{‘People screamed. Cried. Threw up’: 10 Incredible Insights from Ozzy Osbourne’s Latest Memoir
“Here’s the thing, man,” reflects the late Ozzy Osbourne in his latest memoir. “Why would anybody want counsel from me?”
Indeed, he gave us Planet Caravan and numerous other iconic rock songs. But, by his own admission, Osbourne was also a lawbreaker, a deceiver and an addict, who routinely risked his and others’ lives and bit the head off a bat. (In his defence, he says, he thought it was a toy.)
For all his mistakes and misdemeanours, however, Osbourne appears favorably in Last Rites: self-aware, level-headed and hilariously blunt, and not just by rock star standards.
Osbourne passed away in July aged 76, less than three weeks after taking the stage with the founding Black Sabbath. Like a dispatch from beyond the grave, Last Rites documents his battles privately with Parkinson’s disease, risky spinal surgery in 2019 and successive complications.
But it wasn’t all bad, Osbourne notes, characteristically self-effacing: he also provided the voice for King Thrash in Trolls World Tour, and recorded a song with Post Malone.
Reflecting on his golden rule as the “Prince of Darkness”, he states: “I had 70 great years, which is a lot longer than I thought possible or likely deserved.” Below are 10 takeaways.
1. Where there’s a will, there’s a way
Osbourne credits his career to his dad, who purchased for him a sound equipment on installment plan for £250 – thousands of pounds in today’s money, and an “astronomical sum” for a factory-worker parent in Birmingham.
Ozzy’s biggest remorse was that he never thanked him: “Without that PA system, I’d never have left Aston.”
Aged 19, and fresh out of prison (for burglary), Osbourne put together his first band: the Polka Tulk Blues Band, inspired by his mum’s preferred brand of talcum powder. But they were consistently metal, in essence if not yet in name.
Tony Iommi, the guitarist and “de facto head” of Black Sabbath, severed the tips of two fingers in an industrial accident. Not to be dissuaded, “He just invented himself a set of new fingertips using an old Fairy Liquid bottle, then re-taught himself how to play,” Osbourne writes.
Later Ozzy displayed the same determination and enterprising spirit to get high, befriending every unscrupulous medical professional who’d write him a prescription. “At one point I had a larger circle who were dental anaesthesiologists than the average dental anaesthesiologist did.”
Two. Anything can be addictive if you’re an addict
As a “world-class” drug addict and alcoholic, Osbourne’s habits had a tendency to intensify. One pint of Guinness led to nine more, then cocaine, then pills; an attempt to quit smoking ended with him smoking 30 cigars a day.
His sole redeeming quality, Osbourne writes, was that he had “never, ever wanted to shoot up … Needles just terrify me, man.” More or less everything else was fair game, narcotic or no.
Ozzy recounts being addicted to all manner of drugs, of course, but also sex, fame, fast cars, Yorkshire Tea, English sweets, doodling, wordsearch books, “texting funny shit” to his mates and Peter Gabriel’s album So, which he played so much upon its release that his security guard was compelled to take stress leave.
At one point, Osbourne was eating so much ice-cream (vanilla and chocolate only, “sometimes strawberry”), he thought it would be more cost-effective to hire a chef to make it for him. “Big mistake … After a few weeks, I became pre-diabetic.”
Even his healthier habits became excessive. In Los Angeles, Osbourne got hooked on apples, and “none of that granny smith bullshit”: they had to be pink ladies, carefully chosen from the high-end LA grocer Erewhon. At his peak, Osbourne was eating 12 a night. “I guess I’m a former apple-a-holic now.”
Three. You can buy the Ferrari(s). It doesn’t mean you can drive
Osbourne’s last bender was in 2012. “The first sign of trouble,” he writes, was when he bought a Ferrari 458 Italia, then a second Ferrari 458 Italia, then an Audi R8 – despite never having learned to drive.
He took the exam in LA: a “piece of piss”, Osbourne writes. “All you’ve gotta do is navigate the block at this place in Hollywood and not crash into anything. They don’t even make you park, never mind do a hill start.”
But once back in Buckinghamshire, the Californian driving licence went to Ozzy’s head. He started drinking and driving to High Wycombe to buy coke. “To this day, I have absolutely no memory of ever going to High Wycombe.”
Sharon – still in LA, making her TV Show The Talk – found out, sold all of his cars and got him into AA. “That one bender cost me north of half a million quid.”
Four. Don’t try that stunt at home
In 2018, Ozzy was five years sober, a few months off turning 70 and getting ready for his farewell tour, No More Tours II. (The first No More Tours tour, in the 90s, had been marketed as his farewell “before I realised there’s only so much time you can spend in your back garden wearing wellies”.)
Life was good, as evinced by his advanced bed. Osbourne describes it as having “a “bigger brain than ChatGPT”, with two remotes for him and Sharon to each control their separate sides and “motors, wires and gear wheels”.
Ever since he was a boy – and through his marriage, much to Sharon’s displeasure – Osbourne had always leapt into bed with a running jump. One night in 2018, he got up to use the bathroom before returning to bed with his usual stage-dive. This time, however, he landed on the floor, hard.
“To this day, I don’t understand how the fuck I could have missed it … It’s like having a Sherman tank parked in the middle of the room.”
5. Seek multiple views and check details
In 2003, while filming The Osbournes, Ozzy had wrecked his quad bike, broken his neck and spent eight days in a chemical coma. The failed stage-dive into bed, 15 years later, shifted the metal holding his shoulders and spine together, necessitating intrusive surgery.
Though Osbourne was recommended to get a second opinion about having surgery, he wound up going ahead with a specialist he dubbed “Dr No Socks … ’cos he didn’t wear any”. For years after the procedure, he had a difficult recovery and suffered serious illnesses such as sepsis and pneumonia.
Together with the Covid-19 pandemic, this caused postponement, then the cancellation, of No More Tours II, sparking online rumours of Osbourne’s death. At one point he was in intensive care. “I’d never taken so many drugs in my life, which was quite a statement.”
Though Ozzy did not hold responsible Dr No Socks, he regretted not getting a second opinion, he writes. “It’s hard to imagine it could have ended up any worse.”
Osbourne’s other big regret was not checking the small print of his first contract with Black Sabbath. Not understanding the term “in perpetuity” cost the band their publishing rights, which were signed over to “a bloke called David Platz, who died in the nineties”, and since then his children.
Once Osbourne asked his accountant how much that mistake had cost him. The accountant replied reluctantly, and only after being pressed, that it was roughly £100m. “I had to go and sit down.”
6. Be memorable
Ozzy is ambivalent about Black Sabbath’s sinister reputation, and his own as the “Prince of Darkness” (“not that I knew who the fuck John Milton was”).
His first musical love was Cliff Richard; later, he was starstruck meeting Phil Collins. Of the teenage girls who used to run out of Sabbath gigs screaming, he writes: “You’ve gotta remember, a lot more people went to church back then.”
Nonetheless, when asked by Sharon to “make an impression” at a big meeting with his American label in 1980, Osbourne’s response was to take out a live dove out of his jacket pocket, having stashed it there for a poorly planned stunt about peace – and decapitate it. “The place went completely insane. People shrieking. Weeping. Throwing up.”
Osbourne adds that he was 36 hours into a 72-hour bender. “The poor dove didn’t deserve it,” but it did help with the marketing drive for his solo album, Blizzard of Ozz. “People thought I was an absolute fucking lunatic.”
Decades later, when Covid hit, Osbourne was disturbed by the risks he’d run with the dove and then the bat in Des Moines (though, again – he thought it was a toy). “Of all the bullets I’ve ever dodged, not catching some mutant virus … has gotta be right up there.”
7. Select support acts wisely
For all its occultish stylings, Black Sabbath was “the kind of band that went on stage in our jeans and leather jackets”, Osbourne writes – “a male band … for male audiences”. They had difficulty when metal started to move toward spectacle.
Choosing Kiss to open for their mid-70s tour was a mistake, Osbourne writes, remembering their Spandex jumpsuits, bared nipples, extravagant facepaint and “half a ton of explosives”. Sabbath bassist Geezer “almost had a heart attack” at Gene Simmons, 7ft tall in platforms, waggling his tongue.
Meanwhile, “The closest I got to a sexy album cover was me in a werewolf costume,” Osbourne writes. They thought they’d learned their lesson: “You wanted your support act to be good, but didn’t want to upstage yourself. You wanted Status Quo, basically.”
Instead, for their 1978 tour, Sabbath ended up hiring a little-known LA outfit called Van Halen. After he watched 20,000 jaws drop at Eddie Van Halen’s innovative performance of Eruption, Osbourne remembers “going back to our dressing room in silence and just sitting there, staring at the fucking wall”. Every night of the tour, Van Halen “just slaughtered us”.
Eight. Marry someone who makes you feel like Ozzy, not John
Osbourne met Sharon through her father, Don Arden, Black Sabbath’s original manager. When Paranoid came out, in 1970, she was about 18 and working as his receptionist.
Sharon’s first memory of Ozzy, he writes, was when he came into the office “with no shoes on”. His first memory of her was thinking, some time later, “Wow, what a good-looking chick.”
They finally wed (after Osbourne’s divorce)