First up is the eight-eyelet pair of boots dedicated to Black Sabbath's groundbreaking debut album, largely considered to be the first bona-fide heavy metal album. Beyond the cold, otherworldly atmosphere of the music is the chilling album cover, which features a mysterious woman (wait — she...
Black Sabbath is the debut eponymous studio album by English heavy metal band Black Sabbath. Released on 13 February 1970 in the United Kingdom, and later on 1 June 1970 in the United States, the album reached number eight on the UK Albums Chart and has been recognised as one of the ...
then there are milestones of milestones. This, is one of those occurrences my friends. Welcome to the birth of Heavy Metal music because today is the 50th Anniversary of the debut album by the legendary (and now mostly retired) Black Sabbath. That album is their eponymous “Black Sabb...
Of course with me and this Black Sabbath site, I’m jazzed that the first single is a Black Sabbath cover, and even better, not something we’ve seen a ton of times (Iron Man, War Pigs). They picked a Tony Martin era track (even if said track was written by/for Ray Gillen with ...
It was known as Black Sabbath. Not content with their original name of Earth, four Brummies’ – Tony Iommi, Geezer Butler, Bill Ward and Ozzy Osbourne – decided on the name Black Sabbath – but little did they realise that their debut self-titled album would change music forever and spaw...
The images below are from some old 8 track releases of the first Black Sabbath album The following images are from a 1976 Holland NEMS release of the first album. Here are some pictures of the Mapledurham Watermill on the River Thames, which is used in the cover art for the album. Thank...
The self-titled debut, “Vol 4”, “Technical Ecstasy” and “Sabbath Bloody Sabbath” feature the original back album artwork on Side B. “Paranoid”, “Master Of Reality” and “Sabotage” features an album-era photo of the band. The collection also includes a large colour poster of the...
Black Sabbath's Debut: 5 Things We Learned About Its Creation and Cover Art To mark the 50th anniversary of the revolutionary heavy-metal album, Rolling Stone conducted exclusive interviews with the band, its collaborators, and peers, uncovering new details about how it came to be ...
“just went with Black Sabbath,” and his assistant, Roger Brown, wrote the poem that went in it. “He was quite proud of that,” Macmillan says. “It’s such a creepy poem.” One of his collaborators, Sandy Field, did the typography for the logo, which made the cover...
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