It was nerve-wracking, because we knew we were recording it. When you do a regular show, after the last song it's over and done with, but when it's recorded everybody can see and hear it afterwards forever and ever. Also it was a hometown gig, which made us even more nervous. Friends were coming. Brian May was there and Cozy and Neil as well. As a matter of fact, the four of us went out for dinner to a Chinese restaurant afterwards.
Even so, we were all happy to be able to play together again. I think it went better than we expected. As a matter of fact, it went great!
I went over to the A&M Studios in Hollywood to mix the live album with Bob Marlette. Then these guys from the record company came down and said: âWhy don't you write two new songs for the album?'
âEh . . . right. Now?'
âNow!'
âOh. What, me and Bob?'
Because we were the only ones there.
âNo, we'll get Ozzy down as well.'
To write a song in the middle of a mix is not a particularly good idea. You've got your head around how everything should sound, and then you don't want to be thinking, what are we going to write, how do we start? And if you don't have the band to start jamming, and you don't even have Ozzy half the time, it's bloody difficult. We just dropped the mix and started working on the new songs. I had no ideas lying around, so I had to come up with something there and then. It was a good thing I had a guitar there! And off we went.
Blimey.
Bob Marlette used programmed drums, just so that I could put the riff ideas down. That's how we did it with âPsycho Man': I played a riff and he put a drum to the riff, and then we'd build it up like that. Ozzy came down and disappeared and came down again and went and sat in the other room and got a sandwich and fell asleep and whatever else he did. Quite often he dozed off on the couch in the control room while we were putting the song together. One time he was spark out and then woke up to go to the toilet. He was gone for about twenty-five, thirty minutes. We thought, where the bloody hell is he? We need him now!
We sent somebody out to look for him, but the guy came back and said: âI can't find him. He might have gone home.'
We phoned his home, but he wasn't there.
âWhere the fuck is he?'
Even Tony, the guy who works for him and never leaves his side, didn't have a clue. Then we heard all this commotion in the hallway. It was another band, and they were going: âOh man, Ozzy Osbourne is in our studio. He's asleep on the couch!'
We thought, oh, no!
Ozzy had come out of the toilet, half asleep, and he didn't remember what studio we were in. He'd gone into their studio, right in the middle of their recording session, and he'd fallen asleep on their couch. They were out in the studio, playing away, and they came back into the control room and found him snoring away. They were in awe of him, so they weren't about to tell him to leave. We sent somebody in to get him, but in the meantime Ozzy had woken up, come back into our studio, and, hovering about, he'd knocked a full pint of water into the recording desk and the bloody thing blew up!
But when Ozzy was awake at our own session he'd be all enthusiastic: âOh yeah, I like this!'
It was the first time I actually saw him write lyrics down and
really get involved in it. We wrote the songs and recorded Ozzy's and my bits in one day. It was too fast, we never had time to live with them, but the guy from Sony Records was standing outside, waiting to hear them. We got Geezer and Bill to come in later to put their parts down. And that was it. We had the two tracks, âPsycho Man' and âSelling My Soul', but I wasn't pleased with them. It could've been so much better if we'd had more time to work on them.
At the time it didn't lead to plans for a new studio album. It was only later, right before Ozzy started
The Osbournes
, that we actually went into the studio to write a new album. We were there for three or four weeks and managed to put about six ideas down. It wasn't a very full band effort. We had a go but it was a bit like pulling teeth. We'd jam for a bit and put stuff down, but then Ozzy would disappear or fall asleep on the couch again, or he'd go to make the fire and he'd come in and say: âWould you like a cup of tea?'
âOkay.'
And then he'd disappear again for two hours.
âWhat happened to the tea?'
It was like it used to be in the old days. He just didn't have enough of an attention span to stand there and work a song over. But that's Ozzy, that's just how he is.
Still, we could have done an album. We got the six songs and the idea of Rick Rubin producing the album was brought up. Geezer, Ozzy and myself went to see him at his house in LA. There was a bloke who came in to greet us, he sat us down and we waited. After about ten minutes Rick Rubin came in. I'd never met him and didn't know what to expect, but he was definitely a character. He was wearing a kaftan and he was like an old hippie in some ways, like a Buddha. Very calm.
We played him the stuff and he liked about three of the tracks. And that was it: we never saw him again and we never followed it
up. It fizzled out because Ozzy started with his television show
The Osbournes
. It's a shame, because if everybody had been involved and really got off their arses, we could've come up with something good.
I still have those six songs somewhere. We didn't do anything with them, but that was as close as we ever got to recording a new album.
77
Cozy's crash
In April 1998 I was in LA at the Sunset Marquis hotel when I got a call from Ralph. He said: âI'm really sorry to tell you that Cozy has been killed in a car crash.'
It was a real shock. I was just stunned.
All the years I knew Cozy, he was a bit of a wild character. I've been with him in the car a few times and he was a very good driver, but he went so fast I was terrified. He used to drive around the track in his old Ferrari, because he liked speed. He also had a couple of big motorbikes and he really tore ass on those things. When we recorded
Headless Cross
with Cozy at Woodcray back in 1988, he'd come down on his bike and sometimes, when he'd had a right few drinks, I'd take his keys off him and hide them so that he couldn't ride home. He'd go: âWhere's my keys?'
âYou're not going to drive home like that!'
âI'm all right, I'm all right.'
The old âI'm all right' thing. But he'd have to stay.
They were fast Yamaha bikes and I thought, one of these days he's going to come off one of them. I didn't expect it in a car. And when I heard what happened, it was bloody awful.
Cozy was seeing this girl. She was married but separated, or
separating, and she had problems with her husband. Cozy was at home and he'd had a few drinks, as he tended to, and she called him all upset and said: âCan you come over quick?'
Cozy lived about thirty or forty miles away from her. He flew down the motorway in his Saab, quite a quick car. While he was driving towards her she phoned him up. âWhere are you?'
âI'm on my way.'
While they were on the phone, she heard him go: âOh, shit!'
And the next thing: bang!
I think it was raining at the time. Cozy wasn't wearing a seatbelt. He hit something and went straight through the windscreen. What a complete and utter waste of such a talented musician and good mate.
78
Bill, Vinny, and Bill and Vinny
With the
Reunion
album in the can, we planned a fully fledged tour with the original line-up and in May 1998 we went into rehearsals for it. It had been twenty years since the four of us had worked like that. This time we tried to communicate properly by talking things through, instead of going in like bulls in a china shop. Instead of: âWe're doing this', or even: âLet's do this and let's do that', everybody was going: âWhat do you think, shall we do this?'
We had a laugh and worked well together again. It was good because we were prepping to do something we knew. We just rehearsed through the songs. Ozzy would sing them and leave, and then we usually ran through them again on our own. On 19 May we were running through the show and, when we got to âParanoid', the final song, Bill said: âCor, I feel really strange. Is it all right if I have a lie-down?'
âYeah, go and have a lie-down.'
I took him upstairs and he got into bed and said: âCould you ask my assistant to come up?'
âSure.'
âJust to give me a massage for a bit, because my arm's gone a bit numb.'
I never thought anything of it. Me and Geezer went out for a bit of fresh air and walked up the drive and then down the road. We saw this ambulance come flying past and we jokingly said: âBill!'
We always did; any time we saw something like that it was always: âAh, Bill.'
And, bloody hell, this time, sure enough, it was. Minutes later we saw the ambulance flying past again in the opposite direction, taking him to the hospital. We got back and Ozzy was going: âBill has had a heart attack! Bill has had a heart attack!'
âChrist, that was the ambulance then?'
âYeah, that was Bill!'
They took him to the closest hospital about twenty miles away. He had to stay there for a while and obviously couldn't play.
We didn't cancel the tour. We asked Vinny Appice to stand in for Bill while he was convalescing. We'd been working with Vinny on and off with Ronnie and Bill always liked him, so it just seemed the way to go. Vinny was fine with it; he came in and rehearsed with us, and then we did the tour of Europe with him.
We had rehearsed songs we hadn't played for years. When we started off, we had a two and a half hour show. It killed me because it was a long set, but it was great. We were playing a lot of other songs besides the regular, routine ones.
The tour started off in June in Hungary. Certainly in the beginning it went really well. The Milton Keynes Bowl, with bands like Foo Fighters, Pantera, Slayer and Soulfly, was one of the highlights. Bill came to that gig; it was nice of him to turn up. We got him on stage and the audience loved seeing him. He was standing there in his tracky pants and I couldn't help it because they were all loose and, whoosh!, I pulled them down in front of all those people. Typical me and Bill. I used to do that all the time to him and, of course, this was an ideal opportunity. He just stood there, pulled them up and took no notice. He's a real character like that.
In October 1998 the
Reunion
album was finally released. Our label, Epic, organised a record-signing tour of eight cities in America for the four of us, including Bill Ward. They put us in the St Regis Hotel in New York. It was incredibly expensive: every room came with its own butler. We used that hotel as our base and we had a private jet to fly us out to Dallas or wherever it was we had to do the signings and radio interviews and anything else. We'd do the business and fly back to New York again.
Meanwhile, we had so many people coming to the stores where we did our album signings that it got out of hand. Sometimes security was rough on the crowds. We ended up saying to our tour manager: âThey can't do this to the kids, pushing them around and being aggressive with them like that. They are fans, they should take it easy on them!'
We did one in a mall and the whole place was packed. I'd never seen that, signings in the middle of a shopping mall. These appearances at record shops were really good, if not a little too successful.
We also did the
Late Show with David Letterman
, our first TV appearance together in twenty-three years. I was bit worried, because I wondered what it would be like to do âParanoid' with a live audience in a talk show like that. I thought Letterman and his people would be a bit snooty about it, but they were really nice. David was in and out, really; we saw him on the night when he came to say hello and shook our hands. We talked to him but not a lot. We saw Paul Shaffer during the sound check and had a chat with him. He might have asked if he could play, but we just did it with the four of us. And that was it. We played, it went down great, and good night.
We started off our American tour on New Year's Eve in Phoenix, Arizona. That was the one Maria came over for. It was a big gig.
We always had a big fireworks display afterwards, so we could leave without getting stuck in the traffic of people trying to get out
at the same time. We always got off stage and then left immediately.
Bill was back with us for this tour, but we took Vinny along as well. We didn't want Bill to strain himself. As much as he said: âI'm all right', we were concerned he might feel rough one night, and go: âI don't feel well, I can't play.' Also, with Vinny there, if he got over-exhausted he could say: âI can't play these two songs, I need a rest', and Vinny could step in. I thought this would be good for Bill's peace of mind as well, but I heard later that he was actually offended by the fact that we had Vinny up there. But none of us meant it in a bad way; we were just concerned about Bill. We never used Vinny anyway, because Bill played great and stayed healthy. As a matter of fact, I got flu and Ozzy caught a cold, but Bill was as fit as a fiddle.
Bill couldn't drink, Geezer wasn't drinking and Ozzy wasn't supposed to be drinking, so the only one drinking was me. We each had our own bus and a trailer as well, and there I had wine and champagne and whatever else. I wouldn't flaunt it in front of everybody and it was actually awkward when Ozzy came in. He'd often visit me in my trailer, and I never wanted to drink around him, so for me it also turned out to be a rather dry tour.