Episode #89 | 10.26.21
Black Sabbath: Satanists, Severed Limbs, Dismembered Fingers, Mountains of Cocaine, and the Invention of Heavy Metal
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In this episode
Black Sabbath are solely responsible for conjuring the diabolical power of heavy metal. When guitarist Tony Iommi lost his fingertips as a teenager, he turned to a less painful style of playing—a style that produced a new, genre-defining type of gloom and heaviness. The band climbed through the seven circles of British podunk hell to international rock star success, but the lore of their dark imagery compelled the freaks to flood out of the woodwork and to their shows. Despite composing songs that warned against the evils of the occult, Black Sabbath attracted legions of devil worshippers, occultists and 1970s freak-flag-flying practitioners of the dark arts. Kids went mad for their metal. Critics hated it. And much to the band’s dismay, Satanists found their battle cry in the heavy gloom that Black Sabbath had awakened.
Sources
Black Sabbath: Symptom of the Universe, by Mick Wall
Thought Catalog: 22 Soldiers on the Most Horrifying Thing They Saw While Deployed
Indiana Public Media: The Devil’s Interval: The Tritone in Classical Music
NPR: The Unsettling Sound of Tritones, the Devil’s Interval
Fender: The Devil’s Chord: The Eerie History of ‘Diabolus in Musica’
San Bernardino Sun: 8 Arrested in 1971 Cop-Killing Tied to Black Panthers
Manson Family: August 21, 1971: The Hawthorne Shootout
NME: 10 WTF Things You Didn’t Know About Black Sabbath
The Guardian: Black Sabbath: ‘We used to have cocaine flown in by private plane’
Louder: The time Geezer Butler got arrested in a bar brawl
Maniacs Online: 6 Classic Black Sabbath Stories
Louder: All Kinds of Crazy: Life on the Road with Black Sabbath in the 1970s
Society of Rock: The Wildest Black Sabbath Antics
Disgraceland is a podcast about musicians getting away with murder and behaving very badly. It melds music history, true crime and transgressive fiction. Disgraceland is not journalism. Disgraceland is entertainment. Entertainment inspired by true events. However, certain scenes, characters and names are sometimes fictionalized for dramatic purposes.
Music
Score by Jake Brennan.
Mixed and Engineered by Sean Cahalin.
Disgraceland theme song, "Crenshaw Space Boogie" written and produced by Jake Brennan. Performed by Jake Brennan, Bryce Kanzer, Jay Cannava and Evan Kenney. Mixed and engineered by Adam Taylor.
*illustrations by Avi Spivak @avispivak