Posts tonen met het label Ozzy Osbourne. Alle posts tonen
Posts tonen met het label Ozzy Osbourne. Alle posts tonen

zondag 15 maart 2026

Witching Buzz’s A Tribute To…

 

 

Witching Buzz’s A Tribute To… 

As Witching Buzz and Grand Sounds Promotion announce the third installment in their A Tribute To series, we realized we never mentioned the earlier two. And although we now look forward to hearing all those bands pay homage to Sleep on the soon to be released A Cathedral of Smoke: A Tribute to Sleep, we can still dive head first into the renditions of all those wild Ozzy Osbourne songs from the second A Tribute To and everything related to Kyuss from the very first one…




 

The journey of praise started with A Spaceship Landing: A Tribute To Kyuss. And let’s be honest, Stoner HiVe, you, me, would not be here if it had not been for that legendary band. And the cover album before you right now will in no way add anything to that legend. And if you are of the mind that all Kyuss songs are sacred relics and should not be messed with, you might want to keep on walking... 

For everyone else, are you ready for a fuzz-drenched playground where underground bands tear into these classics, keep their ear to the Kyuss beat or reshape them in their own dusty image? Sonic Wolves for instance rip through Thumb with swagger and sharp guitar flair. While Rhino stays close to the original Green Machine and on some level of course therefor does the most homage. Poste942, the main man from the band also responsible for the artwork of the series, give Demon Cleaner an eighties touched tumbling over and over kind of groove. Isaak’s Odyssey version hits every riff out of the park and so does Fuzz Evil and their version of Supa Scoopa and Mighty Scoop. Versions that could one day make the world famous Stoner HiVe posts named The Cover That Could. Grin! But yeah, you will probably have your own favorite after listen to all twenty Kyuss songs done right. And perhaps a new favorite band if the names that riff you wild, where unknown to you before this session… So, open a can, find a cactus and let the desert spin around you… 





Iron Man’s Anthem: A Tribute to Ozzy Osbourne followed last February. It’s only been a bit more than half a year since the Legend gave us his final bow. And on this tribute there are twenty-two bands paying homage to the great and only Oz. And where the Kyuss tribute featured bands I already knew, this one sports some lesser known ones. And that is perhaps another reason why these albums are fun, you might just discover a band and dive into their own work after hearing a fine rendition of a famous song. Even though it might be a different reason than expected, the Kazoo-laced and Elvis-infused madness in second track The Wizard for instance. But that’s of course what Heaven and Hellvis from Scotland is all about. Luckily this is followed by a faithful rendition of N.I.B. by Rainbow Bridge and puts you back on track to enjoy the album. A more stoner and sludge approach to Paranoid by Corruption out of Poland hits the spot right. Poste942 is still roaming around in a cloud of the eighties, but this time more metal and absolutely compelling with their No More Tears version. Will every of the twenty two renditions keep you from immediately turning to the original, absolutely not! But most of them are definitely full of passion and sound like they wanted to do right by the one true king. I guess there’s enough proof here for all that reckless devotion and their love for the way in which the man rattled your bones, made amps explode and bats take a detour whenever and wherever the ominous sounds of Black Sabbath were heard… 

 



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vrijdag 1 augustus 2025

The Doom Charts for July 2025

 


DOOM CHARTS

JULY 2025

“As far as we were concerned, we were just a blues band that had decided to write some scary music.”

~ Ozzy Osbourne


We’ve said goodbye to one of our heroes. One that always felt like one of ours. Cause he never  hid his faults, his shortcomings and was honest about everything. He was one of a kind. And even though the character he was and finally became might have hindered some of his future actions, he was always himself and never shied away from doing what he loved doing. Music. He and his Birmingham mates are without any doubt responsible for all that music we so dearly love. The heavy stuff. All that he produced and all that he inspired. The forty albums in the list below are all in some way or form in dept to the cannon blast that he delivered. Ever since that ominous church bell, that first riff and that first vocal line… “What is this that stands before me?”

Well, Dear Ozzy… It’s the Doom Charts. And it would not exist if it wasn’t for you. None of the forty albums below would exist. And we thank you for them all. And we thank you for giving up petty crime and forming a band. We thank you for hunting around town for a microphone and amplifier. We thank you for finding the guys that became your band members… We thank you for the fucking awesome ad!  And we thank you for changing The Polka Tulk Blues Band into Black Sabbath… We thank you for all the music…

She's out! That lovely July edition of the Doom Charts!

An amazing edition once again, filled with 39 brand new albums for you to peruse! 39 you say?! Yes, one carried over from last month... None other than that ACEVES album MAGNUM DOPUS!

But as usual, I could have voted for them all! Gonna listen to them all in a row... Starting with Hemelbestormer's The Radiant Veil!
 
Already featured on Stoner HiVe... 
 
 
 

Welcome to Doom Charts, representing some of the finest bloggers, journalists, radio, podcasters and reviewers from the heavy underground around the globe.  Each month, our critics submit their picks for the best new doom, sludge, metal, stoner, psychedelic and heavy rock albums.  The results are compiled and tabulated into the chart below.  This is a one-stop shop for the best new albums in the world…

The Doom Charts for July 2025 

 

maandag 28 juli 2025

Stoner HiVe’s Top 10 Most Listened Artists Last Week…

 

Stoner HiVe’s 
Top 10 Most Listened Artists Last Week…


Black Sabbath
Bask
Solace
Aceves
Cosmic Reaper
Les Mazoetans
The Division Men
Stoned Jesus
The Hives
Ponddigger

Welcome to another Monday and another glance back at the week past. As predicted, there was very little time to HiVe. We hope to have more this week. And we think we just might. We listened to great albums though. But all news and all that pales in comparison to the sad news that came in on Tuesday. Ozzy Zig went off to have his great gig… In the sky… Only two weeks after his final show. And then. The following day, the news came George Kooymans passed away the same day. Ozzy and his Black Sabbath instrumental to all the heavy rock and metal that followed. George and his Golden Earring for every rock band from the Netherlands. So, yes, naturally, we spun a lot of Sabbath and Earring after that. But the above list also features new music, just out or soon to be released. Like the new Bask, The Hives, Stoned Jesus and Cosmic Reaper… And we dig’m all! So, get ready for those new ones and check out all listed above!  


The Spotify Playlist for...

Stoner HiVe's Weekly Top 10 Most Listened

Week 30

woensdag 23 juli 2025

Rest In Peace – Ozzy Osbourne

  

Rest In Peace – Ozzy Osbourne


After discovering so much metal and so much heavy music, it was slowly moving back towards the roots of it all that made me discover Black Sabbath. The bigger than life character on MTV had never interested me, but hearing him sing, wail and emote over those early Sabbath riffs like in N.I.B. or Evil Woman was what made me fall in love with Sabbath and Ozzy. The awe and understanding came from those first tones of the opening Black Sabbath track though. "What is this that stands before me?" will forever be remembered as the first track that sent shivers down my spine. The ominous church bell first, the thunder that follows, the mournful guitar tones and then that voice... No escape possible...  


Farewell dear Ozzy....

Thank you for ALL the music... 

 


vrijdag 14 oktober 2022

Ozzy Osbourne – Patient Number 9

 

 

Ozzy Osbourne – Patient Number 9
Epic – 2022
Rock, Hard, Metal
Rated:

Two years ago, when Ozzy Osbourne released an album called Ordinary Man, we sort of assumed it would be the curtain call. We got the Stoner HiVe gang that help out now and again to say a few words about the record and then we basket weaved it all together. We refused to give any stars to the album, simply because it is our Lord Ozzy, and also because the album, well, had some pretty good stuff on it. It had its merits. As we concluded… This time around, we do it slightly different and have both Madman Tony Maim and Shastabeast aka Kyle SB say a few words about it… And of course I will spew my nonsense as well…

But surely, we had not expected to be back again, to write about another new Ozzy album only two years later. The man is in his seventies, had his greatest moments back in the seventies and now gives us a new thirteen track album that has stuff on it that is just simply put: pretty good! Its sometimes seems to ooze class and that’s not really strange when you consider the fact that it’s Ozzy Osbourne and he has managed to get a whole truckload of amazing artists to help out on the album. In the title track alone, we get Jeff Beck and Zakk Wylde on guitar, Robert Trujillo on bass and Chad Smith on drums. On other tracks Mike McCready and Josh Homme help out, but also Chris Chaney and the late Taylor Hawkins. Most important guests perhaps are Eric Clapton and Black Sabbath’s very own Tony Iommi. The Sabbath axe slinger can be heard on No Escape From Now and on Degradation Rules, both perhaps together with Evil Shuffle the best tracks on the album. Although that highly different from the rest song One Of Those Days with Clapton performing his magic, can also be viewed as one of the most interesting and worthwhile tracks. God Only Knows is the one that features Queens Of The Stone Age frontman Homme, where he and Zakk Wylde solo around and chasing after each other so it seems. Bluesy outro Darkside Blues, even though, the vocals are drenched in effects, shows what Ozzy might have sounded like if he had been an old blues legend from the past, strolling along side Robert Johnson onto the crossroads. Not sure if the devil would have wanted his soul though? Overall, the album has way more class and outright good rock on it, but there are surely some tracks that sound just a bit too easy. Like he is just doing it all again; without giving it that much of his attention. On the other hand, it’s our Lord Ozzy, with Iommi and featuring one of the final recordings of drummer Taylor Hawkins. Perhaps, it’s just an album we all should have…

Shastabeast aka Kyle SB:

"The latest from the Prince of Darkness, Patient Number 9, follows in the steps of his Ordinary Man release in many ways. Despite a plethora of big-name guests from Jeff Beck to Zakk Wyld, the Oz Man offers up mostly uninspiring, heard-this-before rock ballads peppered with a few fun riffs. Highlights do include "Immortal" with Pearl Jam's Mike McCready, which delivers some classic Ozzy energy with a high-octane riff and a dose of arena rock largesse, and Zakk Wylde's hard-hitting "Parasite" that showcases Ozzy's masterfully dark lyricism. Naturally, the two tracks with Tony Iommi are stronger than most, including a truly doomy "No Escape From Now", complete with extra crunchy riffs and a classic Sabbath midtempo run in the second half. Outside of a few memorable tunes, however, Patient Number 9 won't satisfy Ozzy fans looking for a return to his glory days, but rather find an abundance of pop-adjacent, manufactured sounding tracks that lack any real "oomph" from The Dark Lord, with the title track being one of the worst offenders."

Madman Tony Maim:

"The arrival of a new Ozzy album does not feature highly on my "things to get excited about"! Apart from the odd article about him he had pretty much fallen off my radar... until Joop asked if I would like to do a small review of Patient Number 9.  The album has a slew of guest guitarists - Jeff Beck, Clapton and for the first time on an Ozzy album two tracks with Tony Iommi. And... it all sounds really good. No more radio-friendly unit shifters, this album has Ozzy sounding heavier, darker and dare I say it - more metal than he has for a long time. Obviously the Iommi tracks are the highlights, but the album as a whole should please both new and old Ozzy fans plus classic, heavy rock head bangers in general. Lyrically there is a lot of musing on life and mortality but it all sounds like genuine heartfelt feelings In short, a great return to form."

So, I guess if we combine these three opinions to voice one uniform little thought about Patient Number 9, we perhaps should state that the album has no shock value, no awe inspiring moments... Or as Doktor420 said: "It doesn't inspire me at all - not for good, nor bad words..." Well, nothing good, nothing bad, except for the fact that it’s good enough to enjoy, cause it’s good enough for Ozzy and that means it’s good enough for you…  And hey, it might once again be his final album…  

(Written by JK)

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maandag 26 september 2022

Stoner HiVe’s Top 10 Most Listened Albums Last Week…

 

 

Stoner HiVe’s
Top 10 Most Listened Albums Last Week…

Bush
King Buffalo
Deville
Ozzy Osbourne
Nikki Lane
Tim Bowness
The Mountain Goats
Everest Queen
Fire Horse
Indian Handcrafts

Damn! Time flies, weeks seem to pass by within the blink of an eye! Had an interview with Gavin Rossdale about the new BUSH album. Good album! Finally managed to finish the King Buffalo interview and it went live last Thursday, thanks to everyone for taking the time to read it. I know it was once again a bit long, but hey, King Buffalo is one hell of a band and deserves even more. Gonna try and put up all the other stuff that has been in the works the past weeks before the new Doom Charts needs to go up… Keep rockin! And keep checking all those heavy releases!

woensdag 4 maart 2020

Ozzy Osbourne – Ordinary Man


Ozzy Osbourne – Ordinary Man
Sony – 2020
Rock, Hard, Metal
Rated:

As that small selection of heavy music fiends that indeed read some of the words we publish know, we do not do lengthy reviews, in depth, technical sifting or negative ones. The reason for that is simple, there is so much good stuff out there, there is no need to dwell on the bad ones. Plus, the crazies that created that horrible piece of music, put their heart and soul into it; and for some personal reason it just does not seem to sit well with the HiVe listener for some reason. But perhaps there are others who might dig it. The other reason is that we are more for enticing the listener to check things out for themselves. So, we always state what something did to our bones, to our blood and to our heart in the hopes it might do something along those lines to the fellow heavy music fiends in the HiVe as well. But once every so often a record comes along that just needs a bit more. I mean, we’re not going to destroy a record recorded by four buddies on a tape recorder in someone’s garage, even if it’s horrible. But when a legend comes up with something disturbingly awful, I guess we are entitled to say so… So, when a legend gives us a new record, fifty years after he shook the world, by unleashing heavy metal upon us all, I guess we should pay some more time and give a few more words to that record… Good or bad?


Doktor420: “Did Ozzy turn into the Dark Pink Prince? It feels a lot like he is guesting on this album. It’s a Post Malone song featuring Ozzy, it’s an Elton John song featuring Ozzy. But also, the other tracks feel like he is just along for the ride…”

Ozzy Osbourne and Black Sabbath has given us everything we love. Beautiful and wild, loud and noisy, dark and ominous, twisted and excellent. Friday the 13th, 1970, Black Sabbath gave us the child that is heavy metal and all that came after. We could dive into everything they did afterwards, all the highs and lows, but that’s not why we are here right now. We’re here because Ozzy Osbourne has given us a new record called Ordinary Man. He has been saying goodbye for ages without ever leaving the stage. Or simply coming back after the curtains had barely closed. But now that the man has confessed to suffering from Parkinson’s and he has once again cancelled shows, we might conclude, once again, that this will be a farewell album…

Shastabeast: “The Prince of Darkness's latest effort, "Ordinary Man", starts off strong with opener "Straight to Hell" dealing out a nasty riff and signature Ozzy screams, but that's where the album peaks.”

Doktor420: “He should not have used that quiet part that starts around 2:20 in Straight To Hell. Perhaps it was only put in so he could use his ‘Alright Now’ as he has before.”

Tony Maim: “With the great man’s health in question and the rumors flying around that this may be his last album, it feels a betrayal to his legacy bring up any negative reviews of the new album.”


And not just because of the news surrounding his health, on the record we can also find songs that seem to reflect on his demise or his farewell from the stage. A song like Goodbye is nothing but a testament to that fact. But don’t think there is only doom and gloom here. Of course not, because Ozzy is a humorous man and his lyrics reflect that. But I guess those have always been the key to his way of dealing with life. Stage antics, life antics all seem to reflect that as well. But the seminal track on the album, the one that speaks volume about everything the man has done and continues to do is probably the title track. Ordinary Man, a ballad, a duet with another legend that is saying farewell, Elton John, borders on sentimental travesty, yet seems to drag you into his state of mind, and you cannot help but believe everything they sing. And you continue to realize throughout this track that another legend is leaving the stage… Two of them in fact…

Doktor420: “Ordinary Man with Elton John sounds so calculated; I can see the audience and their lighters.”

Musically, the entire record, is filled with perfect production, (which is only logical), which of course makes you want to state: too perfect. We don’t want Ozzy’s musical footman to sound this perfect; but they are, and they do. Drum work courtesy of Red Hot Chili Peppers very own Chad Smith, on bass Guns ‘N Roses Duff McKagan and guitar by Andrew Watt from California Breed. Guest spots by Tom Morello, Slash, daughter Kelly and a few more. Straight To Hell, a rich hardrocker. All My Life with that sweet riff. Under The Graveyard a fine return to his more doom roots; well, sort of… Which could have been a grandiose return if it has been slowed down more and some of the production value would have been turned off.  Eat Me, Scary Little Green Men, fun Ozzy in all his glory! It all leads to a tight knit album that seems to cruise to a perfect salute… Cruising, a bit perhaps too much. The man does, on some moments, seem to just be going through the motions one last time. But that might also be due to the fact that the entire record feels like a glance, a peek at all the different things he has done throughout his career… Indeed… A synopsis of his career with 2020 technology…

Tony Maim: “After the great return to form with Sabbath on “13” I kinda hoped that the next Ozzy album would be recorded with a small band and stripped down but the opposite has happened. Over polished and with a sterile production robs the very moving autobiographical lyrics of any feeling, to me, half the tracks on the album feel like cut and paste versions from previous albums and there seems to be no theme to the track listing which makes for a mish mash of styles.”

Shastabeast: “The following tracks are a mix of ready-for-radio ballads and familiar sounding "epic" metal scores. A few glimmers of the Ozz we love come through in the brutal honesty of the title track and maniacal theatrics of "Little Green Men" and "It's a Raid", but overall, the album falls flat in terms of energy and originality. There's no sense in comparing to his early years but considering what Ozzy's capable of delivering the album feels wanting, particularly coming off the forced, cookie cutter R&B exercises on final track "Take What You Want".”

Doktor420: “It’s A Raid, starts out… errr… Weird. Not necessarily in a good way. I do not understand the noisy violence in this song. Is it a children party flipping out to the heaviest music they heard so far?”


Ten damn good songs that are all looking back and showing us once again what Ozzy is all about. But as a longtime fan of Ozzy and Sabbath there is nothing on this album you will actually need. And much that might make you cringe or shiver. Even if there isn’t anything wrong with them, they add so very little to everything we love from Ozz. But if this is a first meeting with the legend everything you hear on the album could lead to a four or even five stars rating… Really? No, really?

Doktor420: “I am a bit frightened about the feat. Post Malone songs coming up. And we can diss Malone about his autotune stuff, but Ozzy is using it as well. Constantly. Have you seen Ozzy performing live recently? I mean confirmed live singing? I suspect that this is an Ozzybot. A cyborg or fully mechanical robot with a little AI, autotune and spotify database. I mean if you are THE music industry and want to build one artificial musician who can please many listeners of all ages, who would you chose? He has it all: he’s a vampire and eating bats, he's a zombie, he's nearly dead and without any resistance...”

No. There is no way in hell that we can give five stars to the album. And that’s because of the bonus track. Autotune rube Post Malone is already present on the tenth track It’s A Raid; which seems to be a pretty good thrash metal send off, a finale to say ‘damn yeah’ too. But unfortunately, there is an eleventh track. The obligatory bonus song. This time called Take What You Want, featuring Post Malone and Travis Scott. Written by Malone and already featured on this Hollywood’s Bleeding album from 2019, it is what every metal fan dreads. The first thirty seconds, before the fake clap starts, there is hope that it will turn into an awful commercial ballad. But then the clap comes in, a computer beat starts and something that will turn your heart to stone is in the making. No no no, you start to yell, putting your hands over your ears. No no no, don’t do it Ozzy… Sure, we can hear throughout the album, Ozzy’s own voice is aided by some digital help as well. But not in the way that all that there is, is the digital annoyance we know from Post Malone and Travis Scott. No no no… Why end an otherwise pretty good album, diverse in every way, like this? Why end an album, with strong compositions that do not necessarily add something extra to the catalogue, but definitely serve as a glance at what Ozzy was and is all about, with something this awful… Fans will never be able to comprehend it and we doubt there will be some Post Malone fan out there that will be turned on to Sabbath by this one track. But… Apparently, when the single was released it did manage to reach the Number 8th position of the US Billboard Hot 100. So, perhaps we are wrong, and we should celebrate that track. Yes, perhaps we should?! Cause it will turn all the fans of all those autotune dingbats out there into Sabbath fans!

Doktor420: “I make fun of him, but I am not dissing him. He is still one of my old heroes and after ‘Dreamer’ I tried not to see or hear anything new from him to not destroy my ancient picture of him and Sabbath. I unfortunately also saw a few short snippets of his tv series, which I tried to steer clear from. You don’t need to get new fans when you deliver your swansong, your final album. It’s A Raid has one minute of Ozzy but then he's giving his scepter/baton to Malone (the upcoming star for a lot of people). The last song has no Ozzy at all, really. He vanished. I still hope for a final scene with Ozzy. Imagine the roof scene of Bladerunner. Ozzy, dying in the rain, releasing a bat out of his hands when his last breath goes…”

Reek of STOOM: “Farewell Mr. Osbourne - a sober end to a life story few could surpass.”

Tony Maim: "But – his vocals are as good as ever; some songs really kick ass and anything from Ozzy is always welcome. "I come to praise Caesar, not bury him.""


(Written by JK with Doktor420, Tony Maim, Reek of STOOM & Shastabeast)