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It took the return of donjunio. Years and years ago, I had a passion for Clark and Parsons, and I would like to say that this album is very beautiful, but it is misleading due to the presence of the Gosdin brothers, who were bluegrass singers, and people like Dillard, who was a banjo phenomenon, making it associated with country rock. However, there were people like Leon Russell on piano, giving it a strong turn towards the Beatles. After all, the birth of country rock is traced back to Gram Parsons' International Submarine Band, but this Clark record already contains country rock gems like "Tried so Hard," which was covered heavily in the following years; I also remember a version by Yo La Tengo.
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Ian Gillan with ERA was a virtuoso with Deep Purple! In that album with Sabbath, he makes you miss Ronnie Dio a hundred times; when I hear him scream DEATH!! DEATH!! I laugh my ass off.
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I also think Ozzy doing a sitcom on MTV sucks, but back in 1974, we ADORABLE him, and this is something kids like you will never understand, not even with all the goodwill in the world. Review the albums of the little metal bands that are coming out now and leave the Ozzy Sabbath alone, you're just not capable, listen to me.
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damn psycho, we're telepathic...
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ENOUGH! I'm fed up with this site being frequented by kids like STARBLAZER who download all the Sabbath knowledge in 2000, listen to it in one day, and then act like they're experts on the matter!!! There are people here who bought the Sabbath albums when they were released, and we ALL worshiped Ozzy because he was the only one whose voice captured the DOOM of the three musicians in such a sick way!!! In fact, when Gillan comes, it will suck because both his nature and his ironic lyrics have absolutely no connection to Sabbath's heavy sound! Sabbath are Sabbath up until Sabotage; for the rest of the '80s, you can shove the albums, or rather the mp3s, up your ass because in that format they hurt less. And what do we expect from someone who says the best singer ever is that trained dog Blaze!!
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be careful blacchedogghe because groping blindly in an orgy can lead to nasty surprises...
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"It will be... but I prefer the gun," Clint/Joe teaches.
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Ah, well if that's the case, I can give you Natasha's phone number. It's a bit of an expense, but if you bring her the Grinderman disc, she’ll play it for you “in the meantime” and “in the process”… maybe you’ll even hear Bo Diddley too…
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I told you where I hear them, blackdog, but I realize that to perceive them you need to have listened to the Suicide and Diddley, and then you need to have the blackdog ear, and that is not achieved by listening to records from Ricordi, otherwise it’s easy to just say Black Sabbath.
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mocampo "Wring that neck" was written by the original lineup of Deep Purple, Blackmore/Lord/Paice/Simper, when Rod Evans was still on vocals. As for "Child in Time," it seems that during rehearsals Jon Lord, who was captivated by the arrangement of Bombay Calling, started playing the theme, the others joined in, and they spontaneously stole the song from LaFlamme and companions, without any premeditation...