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Ozzy Osbourne
Ozzy Osbourne 「Patient Number 9 [CD+Magazine]」 CD
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商品の情報
| 発売日:2022年09月09日 / ジャンル:ROCK/POP / フォーマット:CD / 構成数:2 / 製造国:輸入 / レーベル:Epic / SKU:194399443026 / 規格品番:194399443026 |
商品の紹介
| Against all odds, Ozzy Osbournes 2020s output has been as strong if not stronger than the vast majority of his multi-decade discography. His 12th studio solo album, 2020s Ordinary Man, sounded rejuvenated and inspired, with its moments of hard-hitting, Sabbath-echoing greatness far outnumbering its few by-the-numbers clunkers. Ozzy hadnt turned in a studio LP for ten years before Ordinary Man, but his 13th album, Patient Number 9, arrives just two relatively short years after its predecessor and carries a similar crackle of reactivated excitement. Part of what keeps things lively is the all-star cast of guest guitarists that show up on almost every track. Eric Clapton, Jeff Beck, and Pearl Jams Mike McCready all contribute lead parts and solos to various songs, but some of the records best moments come when Ozzy reunites with guitar heroes from his past. Zakk Wylde plays on tracks like the tense downtempo groover "Evil Shuffle" and the Beatles-informed angst ballad "Nothing Feels Right," a song that imagines a world where Ozzy sang in Soundgarden circa "Black Hole Sun." Perhaps most substantially, Black Sabbaths own Tony Iommi makes appearances on multiple songs, marking the first time he has played on one of Osbournes solo albums. Ordinary Man tapped into a distinctively Sabbath-esque intensity at times, and adding Iommis menacing shredding to already Sabbath-modeled tunes further highlights the similarities. His churning blues-metal riffing (along with the haunted harmonica) on "Degradation Rules" takes notes from various Sabbath moments, and "No Escape from Now" applies the exact spaced-out vocal effect that made "Planet Caravan" such a surreal trip. Ozzys sound has always included a fine-tuned balance of powerhouse riffing and hooks derived from the more sinister reaches of pop, and that formula continues here. Rather than the fairly straightforward arrangements of Ordinary Man, however, Patient Number 9 gets into more involved song structures and riskier production moves. The seven-plus-minute title track kicks off the set, sounding at first like a standard Ozzy fantasy about being trapped in a corrupt asylum, but quickly branching out into extended soloing from Jeff Beck, a psychedelic breakdown midway through the song, and most unexpectedly a lengthy prog-flavored outro. Theres also a fairly blatant use of Auto-Tune on the vocals of several songs, adding to the albums surreal sheen. While confusion and depravity have been favorite topics for Ozzy since 1969, he links these familiar emotions to themes of mortality and time running out throughout Patient Number 9. It makes sense that Osbourne would be writing with his eyes on the clock after a half-century run that included years of very public substance abuse issues and, as life went on, serious health struggles. Even with that fatalistic perspective sometimes peeking through, Ozzy sounds hypercharged throughout Patient Number 9, continuing the unlikely late-in-the-game comeback he began on Ordinary Man, and besting that album by taking more chances. ~ Fred Thomas |
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収録内容
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・構成数 | 2 |