Black Sabbath - Master Of Reality
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 See Larger Image | Master of Reality Artist : Black Sabbath List Price : $11.98 USD Your Price : $10.99 USD ProductGroup: Music Release Date : 1990-10-25 Studio : Warner Bros / Wea Label : Warner Bros / Wea Avg. Customer Rating : (200 reviews)
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Reviews Customer Reviews for Master Of Reality Sabbath goes Christian! (?) (!!) (???) (!!!!) Rating: Wait a minute, wait a minute... this is a Christian album? Is Black Sabbath going all Jesus freak on us? Um... what the hell? Why is Ozzy telling me that God is the only way to love? Okay, this is getting on my nerves. I'm gonna go listen to something else.
But wait! This album's good! Very, very, very good! Tony Iommi touched on the overlord of guitar tones here. Like your guitars deep, heavy, grumbly, thick, and evil? Oh, then you've got 'em all over this record. Check out "Sweet Leaf." A song and a half, that "Sweet Leaf!" Or, more accurately, a riff and a half! Ah yeah, man. The ultimate pothead theme song. I'm a-thinkin' it's Sabbath's very best song, with only two real competitors. One of them is "Symptom of the Universe..."
...and the other is "Children of the Grave," which is right here, on this very album! What's better than a song with one great guitar riff? Two great guitar riffs! What's better than a song with two great guitar riffs? A song with one of those guitar riffs played on guitar and the other played on a heavy, distorted, Jack Bruce-like bass that sounds like a guitar! It's really fast, too. It's one of those quintessential proto-thrash songs, along with "Symptom," "Paranoid," "Achilles Last Stand," and probably something by Motorhead. The song just keeps on delivering one great guitar part after another. There's even a slow section with haunting keyboard embellishments! Score! And it's anti-war, and if you ask me that's reason enough for it to be cool. Something tells me Geezer Butler didn't like war. I mean, "War Pigs," "Electric Funeral," and now this. Nothing wrong with that, of course.
"After Forever" is also great. Despite it being one of the more overtly Christian songs on this album, it's got the same heavy, sludgy doom riff we know from Black Sabbath. Totally grooves, too. Did I mention that those three songs are all on side one? Something about side one of Black Sabbath albums. Consider how amazing the first sides of Paranoid, Master of Reality, and Sabotage are for a minute. On the other hand, side two is a bit of a letdown. The Jesus anthem "Lord of This World" is a fine slab of sludge, though I still can't get over how weird it is hearing a band named Black Sabbath singing about the healing powers of God. But I don't really like the rest. "Solitude" is terrible, as a first. Black Sabbath should not be doing weepy, melotron-laced ballads. Some people can pull it off, but Sabbath can't. "Into the Void" is pretty much by-numbers sludge. And "Orchid" is a lousy acoustic instrumental. Iommi rocked the electric guitar, but Steve Howe he was not.
Still, a fine follow-up to the indisputable classic Paranoid.
Customer Reviews for Master Of Reality Cd Black Sabbath - Master of Reality Rating: Black Sabbath - Master of Reality I hadn't listened to this album since I bought it on cassette many years ago. It was as good as I remember! If you're a Black Sabbath fan from back in the day, this is a must for your collection. A classic indeed.
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