OZZY OSBOURNE – Live & Loud (limited edition 1993 Epic speaker grille edition)
Ozzy Osbourne has done lots and lots of tours since his “No More Tours Tour”. Â It seemed special at the time, because we thought Live & Loud was going to be the last live album. Â It was not. Â What was supposed to be a definitive and indispensable capstone is just another live album, only really notable for its packaging.
Let’s start there. Â If you buy this album, don’t buy the remastered edition in the jewel case. Â This album didn’t need remastering a couple years later. Â Why would it? Â Instead search for the original digipack with the metal speaker grille cover. Â Finding one in good shape can be a challenge. Â Unfortunately, the metal grille is not removable although the VHS release did have a removable grille. Â The release also came with two Ozzy “temporary tattoos” on little 2″ x 2″ sheets of paper. Â These are the first things to get lost and you might want to consider that you’ll never find them.
Live & Loud scores an A+ for packaging, but gets mediocre grades for the music. Â This is patched together from a variety of recordings, and it sounds like a lot of fixing was done after the fact. Â It’s bogged down with over-long guitar and drum solos (Zakk Wylde and Randy Castillo) and too much talking. Â There is only so much that one needs to be told to “go fucking crazy”. Â Ozzy proclaims that he loves us so often that it loses all meaning. Â He’s more of a cheerleader than a singer at times, constantly badgering the crowd to get “louder”! Â There is also an annoyingly long intro that means nothing without the visual accompaniment that’s supposed to go with it. Â I will admit that my buddy Peter and I were amused when Ozzy said “Let me see your fucking cigarette lighters” during “Mr. Crowley”.
On the plus side, this particular lineup of Ozzy’s band was one of his strongest. Â Zakk and Randy were joined by bassist Mike Inez who was invited to join Alice in Chains in 1993. Â Another plus is the presence of Black Sabbath. Â The second to last song is “Black Sabbath”, performed by the original Black Sabbath, at the final show on the tour. Â Fans will recall that Sabbath were touring their incredible Dehumanizer album, which frankly blows away Ozzy’s No More Tears. Â When Sabbath (then including Tony Iommi, Geezer Butler, Vinny Appice and Ronnie James Dio) were asked to open for Ozzy at his final two concerts, Dio bailed. Â He was replaced for those shows by a little known metal singer named Rob Halford. Â At the last of the two shows, the original Black Sabbath featuring Ozzy Osbourne, Tony Iommi, Geezer Butler and Bill Ward reunited to play a three song set. Â It was their first time together since Live Aid in 1985.
Unfortunately, a couple tracks aside, Live & Loud is flat and uninspired. Â “Black Sabbath” isn’t brilliant but at least it’s historic. Â All the important songs are there, with maybe a few too many from No More Tears. Â There is one surprise in “Changes”, the old Sabbath classic. Â This is performed by Zakk on piano and Ozzy. Â It’s brilliant and was used as the single. Â “Mr. Crowley”, “Shot in the Dark” and “Desire” are pretty good, but drummer Randy Castillo was killing it. Â He was the perfect drummer for that band. Â Rest in peace Randy.
Live & Loud is for the serious fan only, who will really want to get the grille cover. Â Live & Loud is not consistent enough for the average listener and gets bogged down in spots making it a very long run.
2/5 stars

