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Prince of Metal, King of Chaos: Ozzy Bows Out
The godfather of heavy metal has taken his final bow. Ozzy Osbourne, the legendary frontman of Black Sabbath and beloved solo artist, died Tuesday morning at the age of 76. In a statement shared by his family, they wrote: “It is with more sadness than words can express that our beloved Ozzy Osbourne passed away this morning. He was with his family and surrounded by love.”
The cause of death was not disclosed, though fans were well aware of the rocker’s ongoing health battles. Diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease in 2020, Osbourne had also endured years of physical complications, including injuries sustained in a 2019 fall that forced him into extended rehabilitation.
Despite the challenges, Ozzy’s fire never dimmed. Just over two weeks ago, he gave the world one final performance—one last thunderous scream into the void—at Villa Park Stadium in his hometown of Birmingham. There, 40,000 fans stood in awe as the "Prince of Darkness" sat atop a gothic throne, elevated above the stage like metal royalty. The moment marked 56 years since Black Sabbath first erupted from Birmingham’s gritty underbelly, and the return to his roots was more than symbolic. It was spiritual.
Joining him on stage were rock titans Axl Rose, Tom Morello, James Hetfield, and Lars Ulrich—each saluting the man who paved the way for generations of metal gods. His body weakened by Parkinson’s, Ozzy remained seated for the set, but his spirit was on its feet. “I don’t know what to say,” he told the crowd, voice raw and honest. “I’ve been laid up for six fucking years. You have no idea how I feel.”
And really, who could? For more than five decades, Ozzy Osbourne defied every label: lunatic, legend, addict, survivor. He was the unpredictable whirlwind at the center of metal’s storm. With Black Sabbath, he redefined music in the 1970s with dark, sludgy riffs and lyrics that leaned into horror, war, and madness. Then came his solo career, where he soared with hits like Crazy Train, Mama, I’m Coming Home, and Dreamer—songs that showed he could be brutal and tender, sometimes in the same breath.
Of course, no Ozzy tribute is complete without the bat. On January 20, 1982, while performing in Des Moines, Iowa, Ozzy bit the head off a bat thrown onstage, believing it was rubber. It wasn’t. He was rushed to the hospital for rabies treatment and permanently etched into rock’s hall of WTF. “The biggest mistake of my life,” he later admitted—though it didn’t seem to slow him down.
In the 2000s, he found an unlikely second act on reality TV. The Osbournes, MTV’s docuseries, catapulted the metal madman into pop culture, showing a hilariously chaotic domestic life with wife Sharon, daughter Kelly, and son Jack. Notably absent was daughter Aimee, who chose privacy over primetime. Ozzy also had children Jessica and Louis from his first marriage to Thelma Riley, and adopted her son Elliot.
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