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Black Sabbath - Discography @(320)

Infohash:

89ECA0B635EB73875E00CF2F912E95258FD2F687

Type:

Music

Title:

Black Sabbath - Discography @(320)

Category:

Audio/Music

Uploaded:

2009-07-31 (by rustyjerk)

Description:

Black Sabbath - Discography @(320) Artist...............: Black Sabbath Album................: Discography Genre................: Metal Source...............: 23 Alblums / 24 CDs Year.................: 1970-2007 Ripper...............: Exact Audio Copy (Secure mode) Codec................: LAME 3.96 Version..............: MPEG 1 Layer III Quality..............: Insane, (avg. bitrate: 320kbps) Channels.............: Stereo / 44100 hz Tags.................: , ID3 v2.3 Information..........: Redacted Ripped by............: SmurfCo on 5/3/2009 Posted by............: gc1966 on 5/3/2009 News Server..........: Redacted News Group(s)........: Redacted Included.............: NFO, PLS, M3U, SFV, Lyrics Covers...............: Front Back CD Inside Tracklisting 01. [1970] Black Sabbath - Black Sabbath 02. [1970] Black Sabbath - Paranoid 03. [1971] Black Sabbath - Master Of Reality 04. [1972] Black Sabbath - Vol. 4 05. [1973] Black Sabbath - Sabbath Bloody Sabbath 06. [1975] Black Sabbath - Sabotage 07. [1976] Black Sabbath - Technical Ecstasy 08. [1978] Black Sabbath - Never Say Die! 09. [1980] Black Sabbath - Heaven And Hell 10. [1980] Black Sabbath - Live At Last 11. [1981] Black Sabbath - Mob Rules 12. [1982] Black Sabbath - Live Evil 13. [1983] Black Sabbath - Born Again 14. [1986] Black Sabbath - Seventh Star 15. [1987] Black Sabbath - The Eternal Idol 16. [1989] Black Sabbath - Headless Cross 17. [1990] Black Sabbath - Feels Good To Me (Single) 18. [1990] Black Sabbath - Tyr 19. [1992] Black Sabbath - Dehumanizer 20. [1994] Black Sabbath - Cross Purposes 21. [1995] Black Sabbath - Cross Purposes Live 22. [1995] Black Sabbath - Forbidden 23. [2007] Black Sabbath - Live At Hammersmith Odeon Total Size...........: 2.57 GB NFO generated on.....: 5/3/2009 7:37:29 AM Biography Mixing equal parts bone-crushing volume, catatonic tempos, and ominous pronouncements of gloom and doom delivered in Ozzy Osbournes keening voice, Black Sabbath was the heavy-metal king of the 1970s. Often despised by mainstream rock critics and ignored by radio programmers, the group still managed to sell over 8 million albums before Osbourne departed for a solo career in 1979. The bands original lineup reunited for a two-year tour in 1997. The four original members, schoolmates from a working-class district of industrial Birmingham, England first joined forces as the Polka Tulk Blues Company, a blues band. They quickly changed their name to Earth, then, in 1969, to Black Sabbath; the name came from the title of a song written by bassist Geezer Butler, a fan of occult novelist Dennis Wheatley. It may also have been an homage to a Boris Karloff film. The quartets eponymously titled 1970 debut, recorded in two days, went to Number Eight in England and Number 23 in the U.S. A single, Paranoid, released in advance of the album of the same name, reached Number 4 in the U.K. later that year; it was the groups only Top 20 hit. The single didnt make the U.S. Top 40, but Paranoid, issued in early 1971, sold four million copies with virtually no radio airplay. Beginning in December 1970 Sabbath toured the States relentlessly. Despite the band members intense drug and alcohol abuse, the constant road work paid off, and by 1974 Black Sabbath was considered peerless among heavy-metal acts, its first five LPs all having sold at least a million copies apiece in America alone. In spite of their name, the crosses erected onstage, and songs dealing with apocalypse, death, and destruction, the band members insisted their interest in the black arts was nothing more than innocuous curiosity (the sort that led Ozzy Osbourne to sit through eight showings of The Exorcist), and in time Black Sabbaths princes-of-darkness image faded. Eventually, so did its record sales. Aside from a platinum best-of, We Sold Our Soul for Rock n Roll (1976), not one of three LPs from 1975 to 1978 went gold. Osbourne, racked by drug use and excessive drinking, quit the band briefly in late 1977 (ex Savoy Brown and Fleetwood Mac vocalist Dave Walker filled his shoes for some live dates). In January 1979 he was fired. Ronnie James Dio, formerly of Ritchie Blackmores Rainbow, replaced Osbourne. Although Dio could belt with the best of them, Sabbath would never be the same. Its first album with Dio, Heaven and Hell (1980), went platinum; its second, Mob Rules (1981), gold. But thereafter, the groups LPs sold fewer and fewer copies, as Black Sabbath went through one personnel change after another. Ill health forced Bill Ward out of the band in 1980; Carmine Appices brother Vinnie took his place. Friction between Iommi and Dio led the singer to quit angrily in 1982; he took Appice with him to start his own band, Dio. Vocalists over the years have included Dave Donato; Deep Purple singer Ian Gillan; Glenn Hughes, another ex-member of Purple; Tony Martin; and Dio again. By 1986s Seventh Star, only Iommi remained from the original lineup. He had to wince when Geezer Butler teamed up with the phenomenally successful Osbourne in 1988, though the bassist did return to the fold three years later. Despite bitterness expressed in the press between Osbourne and Iommi, the original foursome reunited in 1985 at the Live Aid concert in Philadelphia, and again in 1992, at the end of what was supposedly Osbournes last tour. Throughout 1993 word had it that Osbourne, Iommi, Butler, and Ward would tour, but by years end Osbourne had backed out, allegedly over money. The indefatigable Tony Iommi went right back to work with Butler, rehiring vocalist Tony Martin and adding former Rainbow drummer Rob Rondinelli. That lineup proved as unstable as the previous one, with drummers coming, going, and returning over the following years. Despite hiring Body Counts Ernie C to produce 1995s Forbidden (and inviting guest vocalist Ice-T to sing on a track), Black Sabbath seemed increasingly out of touch with the times, and at the end of the Forbidden Tour, the band unofficially went on hiatus. But not for long, as Iommi, Butler, and Osbourne reunited to headline 1997s Ozzfest. Ward was not invited (he was replaced by Faith No Mores Mike Bordin), but he did participate in two shows in the bands hometown of Birmingham, England, in December 1997. The resulting live album, Reunion (Number 11, 1998), also featured two new studio tracks, including the single Psycho Man. The album went platinum in the U.S., and the live version of Iron Man earned the band its first Grammy for Best Metal Performance nearly 30 years after the song was originally released. The ensuing tour lasted two years and ended in December 1999. Tony Iommi released his first solo album in 2000; a prestigious roster of guest singers (Osbourne, Billy Corgan, Henry Rollins, Dave Grohl) handled the vocals. Among metalheads, Iommi is something of a guitar god, due in part to the fact that he plays spectacularly despite having lost the tips of two right fingers in a welding accident at age 17. His hero was the great jazz guitarist Django Reinhardt, who also lost two fingers and yet continued to play. In mid-2001 it was announced that all original members were writing material for a new Black Sabbath album. In mid-2001 it was announced that all four original members were writing material for a new Black Sabbath album to be produced by Rick Rubin. The band scrapped all the material and the album never materialized, although Sabbath performed one new song, Scary Dreams, on that years Ozzfest. The band was put on hold throughout 2002 as Osbourne refocused on his solo music and new MTV reality show, The Osbournes, in which his family was portrayed as a sort of real-life Munsters. The band came back together for the 2004 and 2005 Ozzfest tours. In 2005, Black Sabbath was inducted into the UK Music Hall of Fame, and the following year, after many years of eligibility, the band made it into the US Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. In 2007, Iommi and Butler reunited with Appice and Dio to record new material for the compilation Black Sabbath: The Dio Years (Number 54); that configuration of the group toured as Heaven and Hell (to avoid being confused with the Osbourne-fronted Black Sabbath) into the year 2008. A new Heaven and Hell album is slated for 2009.

Files count:

420

Size:

2640.57 Mb

Trackers:

udp://tracker.openbittorrent.com:80
udp://open.demonii.com:1337
udp://tracker.coppersurfer.tk:6969
udp://exodus.desync.com:6969

Comments:

Berny1707 (2009-09-03)

0 seeders and 70 leechers ?

UncleDirt (2009-10-30)

Holy poop nuggets!!!!!!!

cam6389 (2009-11-27)

Ah can I jsut say.
I discovered theres something wrong with this torrent.
with the Vol 4 album
there a pretty big screw up.
'Tomorrow's Dream' is in there twice (2). Once under its actually track title, and again under 'Changes'.
'Laguna Sunrise' is also in there twice (2). Once under its track name and again under 'st. Vitus's Dance'
So altogether with the Vol. 4 album. Theres 2 tracks missing.
"Cornucopia"
"Under the Sun"

mrvain32 (2010-01-16)

I'm uploading your files under my name. Thanks for sharing...I've updated a lot of covers. Edited few things here & there. Hope you dont have any problem. You are credited though :
http://thepiratebay.se/user/mrvain32/
If there's any probs then I can remove the torrent.
Thanks

SabbraCadabbra (2012-04-22)

Can a brother get some seeds?