Paranoid |
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Released: September 18, 1970 Peak: 12 US, 11 UK, 20 CN, 4 AU Sales (in millions): 4.0 US, 0.2 UK, 4.52 world (includes US and UK), 34.22 EAS Genre: heavy metal |
Tracks:Song Title [time] (date of single release, chart peaks) Click for codes to charts.
Total Running Time: 41:51 The Players:
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Rating:4.561 out of 5.00 (average of 23 ratings)
Quotable:“Paranoid defined the sound and style of heavy metal more than any other record in rock history.” – Steve Huey, AllMusic.comAwards:(Click on award to learn more). |
About the Album:After Black Sabbath (originally called Polka Tulk Blues Band) TL recorded their debut self-titled album, they toured Europe for six weeks and then headed right back to the studio. Considering the negative reviews from the rock press, bassist Geezer Butler said, “it felt like the four of us against the world.” LW They didn’t realize what a loyal fan base they were developing in the U.S. Their main goal was to prove to their families that they weren’t wasting time on music. LWThe band’s second effort, Paranoid, is “the most influential album in the history of heavy metal.” CM “Metal is what it is now because of this very record.” PM It carved out “an essential metal template.” PF “Radical songwriting. Ear-shattering riffs. Unforgettable vocals. An all-time great rhythm section. Even a slower love song set in outer space. Paranoid had it all.“ NPR The Band“Paranoid transformed the landscape of metal” PM with “a dizzying onslaught of distortion and bass-heavy power chords” CS thanks to “Tony Iommi’s crushing, granite-fuzz guitar chords,” 500 “the weighty basslines of Geezer Butler and the pounding percussion of Bill Ward.” PMWith his “eruptive screech,” PM lead singer Ozzy Osbourne delivered vocals “in line with the eerie, apocalyptic nature of the music.” PM He sang “as if chained up somewhere down the corridor.” TB When he “screams, he sounds like he wants to drag you down to the bottom of the ocean and eat your brain.” VB He “would eventually be respected as one of rock’s great showmen and the father of heavy metal.” CS Their BackgroundThe band wouldn’t be the same without their factory hometown of Birmingham, England. Joel McIver, who wrote two books about them, says, “You cannot separate the environment of Black Sabbath from the music that they made.” NPR The town was ravaged by bombing in World War II and the future looked bleak for anyone born in the late 1940s, such as the members of Black Sabbath. As McIver said, “your future was 45 years on a factory assembly line.” NPRAbandoning the Book of Rock“Sabbath took the Book of Rock and handed it on with 90 percent of its pages missing: blues, psychedelia, hippie mysticism, soul basslines, folk, rock ‘n’ roll – you name it, Sabbath dumped it. And they were asexual, immune to the erotic pulse that dated back to Elvis’ gyrations.” TB Their songs weren’t about girls, cars, and partying but about death, doom, and destruction. Black Sabbath’s reinvention of rock and roll came to define heavy metal.The Big Three“Sabbath is rivaled only by Led Zeppelin and Deep Purple as the most important early metal act.” CS “The metal bands with huge libidos borrow from Led Zeppelin” TB but musically “Zeppelin incorporated a great deal of folk and blues into their songs.” CS “The flashy neo-progressives look up to Deep Purple” TB who were “as much progressive rock as it was metal.” CS However, Black Sabbath were “the first pure-metal band, with every song thunderous, weighty, and bordering on chaos.” CSThe Sound and Look of Heavy MetalBlack Sabbath owed its unique sound to Iommi who, because he’d lost the tips of two fingers while working in a sheet-metal factory, lowered his guitar tuning and fashioned prosthetic fingertips from bottle caps. Butler then also lowered his tuning to match Iommi. This practice of “downtuning” “became such standard practice in heavy metal that it has come to define the sound as much as the guitar’s distortion and the volume at which the songs are meant to be played.” CSThe band’s second effort, Paranoid, furthered the template Black Sabbath established with their self-titled debut. The band subdued the blues influences prevalent on their first album CQ by refining their “signature sound – crushingly loud, minor-key dirges loosely based on heavy blues-rock – and applied it to a newly consistent set of songs with utterly memorable riffs, most of which now rank as all-time metal classics.” AM It is “monolithic and primally powerful,” AM “heavier than seven lead elephants [and] metaller than a fork factory.” VB Quite simply, “Paranoid defined the sound and style of heavy metal more than any other record in rock history.” AM “Nearly every heavy-metal and extreme rock band of the last three decades…owes [it] a debt of worship.” 500 It “set the standard against which all heavy music would forever be judged.” GW It is “the landmark in the history of heavy metal.” CR The band’s followers created “an entire wardrobe of black leather, heavy jewelry, and brooding complexions that would come to define the world-weary posture of heavy-metal fandom.” CS By giving the music a defining sound and look, Black Sabbath would “launch heavy metal not just as a genre but also a veritable industry.” PF The Songwriting and RecordingThe songwriting was much more systematic than on the first album. Iommi would start the process with “one of his killer massive roaring riffs.” CR Ozzy would work on melodies for the vocals, Butler would pen most of the lyrics, and then Ward would “top it off with a pounding beat to complement Butler’s thunderous bass.” CR“Iommi’s stump-fingered leads and down-tuned riffs provided the perfect platform for songs about war-mongering generals, boots-wearing skinheads and nuclear fallout.” GW The album “perfectly captured the rage, confusion and, yes, paranoia of the Vietnam era” GW as well as “the struggles of Britain’s working class.” PM “The subject matter is unrelentingly, obsessively dark.” AM “Listeners hear their basic existential fears amplified so that they sound like the end of the world.” CM It’s as if “the band members were tasked to deliver warnings of doom to the world.” CR The themes “that we must atone for the inherent evil of mankind” TM came to define “the philosophical disposition of heavy metal” TM by becoming “the obsessions of every other band aspiring to hardness.” TM With only six days in the studio (an eternity compared to the one day they had for their first album), LW they recorded the songs as if playing a live concert. The songs had largely been written on the road while the band toured in support of Black Sabbath. SatanismThe band’s “alling was to express downer sentiments evoked by pentatonic riffs fit to make a television evangelist’s head revolve.” TB When the album was released, “the world was convinced that these working-class chums…were either satanists or an incredible facsimile.” TL Ozzy Osbourne’s biting-the-heads-off-bats incident didn’t come until he’d embarked on a solo career, but he had people nervous with his “declaration that he had sat through The Exorcist a gazillion times.” TLOzzy once told an interviewer, “We’ve never done anything really devilish. Perhaps Tony has sacrificed a few too many virgins in his time, but nothing you could really call wrong.” CS The SongsHere are insights into individual songs.“War Pigs” Lines like “Satan laughing spreads his wings” furthered the image of the band as Satanic, but it wasn’t about the devil at all. Butler said, “To me, war was the big Satan. It wasn’t about politics or government or anything. It was evil. So I was sying ‘Generals gathered in the masses / Just like witches at black masses’ to make an analogy.” LW It's also worth noting that the album was originally to be called War Pigs and the artwork had been designed with that in mind. As Tony Iommi said, “There’s a guy standing there with a shield and a sword, with the album title called Paranoid…’What’s that have to do with Paranoid?” Well, nothing really. But that’s how it was.” LW
“Iron Man” The song found a whole new audience as the title song for 2008’s super-hero movie, Iron Man, starring Robert Downey, Jr. Of course, the original had nothing to do with the Marvel Comics character. It is “a surreal fantasy” PF “about a man who travels to the future and sees the apocalyptic destruction on mankind.” CR When returning to the present, he is turned to steel by a magnetic field and is rendered mute, leaving him unable to warn anyone about the apocalypse. “He’s ostracized and ignored he lashes out, iron fists falling on the city with the weight of Iommi’s monstrous riff and Ward’s colossal Bonham drums.” PF
“Paranoid” Tony Iommi wrote the “simple riff that chugged, paused, and kept prowling, like a predator always in search of its next meal” PF while the rest of the band headed to the bar. PF The song “foregrounds an adolescent sort of worry – about being depressed and not understanding the symptoms or root of it, about crying when others laugh, about breaking up with someone because ‘she couldn’t help me with my mind.’” PF “Butler sounds like he’s using a brick for a plectrum, but the arrangement is perfectly balanced, taking in drum cracks, doom-laden feedback, and clusters of electric punctuation that dazzle by way of contrast. The song is a pocket symphony: an Old Testament that successors will always look to.” CM The record company, Vertigo, heard a hit and issued the “three-minute assault” PF as a single just six months after the band had released its debut album. Vertigo also pushed for renaming the album Paranoid (instead of the originally planned War Pigs) “to remind potential customers of the song they’d seen four long-haired weirdos headbang to on Top of the Pops.” PF
“Hand of Doom” “Ozzy’s horizon-reaching yowl was made for songs like ‘Hand of Doom,’ where the rhythm virtually demands that head banging be invented.” CM “Electric Funeral” The “churning, discombobulated riff that underpins ‘Electric Funeral’…takes psychedelia to new extremes.” CM “Rat Salad” “Fairies Wear Boots” “Planet Caravan” Notes:A 2009 deluxe edition added a second disc of the album in a quadrophonic mix and a third disc of instrumental versions and versions with alternate lyrics. A 4-CD deluxe edition was released in 2016 which included two live 1970 shows, one from Montreux and one from Brussels. |
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Other Related DMDB Pages:First posted 2/18/2008; last updated 11/10/2024. |
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