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July 28, 2004

Review: Ozzfest 2004 - Judas Priest and Black Sabbath

Hmm Reviews, music — by TDavid @ 12:41 pm PST
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Went to Ozzfest in Seattle (Auburn White River Ampitheater for the purists) and the 14 hour sunburn wasn’t the only thing hot there. Judas Priest gave an outstanding show. It started with Hellion/Electric Eye and Rob Halford was singing through the eyeball of a huge tarp while Glenn Tipton and KK Downing worked their dual axes with masterful execution. The complete setlist:

Hellion/Electric Eye
Metal Gods
Headin’ Out To The Highway
Touch of Evil
The Sentinel
Victim of Changes
Breaking the Law
Beyond the Realms of Death
Green Manalishi (with the two-pronged crown)
Painkiller
———– end set, start encore segment
Hell Bent for Leather
Livin’ After Midnight
You’ve Got Another Thing Comin’

The encore started with a vintage Priest show attraction: Rob Halford riding out on his signature Harley motorcycle to be followed by the tune: Hell Bent For Leather. Halford still can rock although it seemed like he clever avoided hitting some of the real high notes at some points in songs (like Victim of Changes). Or he hit the note but didn’t have the sustain that he had when I saw them nearly 20 years ago on the Defenders of the Faith tour. That’s not really a negative, as there aren’t many singers — perhaps Ripper Owens excluded — who could handle sustaining those high Halford notes. Also, a little bit of a letdown that they didn’t play anything off their upcoming new album. I was hoping for at least a brief sneak peak at some new stuff. Still, their setlist was solid and I’d say for me, anyway, this was the best part, musically anyway, of Ozzfest.

Also exciting to me was for the first time seeing the original Black Sabbath lineup with Geezer Butler on bass guitar, Tony Iommi on guitar, Bill Ward on drums and Ozzy at vocals. Here was Black Sabbath’s complete setlist:

War Pigs
N.I.B
Fairies Wear Boots
Into the Void
Black Sabbath
Snowblind
Iron Man
Children of the Grave
————— last song, start encore
Paranoid

Every song was followed by a break for Ozzy to grab a drink of his tea and work the crowd up a little. Ozzy goes a little nuts these days with the “I wanna see all you [expletive] go [expletive] crazy!” stuff. He did tell one interesting story about how his doctor said he should take a year off after his ATV accident and he’d have no part of that.  He called his doctor a “dickhead” and I’m sure his doctor wouldn’t be surprised.

Bill Ward on drums looked like he was 80 years old and the camera should not have panned on his overweight and out of shape elderly body on drums. Musically, he did an admirable job on the drums, but I kept thinking about how this guy has had heart trouble in the past and I was worried — seriously — that he was going to have a heart attack on stage. A roadie was towelling him off after each song. It was the kind of thing which reminded me of the age of Black Sabbath and in one respect it was sombering and in the other it was exciting to be there to witness them for what might very well be the last time they take the stage together in my area. I know, I know, they’ve done a bunch of reunion gigs but these guys are all looking pretty haggard. Perhaps the only exception might be Geezer Butler who has aged well. Iommi doesn’t move much around the stage, but can still work his magic on the fretboard. 

It was a thrill to see Black Sabbath and I wish I had been able to see them together when everybody was younger and Ozzy could still sing. Ozzy’s voice cracked badly on several songs: notably Into The Void and ironically their self-titled song: Black Sabbath. I also noticed that some annoying reverb was added to some of Ozzy’s tougher vocal moments. Was this to disguise him not being able to hit all the notes? I think so. He wasn’t bad vocally all the time and in fact there were times he hit the notes surprisingly well, but there was always this sense there that Ozzy doesn’t have much left in the tank. The crowd was singing along to help out the Ozzman so I don’t think that many concert-goers really cared.

The smell of marijuana wafted through the air more heavily during Black Sabbath than any of the previous bands. So much in fact that I’m surprised that they didn’t perform their song Sweet Leaf. That was the only song I expected that they’d play that they didn’t. I think they should get rid of Into the Void and replace it with Sweet Leaf. It also seemed a bit odd that the headline band didn’t play as long as the band that preceded them (Judas Priest). I guess they are sort of dual headliners. This didn’t bother me that much because I was just happy to be able to see the band together on stage for the first time.

As for the rest of Ozzfest? I don’t have much to say either way about the other bands. There were a few bright moments, but I pretty much only looking forward to seeing Judas Priest and Black Sabbath and only concentrated on their music and setlists. We did buy Laguna Coil’s CD, as the lead singer there has a Pat Benatar rock edge to her voice that I enjoyed. Also, my son got an autograph of guitarist Kerry King from Slayer on a double live CD and he seemed to enjoy Slayer’s set. My son also enjoyed the Playstation 2 truck that was parked near the second stage and was filled with machines with playable demos. Nice touch to get out of the sun. It was a wonderful father/son day and one that made me wish my dad had done something like this when I was a teen.

Would I do Ozzfest again? Absolutely! It was a great time. What would I do differently? Smuggle in more snacks! The food prices there were carnival-style outrageous. $23 for two lousy tacos and two large sodas. We bought two concert shirts and a couple CDs. Total money spent for 14 hours of entertainment (two tickets), food and souveniors for two people: $285 USD. If Ozzfest is coming anywhere near you this summer, check it out!  Really, this may be the last chance ever you’ll get to see the original Black Sabbath lineup together (contract deals with all of them and Sharon Osbourne could plague future appearances just as much as age) plus Judas Priest is a real treat. Grade: A-

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RSS Feed comments for this post 5 Comments »

  1. Sounds like a great concert, I hope Ozzfest comes to my town.

    Comment by bryan — July 28, 2004 @ 10:42 pm PST

  2. Hi Bryan, thanks for the comments. You can see a full Ozzfest tour schedule here: http://www.ozzfest.com/tourdates.html

    Hope that they make it to your area as well, rock on!

    Comment by TDavid — July 29, 2004 @ 9:54 am PST

  3. […] I had planned to pay for a ticket anyway because I was taking my son and also because I like to pay for the things I review anyway. You can read the review of Ozzfest 2004 at Blogcritics and a slightly different version here at Hmm (same review score). […]

    Pingback by Make You Go Hmm: » Iron Maiden vocalist still pissed at Sharon Osbourne over Ozzfest 2005 — August 27, 2006 @ 11:02 am PST

  4. […] I went and told our oldest son about this offer and he is psyched. We’re going to be watching for these tickets and hope we can bag a few. We went to Ozzfest 2004 and had a great time watching the return of Judas Priest and seeing Black Sabbath for the first time. […]

    Pingback by Sharon Osbourne announces Ozzfest 2007 ticket prices are free! » Make You Go Hmm — February 6, 2007 @ 5:10 pm PST

  5. […] After listening to the 15 samples of Ozzy Osbourne’s upcoming album entitled Black Rain, I already miss the old Ozzy, the Black Sabbath and early solo Ozzy with Randy Rhoads. His voice sounds at least an octave lower and out of sync which was the way he sounded the last time I heard him live at Ozzfest. There isn’t enough of his singing to see if he does anything truly old school with his vocals in the brief samples so a full Hmm review will need to wait until May 22 or later, but it’s a given that we can expect some killer riffs from master axeman Zakk Wylde. […]

    Pingback by Ozzy lets Black Rain fall in stores on May 22 on Epic records » Make You Go Hmm — April 11, 2007 @ 7:36 am PST


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