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Black Sabbath is the debut studio album by English heavy metal band Black Sabbath, ... Mapledurham Watermill, which is featured on the album's cover art.
Four Tet performs an instrumental cover on the Black Sabbath covers album Everything Comes & Goes. William Shatner covers the song alongside Zakk Wylde (former Ozzy Osbourne guitarist) on his 2011 album Seeking Major Tom. Comedian Bob Rivers recorded a parody as the title track of his album I Am Santa Claus.
The Eternal Idol is the thirteenth studio album by English rock band Black Sabbath, released in November 1987 in the UK and on 8 December 1987 in the US. [3] It is the first Black Sabbath album to feature vocalist Tony Martin. It spent six weeks on the Billboard 200 chart, peaking at 168. [4]
Media in category "Black Sabbath album covers" The following 21 files are in this category, out of 21 total. B. File:Black Sabbath - Cross Purposes Live.jpg;
This recording saw the reunion of Black Sabbath's Tyr-era line-up from 1990, with the return of Neil Murray and Cozy Powell. It was the last album to feature Tony Martin on vocals and Geoff Nicholls on keyboards, and technically the last by the band until 2013 when Ozzy Osbourne and Geezer Butler returned for the album 13 .
The album is included in the Black Sabbath box set The Rules of Hell. [9] The Live Evil album cover features literal interpretations of Sabbath songs. On 12 April, 2023, Iommi, Butler, and Dio's official social media accounts across several sites, as well as the Rhino website, announced the reissue of Live Evil as a Super Deluxe box set on 2 ...
The album's original cover art has proved iconic, and has been imitated and parodied on numerous occasions, such as on the 1992 Peaceville Volume 4 compilation album, the 1992 Volume Two EP by the band Sleep, Longmont Potion Castle Vol. 4 by the prank caller Longmont Potion Castle, and the 1994 Planet Caravan EP by Pantera.
All of the tracks featured on the Nativity in Black albums cover material strictly from the band's 1970s heyday with vocalist Ozzy Osbourne.The title is derived from a widespread yet incorrect assumption surrounding the title of the Black Sabbath song "N.I.B.".