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Ozzy Osbourne

No More Tears

(Epic; US: 2 Apr 2002; UK: 20 May 2002)

Nowadays, it seems like everybody loves Ozzy. Witness his three-decade string of platinum albums, his sold-out annual tours, and his starring role in the most talked-about show on TV. He has become so well-known—even respectable—that he recently received an invitation from Queen Elizabeth.


Ozzy does not look like Morrissey, sing like Robert Plant, play like Eddie Van Halen, or write like Pete Townshend. Unlike most metal frontmen, he whines about his misery and admits his weakness instead of proclaiming his prowess. So why do people still so adore him? While he was once quite entertaining in the role of a Satanic purveyor of doom, his charm today lies mostly in the fact that he is miserably screwed up and—at the same time—wildly successful. Ozzy is proof positive that anyone can become rich and famous, no matter how small their talents, how twisted their thoughts and behavior. In fact, many of Ozzy’s fans are probably attracted to his dysfunction and despair because they can relate. Aren’t we all a little bit warped? Don’t we all feel down sometimes?


Cashing in on the success of Ozzy’s MTV show, The Osbournes, Epic has remastered and reissued four of his solo albums with bonus tracks. No More Tears, a comeback album of sorts, was first released in 1991 and here includes two additional songs: “Don’t Blame Me”, which was the B-side of “Mama, I’m Coming Home”, and “Party with the Animals”, from the soundtrack to Buffy the Vampire Slayer. Both bonus tracks are cut from the same cloth as the original album, and neither of them stands out as particularly important. Listeners who already own a copy of No More Tears can skip buying this reissue unless they are completists.


Musically, the rockers on this record lack the punch of Black Sabbath songs from the ‘70s and Ozzy’s early ‘80s solo work, but the ballads really shine. On the faster numbers, guitarist Zakk Wylde plays proficiently, but his riffs are often unmemorable and too heavily-processed. They suffer in comparison to the thick, dark playing of Sabbath axeman Tony Iommi and the ornate but forceful guitar work of the late Randy Rhoads. Wylde plays beautifully on two grandiose, melodic ballads, “Mama, I’m Coming Home” and “No More Tears”. His chunkiest riff plays call-and-response with Ozzy’s vocals on “No More Tears”, and a deliciously sinuous lick graces its chorus. Clocking in at over seven minutes, “No More Tears” also features tasteful synth work by keyboardist John Sinclair that reminds me of Bon Jovi and a melancholy piano interlude that brings to mind Queen’s “Bohemian Rhapsody”, another dramatic, multi-movement song. Wylde’s sweet acoustic fingerpicking and fuzzy power chords flavor “Mama, I’m Coming Home”, which builds to a crescendo on the strength of soaring backing vocals.


Lyrically, Ozzy and his band do the heavy lifting here, but they get help from Motorhead frontman Lemmy on four tracks. Most of the characters Ozzy and friends write about are depressed, tortured souls going insane over their pain. They refuse to get help, even though they know they are out of control. Instead, they try to numb themselves with touring (“Hellraiser”), drugs (“Zombie Stomp”), murder (“No More Tears”), molestation (“Mr. Tinkertrain”), or relationships (“Mama I’m Coming Home”). Some of these characters admit that what they are doing is not making them any happier, but they do it anyway. The man described in “Mama, I’m Coming Home” is going back to a woman who hurt and deceived him, but he can’thelp himself. In his “selfish love” he is willing to take a “heart of stone.” He doesn’t care about “sunshine,” he’s “coming home,” no matter how hurtful it will be. Another of Ozzy’s characters knows the pain will be “killing” him again the “morning after,” but he still can’t put down the drugs, he refuses to stop doing the “Zombie Stomp.”


On the album’s last song (not counting the two bonus tracks), “Road to Nowhere,” Ozzy looks honestly at the “wreckage” of his past. He admits that the “road to nowhere” he has been traveling on will ultimately lead him back to himself, no matter how hard he tries to escape. But he still somehow believes that his “road to nowhere” will never end. In fact, despite past indications that Ozzy would retire, that road has not ended. In the more than ten years that have passed since the original release of No More Tears, it seems Ozzy has changed little: he is still drinking, still touring, and still outrageous. And his fans, whatever their reasons, still love him.

Tagged as: ozzy osbourne
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