Coldplay Dedicates Nashville Show to Ozzy Osbourne After His Death: 'Ozzy, We Love You Wherever You're Going'New Foto - Coldplay Dedicates Nashville Show to Ozzy Osbourne After His Death: 'Ozzy, We Love You Wherever You're Going'

Kevin Winter/Getty; Bryan Steffy/Getty Coldplaydedicated a cover of Black Sabbath's soft-rock 1972 ballad "Changes" to the lateOzzy Osbourneat their concert at Nissan Stadium in Nashville on Tuesday, July 22. Osbourne's family confirmed his deathon Tuesday morning. He was 76. Before the show, a fan posted a clip onXfrom outside Nissan Stadium, where the band could be heard performing "Changes" during soundcheck. "We'd like to dedicate this whole show to the incredible genius, talent, and character called gift to the world who was Ozzy Osbourne. We send our love to his family," Coldplay frontmanChris Martinsaid in a fan-captured video from the concert shared onTikTok. After playing the meditative heartbreak ballad, Martin, 48, said, "Ozzy, we love you, wherever you're going." In his 2011 autobiographyI Am Ozzy, co-written by Chris Ayres, the Black Sabbath frontman revealed that the lyrics were inspired by the end of guitarist Bill Ward's first marriage. Osbourne co-wrote the lyrics with Black Sabbath bassist and lyricist Geezer Butler. Brian Rothmuller/Icon Sportswire via Getty In 2003, Osbourne re-recorded the song as a duet with his daughterKelly Osbourne. Earlier this month,Yungbludperformed a cover of the song live atBlack Sabbath's Back to the Beginning benefit concertheld at Villa Park in the band's home city of Birmingham, U.K. Proceeds from the concert on July 5 went to Cure Parkinson's, Birmingham Children's Hospital, and Acorns Children's Hospice. Yungblud shared a tribute to Osbourne in the wake of his death. "I didn't think you would leave so soon the last time we met you were so full of life and your laugh filled up the room. But as it is written with legends, they seem to know the things that we don't," Yunglud, 27,began his tributeon Instagram. "I will never forget you - you will be in every single note I sing and with me every single time I walk on stage," Yungblud wrote. "Your cross around my neck is the most precious thing I own. You asked me once if there was anything you could do for me and as I said then and as I will say now for all of us the music was enough. You took us on your adventure - an adventure that started it all." Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE's free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories. "I am truly heartbroken. You were the greatest of all time," concluded the rock star. Osbourne's family told PEOPLE in a statement on July 22, "It is with more sadness than mere words can convey that we have to report that our beloved Ozzy Osbourne has passed away this morning. He was with his family and surrounded by love. We ask everyone to respect our family privacy at this time." Osbourne is survived by his wife Sharon and six children. Read the original article onPeople

Coldplay Dedicates Nashville Show to Ozzy Osbourne After His Death: ‘Ozzy, We Love You Wherever You’re Going’

Coldplay Dedicates Nashville Show to Ozzy Osbourne After His Death: 'Ozzy, We Love You Wherever You're Going' Kevin Winter/Getty...
Ozzy was a rock star and reality TV dad: Look back at iconic moments from 'The Osbournes'New Foto - Ozzy was a rock star and reality TV dad: Look back at iconic moments from 'The Osbournes'

After Ozzy Osbourne helped mold the sound of heavy metal, he became a reality television star. The Black Sabbat frontman, 76,died on July 22,hisfamilyannounced in a statement Tuesday. ButOsbourne was a pioneer in morethan rock music; his stint on reality television set the stage for every such show that followed, ultimately winning the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Reality Program for "The Osbournes." The show, packaged like a sitcom about Ozzy and his family, premiered on MTV in March 2002 and offered a glimpse into the domestic life of the "Prince of Darkness" himself, his wife Sharon, and their two children, Kelly and Jack. It was dubbed MTV's most viewed series ever in its first season. Naturally, the family's on-camera antics were less "Full House" and more "Crazy Train," though Ozzy's habit of bellowing his wife's name in many episodes (Sharon!) was vaguely reminiscent of something out of the Flintstones (Wilma!), though with much more colorful language. While Osbournelater told New Music Expressin 2013 that he regretted doing the show, the series has gone down in the annals of entertainment history and inspired the explosion of celebrity reality television. Countless iconic moments were born from the venture — so much so that some are still referenced in pop culture today. Ozzy is known for bellowing his wife's name, "Sharon," throughout the series, including during "Bark at the Moon" (season 1, episode 2), when he's upset that the family's pets are tearing up the furniture, pooping, and peeing in the house. "It's not like a little squirt, he must have an extra tank," he said of one of the family's dogs, adding: "I'm not picking up dog (expletive). I'm a rock star!" He later spoke directly to the dog's butt, asking it not to poop anymore. Though initially resistant to the family's suggestion of calling a dog trainer — "You don't need to hire a dog therapist! You just need to wake up at 7 a.m. and open the (expletive) door," Ozzy exclaimed — the Osbournes eventually ended up bringing in a pro for help. In "Won't You Be My Neighbor?" (season 1, episode 4), the Osbournes enter into a noise battle against their neighbors. How does one manage to be loud enough to tick off the family of one of the hardest musicians of all time? By singing folk music early in the morning, of course. Jack blasted Sabbath tunes to compete with the noise until he and Sharon decided to kick things up a notch, throwing bagels and an entire ham into the neighbor's yard. The feud ends, at least temporarily, when the police arrived at the Osbournes' home and advised the family to call them next time instead of wasting good food. In the same eventful episode, Kelly bemones her older sister, Aimee (who refused to participate in the show), taking it upon herself to book her a gynecology appointment. Ozzy, who appeared less in the moment like the man who played to sold-out stadiums and more like a befuddled father unsure of how to comfort his daughter, responded: "Tell her to book me a gynecologist appointment, I wouldn't mind." "All you have to do is say (expletive) off when the vagina doctor calls," he added, before the conversation turned to him inquiring about Kelly's sexual activity — a conversation no teen girl wants to have with her dad. In "What Goes Up" (season 2, episode 1), Ozzy and Sharon attended the White House Correspondents' Dinner, where President George W. Bush recognized Ozzy from the podium. "What a fantastic audience we have tonight. Washington power brokers, celebrities, Hollywood stars, and Ozzy Osbourne," Bush says. Ozzy stood, raised his arms, and blew a kiss toward the stage before thanking host Greta Van Susteren, telling her it was the "best night of my life." When Ozzy tried to feed the family's pet bird in "Must Come Down" (season 2, episode 3), the animal reacted in a way that made the rock icon think it required medical attention. "This bird is having a seizure. This (expletive) bird is going into a seizure!" he yelled. When the bird (which he called a parrot) relaxed, Ozzy took it out of its cage and brought its beak to his mouth to transfer food like a mother bird — a tense scene for anyone familiar with the tale of Osbourne biting off the head of a bat. In a rare break from its predominantly reverent tone, a segment of "It Must Come Down" touched on Sharon's newfound colon cancer diagnosis, which she seemed to take in stride with her characteristic sense of humor. We followed Sharon as she has a chest port implanted and recovered from her first treatment while Ozzy is away on a tour and "on a detox," according to his wife. We also witnessed Ozzy's struggle with sobriety on the road after a stint of what Sharon called "self-medicating" due to the stress of her diagnosis. "She's my whole world," he said at one point, while Kelly described finding out about her mother's diagnosis as a feeling like "something stabbing me." In perhaps one of the show's more dramatic moments, Kelly and Jack resorted to full-on fisticuffs after Jack danced with Kelly's arch nemesis, Christina Aguilera, in "What A Boy Wants" (season 2, episode 11). "When you hate someone, I hate someone!" she told her brother, who insisted Aguilera had nothing but nice things to say about Kelly. "You just wanted to say you danced with Christina Aguilera," Kelly said before both siblings hurled a string of insults at one another. After the two exchanged a few pushes and slaps, Sharon intervened, later telling Kelly she would regret the time the two spent arguing. The two hug and make up by the end, much to their mother's delight. In "The Accidental Tourist" (season 3, episode 5), Ozzy suffered an accident while riding an ATV on the family's English estate. Cameras followed Ozzy as he zipped around the property at high speed until the scene went black, cutting to an image of him lying unconscious on the ground. His bodyguard knelt over him, shouted his name, and asked if he could breathe. In a dramatic cliffhanger ending, viewers heard "he stopped breathing for a while" as an ambulance pulled up to the home. In the following episode, "The English Patient," the family patriarch leaves the hospital in a neck brace after three weeks, telling cameras he "died twice" and was put on "life support." "I'd never died before," he said. Jack later explained that his father suffered a collapsed collarbone, pinching his main artery, which had to be repaired, as well as a punctured lung and "cracked neck." Ozzy later said that he also suffered several broken ribs. He eventually flew back to Los Angeles at the end of the episode, where he was overjoyed to see his family. He and Sharon agreed to take a break from working unless they find a project they can work on together, saying they've wasted too many years being apart. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:'The Osbournes': Ozzy, Sharon, Kelly, and Jack's iconic MTV moments

Ozzy was a rock star and reality TV dad: Look back at iconic moments from 'The Osbournes'

Ozzy was a rock star and reality TV dad: Look back at iconic moments from 'The Osbournes' After Ozzy Osbourne helped mold the sound ...
Ozzy Osbourne's 15 Most Essential Songs, From 'Black Sabbath' to 'Mama, I'm Coming Home'New Foto - Ozzy Osbourne's 15 Most Essential Songs, From 'Black Sabbath' to 'Mama, I'm Coming Home'

It is almost impossible to put into words how vitally importantOzzy Osbourne — who died today at 76— and Black Sabbath, the band that he helped loft to fame, were to the history of heavy music. The only suitable analogy is to compare them and him (in context of hard rock, of course) to the Beatles and his idol, Paul McCartney, whom he only recently met — and, in a showing of his modesty, was endearingly nervous about it. He wasn't a great conventional singer, but his voice could convey menace, excitement and fear, essential qualities for Sabbath's legendarily dark sounds and lyrics, which took musical portents of doom to levels only previously reached by classical music. His and the band's songs and imagery guaranteed that Sabbath —Osbourne and guitarist Tony Iommi, bassist/lyricist Geezer Butler and drummer Bill Ward — would be hounded by genuine Satanists and practitioners of black magic for the rest of their lives. More from Variety Jack White, Elton John, Metallica and Rob Zombie Lead Tributes to Ozzy Osbourne: 'Long Live the Oz!' Ozzy Osbourne, Black Sabbath Frontman and Heavy Metal Legend, Dies at 76 Ozzy Osbourne and Black Sabbath's Final Concert Film to Release in 2026 There were many different iterations of Sabbath over the years, often with Iommi as the only founding member, but the original lineup was the most essential. Thousands of bands can play heavy music effectively, but what made Sabbath different was the fact that as crushing as Iommi's power chords were, the rhythm section couldswing,and that groove is not only the element that most of the untold thousands of bands influenced by them failed to understand, it's also what set them apart. Ozzy's solo career started off with a bang: His first two solo albums, "Blizzard of Ozz" and "Diary of a Madman," featured the brilliant guitar work of the young Californian Randy Rhoads, who revolutionized heavy rock guitar in just those two albums, before he was tragically killed in a plane crash while the band was on tour. Ozzy carried on for decades more, with a number of great musicians (particularly guitarist Zakk Wylde), but there's no question that his classic solo work is on those first two albums. It is both fitting and deeply bittersweet that Osbourne held on for long enough to perform with Sabbath one last time, in Birmingham — the industrial English city that spawned him and them — just two weeks ago. It is impossible to list all of the essential songs from his and the band's catalog, but here's a strong starting point. "Black Sabbath" (1970)The first song on the band's first album is a statement of intent if ever there was one: The doomiest guitar riff ever recorded, over a funereally slow drumbeat and Osbourne's ominous voice — "What is this that stands before me?," he begins. "Figure in black that points at me" — before it becomes terrified and then doomed: "Oh no, God help me!" Black Sabbath had been a blues band called Earth before writing that song. According to Osbourne, it stopped all conversation in the pub when they first played it. "Fucking hell, we have to write more like that!" he remembered the band saying. "N.I.B." (1970)Perusing the Sabbath catalog, it's hard to believe how many classic riffs the band created in just a few years. This is one of their all-time greatest, so strong that the song's vocal melody follows Iommi's crushing riff almost note-for-note. It also continues the Satanic themes that would follow the bandmembers for the rest of their lives: "My name is Lucifer, please take my hand." "Paranoid" (1970)The title track for the band's second album was famously written in about half an hour, when they realized they didn't have enough songs — it went on to become a Top 5 single in the U.K., broke the band in the United States, and became one of the most-covered rock songs of all time, especially due to its driving rhythm and basic but indelible riff. "War Pigs" (1970)Arguably the definitive Sabbath song, its unconventional structure somehow combines a slow, doom-laden intro, a stop-start rhythm on the verses, and a classic riff on the instrumental passages that lead into the chorus, and even a coda with a different instrumental section. The song, a seething cry against the barbarity of mechanized war and warlords, was the original title track of the album, but the record label grew uneasy about the ramifications and changed it to "Paranoid" (without telling the band). Regardless, the second those chords crush in, you'll see heads bobbing and fists pumping. The studio version is the classic, but a live 1973 rendition begins with piercing feedback and Ozzy yelling "GET UP!" before the band crashes in — pure metal nirvana. "Iron Man" (1970)Another classic from the "Paranoid" album, this almost comical tale of, yes, a man made of iron and a stomping, mechanical riff that accompanies Ozzy's lyrics about Iron Man's alienation from the world and empathy for him. "Into the Void" (1971)One could include nearly every track from the "Master of Reality" album on this list — song for song, it's arguably their best album — but the closer will suffice: Its intro features one of Iommi's most complex, crushing and difficult-to-play riffs before shifting into a driving rhythm that powers Ozzy's ominous vocal. Interestingly, two decades later Soundgarden would cover the song, replacing the lyrics with an ecology-themed prayer from Sealth, the legendary Native American chief for whom Seattle was named. "Snowblind" / "Supernaut" (1972)A one-two punch from the band's fourth album — the first to be recorded in Los Angeles, and, as the first track suggests, under the strong influence of the white powder that would cast a long shadow over the band's following years. Both songs have classic Sabbath riffs, but especially "Supernaut," which finds them dialing back the complexity and kicking out the jams. "A National Acrobat" (1973)While not the most obvious song to pick from the band's "Sabbath Bloody Sabbath" album, this one finds the band branching out musically, with a slower, smoother tempo and most notable harmony tracks on both Ozzy's vocal and Iommi's melodic guitar work, which loft over the riff like barbed wire. "Hole in the Sky" (1975)The leadoff track from "Sabotage," which many feel is the last great Sabbath album, this one is notable not just for the piledriving riff and rhythm, but also because it is almost definitely the highest-pitched Ozzy vocal on record. "Symptom of the Universe" (1975)Sabbath's influence on hard rock and heavy metal bands was by this point well-established, but this song in particular contained the DNA that would evolve into thrash metal within the next six or seven years: Echoes of its driving riff, fast tempo, gothic instrumental section and, most of all, Ozzy's vein-bulging vocal can be heard in countless songs and bands from that genre. "Crazy Train" (1980)The prospects for an Ozzy Osbourne solo career were not great at the time he left Black Sabbath (twice) in the late '70s. But, thanks in no small part to his fiery wife and manager Sharon (who would soon herself become a celebrity), he regrouped with the young, wildly innovative guitarist Randy Rhoads and fired off a pair of albums that reinvented his career and established Rhoads as one of the most important hard rock musicians of his generation, although he was to die tragically in a plane crash at the age of just 24. This first single from the first solo album was a mission statement of sorts, bringing in a more melodic Ozzy and the driving form of heavy metal that would tower over the decade. The song has been used in so many advertisements and other synchs that it's well-known to millions of people who have little to know idea who Ozzy or Rhoads were. "Mr. Crowley" (1980)Another defining track from the first album that continues the Satanic themes of Sabbath, but with Ozzy as an observer this time, questioning who Aleister Crowley was and what he might have seen — it all quickly became cliché, but it wasn't at the time. Just as significantly, it's the most Sabbath-y riff in the Rhoads canon. "Diary of a Madman" (1981)While the single "Flying High Again" was the single from Osbourne's second and final studio album with Rhoads, this song is much more innovative, a near-ballad with haunting arpeggiated riff and a spacy middle section that leads into an over-the-top, Satanic-mass finale. "Mama, I'm Coming Home" (1991)This song from Ozzy's "No More Tears" album was written with guitarist Zakk Wylde and another legendary hard rock musician, Lemmy Kilmister of Motorhead. A ballad that is drastically uncharacteristic of all three musicians, the song starts off with lush 12-string acoustic guitars underpinning Ozzy's strong melody, which bursts open into power-ballad terrain on the chorus. And although it was one of five solo songs that Ozzy performed at "Back to the Beginning" — which will be released as a film in the coming months — there's no question it will be the most remembered: a frail but determined and joyful Ozzy, seated on a giant throne because he could no longer walk, singing "Mama, I'm Coming Home" to bandmates, friends, musicians he influenced and nearly 50,000 adoring fans, in his hometown, one last time. Best of Variety New Movies Out Now in Theaters: What to See This Week 'Harry Potter' TV Show Cast Guide: Who's Who in Hogwarts? Final Emmy Predictions: Talk Series and Scripted Variety - New Blood Looks to Tackle Late Night Staples Sign up forVariety's Newsletter. For the latest news, follow us onFacebook,Twitter, andInstagram.

Ozzy Osbourne’s 15 Most Essential Songs, From ‘Black Sabbath’ to ‘Mama, I’m Coming Home’

Ozzy Osbourne's 15 Most Essential Songs, From 'Black Sabbath' to 'Mama, I'm Coming Home' It is almost impossible to ...
Hong Kong judge rules in favor of transgender bathroom accessNew Foto - Hong Kong judge rules in favor of transgender bathroom access

HONG KONG (AP) — A Hong Kong judge on Wednesday ruled to strike down regulations criminalizing the use of bathrooms designated for the opposite sex, ruling in favor of transgender individuals' rights to access public toilets matching their identity. Judge Russell Coleman approved the judicial review of K, who was born a woman and identifies as a man, saying the regulations contravene an article of the city's mini-constitution that stipulates all residents should be equal before the law. But he suspended the declaration to strike down the regulations for a year to allow the government "to consider whether it wishes to implement a way to deal with the contravention." He said in the judgement that the regulations and "drawing the line of a person's biological sex at birth create a disproportionate and unnecessary intrusion into the privacy and equality rights." The ruling marksanother step forwardin recognizing the rights of LGBTQ+ people in the Chinese financial hub. In recent years, the government has revised policies following activists' wins inlegal challenges. Currently, only children under 5 years old accompanied by an opposite sex adult can enter a public washroom designated for the opposite sex. Those violating the rule face a fine of up to 2,000 Hong Kong dollars (about $255). K launched a legal challenge in 2022, seeking to expand the exemption to pre-operative transgender people who have been diagnosed with gender dysphoria and have a medical need to undergo the process of living in their identified gender. He argued that his constitutional rights were infringed by the prohibition against him using public toilets allocated for men, the court heard. In 2023, Hong Kong's top courtruled thatfull sex reassignment surgery should not be a prerequisite for transgender people to have their gender changed on their official identity cards. The next year, the government revised its policy to allow people who have not completed full gender-affirmation surgery to change their genders on ID cards as long as they fulfill certain conditions. The conditions include the removal of breasts for transgender men, the removal of the penis and testes for transgender women, and having undergone continuous hormonal treatment for at least two years before applying. Applicants also have to continue their hormonal treatment and submit blood test reports for random checks upon the government's request. In April, activist Henry Tse, who won the legal battle in 2023 and received his new ID card reflecting his gender change last year, lodged a fresh legal challenge over the new requirements.

Hong Kong judge rules in favor of transgender bathroom access

Hong Kong judge rules in favor of transgender bathroom access HONG KONG (AP) — A Hong Kong judge on Wednesday ruled to strike down regulatio...
Hong Kong court backs transgender person's right to use toilets that match chosen gender identityNew Foto - Hong Kong court backs transgender person's right to use toilets that match chosen gender identity

By Jessie Pang HONG KONG (Reuters) -A Hong Kong court ruled on Wednesday in favour of a transgender person who challenged laws that criminalise them for going into public toilets that align with their chosen gender identity. Judge Russell Coleman struck down the two provisions that made it criminal to do so but suspended the ruling for 12 months to let the government "consider whether it wishes to implement a way to deal with the contravention". The Hong Kong government did not immediately respond. "This is a matter of the line-drawing, which seems to me to be a question for the government or legislature to address," Coleman wrote in his judgment. He also said the question of where to draw the line between a "female person" and a "male person" is "an answer not appropriately given by the courts, and is more appropriately a matter for legislation". The legal challenge was launched by a transgender man, who identifies as K, born as a female and identifies as a man, and who sought to amend the Public Conveniences (Conduct and Behaviour) Regulations to allow individuals undergoing Real Life Experience (RLE) treatment under medical supervision to use public toilets that align with their gender identity. This is the latest ruling from the city's judiciary in recent years that recognises the rights of transgender people. The city's Court of Final Appeal in February 2023 unanimously sided with appeals launched by transgender activists that barred transgender people from changing their gender on their mandatory ID cards unless they undergo full sex reassignment surgery, saying it violated their rights. The Hong Kong government last April revised the policy and allowed transgender people who have not completed full sex reassignment surgery to change gender on their ID cards. (Reporting by Jessie Pang; Editing by Anne Marie Roantree and Raju Gopalakrishnan)

Hong Kong court backs transgender person’s right to use toilets that match chosen gender identity

Hong Kong court backs transgender person's right to use toilets that match chosen gender identity By Jessie Pang HONG KONG (Reuters) -A ...

 

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