Wolfgang's VaultWolfgang’s Vault:

Black Sabbath Concert

Convention Hall (Asbury Park, NJ)

Black Sabbath

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

share on facebook seed newsvine delicious bookmarks StumbleUpon
  • Bromoe | Monday, January 05, 2009 | 10:59 am

    Black Sabbath = The Heavy Metal / Hard Rock Foundation! Ward and Butler never got their due. Yet,those two layed the back breaking, head banging tempo and timing for Tony's art work. Ozzy may have not been able to sing, but his raspy, raw scowl was what this music needed. Pound for pound and lick for lick, Sabbath was as good as it gets.

  • paul (b b wolf) | Wednesday, December 31, 2008 | 1:00 am

    This reminds me of seeing Sabbath at Southampton Gaumont when they were supported by Van Halen. That was a later tour, but I am reminded of Iommi's astonishing supremacy as a guitarist. The gig I am refering to came just as Van Halen were being acknowledged as the new force - Van Halen I was a revolutionary album, driven by a revolutionary new guitarist. They performed fantastically on the night. Running with the Devil, and Eruption, seemed to take rocknroll to a new level. Eddie danced and pranced and played his guitar like a piano and so on. So assured. At the interval I was fearful that my old favourites were about to be blown away - that they, and Tony I in particular would not be able to compete. Of course I needn't have worried. When your back catalogue contains at least 3 of the top ten riffs of all time (and maybe 6 of the top 20 come to think of it) you always have a fighters chance of setting the stage alight. I don't count Symptom of the Universe in that top 20, but it is one of the great show openers. Three bars in I couldn't even remember my own name, never mind the name of the support act! But what about Tony? How would he deal with the challenge of Eddie? Well, he just reminded me of what I should have known. I'd heard his hammer-on solo before. But perhaps I'd never really known how to listen to it before. As usual, when the time came he just took a little step forward (he's not a prancing kind of guy). He was older, slower, less melodic than Eddie.... wasn't he? Older yes. Nothing to do about that. But that night he played so fast it was barely possible to keep up. He was literally two or three times faster than Eddie at his fastest. I don't think I've ever heard Michael Angelo or Yngwie or Mcgloughlin or any shredder play faster. And although of course he has never played conventional rock melodies, his unique phrases sounded like he was inventing new musical idioms at about the same speed as he was shredding out notes. Hendrix was the one we all admired, but let's be honest, wasn't Iommi the one we all wanted to _be_. The most important musical voice of his generation. Thanks Wolfgang's Vault, for reminding me of all this!

  • fleetwood | Friday, December 26, 2008 | 7:48 pm

    It is ridiculous how good these guys were. Holy shit.

  • RelayerBob | Thursday, December 25, 2008 | 10:24 pm

    My first concert was Black Sabbath about one month after this was recoerded. unbelievable show. Amazing musicianship and showmanship. RJD was OK, but there was no replacing Ozzy. Tony was totally on the night I saw them.

  • mrentertainmentusa | Tuesday, December 23, 2008 | 7:52 pm

    I agree with The Wolf: Black Sabbath has never had such a real "frontman's frontman" as Ozzy and never will! I also agree, however, that Heaven and Hell (and the now-67-year-old RJD - still kicking ass!) was phenomenal, and liked Dehumanizer with Dio, as well. But just listening to Ozzy and realizing that any ONE of songs in this show is a challenge for me to sing any more is astounding! Even if he got some of his "mojo" from drugs in order to perform, he had the raw talent that one can easily hear growing from the first (extremely primitive, vocally) album to Sabbath, Bloody Sabbath - a classic rock or metal album - any way you slice it, baby!

  • diamond dave 77 | Thursday, December 18, 2008 | 2:49 pm

    This Chicago show was my first concert and as a young kid that knew all the songs I was spent when they threw us out after midnight. Long live BILL WARD

  • Anonymous | Thursday, December 18, 2008 | 2:01 pm

    i wish i could see their original line up...born in 89 so ill probably never see em. unless something happens to sharon osbourne...keeping my fingers crossed

  • Anonymous | Sunday, December 07, 2008 | 6:42 pm

    I too was at this show: still have the ticket stub. Cost: $6.30 back then. IF memory serves, we booed opening act, Chick Korea, off the stage and we waited 2 hrs for Sabbath to begin...damn near blew us out of the back of the Convention Ctr. Loved evey minute if it!

  • thomas_foxe | Sunday, December 07, 2008 | 1:04 am

    Domenick has a great point too! Sabbath was great back in the day! with Ozzy

  • thomas_foxe | Sunday, December 07, 2008 | 1:02 am

    Hey! Ronnie James held his own & Heaven & Hell was one of Sabbaths best "albums" ever! Seen them in London in 1981 & it was like "wow!" They were excellent! Of course, Sabbath Bloody Sabbath comes in a close 2nd

To post your comment please either choose your screen name or elect to remain anonymous

screen name
anonymous set preferences