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Live Evil
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Live Evil
Current price: $64.99


Barnes and Noble
Live Evil
Current price: $64.99
Size: CD
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Black Sabbath
's first attempt at an official live album, 1982's
Live Evil
was also the straw that broke the camel's back -- or rather, split the legendary group's second lineup right down the middle. Band tensions were already at an all-time high leading into the album's mixing sessions, but when founding members
Tony Iommi
and
Geezer Butler
accused singer
Ronnie James Dio
of sneaking into the studio to raise the volume on his vocal tracks, the pint-sized warbler decided he'd had enough and, guilty or not, departed to pursue a solo career, taking drummer
Vinny Appice
with him. Fateful accusations aside,
does benefit from a crystal clear, in-your-face sound, and by showcasing even amounts of both
Ozzy
Dio
material, effectively documents
's renascent tours of the early '80s.
Ronnie
certainly has the vocal chops, if not the same everyman charm, to handle the
Osbourne
classics, but his incessant banter between (and during!) songs sometimes verges on the unbearable. And even though the album's only truly transcendent moments may be the vicious introductory pairing of
"E5150"
/
"Neon Knights"
and the extended
"Heaven and Hell"
"Sign of the Southern Cross"
suite, there's also nothing really amiss with solid interpretations of such all-time metal classics as
"Children of the Sea,"
"Black Sabbath,"
"War Pigs,"
"Children of the Grave"
either. And considering the as yet unknown travails awaiting
in the post-
era,
's troubled gestation has come to seem positively idyllic in retrospect. ~ Eduardo Rivadavia
's first attempt at an official live album, 1982's
Live Evil
was also the straw that broke the camel's back -- or rather, split the legendary group's second lineup right down the middle. Band tensions were already at an all-time high leading into the album's mixing sessions, but when founding members
Tony Iommi
and
Geezer Butler
accused singer
Ronnie James Dio
of sneaking into the studio to raise the volume on his vocal tracks, the pint-sized warbler decided he'd had enough and, guilty or not, departed to pursue a solo career, taking drummer
Vinny Appice
with him. Fateful accusations aside,
does benefit from a crystal clear, in-your-face sound, and by showcasing even amounts of both
Ozzy
Dio
material, effectively documents
's renascent tours of the early '80s.
Ronnie
certainly has the vocal chops, if not the same everyman charm, to handle the
Osbourne
classics, but his incessant banter between (and during!) songs sometimes verges on the unbearable. And even though the album's only truly transcendent moments may be the vicious introductory pairing of
"E5150"
/
"Neon Knights"
and the extended
"Heaven and Hell"
"Sign of the Southern Cross"
suite, there's also nothing really amiss with solid interpretations of such all-time metal classics as
"Children of the Sea,"
"Black Sabbath,"
"War Pigs,"
"Children of the Grave"
either. And considering the as yet unknown travails awaiting
in the post-
era,
's troubled gestation has come to seem positively idyllic in retrospect. ~ Eduardo Rivadavia