Rat Salad: Black Sabbath: The Classic Years 1969-1975
By (Author) Dr Paul Wilkinson
Vintage Publishing
Pimlico
1st May 2007
1st March 2007
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Music
782.421660922
Paperback
256
Width 129mm, Height 198mm, Spine 15mm
204g
Nick Hornby meets Spinal Tap meets Revolution in the Head in a winning account of Ozzy Osbourne's Black Sabbath in their early, glory years. Black Sabbath are one of the most outrageous yet longest-lived bands in the history of rock 'n' roll. This informative, idiosyncratic and beguiling book paints a vivid picture of their colourful early history - interwoven with all the most crucial news stories of the time- from Vietnam to Bloody Sunday and the space programme.Where Rat Salad diverges from routes taken by most rock biographies, however, is in its detailed analysis of the band's first six albums. These chapters - think Ian MacDonald's Revolution in the Head meets Spinal Tap - occupy about half the book and persuasively explain the appeal of the music, its compositional artistry and its frequently audacious inventiveness.Original and passionate, Rat Salad embraces a remarkably diverse cast of characters - from Ozzy Osbourne himself and the other members of the band through to Edith Sitwell, Breugel the Elder, John Milton and Doris Day. The author's hand looms large in the piece. We see him both as a boy and man - from schoolboy ingenue to inveterate devotee - as he looks back at a life populated with love, sex, drugs and death played out against a backdrop of crucifixes and power chords.
I wish somebody could write a book about contemporary art that was half as emotionally accurate, fearless, clear and thoughtful, and alive to life, as this book about the gods of doom -- Matthew Collings
Black Sabbath were the ultimate - and perhaps the only true - purveyors of Metal at its heaviest and most grimly gothic. In Paul Wilkinson they have at last found their very own Ian McDonald -- Barney Hoskyns
Paul Wilkinson was raised in the Peak District and graduated with a degree in Psychology in 1983. Since then, he has worked extensively in the arts and entertainment industry and currently manages an arts centre in east London, close to where he lives. He has played guitar and sung in a number of failed pop outfits- most notably, inept Beatles-copyists The Originals, and close-harmony, cabaret joke-band The Stallions of Love. He has been a fan of Black Sabbath for over thirty years. Rat Salad is his first book.