26):
I, I don't, I don't love that song.
See, and I don't that's a weird thing.
I just, I, I mean, I, I from a music standpoint, I see what you
do because Randy's on it and andhis guitar sounds are fantastic
And, but I just. I like that melody.
I just never felt it. So those are two songs on the
album. I just don't.
I don't. I've never really liked.
What's the other one? Oh, yeah.
Suicide Solution. But Steal away the night, Mr.
(47:50):
Crowley. Revelation.
You know, I just fucking did. Just talk to the dead, you know?
Mr. Crowley, I love. This osmosis if you don't know
what Mr. Crowley is about boys and girls, just Google Mr.
Crowley, the original Mr. Crowley.
And Aleister Crowley. Yeah, it's, it's interesting
Osmosis again. Just Perry Mason.
(48:12):
Only Ozzy could get away with that, right?
I just want you Ghost behind Thunder Underground.
Thunder Underground. See you on the other side.
Listen to that. Right, see you on the other side
tomorrow. Denial, my little man, and my
just see you on the other side, man.
Old LA tonight. Just another great album, man.
(48:36):
Just another great album. He knew how to make a good
album. He knew how to put a great band
together. Yeah, and we already talked
about patient #9 yeah, I just, there's so many other songs that
could be in that top 20. I mean, the man was one of he
(48:57):
was 25% of inventing heavy metal.
Yeah, he was when without his voice.
I don't think you created heavy metal.
I don't think. I don't think.
He had one of the most unique voices ever in the history of
the world. I know, I know.
And just, you know, from other Sabbath singers, I don't think
you've put Ronnie James Dio and as as the original lineup for
Black Sabbath. It doesn't, it doesn't
breakthrough like it did with Ozzy because it is, you know his
(49:20):
voice. You can't mistake his voice and
you know his name. Like you don't have to say Ozzy
Osbourne. It's just Ozzy.
You say, Ozzy, everybody knows. I'll tell you how powerful it
is. One of my friends that just
isn't a huge fan of heavy metal is a huge Ozzie fan.
Like hit her super hard, right? That's how unique his voice was,
(49:42):
was it? It really spoke to people who
would generally not listen to that kind of music because it
was so unique. You want to say that he really
wasn't a singer, but he was in an odd way, because it was
pleasing to the ear in the weirdest way possible.
On paper, he shouldn't have beena singer.
(50:03):
You know, he didn't have a huge range, but it was that.
You just hit the nail on the head, man.
It was his, the uniqueness of his voice that just drew people
in. And he was such a lovable
character once you got past the fact that he wasn't trying to
woo everyone into Satan. That was such.
(50:25):
Well, those people were fucking stupid.
Yeah. And then he he released the
album in 2010 called Scream ThatI, I there's nothing on there
that I recognize. So obviously I didn't, I didn't
gravitate. That's a great album at all.
I think that was Gus G on guitarif I remember right.
What are the songs on that album?
I gotta go back to it. Where'd it go?
Where'd it go? You've heard scream because of.
(50:46):
Oh yeah. Oh yeah, I've heard.
Yeah, I've heard scream for sure.
Recording this home studio in LA.
It doesn't say oh, Kevin. Produced by him and Kevin Chunko
Cunko. It doesn't say who the guitarist
is on it. Who?
(51:07):
Oh, here we go. The drop down menu.
Gus G. Yep, you're right.
Gus GI. Know my eyes, A guitar player.
Yep, let's see. That was not one of his better
picks in my opinion. Just my opinion.
Yeah, Black Rain, 2007. That's a great album too.
(51:31):
Not going away. I don't want a black Rain 11
silver here for you, the almighty lay your world trap
door after. I haven't.
I've never heard that one. I'll have to listen to it.
I don't think I I just put a bunch of them on my phone maybe
six months ago and the last two that you mentioned I had never
(51:54):
heard either. Yeah, ordinary man.
I've heard that. I've heard that's the one that
post Malone's on Ordinary man. OK, no rest for the wicked, of
course. Yeah, Miracle man crazy baby is
bloodbath that. Was miracle man.
Yeah, Demon alcohol, we talked about that.
What was that? Jerry Falwell, right?
Miracle man, Yeah. No Jimmy.
(52:16):
Jimmy. He got busted with his pants
down. Little Jimmy, Center.
And then when he when, Yeah. And when he introduces it on
Jimmy who? The fuck was that?
I don't know. I know I fucking Jimmy somebody.
He's dead now. Yeah, but it was funny when he
went on Live and Loud. He's like all these people think
(52:38):
you listen to the likes of Ozzy Oz when you're as fuck going to
go to hell. God, I don't believe in that,
you know? But you went to Cash, you know,
whatever, he Mumbles. Swagger, swag Jimmy Swagger.
Swagger. I just know him as little Jimmy
Sinner because that's what Ozzy dubbed him.
You know, that was the brilliance of Ozzy though.
It's like nothing's taboo, man. Oh, you're a man of the Lord,
(53:00):
are you? How come you're fucking that
prostitute? And then and then of course,
Live and Loud, which was got to be one of the best live albums
ever. And he was at I think to me that
was he was, he was sober. He was clean for the he was a
very long time, right? He's like, he hit his stride.
That's what what what propelled him to kind of he reinvented
(53:21):
himself again, like we talked about, and I mean, just the, the
songs, the intro, which is badass and you got paranoid.
This is how it started. Paranoid.
I don't want to change the worlddesire Mr. Crowley.
I don't know. Road to Nowhere another
fantastic song. Why Road to no No is not in in
Rolling Stones top 20s beyond methat.
Should have been there over patient #9.
(53:41):
That's an autobiography. Yes.
Right yes. Flying high again.
Zach Wylde solo suicide solution.
Goodbye to Romance. Shot in the dark.
No more tears. Miracle Man Randy Castillo's
drum solo. We've talked about Randy before
on the show. Amazing human and drummer.
Yeah, rest in peace. Right then war pigs because he
brings he brings Sabbath back onstage.
(54:02):
No, I that wasn't that yet he waited till Black Sabbath and
changes so war pigs and then bark at the moon Mama, I'm
coming home crazy train. And then he brings Black Sabbath
on stage and does Black Sabbath and and changes and that's the
first time I heard changes and Iwas like, wow, that's that's
amazing. Now also live and loud is when
he bought when he brought Jack, his son at the time on stage,
(54:24):
put him on his shoulders and brought him out.
And that to me all the all the fucking nonsense that people
said about Ozzy being Satanist and evil and dark and blah blah
blah. Right when he comes out on stage
with this kid on his shoulders, it's just like everybody just
shut up. Just.
Don't. Well, just the fact that they
did a show together for that long and you could tell that the
(54:46):
love was genuine. And then Jack and Ozzy went on
to do Ozzy and Jack's detour where the road trip.
That was great road trip. Great show.
And then him and Kelly did something together too.
If I remember right. I know they recorded a song
together. Yeah, yeah.
And then? So they were always together.
How bad their dad could he have been if his kids wanted to be
around him all the time? Right, right.
(55:08):
Exactly. You're stupid.
They are Ozzy Live in 2012. I think it's just a compilation
of of live songs, which is, I don't know.
I don't know, crazy trained believer, Mr. Crowley.
Flan high again. Revelations.
Steal away the night. Suicide, Steal away the night.
Another fucking good song, man. That's Tommy Aldridge on drums
too, and that's a great drum song.
(55:29):
It's a great song Undercover. Now I have this one because I
was intrigued by it because all it is is cover songs.
You ever heard that one? 2005 Undercover it's.
I tried to listen to it. It's hard, I know.
And I must have picked the wrongcouple songs to listen to
because I wasn't real crazy about Ozzy's version of whatever
(55:49):
I was listening to. Do you have the track listing
there? I do Rocky Mountain way.
That might have been the first one, I wasn't a big fan of that.
No, it didn't work in my life. Mississippi Queen that don't
work. For me either.
Woman, 21st century something. That's the doors, right, isn't
it? I don't know, because it's cut
(56:09):
off. It's it's not 21 Century Fox.
It's the lyrics cut off 2120 first century Schnitzel
schnitzoid man Schnitzelman sunshine of your love, for what
it's worth. How could that work?
How does he do? Sunshine of your love.
He can't. Mississippi Queen all the young
dudes fire dinner with with Ozzyand and Sharon go now for what
(56:32):
it's worth working class hero and it's my life.
I just it it it didn't work. I mean, I think those are some
of his favorite songs that he. Shouldn't that's what I exactly?
Is that where you get out of that?
That's totally what I got out ofit, totally what I got out.
And he wouldn't touch The Beatles because The Beatles were
his. Like you don't fuck with The
Beatles. I love Ozzy, but yeah, those I
tried to listen. Now that you mentioned it, I
(56:53):
tried to listen to Mississippi Queen.
And what was the first one? Oh, I've long since passed.
Anyway, yeah. I tried to listen to the first
two and I just, I was like, no, that ain't going to work.
No, it just it and I tried, I wanted to, I wanted to like it
because I was like, oh, this would be a cool take, you know,
And then the rest of the stuff is all these different little
live junkets and and little, youknow, oh.
(57:15):
It was the Joe Walsh 1, Rocky Mountain Wayne.
How can you? How can you hear that other than
Joe Walsh? Oh, you can't.
You just can't. He owns that song.
Totally, totally. And then the essential Aussie.
This is the one I play more thananything because it truly has
everything you could ever want. Crazy, that's the one I
gravitate towards. Too crazy training, Mr. Crowley.
I don't know, Suicide Solution, Goodbye to Romance, Over the
(57:38):
Mountain, Flying High Again, Diver, Madman, Paranoid.
That's just the first 9 tracks. Bark at the Moon, You're No
Different Than Me, Rock'n'roll Rebel.
Crazy, Another great song. Rock'n'roll Rebel and You're No
Different Than Me. Both of those should have been
the top. 20 right? Both Jakey Lee too.
Crazy babies. For my Jake.
(57:59):
Crazy Babies, Miracle Man. Fire in the Sky.
Ironically enough, I was introduced to Fire in the Sky
off this compilation album because I didn't.
I never, I don't recall ever hearing it prior to, but
obviously I did at some point intime because I had that record.
Too, That was on No rest for thewicked.
Right, right. Oh yeah, I listen to every track
on that one. Zach blew me away when I heard
him the first time. That riff for Miracle Man is
(58:22):
outstanding. Yeah, breaking all the rules,
Mama. I'm coming home, Desire no more
tears, Time after time, road to nowhere.
I don't want to change the world.
Perry Mason, I just want you Thunder underground, See you on
the other side. Great song has such relevance
right now on my post. Today was the end of that
outstanding when I put his, whenI posted about him, I had that
(58:46):
song as the music behind it. Because that's just, you know.
Every time I hear that song, I think about everybody that is
not with me anymore that ever taught me anything.
You know, that's what I think about when I hear.
It's just like, yeah, hopefully we do.
Gets me through, gets me throughDreamer and no easy way.
That's the essential Ozzy Osbourne great if you want.
(59:07):
If you don't have any any like real collection of Ozzy, that's
a great collection just to get because you have pretty much
everything. Yeah, if you only if you like
the ones that everybody else likes.
That's a great album for sure. Like Chris and I are, we're into
the deep cuts and you know, we don't think that there is a lot
of filler on Ozzy albums. But I agree with you, if you're
(59:28):
just somebody who's a fringe Ozzy fan, that essential album
is the definitely the best. And it's the one I gravitate
towards the most too, because there's just such a variety on
there of his history. From Randy Rhodes to Zack Wylde
to Jakey Lee, you hear everything from the early 80s to
the 90s to present day. It is a great album.
(59:50):
Yeah, so the other thing that he's known for, right?
You had Lollapalooza, right? And then you had Oz Fest.
So Lollapalooza was all the. I saw him twice at Oz Fest and.
Then you had and you had Oz Fest, and that started in the
90s. Scott and I went once all.
Right. And that was busy.
With him one time. That's cool.
(01:00:11):
And that was that was Sharon's doing.
Because he wasn't, he wasn't. He wasn't drawing like he was.
So she's like, let's do this. Let's figure out how to get
seats. People in the seats and and.
And it was such a cool concept, dude, because you had the big
stage where you had like Rob Zombie at the time and Slipknot
and. System of a down.
(01:00:31):
System of the Down. Rage Against the Machine.
All the big bands of the time, but then about, you know, 203
hundred yards away you would have a side stage where you
would see bands like, and I'm going to get this wrong, but it
would be more like the Goo Goo Dolls were coming up at the time
and you know, bands of that stature before they became big.
(01:00:53):
It was just like a medium sized venue where maybe a couple 1000
people would see the side stage.It was really cool.
You got to see like 20 bands forwhat 8 hours or something?
The show was all day. It started at like 1:00 in the
afternoon or 3:00 in the afternoon and it didn't end till
midnight. So you were there for like 9 or
(01:01:14):
10 hours? Yeah, exactly.
And I, I mean, that kind of set up the way to do festivals too,
for the, you know. And for the people that don't
know, Sharon was Ozzy's manager who was his wife, and she has
been touted as being one of the shrewdest business women out
there as far as knowing how the business works.
Her dad was the president of thelabel that Black Black Sabbath
(01:01:39):
was signed to at the time. Right.
So she understood how the business worked from a very
young age and yeah, obviously was very good at what she did
because she kept Ozzy financially solvent for his
entire life. Right and and now right, he's
going to be one of those artiststhat lives on infamy because
(01:01:59):
his. Catalog is right legendary.
Right. And he's in, he's in the.
I forget what it is, but. He's in the Rock and Roll Hall
of Fame twice, right? Black right with the name.
Right, but remember the the the Ozzie and the Jack and Ozzie
detour where they went to the tothe underground archives?
Yes. Crazy Trains in there, The
original recording of Crazy Train, 'cause they played it,
(01:02:19):
Yeah, I mean that. How cool is that?
Right for somebody who who grew up dirt poor in a fucking.
Dark and that the whole world said was trying to introduce
devil worship to the planet. Right.
And how's he close every show? Thank you.
I love you. God bless you all.
Good night. Every every night, like just I
love you all. God bless you.
(01:02:40):
Yeah, yeah. There was this.
There was a thing backstage at the at his final concert, that
Youngblood, that kid coming up from the UK, right?
I'm trying to get him on the show but he's not responding to
me. Hey, come on man. 21 countries.
Right. Ozzy gave him one of his crosses
and so Youngblood had one made and was giving it, giving it to
(01:03:00):
Ozzy. So that was a cool little moment
behind behind the behind the scenes with him and Sharon
Youngblood. Now, the reason I bring that up,
there's other stuff going aroundwhere it's it's got to be a
generator shit where he's like he can't talk and move.
And how they they stripped of the music away from the vocals.
And it's like the real the real Ozzy at that concert was
(01:03:22):
somebody who was coherent and aware and he was having a
conversation. Youngblood Sharon was next to
him. He was sitting down obviously
because the parking, the accident when he broke his back
on the ATV accident on his in his English England.
I remember. That.
Right. That's what they kind of point
toward that caused the problem because then they got back
surgery. Back surgery for someone like
Ozzy who spent an entire lifetime and then some
(01:03:46):
destroying his body, right? Let's be honest, the dude
inhaled no question, smoked and no question.
I mean. It's a wonder to deny.
That no, absolutely not. You know he'd be like fuck
rock'n'roll. Let's do some more.
Right. But that's the thing so that
that like any any tragic bone break when you're old, let's say
(01:04:09):
Ozzy's old, he was 76. So this was 73 ish when it
happened, maybe 7070 ish when ithappened.
You break your back and then youhave to go get surgery on your
back. That just opens a whole cannibal
bass, no question. And so and so in 19, he said
that when he's when he was diagnosed with Parkinson's
disease, that that kind of changed everything with him
(01:04:32):
because you have the back issue,then you have Parkinson's
disease. And so I mean, where you going
to go? You know what I mean?
I didn't, I always didn't expectthem to be around very much
longer. But today was just like, wow,
really? It was way quicker than I had
anticipated. I wish I had saved it, man.
Sammy Hagar's statement was the best, he said.
(01:04:54):
For someone who knew that he wasthat close to death, and I'm
paraphrasing, to have played that show however many days ago
it was, was a true testament to how loyal and appreciative he
was of the fans that gave him the life that he had for all
those years. He basically said the way that
(01:05:16):
Ozzy went out will never be doneagain.
Nobody has that kind of class. Yeah.
I agree with him, I really do. Because the one thing that you
just said that people don't knowif they've never been to an Ozzy
concert is he literally said exactly what Chris just said
every night, thousands and thousands of times.
(01:05:37):
And he meant it. When you heard him say I love
you all, you really knew somehowthat he really did appreciate
the fact that you were there on a level that you never heard
from any other artist. I did.
I saw him five times. And at the end of every show,
when he did what you said, I felt it in my heart.
You could feel it coming out of his voice.
(01:05:59):
I love you all. So this wasn't a.
Fate. No, not at all.
So this is what Sammy said. I can't say enough about how
impressed, inspired, and touchedI am about the Back to the
Beginning event. Especially Ozzy, Bill, Tony, and
Geezer. They just did it.
They fucking crushed it. And let's not forget about the
musicians that showed up and gave it up for the right
(01:06:20):
reasons. And by the way, if you didn't
know this, it raised $150 million. 190.
OK, my bad, $190 million for Birmingham Hospital.
It's right. It's it's yeah, it's the single
highest grossing charitable concert in the history of the
world. And that money they Right.
And that money will have such a.Dramatic impact on for years and
(01:06:43):
years and years to come. He continues to say.
As for me being asked to be a part of this event, I'm I.
It meant the world. What a horrible doing it.
Right, you meant the world, and actually doing it in real time
is something I'll never forget. How about extra?
The extra love and respect for Sharon and Tom Morello and all
(01:07:04):
the technicians, crew, security and the fans that made this
event not just happen, but made it one of the greatest
rock'n'roll events of all time. Thank you to all, Sammy Hagar.
The fact that Sammy called out Tom Morello tells you how
instrumental he was in helping get that thing arranged.
Because the one thing that people don't realize about music
and musicians as we live all over the world, right?
(01:07:26):
But there's people like Chris and I who know other people
through the fringes. And Tom Morello knows people
through the fringes on a level that we can't even imagine.
And what he does is he picks up a cell phone and goes, hey,
Slash, what are you doing? It's Tom Morello.
Yeah, Hey, we need to meet in England at whatever date because
Ozzy's OK. I'll be there.
OK, next. Time.
(01:07:46):
Yeah, exactly it. Wasn't a question.
Name Setfield. What are you doing?
Tom Morello here. Oh, hey, Tom, what are you
doing? Hey, you need to meet me in
England because Ozzy request. OK, I'll be there.
That's who Tom Morello was. Just so people know he's got the
connections because. Oh, go ahead.
No, I've just, I've just, I've just, I just fuck.
Where is it? I just, I jumped online and
(01:08:09):
there's this image that somebodycreated with AI.
I'll put it on our page. I'm going to put on my right
now. Ozzy, Ron and James Gio, Lemmy
and Renny Rhodes sitting at the table with whiskey and smoking,
laughing and smiling. I hope they are.
I really do. I hope Jimmy's there and Janice
and yeah, let's put a band together.
(01:08:30):
That's that's cool, man. That's really cool.
And it's it's, it's, it's an AI thing, I'm sure.
But it's fucking badass, man. That's awesome.
I'm going to put on the Christian mic show right now.
Those guys are awesome. Yeah, that's one of those
things, man. If you know anybody's belief
about the the afterlife and things like that, it's
(01:08:51):
everybody's own, sure, you know,And it would.
We don't know. We don't know.
Nobody knows. Only thing you can be you can be
a Bible thump of Christian walk and.
I don't care. You don't know.
Right. You don't know you.
Don't know and thank and thankfully, here's a pun that
I'll throw out there. Thank God you don't know because
it means you're. Still.
Alive, right? Right.
(01:09:13):
I'm so happy that I'm sitting here on a Tuesday night talking
to my brother. You know, I hope that continues
for many years to come, but you just never know.
And the last few weeks and actually the last year has
really taught me because I have a good friend who's lost way too
many family members. It just shows you.
It's like the things that peoplereally hold dear and I, I don't
(01:09:37):
have a lot of good examples and I don't want to degrade anybody
anyway, but the way that I look at life is a lot of things that
people really hold dear. I could give a shit less about
in the past is the first one right?
And what people think about me is right up there too.
You said it best. 100 years ago when we started this podcast, I,
I tried to pay my bills with other people's opinions and that
(01:10:00):
didn't work out too well. So I could give a shit.
That's what people think of me. And you were?
Just not sweating this ball stuff.
Yeah, and aside from my group text from my family, you were
the second person I said that Ozzy.
Ozzy is no longer with us today.Thank you.
Yeah, yeah. And then what was ironic then?
Then Jake sends a message. Dude, Ozzy's dead.
(01:10:23):
I'm like, I know, dude. He's like on my bed.
I'm like, did you see the group text?
William Richard Carr just messaged us.
Sorry guys, I know I did not make it home in time but would
have been a little crazy this week.
I got to pull a double tomorrow and should be normalizing by the
end of the week. Now what should you guys
(01:10:45):
schedule like? But let me know and we'll make
sure we can be there for you. I'm watching you guys right now.
Hi Rick, we just read your text message to the world.
Hey. Brother, you made it live on the
show. You did.
So so Tuesday's at three. Yeah, Tuesday's at 3:00 PM,
Right. But I think we're booked.
I have to look at the calendar. Friday's is wide open, Rick, so
anytime. Except for August 1st, we can
(01:11:06):
only do one show, August 1st. Right.
Because the second I have birthday and I'm moving into the
casino for three days. There you go have birthday, but
anytime on on on Fridays after 9:30 after 10:30 AM because we
have the rest of the day free ifwe want it.
Yes, you can. Come on.
Except for August 1st. Right, except for August 1st.
But if you just shoot, shoot me a, I'll shoot you a text if I
(01:11:27):
got available and we'll figure it out.
And we're looking forward. To doing it, man yeah, yeah, I
really want to rehash what he remembers about the old days
and. Move forward.
No, I just want to, I want to get our music down.
I mean, it sucks we we can't do it without Scott, but I just, I
want to get them down. I want to.
We learned, yeah, we learned howto, to upload to Apple.
(01:11:48):
So we're going to, we're going to get what Freeman uploaded to
Apple just and do it under Scottas a dedication to Scott just to
get that out there. Yes, we're going to find
somebody to program those drums just like he played them.
Yeah, maybe we should. We should hit Lemoyne.
That's my thought. I yeah, that would be cool.
Yeah, he would like. A credit.
I think he'd do it. He digs our music.
I think he'd do it. I think he would too.
(01:12:09):
Yeah, we'll give him. $100 to toto produce us.
We won't give him 50 grand like he could have been Black Album
for. We'll give him 100 bucks some.
More We want it done tomorrow. You'll get produced your credit,
man. Of course he will.
Yeah, yeah. I'd be honored if he'd do it.
Yeah, his stuff's blowing up, too.
(01:12:31):
Oh, I see. Every time I turn around, I'm
seeing something about that song.
It's so damn catchy, dude. Right?
It gets stuck in my head. Yeah.
It's crazy. I'm gonna, I'm gonna out, I'm
gonna out myself. Lemoyne, OK?
I wanna hate and I'm I guaranteehe's the same way 'cause he
wrote it and he had to hear it amillion times.
And musicians can talk to each other this way.
I wanna hate that fucking song, I do.
(01:12:53):
But it's so catchy it just gets stuck.
And that's why I want to hate itbecause every time I hear it, it
gets stuck in my head and I can't stop singing it, which is
why people love it. So kudos to you brother.
That's a great. Song Yep, Yep, Yep.
So yeah, let's get Rick on. Let's jam my music and shit and.
(01:13:17):
We're literally the Blues Brothers.
We're putting the band back together.
Yes, we are yes, we are. So we've we've gone over all of
Ozzy's catalog. We've got what we thought, what
we think of the the best songs. You know anything else you want
to touch it? There was oh, here, here, here
we go this so we'll get out of music.
So you remember the the the my truck rubbing against that
(01:13:38):
idiot's car right up in months park.
I told you about that, right? Yeah.
OK, so I got the police report, OK.
He has the police report, ladiesand gentlemen, He's grabbing it
off his office. Desk here.
The one that's claiming damages?Yes.
Hired a lawyer. The police report vehicle 2,
(01:14:01):
which is mine. I'm sorry.
Vehicle 2 was parked at the southeast closest pump to the
fueling station when when I entered and tried to navigate
through a highly congested parking lot, vehicle two rubbed
against the bumper of vehicle 1 Fender.
(01:14:22):
That's the whole report. That's it.
The benefit of what this gave mewas the person's name, her
criminal record, of which one isfor insurance fraud.
Oh, isn't that fantastic? And 2424 April of 2024, she was
charged with insurance fraud along with all other laundry
(01:14:43):
list of of past disorderly conducts, convictions, things
like that. What's even more fun is my
daughter being my daughter because she just has this innate
ability to to go down the rabbitholes found her Facebook page
found her Instagram page the dayof the accident.
She actually posted a video of herself.
(01:15:04):
The, the opening up part of the video was a lawyer, basically,
oh, you ever been in an accident, you know, car crash,
blah, blah, blah, whatever you need a lawyer, click here.
And then it has the, the mile marker for Muns Park coming up.
And then she, she pans the, the manufactured home they were
staying at for the weekend at Muns Park and how life was
(01:15:24):
grand. Two days later, she was at some
Oceanside resort in San Diego. Because then the following day,
her son graduated from the United States Marine Corps.
Insurance fraud. I took all that documentation
and I sent it to the claims adjuster.
When I opened up the file, they paid her $1500.
I'm like for what? They paid her. $15109 for that
(01:15:49):
and I have I have a guy that I sold a house to.
He runs a bike shop in Colorado,at least he did forever.
And I'm talking you build the motorcycle from the ground up.
He's that guy. He looked at the picture, the
picture that I posted on Facebook and text me car cleaner
5 minutes. I'll get that off carb cleaner.
The extent of the damage of thislady's car would have been
(01:16:11):
resolved within 5 minutes with carburetor cleaner.
Don't even need a Body Shop. Don't even need a Body Shop so
how she plucked 1500 bucks is beyond me.
Well, I told you this, I saw thepicture.
I'm a fucking idiot, and I knew it was an easy fix.
Like I said, it sucks if it was you, but there's no dent,
there's no damage, there's no break.
(01:16:31):
There's, you know, like you said, that that guy who knows
what he's talking about said we'll buffer out with some
carpet cleaner. A 2015 Nissan Sentra that has a
salvage title. So her claim of you just win my
$9000 paint job lie. And then what's best about this
woman her little her little bio on Facebook.
What's it say I heart God? Oh, of course she.
(01:16:54):
Does she also has a video why she's in church and she's
panning in the pews because she's obviously Catholic?
No nothing wrong with that but she's panning as people go down
the aisle for mass. So not only is she a God lover,
she's a warrior, Catholic and a a father or a mother to a
marine. I respect that part.
Sure, she's lying piece of shit.Yeah, 100%.
(01:17:19):
Who just I'm like, really? I don't understand people, man.
I don't know what I told you, that's why I stay inside a lot.
Right. And what sucks is it's going to
make my insurance go up higher because she took advantage of
the situation. So I'm hopefully, I'm hoping
that that my auto insurance, which is AAA, they will go after
her for insurance fraud. I have her home.
They do. I have her home address too.
So I was thinking about when I'mout showing houses just doing a
(01:17:41):
drive by and if she's out front take a video.
Well, she obviously didn't learnher fucking lesson because she
here she is what, less than a year later trying to do the same
bullshit again? A.
Little over a year, because it was.
It was April 24th. Now it's July 2014.
Months, ten months still, you would have thought that if you
got away with it once, right, you wouldn't you know, she was
(01:18:02):
close to not getting away with it the first time.
So she's. Imagine how stupid.
Imagine how many packages of blueberry pie Oreos you could
buy with $1500. Are those delicious?
Oh. My God, dude, yeah, Oh my God.
I got to get some. I forgot.
About them it it tastes like blueberry pie, man.
Oh, I want one. Even Nikki was.
Like I'll buy some for my upcoming trip.
(01:18:24):
Oh, she liked them too. Oh, she was like holy shit, they
they went over so well. My broker Nick bought them for a
class we had last week so we could all enjoy the broker the
the Oreo cookies. I'm going to read some of her
stuff. This would be fun.
This is the real role relevant show you have.
OK, I'm not going to I won't. I also have her Social Security
(01:18:46):
number, her home address and herbirthday which made.
That off the show. I will.
I will. She does have a placard, a honey
cat placard card. Of course she does salvage title
so it's not even a brand new car.
Real quick, let me tell you about this guy that has a
handicap placard title in a lifted truck the other day.
(01:19:08):
That was special. Not kidding, You can't make this
shit up. Dude, I remember I didn't.
I didn't print that out. Scott has sent me that in a
screenshot. See if I can find it real quick.
That's. Fucking crazy man.
But what's what's, what's crazy about it is just just how how
(01:19:34):
she tries to pretend. Well, that's what those people
do, because they don't want to work.
I know it's just. You know that's what it is.
She's playing the system right. Yeah, I told, I told Nikki and
Sky. I'm like, she's she's a a female
version of Frank Gallagher from Shameless.
Yeah, there you go. At least he was a lovable, funny
character though. Right.
(01:19:56):
What the hell would I do with this stuff, man?
I don't remember where I put it.I'll, I'll save it for next
time. It'll be a nice little thing.
Next time. Read her Criminal Criminal
activity. You find your way into some
unique situations, I'll. Give you that and it's just, you
know, the the guy was supposed to come do the sidewalk.
This is another situation with me.
(01:20:18):
Remember the contractor, Fidel that just you know, so a couple
weeks ago I was like, dude, justlittle man trips fell off the
sidewalk and into the dirt part.I'm like, dude, I called him up.
You just need to at least come do my concrete, man.
I already paid you for it. At least just come do the
concrete. Be a human, come do the
concrete. Then we'll work out a payment
plan for the rest of the money you owe me.
So he's all on board, right? Texting Monday, blah, blah,
(01:20:39):
blah. Couldn't get there.
It was too late in the day. So Friday comes, he's like, you
know, I'm, he starts texting in the morning.
I got this, this and this. We're going to take care of it.
I'm like, all right, cool. You know, 5:00 he's still not
here, hasn't, hasn't responded to text, hasn't responded to
phone calls. I even sent a video.
Then I'm going to drop that justcalls him out again.
Nothing, nothing. And I'm really, it's, I don't
(01:21:01):
get it, man. I just don't get it.
It's hard to get people to want to work anymore, man.
Well, it's hard to get people towork when they steal your money
and then make all these stories about it and then and you know.
Like, well, you know, that's that guy's MO.
I mean, you're not the first person he fucking did that to.
That's. For sure.
No. And and he's not, he's not going
(01:21:21):
to be able to get a contractor'slicense ever again.
Like it's like, so you think youat least want to, you know, try
to make up for it. But no, no, absolutely not.
Can't fix stupid, as Ryan White says.
He cannot fix stupid. So there you go.
Long live Ozzy Osbourne. He'll be forever remembered
(01:21:42):
because airwaves and SiriusXM has a whole, their channel is
nothing but tribute to Ozzy, which was cool until they
started stopping the music and having people calling them with
stories, which I get, but you just you know, I mean, I listen
to Ozzy Osbourne. I mean, he's on almost every
playlist I have, you know, because he's just because it's
Ozzy, right? So it's not, it's not a sad day
(01:22:03):
because we all knew it was coming.
And I don't, I don't get why people are like, oh, you know,
this one's hard. Well, I get it's hard, but
unless you know the person, unless he's with you every
single walking part of your life, like it's got to be hard
for Jack and Sharon, of course, you know, and Kelly and all the
grandkids and the. People that played in his band
(01:22:23):
and worked on his Rd. crew. Those people, yes, it's a hard
day. He was the boss.
That's what Zach called him. Yeah, you and I, we didn't know
the man. We, we love his music.
We love his. He's one of the reasons I played
music for sure. I.
Never met him. I'm not crying.
No, you know, not to say that we're not.
You know, we're bummed because it's Ozzy, because the world now
(01:22:46):
just got a little quieter. Yeah, there's not.
There's not. There's one less person to give
the middle finger to. The people that think that
they're living their life the right way.
I'm going to say it like that. Yeah, that's a good.
That's a. Good.
I'm that same person. I'm going to call you on your
bullshit. Why do you think you're right?
You're not right? No, you're just living your way,
(01:23:06):
the way you see things through your perspective.
And that's fine as long as you don't try and push it on me.
That was agreed, right? That's how he lived his life.
You can do whatever you want, but you're not going to push
your bullshit on me because that's what it is.
It's bullshit. It's just an ideology that you
carry around. We're all doing the same thing.
(01:23:28):
All right. This is how we're going to wrap
today up after the, the, the, the standard.
Hey, if you're feeling bad, you know, somebody miss you,
somebody's going to miss you, somebody's going to love you.
Don't leave a hole in somebody'sheart because you took the
coward's way out. You know, go to sleep, take a
breath, meditate, journal, journaling.
Worse wonders if you're in, if you're depressed.
(01:23:49):
So write your thoughts down, youknow, talk to somebody.
Tomorrow will be a better day. We promise you that, OK?
Then you'll go back and look at those later and have a different
perspective on you'll. You'll understand.
I agree with you because I wrotea lot of stuff down during that
time. No, Yeah, see.
And I journaled for years. So we're going to leave you with
this voices. 1000 thousand voices.
(01:24:12):
Which being the time has passed for choices.
Golden days are passing over. Yeah.
I can't seem to see you, baby, Although my eyes are open wide.
But I know I'll see you once more When I see you.
I'll see you on the other side with that boys and girls.
Ozzy Osbourne. You'll be you'll be missed.
And by quiet, I meant you won't have his little media drops and
(01:24:34):
his little quirks in the world anymore.
His music will live on forever and ever.
But it is. It is a sad day for the heavy
metal world and the rock odds have called him home.
So nothing but love and peace for the Osborne family.
And you know, thank you for everything you did for the world
of music, Ozzy. You're appreciated.
And just for the world in general, for sure.
(01:24:55):
Yeah, yeah, just in general, man.
My brother, I love you. Love you too man.
William Richard Carter, the Third.
Thanks for chiming in man. We'll talk to you soon.
Peace, brother. You will go behind your eyes, be
(01:25:38):
yourself and meet yourself. Take a moment, listen till you
see him watch your battle and see you watch your battle.
But you fuck will put you back to your.
(01:27:16):
Come down here, we haven't bounced all these things in sand
and he's fun fighting. Wait for the dead.
When he's closer, I've been. Hit, but in the wind he went.
No quizzes, we don't play in fire.
And he took your grin on the almighty day.
(01:27:39):
You got a dream through in your life to keep our soul in every
day. Take the trail behind your eyes.
Feel the soul evolution now. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah,
(01:28:02):
yeah, yeah. Take a moment.
We can see you. See him fight the battle into
you more clear. You gotta, you gotta.
(01:28:39):
You gotta, you gotta, you gotta.