BLACK SABBATH – Children of the Sea – Live in Brazil ’94 (Disc Media)
The Cross Purposes tour was not a happy time in Black Sabbath. Geezer Butler had felt that this band (featuring himself, Tony Iommi, Tony Martin, and new drummer Bobby Rondinelli) should have had a new name and not been billed as Black Sabbath. Rondinelli left mid-tour, so Tony and Geezer called up the original Sabbath skinsman Bill Ward. With this historic lineup, 3/4 of the original band were intact (the same ratio as today’s Sabbath). They went to South America to play five shows. Then Butler quit after a furious standoff with Iommi.
This broadcast footage is all that remains of this very short-lived lineup of Black Sabbath.
The set opens with “Time Machine”, a Dio-era song that neither Tony Martin nor Bill Ward originally appeared on. The sound is pretty horrendous, coming in slightly better than bootleg quality. The crowd noise is too high, and the backing keyboards of Geoff Nicholls actually drown out the lead guitar. Nicholls’ backing vocals are also more audible than they should be. As a frontman, Martin does his best, which involves spreading his arms wide and shaking his hair. A long haired Ward has a completely different rhythm on this track than Vinnie Appice gave it. Another Dio number is next, “Children of the Sea”. Ward at least played on this Heaven and Hell classic. Haters would be critical of Martin’s version of Dio songs, but Dio quit. Ozzy wasn’t ready to come back. Iommi carried on, and that’s how it went down. Martin had to sing the old songs to the best of his talents and he helped keep the ship afloat during these difficult years. Having Bill Ward on this track lends it a required authenticity.
There are certain songs that Sabbath has never dropped from the set, that are very difficult for most singers to perform. “Black Sabbath” is top of the list. Ozzy’s possessed original can never be duplicated or imitated. A big part of that, however, is that Bill Ward’s primitive drum fills were such a big part of it, and Bill’s back on this one. With 3/4 of the original Sabbath there, this version actually works out. It’s one of the most true to the original of the versions released by any post-Ozzy lineup of Black Sabbath…except it is edited! It halts abruptly at the half-way point, to awkwardly go into “War Pigs”. This concert was clearly cut down to fit into a one hour (with commercials) time slot. Why half of “Black Sabbath” was sacrificed instead of something else, I don’t know. Shoddy. At least “War Pigs” is intact, with Bill (shirtless now) providing the loose backbone it always had on album. It acquires a jazzy feel during the slow outro.
Iommi gets a guitar solo (could have edited this out instead of “Black Sabbath”, but what do I know?) which has shades of “Too Late” from Dehumanizer. Then it’s “Paranoid”, with Bill behind the beat as it should be. Martin bites into every word, doing a fantastic job of it. I have several live versions of Martin doing “Paranoid”, but this one is the best and most true.
When it’s time for “Headless Cross”, the rhythm section are not the ones who recorded it (Lawrence Cottle on bass and Cozy Powell on drums). It’s weird to think of Bill Ward playing drum parts that Cozy Powell wrote. Geezer sounds more at home, and is able too bring his trademark slink to the bass. Offstage, Geoff Nicholls quite obviously provides the high notes in the chorus that Tony Martin can no longer hit, whether by voice or sample I do not know. There’s another awkward edit into “Iron Man”, a song most singers except Ozzy struggle with. This could have been excised. We finally blast into “Sabbath Bloody Sabbath”: better, even though nobody can hit the unholy notes that Ozzy did on the studio version.
That’s the last track.. The back cover claims that “The Hand that Rocks the Cradle” is next, but there is no such track. Bastards! To compound the error, they got the song title wrong by just having “The Hand that Rocks”. Not that this is the only mistake on the track list. “Babbath Bloody Sabbath” is pretty funny, especially since this title carried over to the song menu on the DVD!
Wardrobe wise, I like Geezer’s sweater with the crosses on it; that’s nice. Tony Martin has a cool, steel plated leather jacket, which looks as if raided from Rob Halford’s closet. Iommi sports silver cross center-chest, while Bill Ward is right out of 1975 with the long hair and track pants.
There are issues with the audio sync on this DVD, probably originating from the broadcast but carried over even though it would be easily fixed. Sloppy release. I’m sure that this is ripped from a VHS recording of the broadcast, due to the obvious spots where commercial breaks are edited out.
Maybe the original uncut tapes are out there somewhere. If so, somebody should release them. This concert could have been a great little DVD release, but the various audio and editing flaws make it a difficult viewing.
2/5 stars
Bit of a lost era of Sabbath for me. I had given up on them at this point (and I’m sure plenty of other people had too!) Like the sound of Geezer’s sweater though!
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Yeah and that song Babbath Bloody Sabbath sounds promising too.
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It’s a great title. Reminds me of something else but I can’t quite put my finger on it.
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Probably Lou Costello’s first solo album, “Hey Babbott”!
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I know this isn’t an ‘official’ release, but you have to wonder why they bother releasing this kinda stuff when there are clear issues with the quality. Surely that’s no good for anyone?
… this, though: ” As a frontman, Martin does his best, which involves spreading his arms wide and shaking his hair”. Oooft. Faint praise …
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Why bother issuing? Because any sucker in the grocery store who sees this for $5 is likely to buy it and not return it, I guess.
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Good point – I just find the whole second rate live footage rather bizarre …
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You have to be super careful about unofficial stuff like this. I knew I needed it, for the lineup. Such a short lived lineup that is 3/4 original…I had to have a document of it. But that’s me.
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I understand that completely – I’ve been close to buying the odd concert video myself, but usually shy away having seen the quality of some of them …
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If it’s super cheap, you can take a chance. Especially if you have seen the show on TV and know already what it looks like.
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I remember being at the record store and had to choose between this DVD and the Cross Purposes Live (CD & VHS) Double Pack. I chose the Double pack since I taught I was getting more for the buck but after reading your review I can tell you both live albums are bad.
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I like Cross Purposes Live…I have that box set. Then I ripped the three tunes that were only on VHS, and added those to CD. I think that studio album was underrated and I want to take a detailed look!
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There should never be anything that has Black Sabbath and 2/5 stars in the same page.
Shame. I hope this is the only one.
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Then you haven’t heard the pathetically bad Forbidden album. Their last studio album before 13.
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You really need that Mick Wall book, Mike.
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I know I do. Wishlisted. $25 on Amazon. I just bought a book by a certain “80’smetalman” so that’s my book budget for this month! Time to start wishlisting for Christmas.
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£3 over here, I’ll track one down for you. I’ll see if I can get you one on limited edition coloured paper with bonus pages!
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Awesome! Maybe I’ll even send that Lego stuff I put aside for you months and months ago. Shit.
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I wa interested to read this. I wish I’d picked up a vinyl copy of ‘Headless Cross’ before they got really, really expensive.
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It was impossible to find when I was looking for it around this time, 1994. It had been deleted on CD, or the label went backrupt, same difference to me. I eventually had to order it on import for a rival store.
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This sounds like a much better representation of the setlist. Some of the songs sound pretty darn good. I would have liked to have seen that tour.
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Yeahhhhh… I do love me some Sabbath, but I’ll leave this one to the completists like you! Thanks for the report for the front lines!
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I agree with everything that the Knowlton Nash of Rock News has stated above!
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Oh man, I seem to be getting a reputation around here… ;)
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Bad news everyone. It’s not just bootleggers who edit parts of songs out, sabbath’s management does it too
The B sides to the single feels good to me were Heaven and Hell+Paranoid recorded live in Moscow (these and the rest of the show are available in soundboard quality on the Headless in Russia DVD).
The bastards segued Heaven and Hell into Paranoid after the band intros, cutting the final 2 verses where “they say that life’s a carousel” et cetera et cetera. I was infuriated. Tony Martin did an excellent job at this song and we should have heard the whole thing.
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I’m still pissed of about this. If they really wanted a segue they should have done it with Die Young. That performance of Die Young was the best I’ve ever heard it done. Paranoid was pretty average by comparison.
I know they put Paranoid on to sell more copies but that still doesn’t make me any less mad
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^Still mad
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