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Ozzy Osbourne, the godfather of heavy metal, found fame on reality TV, died at 76

Ozzy Osbourne, host of the 1970s heavy metal band Black Sabbath, won the infamous bat on stage, pursued the drug-crazy lifestyle, and then reinvented himself as a lovely, even a reality TV star who often fouled reality TV.

According to the family statement, Osborne is known as the “Dark Prince” and the godfather of heavy metal, known as the “Dark Prince”, died at the age of 76 on Tuesday morning.

“It is not just the sadder that is conveyed by the simple words that we must report that our beloved Ozzy Osbourne has passed away this morning,” a statement sent to CBC News on behalf of his family said.

“He is with his family and surrounded by love. We ask everyone to respect our family privacy at the moment.”

Osbourne Paranoid arrive Fighting Pig arrive Sabbath Bloody Sabbath. Those combined with a series of solo releases have led him to sell more than 100 million records worldwide.

Hard improvisation and dark themes from depression to war to apocalypse are combined with the instincts of Halloween drama. As a performer, Osbourne sprinkled the audience with raw meat and met a bat that fans fell on the stage in 1982.

He always insisted that he thought it was a toy until he bit it, realized his mistake, and rushed to the hospital to shoot rabies. Later, he sold the brand’s bat soft toys with a movable head.

Osbourne is a regular target for conservative and religious groups, focusing on the negative impact of rock music on young people. He always admits his lifestyle and lyrics to the excess – but in The Wild Reports report he is a truly demonic fearful.

Members of the Black Sabbath band, Tommy Iommi, Osbourne, Geezer Butler and Bill Ward, reacted after being inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2006 at the Waldorf Astoria Hotel in New York. (Mike Segar/Reuters)

“My time did something bad. But I’m not a devil. I’m just John Osbourne: a working-class kid from Aston who resigned at the factory and sought good times.”

Born in John Michael Osbourne, he is the fourth of six children, and grew up in Aston, Birmingham, central England. He suffered from dyslexia, left school at the age of 15, engaged in a series of mean jobs and was sentenced to a brief prison for a burglary. Then there is the Black Sabbath.

“When I grew up, if you sat me on the wall with the other kids on my street and asked me which of us was 60 years old, with five kids, four grandchildren and four grandchildren and houses, I wouldn’t put money in me, without F– King-king.”

It was the latter stage of his life that provided a reshaping environment for him to be a star of American television in 2002 Osborne.

The camera follows the aging rock god around his huge house, proclaiming the events in his reverberation of Birmingham’s accents and bewildered by the antics of his family – a format that has won all new fans.

Osbourne’s wife and manager Sharon survived; five children, including Jack, Kelly and Amy; and several grandchildren.

A man stands next to a woman while taking a photo while posing against the background of reading "Metal hammer gold."
Osbourne, left, his wife Sharon Osbourne at the 2020 Golden God Awards in London. That year, he revealed that he was diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease, a neurological disease that affects movement. (Vianney Le Caer/Invision/Assiriss Press)

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