No one in Birmingham knew it yet — but in the late 1960s, a legend was waking up. A skinny kid named John “Ozzy” Osbourne, covered in factory dust and dreaming far beyond his street, opened his mouth… and the sound that came out didn’t belong to an ordinary boy. It was raw. It was powerful. It was destiny tearing its way into the world. When Ozzy collided with Tony Iommi, Geezer Butler, and Bill Ward, the explosion was instant. Something dark, electric, and entirely new ripped through the music scene — the birth of Black Sabbath, and with it, the birth of heavy metal itself. Ozzy didn’t just sing — he summoned. He didn’t just stand on stage — he transformed it. From a working-class kid to the voice that redefined rock forever, his rise proves one thing: Legends aren’t born. They break free. And Ozzy broke free louder than anyone.
THE NIGHT A LEGEND AWOKE IN BIRMINGHAM — AND NO ONE SAW IT COMING No...
