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Black Sabbath Concert

Convention Hall (Asbury Park, NJ)

Black Sabbath concert at Convention Hall on Aug 5, 1975

08.05.1975
Tracks: 18 / Total Time: 1:39:34
Catalog: King Biscuit

Avg Rating:

Concert Summary

Zeppelin might have made the mold, but Sabbath crushed the mold into a fine powder, snorted it, and proceeded to scare the hell out of everybody.

Not as musically ambitious as that other monolithic four-piece from England, Black Sabbath in their prime did one thing and did it better than anybody, making a uniquely terrifying brand out of the HUGEST riffs anywhere and a strange contrast of druggy utopian fantasies with the bleak, end-of-the-world industrialism of their native Birmingham. This is the sound…entire summary

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  • KarlHuber | Sunday, November 01, 2009 | 9:53 am

    I saw the same set Oct 1975 in Munich together with my mother(!) - I was 14. The location was "Circus Krone", a quite small "round hall", not more than 1500 people. Concerts where a very "physical" experience - The band directly in front of you, walls of amplifiers 5 meters behind them, in the middle a gigantic drum kit, and enormous PA towers left and right - Loud like hell. Great!

  • platermanuk | Sunday, October 25, 2009 | 1:14 pm

    Sabbath were always best with Ozzy, he was always best with Sabbath. Ronny James Dio (that squeeking midget) isnt fit to sniff his piss, and certainly should have thought twice about the terrible "Heaven and Hell" tour he did a couple of years ago. I went to the original Heaven and Hell tour and 3/4 of the audience left about half way through when Dio started doing Rainbow songs. Sounds daft now but felt like betrayal at the time. Against my better judgement I went to the M.E.N arena to see the "H&H" tour. If I had paid for the ticket myself I would have left again. According to Dio, the band had been formed just for him, to do that one album. Felt like throwing things at the preening dwarf

  • dcb1 | Thursday, October 22, 2009 | 9:33 pm

    SORRY ANONYMOUS, ZEPPELIN WAS THERE YEARS BEFORE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  • billybeng | Saturday, August 08, 2009 | 10:51 am

    if anyone is interested 3 songs from this show Hole in the Sky, Symptom of the Universe and Megalomania are available on the Past Lives cd that was released back in 2002. hope the rest of this great show makes it out someday along with the complete California Jam video from 1974.Sabbath at their peak could not be topped!! ROCK ON!!!

  • kidnya | Monday, August 03, 2009 | 7:29 pm

    This was the very first concert I ever saw and I just turned 14! (I still can't believe my mother let me go, different days the 70s. I saw things at this show I'll never forget and it made me a lifelong Sabbath fan.

  • Classixroxs | Tuesday, July 21, 2009 | 6:27 pm

    Thanks Jedeco.....anyone who's ever heard "Snowblind" can agree with BS being at their best as a group...It's one of my fav Sabbath songs...I agree with you...Randy Rhoades was one of the best rock guitarists ever....I don't think he would have fit in with Sabbath as Tony Iommi did the power chords( which gave Sabbath their heavy feel) better...but RR and Ozzy were PERFECT together....Ozzy was never as good after RR died..

  • jedeco | Thursday, July 09, 2009 | 8:03 pm

    @Classixrox I agree about sabbath being best as a group. Ozzy did very on his own, but it was never the same. Although i must say I thoroughly enjoyed every Ozzy show I've been to. In 1980 a friend and I saw the "Blizzard of Ozz" and I gotta tell you, if you didn't get a chance to see Randy Rhodes live, he was almost the best rock guitarist I've ever seen. I still give EVH the nod, but back then most of the people at that show only knew it was Ozzy and a band...they came to see him. They didn't know about Randy or Rudy Sarzo for that matter, but everyone knew who he was after that show. Damn that little guy could play. It was the buzz afterwards and anyone else I ran into that saw Randy in his short lifetime feels they are somehow better off for it. He was just a tiny dude, but he carried a big guitar! ;) I mean if I try and compare Tony Iommi to Randy Rhodes, well it just can't be done. Tony Iommi invented the power chord IMHO. He pioneered many techniques and is a living legend. In many ways he has more accolades than Randy Rhodes for certain. Hard to say how it would stack up if Randy had not gotten on that plane, but as for pure musicianship, Randy was just far superior. If I had to choose which one to sit through a 20 minute guitar solo, it would be Randy. He was a guitar God and still is. I don't mean to sound...whatever it is I sound like...and I'm being too chatty here, but it's a tossup for me personally. I loved Sabbath since I was 14 or 15 years old and started buying 8 tracks at this shady kind of place in town that sold cheap copies (they wer actual copied very well and sounded close to the original actually. Maybe they were legal, I was never sure) but I was intrigued by Sabbath. They were rarely covered in the magazines I checked out back then and had a mystique and I grew to love that big powerful sound. You could always count on it to do it for you, you know. But I love most of the Ozzy solo albums I own too. And the solo Ozzy shows were always great. From Randy to Brad Gillis (temporarily filling in for Randy) to Jake Lee to Zakk Wylde Ozzy (or Sharon) always managed to get a top notch lead guitarist and I loved each one of them. Another favorite concert of mine was in the Jake Lee era. I woke up that day with no thoughts of going to see Ozzy who I knew was in Buffalo that night but later in the afternoon a friend said we should just drive up and see what kind of tickets we can get. He had an old forestry club cab International pickup (still painted the same forestry green) we found 2 other friends and headed up just as a party kind of thing. We got there about 45 minutes before the show and knew the old Buffalo Auditorium would have "orange" seats. It wasn't sold out. But we decide to drive a short distance down Delaware Ave to Central tickets and it was king of surreal. They guy smiled when we asked if he still had any decent tickets and he said "how would 10th row, center be. I guess we weren't in the know about it, but apparently the ticket outlets, at least in that day, would sell any reserved seating the band or other VIPs had if there were no shows etc. It was our lucky day, that's all we knew. Great show, great seats...had to put cigarette filters in our ears for some protection. It was a 3 band show with a band named "Wasted" opening up, which featured some ex-UFO members (not Michael Schenker...i think maybe the bassist and drummer and I didn't know their names), then Motley Crue was next with a quite large stage set for an opener...they were on the verge of breaking into headlining and put on a great performance, then Ozzy delivered big time. Watching Jake Lee close up was a treat. Another guitar great. He was tremendous. I'm sorry, i've been to over 30 concerts and could ramble on about every one of them. I must go...really am sorry to go on. Rock on.

  • jedeco | Thursday, July 09, 2009 | 7:21 pm

    This was great. Loved it. Wish i had been there. I'm 47 and saw the "Never Say Die" tour at a small general admission fieldhouse in Erie Pa. I was 16, almost 17 and Black Sabbath was my favorite group. Van Halen was the warm up band and I gotta say, even being my first concert (first concert is like your first kiss, first car and stuff like that you know) and being totally psyched for Sabbath, Van Halen upstaged them, and I didn't even really know who VH was at that point...hadn't heard their debut album before the show, but there was no denying we were seeing the beginning of something great. We were about 30' from EVH's side of the stage...Eruption blew us away. I think it was better in the shorter version , over the years it grew into a 15 minute solo. They did about 40 minutes, which was long for a warm up band in that era, as i came to find out and I have to say it.....Black Sabbath rocked and i loved 'em, but it was kind of a let down after that Van Halen set. They were holding nothing back. You have to love those old general admission shows too, with no security inside. It was like a big festival every concert and they were peaceful. Then the cops started policing them in the early 80s sometime. The reserved seat, policed shows were the end of a great time and era.

  • Classixroxs | Monday, June 29, 2009 | 5:31 pm

    The Masters of Metal at work...this rocks..... No one did it better than Black Sabbath at their best.....they were always (arguably) better than they were individually ( You can make a case for OZZY) but NO BAND WAS BETTER AT METAL!

  • Anonymous | Monday, June 22, 2009 | 10:55 pm

    justsimplybrilliant

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