Osbourne, Rock Hall
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FOX 8 News on MSNCurator of Rock Hall’s Ozzy exhibit joins FOX 8 to talk about music icon’s legacyAndy Leach, with Cleveland's Rock & Roll Hall of Fame, sat down with FOX 8's Stefani Schaefer and Todd Meany Wednesday morning to talk about the music icon's lasting impact and legacy.
Ozzy’s cultural impact goes even deeper than Sabbath, his solo career, the Osbournes, and Ozzfest. Here’s a look at other pop culture moments from Osbourne’s epic life that people will be talking about for decades to come.
Ozzy Osbourne, born John Michael Osbourne on Dec. 3, 1948, has spent decades in the spotlight since he rose to prominence in the 1970s as the lead singer of the heavy metal band Black Sabbath.
Hours after Osbourne's death, Idol spoke with The Hollywood Reporter about Osbourne's musical legacy, and the path he carved for the musicians who came after him.
Guitarist Zakk Wylde, who co-wrote "Mama, I'm Coming Home" and played on Osbourne's original recording, joined him onstage. So did longtime Osbourne producer Andrew Watt.
That trend will continue in Spinal Tap II: The End Continues, where the band gets together after decades of being estranged for one final show. Rob Reiner confirmed to CinemaBlend that he leaned on the advice of some of his famous friends, like Paul McCartney (who appears in the sequel), for some insight into that experience.
But the tune’s comparative catchiness makes the song the perfect gateway drug into the Surfers’ psychedelic noise, a sound nearly as influential in Eighties underground rock circles as Sabbath was to metal.
Brittney Griner was among the many in the sports world to react to the death of legendary rock star Ozzy Osbourne. Osbourne, known as the front man for Black Sabbath, passed away this week. He was 76 years old. His family announced the news, just a couple of weeks after his final concert. "It is ...