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8 Songs, 41 Minutes

EDITORS’ NOTES

Black Sabbath's second album is nothing less than a blitzkrieg of in-your-face attitude. The politically charged epic 'War Pigs/Luke's Wall' sparks the attack with Bill Ward's hardcore drum thrashing. Ozzy Osbourne's distinctive Brummie wail carries songs like the raw and craggy 'Iron Man' to metal anthem status. And as for the high-octane title track, legend has it that the band knocked it out in less than half an hour. Not bad for the cut that essentially created the template for thrash metal.

EDITORS’ NOTES

Black Sabbath's second album is nothing less than a blitzkrieg of in-your-face attitude. The politically charged epic 'War Pigs/Luke's Wall' sparks the attack with Bill Ward's hardcore drum thrashing. Ozzy Osbourne's distinctive Brummie wail carries songs like the raw and craggy 'Iron Man' to metal anthem status. And as for the high-octane title track, legend has it that the band knocked it out in less than half an hour. Not bad for the cut that essentially created the template for thrash metal.

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Not to be confused with Masters of Reality or Masters of Reality (album).
Master of Reality
Studio album by
Released21 July 1971
RecordedFebruary–April 1971
StudioIsland Studios, London, England
GenreHeavy metal
Length34:29
LabelVertigo
ProducerRodger Bain
Black Sabbath chronology
Paranoid
(1970)
Master of Reality
(1971)
Vol. 4
(1972)
Singles from Master of Reality
  1. 'After Forever'
    Released: 1971
  2. 'Children of the Grave'
    Released: 1971

Master of Reality is the third studio album by English rock band Black Sabbath, released on 21 July 1971. It is widely regarded as the foundation of doom metal, stoner rock, and sludge metal.[1] It was certified double platinum after having sold over 2 million copies. Master of Reality was Black Sabbath's first and only top 10 album in the US until 13, forty-two years later.

  • 7Track listing

Recording[edit]

Master of Reality was recorded at Island Studios in London from February to April 1971. The album was produced by Rodger Bain, who had also produced Black Sabbath's previous two albums, with future Judas Priest producer Tom Allom handling engineering.[2] This was to be Bain's final collaboration with Black Sabbath as guitarist Tony Iommi took over production duties for the band's next several albums. Drummer Bill Ward explained: 'Previously, we didn’t have a clue what to do in the studio, and relied heavily on Rodger. But this time we were a lot more together, understood what was involved and were more opinionated on how things should be done.'[2]

On the tracks 'Children of the Grave', 'Lord of This World', and 'Into the Void', Iommi downtuned his guitar 1​12 steps in an effort to reduce string tension, thus making the guitar less painful for him to play. This pain was the result of a factory accident years earlier in which he had the tips of two of his fingers severed.[3] The downtuning also helped the guitarist produce what he called a 'bigger, heavier sound'.[4]Geezer Butler also downtuned his bass guitar to match Iommi. 'It helped with the sound, too', Butler explained to Guitar for the Practicing Musician in 1994. 'Then it got to the point where we tuned even lower to make it easier vocal-wise. But Ozzy (Osbourne) would then sing higher so it sort of defeated the object.' In the 2013 biography of the band Black Sabbath: Symptom of the Universe, Mick Wall writes that 'the Sabbath sound took a plunge into even greater darkness. Bereft even of reverb, leaving their sound as dry as old bones dug up from some desert burial plot, the finished music's brutish force would so alarm the critics they would punish Sabbath in print for being blatantly thuggish, purposefully mindless, creepy, and obnoxious. Twenty years later groups like Smashing Pumpkins, Soundgarden, and, particularly, Nirvana, would excavate the same heaving lung sound .. And be rewarded with critical garlands.' In his autobiography I Am Ozzy, vocalist Osbourne states that he cannot remember much about recording Master of Reality 'apart from the fact that Tony detuned his guitar to make it easier to play, Geezer wrote 'Sweet Leaf' about all the dope we'd been smoking, and 'Children of the Grave' was the most kick-ass song we'd ever recorded.'

In the liner notes to the 1998 live album Reunion, drummer Ward commented that Master of Reality was 'an exploratory album'. Ward elaborated in a 2016 interview with Metal Hammer magazine: 'On the first album, we had two days to do everything, and not much more time for Paranoid. But now we could take our time, and try out different things. We all embraced the opportunity: Tony threw in classical guitar parts, Geezer’s bass was virtually doubled in power, I went for bigger bass drums, also experimenting with overdubs. And Ozzy was so much better. But this was the first time when we didn’t have gigs booked in, and could just focus on making the album a landmark.'[2] In 2013, Mojo magazine called Master of Reality 'The sound of a band becoming increasingly comfortable in their studio surroundings.' Iommi believes the band might have become too comfortable, however, telling Guitar World in 1992, 'During Master of Reality, we started getting more experimental and began taking too much time to record. Ultimately, I think it really confused us. Sometimes I think I'd really like to go back to the way we recorded the first two albums. I've always preferred just going into the studio and playing, without spending a lot of time rehearsing or getting sounds.' The song 'Into the Void' was especially problematic, with Iommi revealing in the same interview: 'We tried recording 'Into the Void' in a couple of different studios because Bill just couldn't get it right. Whenever that happened, he would start believing that he wasn't capable of playing the song. He'd say: 'To hell with it – I'm not doing this!' There was one track like that on every album, and 'Into the Void' was the most difficult one on Master of Reality.' In his autobiography Iron Man: My Journey Through Heaven and Hell with Black Sabbath, Iommi describes the difficulty Osbourne also experienced recording the vocal: 'It has this slow bit, but then the riff where Osbourne comes in is very fast. Osbourne had to sing really rapidly: 'Rocket engines burning fuel so fast, up into the night sky they blast,' quick words like that. Geezer had written all the words out for him .. Seeing him try was hilarious.' The song 'Solitude' showcases guitarist Iommi's multi-instrumental talents, featuring him playing guitar, flute, and piano.[5] A delay effect was later added to Osbourne's vocals on the song as a means of doubling the vocal track.

Composition[edit]

During the album's recording sessions, Osbourne brought Iommi a large joint which caused the guitarist to cough uncontrollably.[3] Iommi was recording acoustic guitar parts at the time, and his coughing fit was captured on tape. A fragment of Iommi's coughing was later added by producer Bain as the intro to 'Sweet Leaf,' a song which was admittedly an ode to marijuana use.[3] Iommi recalls 'We all played 'Sweet Leaf' while stoned.'[3] In an interview with Guitar World in 2001 Butler recalled: 'I do remember writing 'Sweet Leaf' in the studio. I'd just come back from Dublin, and they'd had these cigarettes called Sweet Afton, which you could only get in Ireland. We were going: 'What could we write about?' I took out this cigarette packet, and as you opened it, it's got on the lid: 'it's the sweetest leaf that gives you the taste' I was like: 'Ah, Sweet Leaf!' Writing in Mojo in 2013, Phil Alexander observed: 'To most it is the quintessential stoner anthem, a point borne out by Sabbath's own Olympian consumption of hashish during their early days.' In the Black Sabbath concert film The Last Supper, Ward ruminates: 'Did it enhance the music? Well, you know, we wrote 'Sweet Leaf': 'When I first met you / didn't realize', that's about meeting marijuana, having a relationship with marijuana .. That was part of our lifestyle at that time.'[citation needed]

Butler was (and remains) a Catholic[3] and the song 'After Forever' focuses entirely on Christian themes. At the time, Black Sabbath were suspected by some observers of being Satanists due to their dark sound, image, and lyrics.[3] 'After Forever' was released as a single along with 'Fairies Wear Boots' in 1971.[6][7]

Black

Artwork[edit]

Re-released non-embossed cover

The first editions of Master of Reality came in an 'envelope sleeve' containing a poster of the band, and with the album's title embossed in black lettering, visible in relief. Later editions lacking the embossed printing would render the album title in grey. This was the first Black Sabbath sleeve on which the lyrics were reproduced on the back of the sleeve. In his autobiography Iommi describes the cover as 'Slightly Spinal Tap-ish, only well before Spinal Tap'.

On the first North American editions of the album, several songs had subtitles given to segments, making it appear that there were more songs than there actually were. The intro of 'After Forever' was given the title 'The Elegy', the outro of 'Children of the Grave' was called 'The Haunting', the intro of 'Lord of This World' was titled 'Step Up', and the intro of 'Into the Void' called 'Deathmask.' This treatment had also been used on the North American editions of Black Sabbath's previous two albums. These pressings also incorrectly listed the album title as Masters of Reality.[8] Subsequent editions corrected the album's title and removed three of the four subtitles (all but 'The Elegy').

Reception and legacy[edit]

Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic[9]
Christgau's Record GuideC–[10]
Encyclopedia of Popular Music[11]
MusicHound Rock4.5/5[12]
Q[13]
The Rolling Stone Album Guide[14]
Sputnikmusic4/5[15]
The Village VoiceD[16]

Master of Reality peaked at number five on the UK Albums Chart,[17] and number eight in the United States,[18] where it achieved gold status on advance orders alone.[citation needed] It eventually sold two million copies in the US.[19] Despite the album's commercial success, it was viewed with disdain by contemporary music critics. In The Village Voice,Robert Christgau called it 'a dim-witted, amoral exploitation.'[16]Rolling Stone magazine's Lester Bangs described it as 'monotonous' and hardly an improvement over its predecessor, although he found the lyrics more revealing because they offer 'some answers to the dark cul-de-sacs of Paranoid.'[20]

In 1994, Master of Reality was ranked number 28 in Colin Larkin's Top 50 Heavy Metal Albums. Larkin described it as Sabbath's 'first real international breakthrough' and 'a remarkable piece of work'.[21] In MusicHound Rock: The Essential Album Guide (1999), authors Gary Graff and Daniel Durcholz described the album as a 'brilliant skull crusher', singling out 'Children of the Grave' and 'Sweet Leaf' as 'timeless'.[12] In 2001, Q included it in their list of the 50 Heaviest Albums of All Time, calling it 'malevolent .. Casting Black Sabbath as a Titanic-style house band on the eve of Armageddon, cranking it as the bomb drops.'[22] A critic for the magazine cited it as 'the most cohesive record of [the band's] first three albums.'[13] In 2003, Rolling Stone ranked the album number 298 in their list of the 500 greatest albums of all time.[23] They described the album as representing 'the greatest sludge-metal band of them all in its prime.'[24] The same magazine also ranked the album 34th on its '100 Greatest Metal Albums of All Time'.[25]Billy Corgan, leader of The Smashing Pumpkins, considered Master of Reality the album that 'spawned grunge'. Black Sabbath and especially Master of Reality was a huge influence of the 1990s stoner rock / Desert Rock scenes in the UK and the US, bands like Kyuss, Monster Magnet, Sleep, and Orange Goblin have cited Sabbath and Master of Reality as a defining album of that genre.[26]John Stanier, drummer for Helmet and Tomahawk, cited the record as the one that inspired him to become a musician.[27] In 2013, Sabbath biographer Mick Wall praised Iommi's 'ability to incorporate more neat riffs and sudden unexpected time changes in one song than most bands would contemplate on an entire album'.

'When I listen to things like Master of Reality,' remarked Tool frontman Maynard James Keenan, 'I hear sort of heavy political rock 'n' roll… I don't really hear them as heavy metal.'[28]

Cover versions[edit]

Songs from Master of Reality have been covered by a variety of bands.

'After Forever' has been covered by Biohazard for Nativity in Black, a Black Sabbath tribute album,[29]Aurora Borealis for Hell Rules: Tribute to Black Sabbath, Vol. 2,Deliverance on their 1992 album What a Joke, and by the hardcore band Shelter on their 1992 album Quest for Certainty.Frost Like Ashes on their debut EP Pure as the Blood Covered Snow. The song 'Solitude' was covered by English doom metal band Cathedral as a bonus track for the European version of Nativity in Black, and later by Norwegian group Ulver on their 2007 album Shadows of the Sun.[30]White Zombie covered 'Children of the Grave' on Nativity in Black, spawning a single. Stone Sour, Racer X, Earth Crisis, and Neurosis have all covered the song as well. 'Into the Void' was covered in 1995 by stoner rock band Kyuss and released on the 1997 split EP Kyuss/Queens of the Stone Age, and by Soundgarden on their EP Satanoscillatemymetallicsonatas. Soundgarden's version featured new lyrics derived from the words of Chief Seattle.[31] 'Sweet Leaf' was covered by Alice in Chains in a live performance in Cincinnati on August 1991 and by Godsmack as a bonus track for the Japanese special edition of their 2000 album Awake and for the second volume of Nativity in Black. The riff from 'Sweet Leaf' was used as the basis for the Butthole Surfers' song 'Sweat Loaf,' from the album Locust Abortion Technician.Thrash metal band Anthrax, at the end of their cover of another Black Sabbath song, 'Sabbath Bloody Sabbath' from their 1987 EPI'm the Man, launch into an abbreviated version of 'Sweet Leaf' which fades to silence after several seconds. That same riff is referenced near the end of 'Give It Away' by the Red Hot Chili Peppers.[32] 'Sweet Leaf' has also been covered by American metal band Ugly Kid Joe on their first release: As Ugly as They Wanna Be, and by Baltimore hardcore band Next Step Up on their 1995 album: Fall From Grace. Riffs from 'Sweet Leaf' and 'Into the Void' feature in a live recording of a Black Sabbath medley performed by Candlemass in 1988. The medley was released as a track on the bonus CD accompanying the 2003 re-release of their debut album, Epicus Doomicus Metallicus. Estonian band Rondellus, in their tribute album Sabbatum,Mathmagic pro edition for adobe indesign free download. covered the songs 'After Forever' and 'Solitude' in Medieval style with lyrics translated into Latin. 'After Forever' is retitled 'Post Aeternitatem' (literally, 'After Eternity'), and is sung by a choir of male voices. 'Solitude' is sung by male and female voices, accompanied by positive organ. Exhorder covered the song 'Into the Void' on their album The Law released in 1992. Stoner doom metal band Sleep covered 'Lord of this World' on their EP Volume Two.Grindcore band Brutal Truth made a cover of this song on their EP Perpetual Conversion. Also, Corrosion of Conformity recorded a version for Nativity in Black. American death metal band Master covered 'Children of the Grave' on their 1990 self-titled album, accompanied by a bass solo from vocalist/bassist Paul Speckmann at the start of the track.

In popular culture[edit]

Several bands are named after songs on Master of Reality, or the album itself. Syracuse, New Yorkhard rock band Masters of Reality, who enjoyed moderate success in the 1990s, took their name from the album title. Metal bands After Forever and Orchid take their name from the album tracks of the same name.[33]Mountain Goats leader John Darnielle wrote a short novel for the 33⅓ book series with Master of Reality as a central theme. The book is written in the form of a diary of a young man who has been committed to a mental health treatment facility, and how the teen relates to the world through the songs on the album.[34] The song 'Solitude' was featured as the leitmotif of main character, Zombie, in the 1991 motion picture Zombie ja Kummitusjuna (Zombie and the Ghost Train) by Finnish director Mika Kaurismäki[35] and also appeared in the ending scene of the episode Keep Calm and Carry On, from the TV series Supernatural.[36] Future Black Sabbath producer Rick Rubinsampled 'Sweet Leaf's main guitar riff in producing the Beastie Boys' 1986 song 'Rhymin' and Stealin.'[37] The track 'Into the Void' was featured at the beginning of Episode 23 (entitled 'Hog Heaven') of the ninth season of the television series CSI: Crime Scene Investigation.[citation needed]

Track listing[edit]

Original UK LP pressing[edit]

All music composed by Black Sabbath (Tony Iommi, Geezer Butler, Ozzy Osbourne, Bill Ward), except 'After Forever', 'Embryo' and 'Orchid' by Iommi; all lyrics by Butler.

Black Rob Discography Torrent

Side one
No.TitleLength
1.'Sweet Leaf'5:05
2.'After Forever'5:27
3.'Embryo' (Instrumental)0:28
4.'Children of the Grave'5:18
Side two
No.TitleLength
5.'Orchid' (Instrumental)1:31
6.'Lord of This World'5:27
7.'Solitude'5:02
8.'Into the Void'6:13

Original US LP pressing[edit]

Side one
No.TitleLength
1.'Sweet Leaf'5:02
2.'After Forever (including The Elegy)'5:25
3.'Embryo'0:29
4.'Children of the Grave'4:30
5.'The Haunting'0:45
Sabbath
Side two
No.TitleLength
6.'Orchid'1:30
7.'Step Up'0:30
8.'Lord of This World'4:55
9.'Solitude'5:02
10.'Deathmask'3:08
11.'Into the Void'3:08

Note that, while the overall timing of 'Deathmask/Into the Void' is approximately correct, the apportioning of time between the two parts of the song may be arbitrary, as the 3:08 mark occurs during 'Into the Void's middle-8 vocal section ('Freedom fighters sent off to the sun ..'). The revised US pressing timings, shown below, compound this likely error.

Revised US LP pressing, with subtitles removed[edit]

No.TitleLength
1.'Sweet Leaf'5:02
2.'After Forever (Including The Elegy)'5:25
3.'Embryo'0:30
4.'Children of the Grave'5:15
Side two
No.TitleLength
5.'Orchid'2:00
6.'Lord of this World'4:55
7.'Solitude'8:08
8.'Into the Void'3:08

Note that the timing of 'Orchid' on revised US pressings is incorrect, as it includes the 'Step Up' introductory section of 'Lord of This World.' The timing of 'Solitude' on these pressings is similarly incorrect, as it includes the first half of 'Into the Void'; the timings of 'Deathmask' and 'Into the Void' from the original US pressing should have been grouped instead.

Black sabbath discology

US-made compact disc pressings of Master of Reality continue to list the incorrect timings of the Revised US LP pressing on the CD booklet.[38] The songs are not indexed on the CD using those timings, however, with breaks between songs properly placed.

2009 Deluxe edition[edit]

A two-disc deluxe edition was released in the UK on 29 June 2009 and in the US on 14 July 2009 as an import. This deluxe edition was remastered by Andy Pearce who also did the deluxe editions of Black Sabbath and Paranoid.

Disc one
No.TitleLength
1.'Sweet Leaf'5:05
2.'After Forever'5:27
3.'Embryo'0:28
4.'Children of the Grave'5:18
5.'Orchid'1:31
6.'Lord of This World'5:27
7.'Solitude'5:02
8.'Into the Void'6:13
Disc two (Bonus tracks)
No.TitleLength
1.'Weevil Woman '71'3:00
2.'Sweet Leaf' (studio outtake featuring alternative lyrics)5:04
3.'After Forever' (studio outtake – instrumental)5:20
4.'Children of the Grave' (studio outtake featuring alternative lyrics)4:36
5.'Children of the Grave' (studio outtake – instrumental)6:01
6.'Orchid' (studio outtake – with Tony count-in)1:41
7.'Lord of this World' (studio outtake featuring piano & slide guitar)5:38
8.'Solitude' (studio outtake – intro with alternative guitar tuning)3:35
9.'Spanish Sid (Early Version of 'Into The Void')' (studio outtake – alternative version)6:24

Personnel[edit]

  • Tony Iommi – guitar, synthesizer on 'After Forever,' flute and piano on 'Solitude', acoustic guitar on 'Orchid'
  • Geezer Butler – bass guitar
  • Bill Ward – drums, percussion on 'Children of the Grave', sleigh bells on 'Solitude'
  • Ozzy Osbourne – lead vocals
  • Keef – photography, poster design
  • Mike Stanford – art direction

Certifications[edit]

RIAAcertification[39] (United States)

DateDesignationTotal sales
27 September 1971Gold500,000
13 October 1986Platinum1,000,000
26 July 20012× Multi-Platinum2,000,000

BPI certification[40] (United Kingdom)

DateDesignationTotal sales
22 July 2013Silver60,000
17 June 2016Gold100,000

CRIA certification[41] (Canada)

DateDesignationTotal sales
1 September 1977Gold50,000
1 September 1977Platinum100,000

Release history[edit]

RegionDateLabelFormatCatalog
United Kingdom21 July 1971VertigoLP6360 050
1992CastleCDCA198
United StatesJuly 1971Warner Bros.LPBS-2562
12 May 1987CD2562-2
UK remastered29 March 2009Sanctuarydouble CD2701108

References[edit]

  1. ^Taylor 2006, pg. 199, 'Some say that Master of Reality was the first stoner metal album. The album as a whole is more late 1960's Heavy Psych in the vain of May Blitz, Grand Funk Railroad, and Leaf Hound.'
  2. ^ abcDome, Malcolm (27 October 2016). 'The story behind Black Sabbath's Master Of Reality'. loudersound.com. Retrieved 22 August 2018.
  3. ^ abcdefIommi, Tony (2011). Iron Man: My Journey Through Heaven and Hell with Black Sabbath. Da Capo Press. ISBN978-0-30681-9551.
  4. ^VH1: Heavy the Story of Metal, Part One.
  5. ^'Black Sabbath online'. Archived from the original on 5 March 2009. Retrieved 15 March 2009.
  6. ^'BLACK SABBATH DISCOGRAPHY v.5.0'. Retrieved 14 March 2009.
  7. ^''After Forever' single cover'. Archived from the original on 13 July 2012. Retrieved 14 March 2009.
  8. ^'Side 2, original North American pressing'. Warner Bros. Records. 1971. Archived from the original on 30 June 2017. Retrieved 17 June 2017.CS1 maint: BOT: original-url status unknown (link)
  9. ^Erlewine, Stephen Thomas. 'Review Master of Reality'. AllMusic. Retrieved 8 September 2009.
  10. ^Christgau, Robert (1981). 'Black Sabbath: Black Sabbath'. Christgau's Record Guide: Rock Albums of the Seventies. Ticknor & Fields. ISBN0-89919-025-1. Retrieved 4 January 2019.
  11. ^Larkin, Colin (2011). 'Funkadelic'. Encyclopedia of Popular Music (5th ed.). Omnibus Press. ISBN0857125958.
  12. ^ abGraff, Gary; Durchholz, Daniel (1999). MusicHound Rock: The Essential Album Guide. Visible Ink Press. p. 115. ISBN978-1-57859-061-2.
  13. ^ ab'Review: Master of Reality'. Q. London: 122. January 2001.
  14. ^'Black Sabbath: Album Guide'. Rolling Stone. Retrieved 5 June 2012.
  15. ^Stagno, Mike. 'Review Master of Reality'. Sputnikmusic.com. Retrieved 18 November 2011.
  16. ^ abChristgau, Robert (12 December 1971). 'Consumer Guide (21)'. The Village Voice. New York. Retrieved 22 October 2012.
  17. ^'UK chart history – Black Sabbath Master of Reality'. www.chartstats.com. Retrieved 11 October 2011.
  18. ^'Allmusic Billboard albums'. Retrieved 28 January 2009.
  19. ^Pesselnick, Jill (18 August 2001). 'J Amasses Certifications'. Billboard: 47. Retrieved 25 June 2014.
  20. ^Bangs, Lester (25 November 1971). 'Review Master of Reality'. Rolling Stone. Wenner Media. Retrieved 3 March 2011.
  21. ^Larkin, Colin (1994). Guinness Book of Top 1000 Albums (1 ed.). Gullane Children's Books. p. 188. ISBN978-0-85112-786-6.
  22. ^'50 Heaviest Albums of All Time'. Q. London: 86. July 2001.
  23. ^'The RS 500 Greatest Albums of All Time'. Rolling Stone. Wenner Media. 18 November 2003. Archived from the original on 6 January 2007. Retrieved 1 September 2009.
  24. ^Levy, Joe, ed. (2005). Rolling Stone's 500 Greatest Albums of All Time (first ed.). Wenner Books. p. 180. ISBN978-1-932958-61-4.
  25. ^Grow, Kory (21 June 2017). '100 Greatest Metal Albums of All Time'. Rolling Stone. Wenner Media LLC. Retrieved 21 June 2017.
  26. ^'Billy Corgan of Smashing Pumpkins talks about the records that changed his life'. starla.org. Retrieved 20 January 2014.
  27. ^Billboard, Vol. 105, Num. 21, 22 May 1993, p. 80
  28. ^Udo, Tommy (July 2006). 'One of these days'. Classic Rock #94. p. 52.
  29. ^Siegler, Joe (12 February 2009). ''After Forever' Cover by Bio Hazard'. Black-Sabbath.com. Archived from the original on 27 September 2011. Retrieved 5 November 2011.
  30. ^'Ulver'. Retrieved 15 March 2009.
  31. ^'Soundgarden'. Guitar for the Practicing Musician. December 1992.
  32. ^Torreano, Bradley. 'Black Sabbath - Sweet Leaf'. Allmusic. Retrieved 5 February 2014.
  33. ^Garry Sharpe-Young, New Wave of American Heavy Metal, Zonda Books Limited 2005, ISBN0-9582684-0-1, ISBN978-0-9582684-0-0
  34. ^Information of 33 1/3 book. 31 January 2008. Retrieved 5 November 2011.
  35. ^'Soundtracks'. Retrieved 15 March 2009.
  36. ^'Keep Calm and Carry On (2016). Soundtracks'. Retrieved 25 September 2017.
  37. ^Raul Pollicino. 'Information on the song Rhymin' and Stealin'. Includes list of samples'. Beastiemania.com. Retrieved 5 November 2011.
  38. ^Master of Reality album booklet
  39. ^'Gold & Platinum - Black Sabbath - Master of Reality'. RIAA. Archived from the original on 21 March 2019. Retrieved 21 March 2019.
  40. ^'BRIT Certified - Black Sabbath - Master of Reality'. BPI.co.uk. Archived from the original on 26 February 2018. Retrieved 21 March 2019.
  41. ^'Gold/Platinum - Black Sabbath - Master of Reality'. Music Canada. Archived from the original on 21 March 2019. Retrieved 21 March 2019.

Bibliography[edit]

  • Taylor, Steve (2006). A to X of Alternative Music. Continuum. ISBN0-8264-8217-1.
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