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This 1974 Ozzy Osbourne interview has never been heard until now. It's the earliest known long-form audio interview with the Prince of Darkness. It’s also the only audio interview with Ozzy relating to Black Sabbath’s Sabbath Bloody Sabbath album.
It is recommended this interview be watched on YouTube so you can see the captions. Ozzy is hard to understand at times.
https://youtu.be/-yRVDfrjs54
The interview is conducted by Steve Rosen, one of the true legends in rock journalism. Rosen has a career spanning 50 years, thousands of articles, and several high-profile books with artists like Black Sabbath, Prince, Randy Rhoads, and others. But his most notable work is his recent Eddie Van Halen book, Tonechaser. Tonechaser is considered a must-have book for Eddie Van Halen fans and any music fan. No other book has uncovered so many untold stories about King Edward.
To order Rosen's Tonechaser: https://bit.ly/3MSVTo9
Check out Rosen's YouTube channel: https://bit.ly/49hIu1Z
Read Rosen's article written about when he met Black Sabbath in 1974: https://bit.ly/45TxeWX
In the interview, Ozzy talks about:
Early days of Black Sabbath
Why Black Sabbath has stayed together, and why other bands break up
Playing an honest gig
Does he think about the money he’s making
If he thinks Sabbath Bloody Sabbath is a different direction than previous Sabbath albums
Why they didn’t record in LA again like they did with Vol.4
Whose idea it was to add strings to Sabbath Bloody Sabbath
What the Sab 4 got tired of hearing about
If he is fulfilled by being in Black Sabbath
If he’s working on a solo record
Why and what it was like producing Sabbath Bloody Sabbath by themselves
If there is more of an emphasis on the lyrics on Sabbath Bloody Sabbath
If Black Sabbath’s songs mirror society
If he thinks the press is unfair to Black Sabbath
If Sabbath is working on a new album
His fondness for synthesizers and spacey music
Why he wants to make a solo record
How he’d like to learn how to play guitar
His love for Rick Wakeman vs Keith Emerson
If he would have Wakeman play on his solo album
Being on the road and away from home
The movie soundtrack he would have wanted to make
He sums up his current feelings on Black Sabbath and his belief he has helped people
Last week, we released an interview with David Lee Roth from 1984. This week, we are releasing another Roth interview, but 35 years later. We go from the height of Roth’s Van Halen career to his twilight years. I believe this interview is one of the most honest and humble interviews he’s ever given; he speaks very candidly on many topics.
At the time of this interview in 2019, Roth was 65 years old and promoting his line of tattoo skin care products called Ink the Orginal. In the interview, Roth talks at great lengths about his parents and growing up, the beginning and ending with Van Halen, why he never got married, why he’s never happy, plus so much more.
The interview was conducted by Debbie Millman and was originally aired on her award-winning awesome podcast Design Matters. We are so grateful that Ms. Millman is allowing us to share one of the most insightful David Lee Roth interviews with you. Please use the link below and subscribe to her podcast.
Subscribe to Debbie Millan's Design Matters: https://www.designmattersmedia.com/
00:00:00 - Intro to David Lee Roth interview
00:01:17 - Debbie Millman intro
00:02:19 - Start of David Lee Roth interview
00:02:47 - His Uncle Manny Roth
00:05:29 - His mother, Sibyl Roth, and her toughness on him
00:07:49 - Wearing leg braces as a kid
00:08:41 - His early jobs
00:09:34 - Where his youthful drive came from
00:11:14 - What the Roth family expected when they had get-togethers
00:12:29 - When he first realized he had a talent for singing
00:15:00 - Him being in plays as a child
00:16:11 - He tells where he really learned to sing from
00:18:59 - His parents threaten him with going to a foster home
00:19:16 - If “bad” Dave comes from his mother
00:21:08 - How he was taught to sing like the girls
00:22:43 - How many instruments he plays
00:23:25 - The first meeting with the Van Halen brothers
00:26:31 - Why he and the Van Halen brothers were crosstown rivals
00:28:26 - What inspired him to write music
00:30:57 - The near-death experience that chokes him up even today
00:34:38 - How much of his Playboy image is a story he was creating
00:37:15 - If he is confident he would make it in show business
00:37:33 - The idea of an album band
00:39:00 - An obscure Dutch radio reference
00:40:14 - Did they write Runnin’ with the Devil in 18 minutes
00:42:25 - Who are the best teachers and coaches
00:45:35 - When he has felt sorry for himself
00:46:45 - Why he hasn’t fallen into a lot of traps, other Rock and Rollers did
00:47:28 - Him stealing books
00:48:31 - What kept him from succumbing to drug abuse
00:49:55 - Where his ability to jump high comes from
00:53:46 - Why did he leave Van Halen in 1985
00:54:38 - Why didn’t he ever get married
00:56:44 - His ability to mimic others
00:58:54 - The teleplay he has been working on for three years
01:00:33 - Why his favorite audience is disbelieving nonbelievers
01:01:29 - Why he isn’t happy
01:02:14 - His window time
01:02:53 - How he’s always solving a catastrophe
01:05:12 - Why he decided to start Ink the Orginal
01:07:43 - Why take his life in this direction
01:09:41 - Tattoos today
01:12:11 - The process of making his product
01:13:53 - How the business is doing
01:14:22 - The difference between having a tattoo today and 30 years ago
01:17:37 - What advice would he give someone who has writer’s block
01:19:28 - Squeezing every single moment out of life
A never-published interview with Van Halen's Diamond David Lee Roth. At the time of this interview in December 1984, Roth was 31 years old, and only months away from no longer being in Van Halen. In the interview, Roth talks about the future of Van Halen, his need for attention, whether he’s a bad role model, and what he wants on his tombstone. And in a Tapes Archive exclusive, Mr. Roth busts into an impromptu freestyle rap.
The interview is conducted by a new Tapes Archive contributor, award-winning legendary entertainment journalist, screenwriter, producer, and author, Ethlie Ann Vare. For decades, Ethlie ruled musical taste and celebrity gossip in newspapers, magazines, and TV. Her Top 10 Syndicated column ROCK ON ran in 1,700 newspapers worldwide. She’s interviewed A-list movie celebrities like Johnny Depp and Nicholas Cage and rock royalty like Ozzy Osbourne and David Lee Roth. She wrote for Billboard, Daily Variety, and The Hollywood Reporter. She also reviewed rock concerts and albums for the New York Times, and discussed rock stars on The Gossip Show. Ms. Vare has more accomplishments than we have time to say here. Below is a link in to her website. We are honored she is allowing us to share some of her unpublished historical interviews with all of you.
Ethlie Ann Vare's website https://ethlieannvare.com/
Watch the captioned version https://youtu.be/QodtYVn7tDQ
00:00 - Intro to David Lee Roth interview
01:46 - Start of the David Lee Roth Interview
02:57 - The rumors about Eddie Van Halen wanting to leave the band
03:58 - Was it an ego blow with Van Halen’s album 1984 not hitting #1 on the charts
05:22 - Playing Black Sabbath music while watching a football game
05:49 - Was having a pop hit with “Jump” harmful to the band?
06:57 - About his love life and what his type is
08:38 - Who is the real David Lee Roth
09:29 - How Roth is a bit of a loner, and his need for attention
10:21 - How he’s critical of other bands
12:03 - Roth does a freestyle rap. (Not kidding, not A.I.)
12:52 - His first and other jobs as a teenager
14:01 - Who manages his money
14:39 - Where his next adventure will be
15:05 - How does he defend the criticism that he’s a bad role model
15:55 - What’s next for Van Halen
16:29 - What’s the Van Halen groupie scene like
17:02 - The Hot For Teacher video
17:42 - The auditions for his music videos
18:42 - What would he want on his tombstone
19:04 - Answering machines
19:44 - What he wants back
19:55 - A scene he likes from the movie Cotton Club
20:41 - His Harley Davidson
21:41 - What type of car he drives
22:11 - His height and weight
22:41 - The movie Amadeus
23:10 - He was just offered a low-budget film
23:57 - Who’s going to remember him in 500 years
A never-published interview with the Red Rocker Sammy Hagar. At the time of this interview in 1997, Hagar was 50 years old, freshly out of Van Halen, and promoting his new album Marching to Mars and his upcoming tour. In the interview, Hagar talks in detail about how he saw the break-up between him and Van Halen, his dislike for manager Ray Daniels, and his new musician best buddy Mickey Hart.
00:00 - Intro to Sammy Hagar interview
01:21 - Why his new album is not more aggressive after being fired from Van Halen
03:38 - Detailed backstory on why it ended with Van Halen and him
05:16 - How manager Ray Danniels wanted more than his fair share of money
07:08 - All about greed and lack of integrity
07:47 - What he thinks Eddie Van Halen lied about
08:43 - Why did he still thank Van Halen on his new album
09:50 - The support of his fans
10:34 - His disappointment in Eddie and Alex Van Halen
11:50 - How does he think the upcoming Van Halen record with Gary Cherone will do
12:55 - How Eddie Van Halen is a musician, not a songwriter
13:38 - How Van Halen hired a 72-year-old to help with lyrics
14:00 - All the producers’ Van Halen went through
14:44 - If Van Halen’s next album fails with Cherone how will Hagar feel
15:43 - How Michael Anthony was mistreated in Van Halen
16:50 - What Los Tres Gusanos is
17:13 - What are the stand-out songs on his new album Marching to Mars
18:28 - How he got together with Grateful Dead’s Mickey Hart
19:49 - Mickey Hart as a musician
20:28 - His touring plans
21:37 - The business side of his tour
22:51 - Did he get to talk to David Lee Roth and the difference in their Gary Cherone stories
24:15 - When he finally busted Eddie Van Halen
25:02 - What would he change if he were the overlord of pop music
26:40 - What else does he have going on
A never-published interview with Alex Van Halen. At the time of this interview in 1995, Alex was 42 years old and was promoting an upcoming Van Halen concert in British Columbia, Canada. In the interview, Alex talks about growing up and playing with his brother Eddie Van Halen, "For Unlawful Carnal Knowledge" producer Bruce Fairbairn, and the best thing about being in Van Halen.
The interview is conducted by a Tapes Archive contributor, Canadian music journalist and author Steve Newton. During his four decades as a freelance music writer, he has interviewed everyone from AC/DC to ZZTop. We highly recommend that you head over to his Patreon page patreon.com/earofnewt and check out over 400 of his exclusive interviews. For only $5, you get full access. We are not paid for this endorsement; we truly feel it’s money well spent.
Read Newton's article based on this interview: https://bit.ly/3YOyBnI
Link to Newton's Patreon page: https://bit.ly/3WQBr9S
For zero money, you can head over to Newton’s website, earofnewt.com, where he has posted more than 3,000 of his interviews, album reviews, concert reviews, and horror movie reviews.
Link to Newton's website: https://bit.ly/3ij9GIa
00:00 - Intro
01:38 - Start of Alex Van Halen Interview
02:06 - His earliest memories of playing with his brother, Eddie Van Halen, and his dad’s musical career
03:24 - Who the Van Halen brothers would try to emulate musically
03:43 - Who were his drum gods when he first started playing
04:39 - Playing with his dad’s Jazz band and if he took lessons
05:39 - If Eddie was part of his dad’s band
05:52 - When did he know Eddie Van Halen would be a legend and his own guitar-playing
06:31 - Did he know early on how big Van Halen would become, and early days with the LA club scene
07:00 - The night Warner Brothers saw them for the first time
08:43 - What’s his favorite David Lee Roth Van Halen album is
09:29 - The essence and core of Van Halen
10:03 - How Sammy Hagar could have replaced Roth back in 1978
10:57 - How Van Halen has evolved since Sammy Hagar joined the band.
11:58 - How producer Bruce Fairbairn got involved in producing “For Unlawful Carnal Knowledge”
13:34 - Van Halen’s process in picking a producer
14:38 - Does he have any input into writing Van Halen songs?
15:53 - How much longer does he see Van Halen rocking?
16:26 - What’s the best thing about being in Van Halen
16:41 - Alex talks about Van Halen’s USA Harvest can drive
18:02 - Alex gives the name of the person Steve should talk to to get backstage.
In this episode, we have Eddie Van Halen and Michael Anthony. At the time of this interview in 1989, Van Halen was in Japan promoting their OU812 tour and record.. In the interview, Van Halen talks about how Eddie wants to be remembered when he dies, David Lee Roth and Ted Templeman, their album OU812, why Eddie is still not 100% sober, and so much more.
We have also added a bonus interview with Eddie alone from 1985.
The interview is conducted by Steve Harris. To learn more about Steve, please check out our podcast-only interview with him, which is out now.
00:00 - Intro
01:03 - Start to Eddie Van Halen Michael Anthony interview
01:15 - Is there a formula to make hit records?
01:45 - Eddie Van Halen enters the conversation
02:34 - Is Van Halen more like a family?
03:03 - If David Lee Roth is a businessman
04:13 - Is OU812 more straightforward?
05:38 - How has the age of fans affected the music?
06:42 - How Eddie wants to be remembered when he dies
07:06 - What separates Eddie from his clones
07:43 - Eddie talks about Jimmy Page
08:28 - Can Van Halen burn out musically?
08:55 - His playing when he first learned to play
09:35 - If they think as they get older, they lose certain things
09:59 - If they ever go back to the older Van Halen music and why he build 5150
11:03 - If Eddie ever becomes too indulgent
12:02 - How much input do producers have? Talks about Ted Templeman and Mick Jones
12:45 - David Lee Roth and Ted Templeman’s theory on covering hit songs
13:46 - Guns ’n Roses
14:12 - Drugs and drinking
14:51 - Did Eddie ever go too far with partying?
15:31 - With David Lee Roth leaving, did that lift a cloud?
16:09 - Does Eddie need to drink to write music?
18:03 - Did Eddie and Al go sober at the request of their father?
18:40 - Eddie tells the band to calm down during their first tour
19:22 - Van Halen band meetings
19:48 - Is Van Halen a democracy?
20:33 - What would Eddie have done if he wasn’t a guitarist
21:21 - Eddie talks about playing piano as a kid
23:09 - Does Van Halen bring out violent impulses from fans?
23:42 - Does he like any current bands?
24:27 - Sammy Hagar walks in
24:56 - Why Eddie started playing guitar [Start of the interview from 1985]
25:58 - Was his guitar like his friend
26:51 - Al and Eddie money making scam
28:08 - How Eddie depends on Alex, and how Al took over Ed’s drums
30:58 - What makes Van Halen good?
32:17 - When did Ed know Van Halen was something special?
32:51 - His love for his guitar and family
34:52 - What will it take for him to realize people appreciate him
35:56 - Eddie avoiding fame
36:28 - Why does he go onstage?
37:34 - Does he feel like a rockstar?
38:18 - What he dreamt of when he first started with Van Halen
38:53 - Alex throwing drumsticks at him
40:36 - Why he detunes
41:18 - He hates books
42:28 - The backstory to the song Girl Gone Bad
44:05 - Why was 1984 important to Eddie’s mental health?
44:56 - Eddie Van Halen plays Crossroads
47:50 - How old was he when he learned Crossroads?
48:10 - Is he happy while playing?
48:41 - Why he likes being alone
49:00 - Have people told him he was nuts?
49:15 - How has the success of 1984 changed him
50:06 - Did he think Jump would be a hit?
50:49 - Does he get pleasure from playing music?
51:40 - Could anyone play like Eddie?
In this episode, we have the one and only Diamond David Lee Roth. At the time of this interview in 1988, Roth was 34 years old and was promoting his Skyscraper tour and record.. In the interview, Roth talks about Diamond Enterprises, if he thinks Ed and Al are sober, and what’s wrong with Van Halen, and he critiques Axl Rose, Ozzy, and Bon Jovi.
The interview is conducted by Steve Harris. To learn more about Steve, please check out our podcast-only interview with him, which is out now.
Link to captioned version
In the interview, Roth talks about:
If he displays himself as the wild man of rock and roll
If he’s different on stage than off?
What’s Diamond Enterprises
If he considers himself a dictator
His street smarts
If he follows what everyone else is doing
The work you must put in
Who is his mentors
If he’s perceived the way he wants to be
His two friends
What drives him
What crowd he fit in with as a kid
Where he developed his flamboyant swagger
If he resented being bussed into minority schools
How Steve Vai stacks up to Eddie Van Halen
The toughness to his music and lyrics.
If he can see the quality in other people immediately
If he’s one big heap of ego
If he listens to his own records
His onstage presence
What’s wrong with Van Halen
How it was different with him in the band
Eddie and Alex on the wagon
Roth goes off the record about Ed and Al’s sobriety
Why he isn’t lucky in love
His critique of Axl Rose
His critique of Ozzy Osbourne
His critique of Brian Wilson
His critique of Bon Jovi
In this episode, we have one of the greatest heavy metal vocalists of all time, Ronnie James Dio. At the time of the interview in 1985, Dio was 43 years old and was promoting his Sacred Heart album and tour.
In the interview, Dio talks about filling Ozzy Osbourne’s shoes in Black Sabbath, a mystical experience that almost killed his wife, his thoughts on Ritchie Blackmore’s playing, and his metal all-star project Hear ‘n Aid.
The interview is conducted by a new Tapes Archive contributor, Canadian music journalist and author Steve Newton. During his four decades as a freelance music writer, he has interviewed everyone from AC/DC to ZZTop. We highly recommend that you head over to his Patreon page patreon.com/earofnewt and check out over 340 of his exclusive interviews. For only $5, you get full access. We are not paid for this endorsement; we truly feel it’s money well spent.
Link to Newton's Patreon page: https://bit.ly/3WQBr9S
For zero money, you can head over to Newton’s website, earofnewt.com, where he has posted more than 3,000 of his interviews, album reviews, concert reviews, and horror movie reviews.
Link to Newton's website: https://bit.ly/3ij9GIa
00:00 - Intro
01:41 - Start of the Ronnie James Dio interview
01:53 - The Sacred Heart tour
02:42 - His project Hear ’n Aid and whose playing on it
04:05 - How he writes music while watching sports
04:33 - What his first instrument was and if he liked it
05:10 - His love for classical music and how it relates to guitar players
06:21 - Why anyone can like classical music
07:15 - What other singers he admires
08:12 - How well Sacred Heart is doing sales wise
08:58 - If the PMRC has affected him
09:24 - If he’s interested in the occult
09:53 - His strange mystical experience while recording Rainbow’s “Long Live Rock ’n’ Roll”
10:15 - An evil spirit who tried to kill his wife, Wendy Dio
10:55 - Filling Ozzy Osbourne’s shoes in his former band Black Sabbath
12:50 - What he thinks of Ozzy’s solo music
13:37 - If he thinks Heaven and Hell paved the way for a resurgence of heavy metal
13:49 - His favorite tunes he did with Black Sabbath
14:19 - If he wants to produce other bands
14:55 - If it’s true he has a degree in Pharmacy
15:05 - If he’s still friends with Ritchie Blackmore and what he thinks of his guitar playing
15:41 - His thoughts on Yngwie Malmsteen
16:05 - His kindness to Steve Newton
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In this episode, we have Black Sabbath’s guitarist and the godfather of heavy metal, Tony Iommi.
At the time of the interview in 1984, Iommi was 36 years old and was promoting Black Sabbath’s Born Again album and tour.
In the interview, Iommi talks about Ian Gillian joining Black Sabbath and blowing up his boat, thoughts on Ozzy Osbourne remaking old Sabbath tunes, the Born Again live show, Randy Rhoads, and how he really did disturb the priest.
The interview is conducted by a new Tapes Archive contributor, Canadian music journalist and author Steve Newton. During his four decades as a freelance music writer, he has interviewed everyone from AC/DC to ZZTop. We highly recommend that you head over to his Patreon page patreon.com/earofnewt and check out over 340 of his exclusive interviews. For only $5, you get full access. We are not paid for this endorsement; we truly feel it’s money well spent.
Link to Newton's Patreon page: https://bit.ly/3WQBr9S
For zero money, you can head over to Newton’s website, earofnewt.com, where he has posted more than 3,000 of his interviews, album reviews, concert reviews, and horror movie reviews.
Link to Newton's website: https://bit.ly/3ij9GIa
00:00 - Intro
01:44 - Start of Tony Iommi Interview
02:07 - Ian Gillian joining Black Sabbath
02:21 - Playing Deep Purple’s Smoke on the Water
03:02 - Why Ronnie James Dio left Black Sabbath
03:22 - The addition of Bev Bevan from ELO
03:58 - If former Sabbath drummer Bill Ward will be back
04:13 - The story behind Black Sabbath’s song Disturbing the Priest
04:50 - Blowing up Ian Gillian’s boat
05:18 - The comparison between Black Sabbath’s debut album and Born Again
06:10 - His thoughts about former bandmate Ozzy Osbourne’s music
06:22 - What he thought of Randy Rhoads
06:34 - On Ozzy remaking old Black Sabbath songs
07:06 - Black Sabbath’s influence on other bands
07:46 - What music does he listen to
08:11 - A very surprising favorite song of Iommi’s
08:23 - Talks about Born Again’s live show.
09:33 - Iommi plays a bit of a joke on Newton
09:58 - Why growing up he did not think he would play the guitar
10:26 - His main influences on guitar
10:48 - How he doesn’t actually play a Gibson SG
11:58 - His current amps
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
In this never before-heard 2016 interview, Vai talks with author Greg Renoff about the landmark David Lee Roth album Eat ‘Em and Smile. At the time, it was the 30th anniversary of the iconic album.
In the interview, Vai talks about the song he thought he wrote but didn’t, the jock that wasn’t happy with Vai, the rumored Kim Mitchell song, and the infamous Lucky Strike reunion show that didn't happen.
The interview is conducted by Greg Renoff. Renoff is the author of two Amazon best-sellers and a must-read for music fans. Van Halen Rising: How a Southern California Backyard Party Band Saved Heavy Metal and Ted Templeman: A Platinum Producer's Life in Music. If you haven't read these books, do yourself a favor and go get them now.
Read Greg Renoff's article based on this interview over on Guitar World. https://bit.ly/3eMS1Xf
00:00 - Intro Steve Vai interview
01:20 - Start of Steve Vai interview
02:00 - The first time David Lee Roth called Vai
02:17 - Pete Angelus and the Fabulous Picasso Brothers
02:42 - Who was involved with the choreography
03:19 - If Aerosmith was involved
04:44 - Was the Kim Mitchell song Kids in Action recorded?
05:16 - Other possible guitar players
05:56 - What Vai has no memory of
06:58 - The song Vai thought he wrote, but didn’t
09:39 - What Roth’s name for Kids in Action was and why
10:18 - Leaking to the press
10:53 - Getting a hold of Roth
12:25 - Early memories with Roth
13:54 - The jock vs Vai story
15:00 - The very first Roth concert he played
16:23 - How Roth was his final mentor
17:49 - If Roth’s movie was originally for Van Halen
18:34 - If he’d do a reunion with the Eat ‘Em Smile band
19:27 - The infamous Lucky Strike concert
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
PLEASE WATCH ON YOUTUBE.
https://youtu.be/ui_kEJ7C3O0
The documentary has hundreds of Vai-centric facts and stories that even the most ardent fan will not have known. Complete with a Vai’esque quirky sense of humor, the video covers Vai’s life growing up, attending Berklee College, playing with several artists like Frank Zappa, Alcatrazz, the David Lee Roth band, and Whitesnake, the recording of both his solo albums Flex-Able and Passion and Warfare, plus Vai’s role in the movie Crossroads, and how he helped create the JEM guitar.
To watch the video version https://youtu.be/ui_kEJ7C3O0
Other information, photos, etc. can be found here: https://bit.ly/3B9P0ZH
Link to Arlen Roth's SoundCloud https://bit.ly/3cLQHTL
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PLEASE WATCH ON YOUTUBE.
You can watch the video version here. https://youtu.be/A6GTf6rOepQ
We take a look at Black Sabbath's masterful third album Master of Reality.
For more information including other credits, articles, and images, please go here. https://bit.ly/385aj2L
Timestamps:
00:00 - Start
00:43 - Intro
01:19 - Evil Woman and Paranoid
02:29 - Changing Management
03:07 - Jim Simpson is fired
03:37 - Sabbath plays Top of the Pops
04:22 - Was Sabbath a bubblegum band?
05:13 - John Peel hates on Sabbath
06:04 - Sabbath’s Peel Sessions
06:35 - John Peel talks about Sabbath
07:05 - Sabbath’s ban on singles
07:41 - Sabbath and Satan
08:54 - First attempt going to the US
10:14 - Confusion with Black Widow
11:31 - Sabbath using Satan for their benefit
13:08 - Coming to America
13:55 - The trial of Charles Manson
14:35 - Arriving in the United States
15:01 - Sabbath’s first concert in the United States
16:20 - Blowing the Small Faces off the stage
16:43 - Playing the West Coast
17:02 - Smoking Angel Dust with Joe Walsh
17:55 - Was there a parade in Sabbath’s honor?
18:40 - Ending the year 1970
20:06 - First day in the studio
20:42 - Spanish Sid
21:14 - Weevil Women 71
21:30 - Paranoid comes out in the United States
21:52 - Myponga Festival
22:13 - Denied entry to Japan
22:44 - The Four Musketeers
23:10 - Touring the United States for Paranoid
23:50 - Playing Union Catholic High School
25:53 - Returning to England
26:31 - Ozzy and his first family
28:10 - Master of Reality will be heavy
29:05 - Tunning down
30:17 - Why they called the album Master of Reality
30:37 - Sweet Leaf
33:51 - Ghost Titles
34:28 - After Forever
34:49 - Geezer Butler as a priest
37:59 - Children of the Grave
39:15 - Mars Bringer of War
40:13 - The Haunting
41:04 - Orchid
42:07 - Lord of this World
44:14 - Solitude
45:52 - Tony Iommi in Jethro Tull
47:35 - Into the Void
49:09 - Soundgarden does their version of Into the Void
51:35 - Various versions of Master of Reality
53:25 - Master of Reality Radio promo
54:02 - Black Sabbath’s Golden Ticket
55:01 - Reception of Master of Reality
55:46 - Nobody but the public digs Sabbath
57:00 - Outro
57:36 - Credits
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PLEASE WATCH ON YOUTUBE.
https://youtu.be/CH8c4TKrIOo
Sabotage is the sixth studio album by metal pioneers Black Sabbath, released in 1975. It was recorded in the midst of litigation with their former manager Patrick Meehan. The stress that resulted from the band’s ongoing legal woes infiltrated the recording process, inspiring the album’s title.
This documentary looks at all the drama surrounding the band at the time and how shady managers took advantage of Sabbath’s kind nature. The video also examines every song on the album and offers up unearthed facts some fans may have never known.
– Intro
– Writing and Recording Sabotage
– The Tale of the Mangers
– Why Sabbath needed to break away from their first manager
– Don Arden’s thugs
– Jimmy Page gets Threatened
– Don Arden making moves
– The introduction to Patrick Meehan Jr.
– Jim Simpson sues the band
– Some Sabbath Success
– Sabbath starts to crack
– Tony Iommi collapses
– A religious freak tries to stab Tony
– Manipulation by Management
– California Jam Festival
– Quotes from Ozzy/Geezer/Tony on Meehan
– The dark reality of their finances
– The worst part
– Does Sabbath even need a manager?
– Don Arden comes back
– The shadow cast from Patrick Meehan
– Crap Compilations
– Meehan robbing Sabbath
– Sabbath is beginning to fracture
– Crank it up! “Hole in the Sky”
– “Don’t Start (Too Late)”
– Symptom of the Universe
– “Megalomania”
– “Thrill of It All”
– “Supertzar”
– “Am I Going Insane (Radio)”
– “The Writ”
– The band Queen diss track
– “Blow on the Jug”
– The Making of Sabotage’s Album cover
– Reception of Sabotage
– One more stick in the gut by Meehan
– Closing thoughts
– Who made this video?
Credits:
Editor/Writer/Voice/Producer: Alan Berry
Co-Writers:
Mark Enochs
Jason C, aka Godshifter
For all credits go here https://www.thetapesarchive.com/black-sabbath-sabotage-documentary/
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
In this episode, we have the Ramones’ frontman, Joey Ramone. At the time of this interview in 1988, Ramone was 37 years old and was in Japan for a tour.
In the interview, Ramone talks about whether he considers The Ramones a punk band, the most exciting time in music history, how most bands lack originality, and whether rock and roll have paid him back for all of The Ramones' contributions.
The interview is conducted by Steve Harris. To learn more about Steve, please check out our podcast-only interview with him, which is out now. You can find the podcast at thetapesarchive.com.
In the interview, Ramone talks about:
The distinctive sound of The Ramones
How most bands lack originality
The most exciting period for music
His admiration for David Byrne
What The Ramones did with their influences
Why he loved The New York Dolls
His thoughts on David Johansen
Whether he considers The Ramones a punk band
Whether he considers himself a punk
How the Ramones are commercial without trying to be commercial
How he feels about bands like Bon Jovi and Poison
Whether there is a flaw in the kids that likes that type of music
How The Ramones are a multi-dimensional band
Why they wrote "Bonzo Goes To Bitburg" and participated in “Sun City”
Ramones Aid
Whether decades from now will he be still singing “Blitzkrieg Bop”
Why the Rolling Stones can go on forever
How The Ramones are always changing
His reaction to hearing that The Ramones are a big influence in Japan
Whether he thinks rock and roll has sufficiently paid him back for all The Ramones’ contributions
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A never-before-published and first known interview with Boston's original singer Brad Delp.
At the time of this interview in 1978, Delp was 27 years old and was in the midst of recording Boston’s second record.
Two years earlier, Boston released what would become the best-selling debut album of all time until Guns ‘N Roses’ first album.
Full transcript The Tapes Archive
In the interview, Delp talks about how the second album is coming along, if the band Boston is a democracy, his feelings on a recent insult from Elvis Costello, and his self-doubt.
00:00 - Intro
01:04 - Where is the new album? (Start of interview)
01:42 - The flooding of Tom Scholz’s basement
02:59 - Whether the band has recorded any new songs
04:28 - What happens when Tom gets a song idea
05:22 - How the record company feels about a two-year delay between albums
06:51 - Whether he was surprised by the success of the first album
07:17 - His self-doubt
08:45 - The history of Boston and how he got involved in the band
10:40 - The cover songs they played
11:08 - His love for the Beatles
12:42 - How they got signed to Epic Records
14:59 - What type of record deal they got
16:14 - Their “horrendous” early concerts
17:16 - Playing with Black Sabbath
17:59 - What his thoughts on Elvis Costello saying about Boston, “They may sell 9 million records, but they’re about as exciting as a plate of tripe.”
19:21 - Looking up to Rick Derringer
20:40 - How many overdubs were made on the first album
22:03 - What kind of an audience Boston has
23:30 - How the Beatles got him into music
24:16 - Whether the band Boston is a democracy
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
A never-before-published interview with Adrian Belew from 1981.
Full transcript The Tapes Archive
In this episode, we have a multi-instrumentalist and the secret weapon for so many bands, Adrian Belew. At the time of this interview in 1981, Belew was 31 years old and was promoting King Crimson’s album Discipline. In the interview, Belew talks about various aspects of playing with the Talking Heads, Frank Zappa, David Bowie, and King Crimson. He goes in-depth on King Crimson’s Discipline, he tells the story about when he got jumped by a gang and finishes the interview telling Marc about his deep love for his family.
In the interview, Belew talks about:
What brought him to King Crimson
Where is currently with the Talking Heads
How he expresses his own personality in the band
The “D” section of Elephant Talk and the meaning behind it
His part in the writing of the album
How he gets that elephant sound
What the lyrics in the song Indiscipline represent
The song Matte Kudasai
What Frame by Frame is about
How his being in the band frees up Robert Fripp
How well Fripp and drummer Bill Bruford get along
If King Crimson as a band has malice and ill will as a constant part of its daily diet
The dynamics of King Crimson
His own plans for solo work
The meaning of the song Thela Hun Ginjeet and how he was beaten up by a gang
Why they don’t play 21st Century Schizoid Man
Younger audiences
What he thinks is attracting new fans to King Crimson
What his solo albums will be like and who’s playing with him
His fascination with rhinos
Where he grew up
Starting with David Bowie
His assessment of the King Crimson’s show at the Metro
How he looks like Mark Knopfler
How he was blasted the night Fripp called him
His surprise when Fripp wanted to call the lineup King Crimson
The very beginnings of his career
His first band
If he is the most famous alumnus from his high school
If Frank Zappa was tough to work for
His Bob Dylan impersonation
If had any problems with Zappa’s lyrics
Why he left Zappa’s band
His deep love for his family
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In this episode, we have a founding member of The Who, Pete Townshend. At the time of this interview in 1996, Townshend was 51 years old and was promoting his greatest hits record. In the interview, Townshend talks about his plan to no longer make records, the remixing process of Quadrophenia, what’s now important to him, and finding a Jimi Hendrix master in his warehouse.
The interview is conducted by Steve Harris. To learn more about Steve please check out our podcast-only interview with him, which is out now.
Full transcript
00:00 - Intro
01:00 - Start of Pete Townshend interview
01:38 - His non-defined image of himself
04:19 - His ability to write story-oriented albums
05:41 - Why it’s very hard to write songs
06:51 - His plan to no longer make records
08:26 - Why he is releasing a compilation album
09:33 - The notion that he hates the Japanese
11:30 - Developing Quadrophenia for a concert theater piece
12:57 - Which album he thinks is The Who’s best
15:08 - The backstory of when The Who revived ‘Quadrophenia’ for Prince’s Trust Concert
18:58 - Remastering old Who albums
20:23 - Writing chamber plays
21:32 - The difficulty of working in movies
22:26 - His lack of enjoyment for music theater
23:28 - What connects music from the ’50s and animation
24:37 - What’s important to him now
26:12 - The remixing process of Quadrophenia
26:57 - The previous poor mastering process of Who records
28:36 - Finding a Jimi Hendrix master in his warehouse
29:38 - The unfinished rock opera “Lifehouse”
32:04 - The mods 30 years later
33:35 - What he found hypocritical playing Black music
37:39 - Chapter 25
39:01 - The songwriting that went into “My Generation”
41:32 - Kurt Cobain and the song “My Generation”
43:18 - Seeing Jimi Hendrix a couple of weeks before he died
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A never-before-published interview with Roger Daltrey from 1994.
In the interview, Daltrey talks about:
Whether he has gotten his due from his solo albums
Which album was a writing breakthrough for him
Why he thinks fans have a hard time accepting him outside of The Who
What’s great about The Who’s music
Why The Who isn’t touring
How hard it is singing Who songs
How anger changes in middle age
If he feels competitive with Pete Townshend
If he knew Townshend was competing with him
How Tommy really became a hit record
Why Townshend is the way he is about The Who
Why it was a constant struggle to make more records
How he feels everyone in the band but Pete did not get the recognition they deserved
The chemistry in the band
What was something he was proud of from the Carnegie Hall gig
Playing with the Spin Doctors on the Dave Letterman show.
How his upcoming concert differs from the Carnegie Hall show
What Townshend said to him after the Carnegie show
The challenges with the Carnegie Hall concert
The bad sound at Carnegie Hall
When he knew he was going to take the show on the road
Whether he ever considered hitting the road with a three-member rock band
Whether they considered playing Woodstock ‘94
The story of how he started spinning the microphone
How the music biz is so “bloody corporate”
Whether he thinks he will ever just sit back and relax
Whether he goes to see his contemporaries in concert
Whether he worries he’s going to disappoint fans
Why didn’t the Who do encores
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In this episode, we have Guns N’ Roses frontman Axl Rose. At the time of this interview in 1987, Rose was 25 years old and was promoting an upcoming tour of Japan. Appetite for Destruction hadn’t even cracked the top-selling 50 albums, and it would be at least another seven months before the band really took off. In the interview, Rose talks about growing up in Indiana, the making of Appetite for Destruction, whether he murdered a dog, and which band is the biggest sellout.
The interview is conducted by Steve Harris. To learn more about Steve, who is new to The Tapes Archive team, please check out our podcast-only interview with him which is out now.
In the interview, Rose talks about:
Going back home to Indiana
How closed off Indiana is
What he draws from conservatism
How he left home at age 16
Whether he murdered a dog
Guns N’ Roses’ early success in England
How the crowds are different in the United States
Gaining more confidence as a live band
Fred Coury, Cinderella, playing for Steven Adler
How he stays fit for concerts
Whether he’s ready for a long tour
People he aspires to be
Mötley Crüe
The recording process for Appetite for Destruction
What would he change on the album
Producers who were considered before Mike Clink
Paul Stanley of KISS as a potential producer
His vision for the record
What success means to him
Whether it bothers him to be compared with Faster Pussycat and Poison
How long it took to get the right lineup for Guns N’ Roses
The tepid response so far to Appetite for Destruction
The limited radio and video play the band was getting
What happens if Appetite for Destruction sells poorly
Slash drinking and driving
What he will do if he leaves the music biz
Working with Izzy Stradlin
When he is happiest
When he is most frustrated
Why he feels Guns N’ Roses is not getting played on the radio
What band he thinks is the biggest sellout
His hopes that Sweet Child O’ MIne will be a hit
Whether he objects to being labeled as heavy metal
His love for the band Queen
Robert Plant, Jimmy Page and Pete Townshend
His thoughts on fellow Hoosier John Mellencamp
How he and Izzy cannot wait to play Japan
Some ‘80’s racist comments that were not considered racist at the time
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Today we are releasing two interviews -- one with Axl Rose and one with the man who interviewed him, Steve Harris.
Steve grew up in San Francisco but went to Japan as a college exchange student and loved it there. He felt like it was the place for him. After graduating in 1980, he started to work as a freelance translator in Tokyo. Through one of his college buddies, he got connected to a music magazine that needed an interpreter. This led to Harris conducting interviews himself. Over the next 17 years, Steve would interview the biggest of names in the music world. Recently, we asked if we could publish some of those interviews here on the Tapes Archive and he agreed. Over the next couple of months, we will be publishing some of his most notable interviews.
Marc Allan, our usual interviewer, called Steve to talk about his life as an ex-pat working for a Japanese music magazine.
They talked about:
The magazine Steve worked for and its unique place in the market
His worst interview and some of his best
His personal musical hero he was able to interview
His thoughts on interviews with Axl Rose, David Lee Roth, Pete Townshend, and more.
Why he kept these recordings and why he is allowing us to publish them
How some questions would get lost in translation and would lead to awkward moments.
His frustrations when he interviewed “slacker genius” Beck
What led him to leave the music scene in 1997
A very funny conversation with Brian Eno about Russian women
He clears up the question of whether Cheap Trick is big in Japan
Marc tells the story of when he was called “old man” at a Rage Against the Machine concert and how he got his job at the Indianapolis Star
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