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Black Sabbath - Mob Rules (CD)

Album Details: Mob Rules

Release Date:10/07/2008
Label:Rhino / Wea
UPC:081227988975

Other Available Formats: Mob Rules

User Reviews: Mob Rules

  • Overall:

    GOOD ALBUM!!!!

    By stam  Feb 10, 2003

    Dio forever!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  • Overall:

    Better than Heaven and Hell

    By Uponthemyohmy  Dec 26, 2002

    The Mob Rules, Black Sabbath's 2nd album with Dio and their 10th studio album is a better effort than Heaven and Hell, and sadly the year before, Bill Ward left the band due to health problems even though he did return for Born Again.This is also one... of Black Sabbath's most underrated albums and their last gold selling till Reunion. Read more Less

Pro Reviews: Mob Rules

  • All Music Guide

    1981's Mob Rules was the second Black Sabbath album to feature vertically challenged singer Ronnie James Dio, whose powerful pipes and Dungeons and Dragons lyrics initially seemed like the perfect replacement for the recently departed and wildly popular Ozzy Osbourne. In fact, all the ingredients which had made their first outing, Heaven and Hell, so successful are reutilized on this album, including legendary metal producer Martin Birch (Deep Purple, Whitesnake, etc.) and supporting keyboard player Geoff Nichols. And while it lacks some of its predecessor's inspired songwriting, Mob Rules was given a much punchier, inyourface mix by Birch, who seemed reenergized after his work on New Wave of British Heavy Metal upstarts Iron Maiden's Killers album. Essentially, Mob Rules is a magnificent record, with the only serious problem being the sequencing of the material, which mirrors Heaven and Hell's almost to a tee. In that light, one can't help but compare otherwise compelling tracks like ..."Turn Up the Night" and "Voodoo" to their more impressive Heaven and Hell counterparts, "Neon Knights" and "Children of the Sea." This unhappy streak is finally snapped by the unconventional "E5150," a synthesizerdriven instrumental. Then, the unbelievably heavy, sevenminute epic "The Sign of the Southern Cross" delivers one of the album's best moments before unleashing the roaring title track. Side two is less consistent, hiding the awesome "Falling off the Edge of the World" (perhaps the most overlooked secret gem to come from the Dio lineup) amongst rather average tracks like "Slipping Away" and "Over and Over." Over the next year, the sht would hit the fan for Black Sabbath, and Dio's exit would mark Mob Rules as the last widely respected studio release of the band's storied career. - Eduardo Rivadavia, All Music Guide Read more Less

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Biography

Black Sabbath

Black Sabbath has been so influential in the development of heavy metal rock music as to be a defining force in the style. The group took the blues-rock sound of late '60s acts like Cream, Blue Cheer, and Vanilla Fudge to its logical conclusion, slowing the tempo, accentuating the bass, and emphasizing screaming guitar solos and howled vocals full of lyrics expressing m... Read more