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The Sabbath Stones

 
Album Review: The Sabbath Stones
 

  • Artist: Black Sabbath
  • Rating: StarStarStarHalf Star
  • Release Date: 1996
  • Type: Compilation (best of)
  • Genre: Rock

Review

Poor Black Sabbath had really fallen on hard times after the departure of Ronnie James Dio. He might have been the last truly respected singer in their history, and even his efforts couldn't win over the Ozzy Osbourne fans who had jumped ship and started following Osbourne's solo career. So The Sabbath Stones tries to detail the period between Dio's initial run with the group and their reunion with Osbourne in 1997. What this leaves for source material is one underrated but bland album with Ian Gillan and the original rhythm section, one mind-numbing disaster with Glenn Hughes on the mic, one reunion album with Dio, and four bizarre power metal experiments with singer Tony Martin. Most of the material is taken from Martin's years with the group, and surprisingly enough there are some good songs featuring him. Although they are light years from "Hole in the Sky," guitarist/original member Tony Iommi managed to write some catchy anthems with Martin. "Headless Cross," "The Shining," and "Virtual Death" are standouts from their collaborations, running the gamut between stoner rock and power metal. Too much material is taken from Tyr, their weird Viking/Norse mythology concept album that fell flat for fans and critics alike. They also include a minute-long keyboard instrumental from the same album that needlessly takes up space between songs. The motivation is that IRS Records owned the rights to only a few of the albums, hence they over-emphasize the albums that they do own. But this does the band a great disservice, leading listeners to think their entire post-Dio period was made up of high-concept power metal. "TV Crimes," the lone track from the awkward Dio reunion of 1992, sounds like the same preachy Dungeons and Dragons rock he was making on his own, but with much better guitar playing. The material from Forbidden, their last album with Martin, is probably the worst of the bunch. These songs are confused, produced badly, and virtually unrecognizable when compared to the first 15 years of their career. As far as the pre-Martin material goes, the Ian Gillan-sung "Disturbing the Priest" is decent but they should have gotten "Zero the Hero" if they were to utilize that album. And "Heart Like a Wheel" from Iommi's experimental Seventh Star is so incredibly bad, yet it might be the best choice from that album anyway. This is obviously a mixed bag, but strangely it works if only for the history lesson it provides. Fans of classic Sabbath should be given extreme caution -- this music is very different from anything they did with Ozzy Osbourne. Instead, this is the sound of an excellent band handling their fall from grace about as ungracefully as they could, and the entertainment value in that alone is worth the purchase. ~ Bradley Torreano, All Music Guide

Tracks

Track TitleComposersPerformersTime
Headless Cross Tony Iommi, Cozy Powell, Tony Martin Black Sabbath (6:32)
When Death Calls Black Sabbath Black Sabbath (6:57)
Devil and Daughter Tony Iommi, Cozy Powell, Tony Martin Black Sabbath (4:43)
The Sabbath Stones Black Sabbath, Tony Martin Black Sabbath (6:48)
The Battle of Tyr Black Sabbath, Tony Martin Black Sabbath (1:08)
Odin's Court Black Sabbath, Tony Martin Black Sabbath (2:42)
Valhalla Black Sabbath, Tony Martin Black Sabbath (4:41)
TV Crimes Geezer Butler, Ronnie James Dio, Tony Iommi Black Sabbath (4:01)
Virtual Death Geezer Butler, Tony Iommi, Tony Martin Black Sabbath (5:46)
Evil Eye Geezer Butler, Tony Iommi, Tony Martin Black Sabbath (5:57)
Kiss of Death Black Sabbath, Tony Martin Black Sabbath (6:09)
Guilty as Hell Black Sabbath, Tony Martin Black Sabbath (3:30)
Loser Gets It All [*] Black Sabbath, Tony Martin Black Sabbath (2:57)
Disturbing the Priest [*] Ian Gillan, Geezer Butler, Tony Iommi, Bill Ward Black Sabbath (5:49)
Heart Like a Wheel [*] Tony Iommi Black Sabbath (6:37)
The Shining [*] Tony Iommi Black Sabbath (5:55)

Credits

Black Sabbath (Producer), Black Sabbath (Main Performer), Ian Gillan (Vocals), Ozzy Osbourne (Vocals), Vinny Appice (Drums), Geezer Butler (Bass), Ernie C. (Producer), Van Cooper (Producer), Ronnie James Dio (Vocals), Jeff Glixman (Producer), Tony Iommi (Guitar), Tony Iommi (Producer), Leif Mases (Producer), Neil Murray (Bass), Cozy Powell (Drums), Cozy Powell (Producer), Bob Rondinelli (Drums), Chris Tsangarides (Producer), Bill Ward (Drums), Tony Martin (Vocals), Glen Hughes (Vocals)
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Wikipedia: The Sabbath Stones
Top
The Sabbath Stones
The Sabbath Stones cover
Compilation album by Black Sabbath
Released April 29, 1996
Recorded 1983-1995
Genre Heavy metal
Length 1:19:59
Label I.R.S.
Producer Various (see below)
Professional reviews
Black Sabbath chronology
Forbidden
(1995)
The Sabbath Stones
(1996)
Reunion
(1998)

The Sabbath Stones (1996) was the last album to be released by Black Sabbath with IRS Records.

The album is a compilation of Sabbath tracks ranging from 1983's Born Again to 1995's Forbidden, and was never formally released in the US or Canada.

Contents

Album information

It was created solely to fulfill Tony Iommi's contract with I.R.S. It included a short story about Black Sabbath which had some mistakes. Another mistake was the misspelling of Vinny Appice's name on the front cover of the CD (as Vinnie).

The era covered by the album is the 'third era' of Black Sabbath. After the initial lineup with Osbourne, Iommi, Butler and Ward was shattered the band's reformation with Ronnie James Dio and Vinny Appice formed a second period. Thereafter, band members repeatedly came and went, came back again and lineups were far less stable. This period is generally less popular among Black Sabbath fans without Ozzy or Dio on vocals.

The album's version of "Headless Cross" starts with the last few seconds of the track "The Gates of Hell" before the opening drum line.

Track listing

  1. "Headless Cross" (Headless Cross)
  2. "When Death Calls" (Headless Cross)
  3. "Devil And Daughter" (Headless Cross)
  4. "The Sabbath Stones" (Tyr)
  5. "The Battle Of Tyr" (Tyr)
  6. "Odin's Court" (Tyr)
  7. "Valhalla" (Tyr)
  8. "TV Crimes" (Dehumanizer)
  9. "Virtual Death" (Cross Purposes)
  10. "Evil Eye" (Cross Purposes)
  11. "Kiss Of Death" (Forbidden)
  12. "Guilty As Hell" (Forbidden)
  13. "Loser Gets It All" (Forbidden Japanese version)
  14. "Disturbing the Priest" (Born Again)
  15. "Heart Like A Wheel" (Seventh Star)
  16. "The Shining" (The Eternal Idol)

Personnel

  • Martin/Iommi/Powell - Tracks 1,3
  • Martin/Iommi/Powell/Nicholls - Track 2
  • Iommi/Martin/Nicholls/Powell/Murray - Track 4,6-7
  • Iommi/Nicholls/Powell/Murray - Track 5
  • Butler/Dio/Iommi - Track 8
  • Butler/Iommi/Martin - Track 9,10
  • Black Sabbath/Lyrics:Tony Martin - Tracks 11-13
  • Gillan/Iommi/Butler/Ward - Track 14
  • Iommi - Tracks 15,16

Producers

  • Tony Iommi & Cozy Powell - Tracks 1-7
  • Mack for Musicland GmbH - Track 8
  • Leif Mases / Black Sabbath - Tracks 9,10
  • Ernie C. - Tracks 11-13
  • Robin Black - Track 14
  • Jeff Glixman & Chris Tsangerides - Track 15
  • Jeff Glixman & V. Cooper - Track 16

 
 

 

Copyrights:

Album Review. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "The Sabbath Stones" Read more

 

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