Prince of Darkness
Download links and information about Prince of Darkness by Ozzy Osbourne. This album was released in 2005 and it belongs to Rock, Hard Rock, Metal, Heavy Metal genres. It contains 52 tracks with total duration of 04:07:59 minutes.
Artist: | Ozzy Osbourne |
---|---|
Release date: | 2005 |
Genre: | Rock, Hard Rock, Metal, Heavy Metal |
Tracks: | 52 |
Duration: | 04:07:59 |
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Tracks
[Edit]No. | Title | Length |
---|---|---|
1. | I Don't Know | 5:01 |
2. | Mr. Crowley | 4:55 |
3. | Crazy Train | 4:49 |
4. | Goodbye to Romance | 5:23 |
5. | Suicide Solution | 7:56 |
6. | Over the Mountain | 4:31 |
7. | Flying High Again | 4:24 |
8. | You Can't Kill Rock and Roll | 6:43 |
9. | Diary of a Madman | 6:12 |
10. | Bark at the Moon | 4:22 |
11. | Spiders | 4:28 |
12. | Rock 'n' Roll Rebel | 5:22 |
13. | You're No Different | 5:49 |
14. | Ultimate Sin | 4:34 |
15. | Never Know Why | 4:34 |
16. | Thank God for the Bomb | 3:59 |
17. | Crazy Babies | 4:15 |
18. | Breakin' All the Rules | 5:12 |
19. | I Don't Want to Change The World | 3:55 |
20. | Mama, I'm Coming Home | 4:08 |
21. | Desire | 5:00 |
22. | No More Tears | 7:23 |
23. | Won't Be Coming Home (S.I.N.) | 4:59 |
24. | Perry Mason | 5:54 |
25. | See You on the Other Side | 6:34 |
26. | Walk On Water | 4:41 |
27. | Gets Me Through | 4:26 |
28. | Bang Bang (You're Dead) | 4:33 |
29. | Dreamer | 4:45 |
30. | Iron Man (featuring Therapy?) | 5:26 |
31. | N.I.B. | 5:57 |
32. | Purple Haze | 4:20 |
33. | Pictures of Matchstick Men | 6:00 |
34. | Shake Your Head (Let's Go to Bed) | 3:55 |
35. | Born to Be Wild | 3:29 |
36. | Nowhere to Run (Vapor Trail) (featuring The Crystal Method) | 4:43 |
37. | Psycho Man (featuring Black Sabbath) | 5:18 |
38. | For Heaven's Sake 2000 (featuring Tony Iommi) | 4:55 |
39. | I Ain't No Nice Guy | 4:15 |
40. | Therapy (featuring Infectious Grooves) | 3:24 |
41. | Stayin' Alive | 4:39 |
42. | Dog, The Bounty Hunter | 0:53 |
43. | 21st Century Schizoid Man | 3:52 |
44. | Mississippi Queen | 4:09 |
45. | All the Young Dudes | 4:34 |
46. | In My Life | 3:29 |
47. | Fire | 4:09 |
48. | For What It's Worth | 3:20 |
49. | Sympathy for the Devil | 7:10 |
50. | Working Class Hero | 3:23 |
51. | Good Times | 3:46 |
52. | Changes (featuring Kelly Osbourne) | 4:06 |
Details
[Edit]It's surprising that with all of the media attention aimed at Ozzy Osbourne, the self-crowned "Prince of Darkness," since his debut as the perpetually numb rock star dad on The Osbournes, it took so long for his incredibly savvy marketing-machine/wife to put out a proper box set. Here you have an artist who fronted one of the world's most influential and coveted heavy metal bands and put out a string of excellent solo albums and singles, then went on television and became the world's most gawked-at wreck on the pop culture highway since Michael Jackson turned white and hijacked Diana Ross' nose. The four-disc set aims to satisfy fans of both Osbourne personas. Discs one and two storm through the singer's '80s and '90s solo heydays with an emphasis on previously unreleased live recordings ("Goodbye to Romance"), B-sides ("Spiders"), as well as classics like "Flying High Again" and "Crazy Train." Disc three is a compilation of bizarre collaborations with everyone from Kim Basinger ("Shake Your Head [Let's Go to Bed]") to Miss Piggy ("Born to Be Wild") to Dweezil Zappa ("Staying Alive") that culminates in an oddly affecting ballad ("I Ain't No Nice Guy") with Motörhead mouthpiece Lemmy Kilmister. Disc four features newly recorded covers, some that work (King Crimson's "21st Century Schizoid Man" and Mountain's "Mississippi Queen" were tailor-made for Osbourne's wily vocal style) and some that don't ("For What It's Worth" and "All the Young Dudes," the latter featuring a very manic Ian Hunter guest vocal that sounds more like an old man stuck in his bathroom than it does a rowdy call to arms). Osbourne states in the beginning of the impressive 40-page booklet that he "wasn't terribly happy about the prospect of repackaging and reissuing another compilation of the same songs you can get on another one of my albums," and the care that's been put into heeding his sentiments is apparent throughout, but one has to wonder whether or not it's fair to the man himself.