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| | Tribute | | | Music Artist : | | Ozzy Osbourne | | Music Style : | | General | | Record Label : | | Sony | | Release Date : | | 2002-04-02 | | Store Price : | | $8.99 | | Artistopia's Price: $8.98 | | Usually ships in 24 hours | | |
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CD Tracks/Songs
Disc 11. I Don't Know 2. Crazy Train 3. Believer 4. Mr. Crowley 5. Flying High Again 6. Revelation (Mother Earth) 7. Steal Away (The Night) (With Drum Solo) 8. Suicide Solution (With Guitar Solo) 9. Iron Man 10. Children Of The Grave 11. Paranoid 12. Goodbye To Romance 13. No Bone Movies 14. Dee (Randy Rhoads Studio Out-Takes)
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Other Artist Albums
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Customer Reviews of This Album/CD |
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Randy Roads is the worst guitarist ever! Submitted on: 2009-07-11 |
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| My friend David told me to check out this album for some tr00 guitar playing. I found the tape in a junkshop for 50 cents so I bought it without hesitation. Wow, was this bad or what! Total disappointment. The guitar playing was just the same boring shredding and overly-long solos again and again for an hour. Weak. Check out "St. Anger", "All The Right Reasons", "Metal Machine Music" or "American Idiot" for some facemelting solos from true fretboard masters! |
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Music Freak Submitted on: 2009-05-13 |
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| Can never go wrong with Randy Rhoads...Incredible CD. Could only imagine how many more great albums would be out there if Randy was still alive! |
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Behold a Legend Submitted on: 2009-01-19 |
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| In my personal opinion Randy "is" and was the Greatest guitar player to ever thrash a six string. The studio albums do not give him justice because of his inability to reign free over his production by disrespecting producers who did not allow him to let loose with his recordings from lack of trust from a very young axeman. In contrary, this album shows you what Randy was capable of when Ozzy let him do his shine through. Simply incredible. |
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AMAZING!!! Submitted on: 2008-08-01 |
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| I remember buying this when it was first released on vinyl. I wore this sucker out. Randy was simply the best. Rippin' chops but with an amazing melodic sensability. An amazing talent as this album demonstrates. If you are unfamiliar with Randy, BUY THIS!!! |
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Straight ahead live album with a dual purpose Submitted on: 2008-06-13 |
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As the title suggests this release is a tribute. To one Randy Rhoads to be specific, killed in a bout of (terminal as it turns out) stupidity as the light plane he was in crashed as it was buzzing the tour bus. Band biographies are rife with stories of bands cavorting about like chickens with their heads cut off and most of the time all ends well. The tragedy is that it doesn't always and this pretty darn tasty Ozzy live album is not only serviceable in it's own right as a release but does show the talents of the deceased guitarist. Which only reinforces the loss.
Song selection is pretty good with lots of metal, some metal and for a bit of garnish some metal is blasted out of your stereo with only a few let ups of pace. In this case that's probably a good thing as Ozzy works best when firing at a manic pace. And given the guy repeatedly tells the audience to stand up - even for Revelation (Mother Earth) which is one of the mellower cuts - it's probably a necessity to really blaze away.
And blaze this does. Tunes such as I Don't Know, Crazy Train and Mr Crowley all work very well live as they are built of pretty strong stuff. Suicide Solution is a perfect choice for inclusion here as it is essentially about another life cut too short, in this case that of Australian vocalist Bon Scott. Steal Away includes Tommy Aldridges' drum solo so be warned, but the extended guitar solo on Suicide Solution is pretty welcome. As the collection unfolds the scarcity of any let up is impressive and a few Sabbath standards are dusted off in the guise of Iron Man and also Paranoid. I dunno, the first one never really made any impression on me, perhaps you had to be 15 in 1973 or whenever it came out. But the latter is a far more communicative track and really sounds pretty darn metallic and anarchic here. Perhaps my favourite version of my favourite track with which Ozzy is associated.
Goodbye to Romance is well placed after Paranoid and it shows that someone was paying attention to the pacing of this thing which speaks of focus and a certain care factor. And the humour of No Bone Movies is probably a good way to close out the album proper before some Randy Rhoads out-takes finish the disc in a way that makes you contemplate...stuff.
Produced and engineered by Max Norman this all sounds consistent and a couple of liner notes by the Prince of Darkness himself add a certain touch to things. A pretty good live album all round and for Ozzy fans probably a must purchase and the sort of album that will have a very long life span as new generations of rivet heads explore the history of their chosen genre. |
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