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Ozzy Osbourne - Down To Earth (20th Anniversary Expanded Edition) (2021)

Ozzy Osbourne - Down To Earth (20th Anniversary Expanded Edition) (2021)

BAND/ARTIST: Ozzy Osbourne

  • Title: Down To Earth (20th Anniversary Expanded Edition)
  • Year Of Release: 2021
  • Label: Epic/Legacy
  • Genre: Heavy Metal, Hard Rock
  • Quality: 320 kbps | FLAC (tracks)
  • Total Time: 01:00:40
  • Total Size: 140 mb | 421 mb
  • WebSite:
Tracklist:

01. Ozzy Osbourne - Gets Me Through
02. Ozzy Osbourne - Facing Hell
03. Ozzy Osbourne - Dreamer
04. Ozzy Osbourne - No Easy Way Out
05. Ozzy Osbourne - That I Never Had
06. Ozzy Osbourne - You Know...(Pt. 1)
07. Ozzy Osbourne - Junkie
08. Ozzy Osbourne - Running out of Time
09. Ozzy Osbourne - Black Illusion
10. Ozzy Osbourne - Alive
11. Ozzy Osbourne - Can You Hear Them?
12. Ozzy Osbourne - No Place For Angels
13. Ozzy Osbourne - Dreamer (Acoustic Version)
14. Ozzy Osbourne - Gets Me Through (Single Version)

Ozzy Osbourne's eighth solo studio album, Down to Earth, shows the madman of rock relying on a supergroup of metal musicians to bring his sound together. Longtime Ozzy guitarist Zakk Wylde is back, this time with Suicidal Tendencies bassist Robert Trujillo and Faith No More drummer Mike Bordin supplying the rhythm. Despite the ever-changing world of heavy metal, Ozzy has a strangely timeless sound that he does not stray from on this record. Thick, heavy songs like "Gets Me Through" could really be on any Ozzy record after 1989 and fit in, but it is this bizarre reliability that keeps the album as listenable as it is. There are a few off moments, most specifically when it comes to the occasional murky production that muffles Wylde's fiery guitar and Bordin's drums. Producer Tim Palmer gives it more of a grunge sheen than a heavy metal sound, which does work on some tracks but takes a little of the punch out of songs like "Junkie." Still, this has all the main ingredients of good Ozzy: a big fat Black Sabbath number ("Gets Me Through"), some wonderfully cheesy ballads ("Running Out of Time"), some tracks that can offend teenagers' parents ("Facing Hell"), and the song about how darn crazy he is ("Alive"). Sure it may be predictable, but no one looks to Ozzy to pioneer new sounds. Anyone who liked Ozzy's output from the '90s will probably embrace this album with open arms, and anyone who does not like him will probably know to avoid this.


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  • mufty77
  •  wrote in 22:13
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Many thanks for lossless.