Ozzy Osbourne’s Memoirs Return to Bestseller List
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Prince of Darkness and forefather of heavy metal Ozzy Osbourne died this week aged 76 –just three weeks after his final performance with his band Black Sabbath
Ozzy Osbourne used Black Sabbath's hard rock music as a way to point out hypocrisy in Western society and modern religion.
The rock singer, who died on Tuesday, has several singles and albums in the charts, both as a solo artist and with his band Black Sabbath.
Ozzy Osbourne's final memoir, 'Last Rites', will be published posthumously on October 7, offering an unfiltered look into his extraordinary life, personal battles and musical triumphs.
He spoke for a generation of alienated Seventies misfits, and no one would have expected him to survive the Eighties. Yet somehow Ozzy Osbourne got more famous and more deeply beloved every year
KISS frontman Gene Simmons pays tribute to Ozzy Osbourne on "CBS Mornings," calling the Black Sabbath legend a "pure human being."
If a single individual could be said to embody the attributes of heavy metal, it would be Ozzy Osbourne, who has died aged 76 after suffering from Parkinson’s disease and other disorders. In a career stretching across six decades,
The singer had just recorded his farewell concert with Black Sabbath a few weeks ago. Titled “Back to the Beginning: Ozzy’s Final Bow,” it’s set for a theatrical release in early 2026. Osbourne told The Guardian in May that he was looking forward to a different life after filming the concert ― one with fewer people and more animals.