Ozzy Osbourne, godfather of heavy metal, dies at 76

LONDON –Β Ozzy Osbourne,Β the gloomy, demon-invoking lead singer of the pioneering band Black Sabbath who became the throaty, growling voice β€” and drug-and-alcohol ravaged id β€” of heavy metal, died Tuesday, just weeks afterΒ his farewell show.Β He was 76.

β€œIt is with more sadness than mere words can convey that we have to report that our beloved Ozzy Osbourne has passed away this morning. He was with his family and surrounded by love. We ask everyone to respect our family privacy at this time,” a family statement said. In 2020, he revealed he had Parkinson’s disease after suffering a fall.

Either clad in black or bare-chested, the singer was often the target of parents’ groups for his imagery and once caused an uproar for biting the head off a bat. Later, he would reveal himself to be a doddering and sweet father on the reality TV show β€œThe Osbournes.”

Black Sabbath’s 1969 self-titled debut LP has been likened to the Big Bang of heavy metal. It came during the height of the Vietnam War and crashed the hippie party, dripping menace and foreboding. The cover of the record was of a spooky figure against a stark landscape. The music was loud, dense and angry, and marked a shift in rock ’n’ roll.

The band’s second album, β€œParanoid,” included such classic metal tunes as β€œWar Pigs,” β€œIron Man” and β€œFairies Wear Boots.” The song β€œParanoid” only reached No. 61 on the Billboard Hot 100 but became in many ways the band’s signature song. Both albums were voted among the top 10 greatest heavy metal albums of all time by readers of Rolling Stone magazine.

β€œBlack Sabbath are the Beatles of heavy metal. Anybody who’s serious about metal will tell you it all comes down to Sabbath,” Dave Navarro of the band Jane’s Addiction wrote in a 2010 tribute in Rolling Stone. β€œThere’s a direct line you can draw back from today’s metal, through Eighties bands like Iron Maiden, back to Sabbath.”

Sabbath fired Osbourne in 1979 for his legendary excesses, like showing up late for rehearsals and missing gigs. β€œWe knew we didn’t really have a choice but to sack him because he was just so out of control. But we were all very down about the situation,” wrote bassist Terry β€œGeezer” Butler in his memoir, β€œInto the Void.”

Osbourne reemerged the next year as a solo artist with β€œBlizzard of Ozz” and the following year’s β€œDiary of a Madman,” both hard rock classics that went multi-platinum and spawned enduring favorites such as β€œCrazy Train,” β€œGoodbye to Romance,” β€œFlying High Again” and β€œYou Can’t Kill Rock and Roll.” Osbourne was twice inducted to the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame β€” once with Sabbath in 2006 and again in 2024 as a solo artist.

The original Sabbath lineup reunited for the first time in 20 years in July 2025 in the U.K. for what Osborne said would be his final concert. β€œLet the madness begin!” he told 42,000 fans.

Metallica, Guns N Roses, Slayer, Tool, Pantera, Gojira, Alice in Chains, Lamb of God, Halestorm, Anthrax, Rival Sons and Mastodon did sets. Tom Morello, Aerosmith’s Steven Tyler, Billy Corgan, Ronnie Wood, Travis Barker, Sammy Hagar, Andrew Watt, Yungblud, Korn’s Jonathan Davis, Nuno Bettencourt, Chad Smith and Vernon Reid made appearances. Actor Jason Momoa was the host for the festivities.

β€œBlack Sabbath: we’d all be different people without them, that’s the truth,” said Pantera singer Phil Anselmo. β€œI know I wouldn’t be up here with a microphone in my hand without Black Sabbath.”

Osbourne embodied the excesses of metal. His outlandish exploits included relieving himself on the Alamo, snorting a line of ants off a sidewalk and, most memorably, biting the head off a live bat that a fan threw onstage during a 1981 concert. (He said he thought it was rubber.)