Ozzy Osbourne
On 27 April 1979, while Black
Sabbath were in rehearsals in Los Angeles, Ozzy Osbourne was
dismissed from the band on the grounds that he was a drunkard
and a drug addict. At the age of 30, Ozzy thought he was
finished.
Sabbath's manager, Don Arden - an infamous hard man nicknamed
'the Al Capone of pop' - sent Ozzy to the Le Parc hotel and
there the singer hid himself away, humiliated and depressed.
With his wife Thelma and his two children back home in
England, Ozzy attempted to numb his pain in the only way he knew
how; with alcohol, cocaine, weed and a string of one-night
stands. He opened his door only to drug dealers, for booze and
pizza deliveries, or for a few well-informed groupies who had
managed to track him down.
Sharon Arden, Don's daughter, worked for her father's firm at
their LA office. At 27 she had spent most of her adult life
around rock bands. She first met Ozzy when she was just 18. Like
her father, Sharon had a tough, no-nonsense approach to
business.
When she visited Ozzy at Le Parc she was shocked at his
appearance and at the squalor in which he was living.
What Sharon Arden said to Ozzy that day would change his life
and save him from himself. She told him that she wanted to
manage him if he cleaned up his act.
The resurrection of Ozzy Osbourne would be on eof the most
unlikely comebacks in rock history - and one of the most
spectacular.
A few weeks after Sharon spoke to Ozzy at Le Parc, he met
guitarist Randy Rhoads for the first time. Under Sharon's
instructions he had begun auditioning musicians in LA (among
them, Gary Moore who had just left Thin
Lizzy). Rhoads (still officially a member of Quiet
Riot) was the only candidate who impressed.
Meeting up with Australian bass player Bob Daisley in the UK,
the trio began writing and rehearsing and auditioning drummers.
They eventually gelled with Lee Kerslake (ex-Uriah
Heep).
The band began recording Blizzard of Ozz in March 1980
at Ridge Farm Studios in rural Surrey. The album was completed
in four weeks. The LP was a performance of astonishing authority
that redefined Ozzy's entire career.

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