"I saw Black Sabbath one month before their first album came out – and I was right in the front row": Billy Idol on his love for Black Sabbath and Ozzy Osbourne

· louder

By Gary Graff
( Classic Rock )
published 22 October 2024

Billy Idol was part of the celebration that saw Ozzy Osbourne inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall Of Fame at the weekend

Ozzy Osbourne and Billy Idol, pictured together at the London launch of the 2005 Download Festival (Image credit: Dave Hogan/Getty Images)

Singing in tribute to Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inductee Ozzy Osbourne over the weekend was a full-on blast from the past for Billy Idol.

"I've been watching Ozzy my whole life," Idol – who sang No More Tears during the star-studded Osbourne segment of the Rock Hall's induction ceremony in Cleveland – tells Classic Rock prior to the performance. "I saw Black Sabbath one month before their first album came out – John Peel was playing it on the BBC before it came out – and I was right in the front row and the tassels of his coat were touching me.

"And getting to know him as well has been fantastic. He's just one of those people you really look (up) to in lots of ways. It's an amazing honour to do this for Ozzy tonight. Never could I have imagined, that 13-year-old kid, his tassels touching me, this is what it would lead to. Life is pretty amazing."

Idol's guitarist and creative partner Steve Stevens was also part of No More Tears, while Tool's Maynard James Keenan sang Crazy Train – which was introduced by an "All aboooooard!" bellowed by Osbourne from a throne-shaped wheelchair on the side of the stage – and Jelly Roll took the lead on Mama I'm Coming Home.

The eight-minute tribute was organized by Andrew Watt, who produced Osbourne's last two studio albums, including 2022's Grammy Award-winning Patient Number 9; his "house band" including Osbourne band alumni Zakk Wylde and Metallica's Robert Trujillo, along with Wolfgang Van Halen and Red Hot Chili Peppers' drummer Chad Smith.

Osbourne's induction speech was given by Jack Black (among the reasons there was an "intended for mature audiences" disclaimer throughout the broadcast), while Osbourne made an emotional acceptance speech from his chair.

"These guys... they're all so good. It's so powerful up there," Idol says. "It feels fantastic. I'm not even thinking about my own show; I'm just sort of vibing off how great everybody’s playing and how powerful it is with the dynamics and everything. I'm really enjoying it."

Classic Rock Newsletter

Sign up below to get the latest from Classic Rock, plus exclusive special offers, direct to your inbox!

Contact me with news and offers from other Future brandsReceive email from us on behalf of our trusted partners or sponsors

Idol – who's planning to release a new album next spring – was also flattered at Osbourne's public suggestion that the Rebel Yeller should be inducted into the Rock Hall as well.

"It's really lovely of him to say so. I would be really incredible because I think in some ways it's a big thank-you to the fans who really have stuck with you, thick and thin – sometimes more thin than thick. They've really stuck with you, (so) in some ways if I'm in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame they are, too."

Gary Graff

Gary Graff is an award-winning veteran music journalist based in metro Detroit, writing regularly for Billboard, Ultimate Classic Rock, Media News Group, Music Connection, United Stations Radio Networks and others. Graff’s work has also appeared in Rolling Stone, Guitar World, Classic Rock, Revolver, the San Francisco Chronicle, AARP magazine, the Detroit Jewish News, The Forward and others. Graff has co-written and edited books about Bob Seger, Neil Young and Bruce Springsteen. A professional voter for the Grammy Awards and the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame, Graff co-founded the Detroit Music Awards in 1989 and continues as the organisation’s chief producer.

More about classic rock

"Yeah man, we blew 'em off the stage": Sammy Hagar on the time he trash-talked Foreigner, the band he's just inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall Of Fame

Alex Van Halen shares the last song he wrote with late brother Eddie Van Halen
Latest

"Genuine despair wrapped up in a delicious glam-grunge cocktail": A tribute to the anguished genius of Inger Lorre and The Nymphs
See more latest ►

Most Popular

Bad Omens announce Australian tour dates with Poppy and House Of Protection

Alex Van Halen on why he was "not interested" joining Sammy Hagar and Michael Anthony on The Best Of All Worlds tour: "They're not doing the band justice"

Seven Impale celebrate tenth anniversary of debut album with vinyl reissue

Listen to Korn frontman Jonathan Davis' collaboration with his son Nathan on the gnarly new track Dark Fantasy

Watch My Chemical Romance play The Black Parade album in full at When We Were Young festival

Jeff Lynne's ELO announce final ever show

Limp Bizkit announce 2025 UK and Ireland tour

"All abooooaard!" Watch the all-star Hall Of Fame tribute to Ozzy Osbourne starring Maynard James Keenan, Billy Idol, Rob Trujillo, Chad Smith, Wolfgang Van Halen, Andrew Watt, Adam Wakeman, Steve Stevens, Zakk Wylde and Jelly Roll

Watch Dream Theater play their first song with Mike Portnoy in 14 years

"I crossed paths with a couple of thieves": Jake E. Lee reveals more about the incident in Las Vegas that led to him being shot

Kerry King names the hardest Slayer song to play on guitar: “It’s not one I’m looking to play live any time soon!”