Henry
Rollins, Billy Corgan to Lend Hand to Iommi Solo LP
An article by Paul Robicheau
of SonicNet
This article originally appeared online here.
It wasn't hard for Black Sabbath
guitarist Tony Iommi to get Henry Rollins to appear on his all-star solo debut,
Iommi.
All he had to do was play Rollins
the riff for "Laughing Man (In the Devil Mask)."
"I said, 'Whoa, that's Iommi,'
" said Rollins, who jumped at the chance to write lyrics and sing on the
track. "To have your voice synched up with that sound for three or four
minutes in your life, to me, that is a stone-cold honor."
That kind of reaction was shared by
other guests on the disc who had grown up with Iommi's thick, crunching guitar
tone in such Sabbath classics as "Iron Man," "Paranoid"
(RealAudio excerpt) and "War Pigs."
Smashing Pumpkins head Billy Corgan,
Foo Fighters frontman Dave Grohl and Pantera leader Phil Anselmo were among the
disc's contributors, along with such veterans as Billy Idol, the Cult's Ian
Astbury and Sabbath foil Ozzy Osbourne.
"They did all the lyrics and
melodies they were singing," Iommi said of his guests. "I wouldn't ask
somebody to come in and join me on a track and tell them what to do. The whole
purpose of it was the amalgamation of it all, to see what happens."
Album Long-Planned But
Spontaneous
What happened was a collaborative
effort, released Oct. 17, that might be viewed as a hard-rock cousin to
Santana's Supernatural in its mix of youth and experience.
"A few people have said that
— that it's a heavy version of the Santana thing — but I've had the idea for
a few years," said Iommi, who was delayed by a reunion tour of the original
Sabbath. "It's just more or less that he beat me to it.
"I wanted a selection from old
to new [singers], which I've got. The only one I couldn't get was Tom Jones. I
wanted to get him on, but he was too busy at the time doing his own project.
"You never know what you're
letting yourself in for when you're getting involved with other people. So it
was actually great to get into the studio together and really click — and we
all did. It's amazing. I was very impressed with the way each one of them
worked, just the different characters and the way they took the songs on."
At times, the process was
spontaneous, as when Corgan arrived at the studio with then-Pumpkins drummer
Kenny Aronoff and picked up a bass to carve "Black Oblivion"
(RealAudio excerpt) from a jam.
"In the morning, we came up
with a riff, and in the afternoon, we were putting it to tape," Iommi said.
"Billy was writing the lyrics while I'm doing some overdubs."
Nonetheless, there's surprising
continuity to the tracks, which shift from the emotionally volcanic
"Meat" (RealAudio excerpt), with singer Skin of Skunk Anansie, to the
melodic majesty of Grohl's "Goodbye Lament" (RealAudio excerpt) to
more brooding takes from Type O Negative's Peter Steele and Serj Tankian from
System of a Down.
Sound Crafted Before Sabbath
In the Osbourne track, "Who's
Fooling Who," Iommi found some familiar chemistry. "I didn't actually
intend to have Ozzy on the record. I'm really glad he did it," he said.
"We were sitting down together one day, and Ozzy said, 'Aren't you going to
have me on the album?' I said, 'Ah, sure.' "
Sabbath drummer Bill Ward was also
at that table, and wanted in. "I more or less had a sound before we
actually got together as Black Sabbath," Iommi said. "I was in a band
with Bill Ward and we played a lot of blues and stuff, loads of guitar solos,
and I developed a sound from that.
"When we first came out with
Black Sabbath, nobody was doing anything like that. It was the whole mood of it,
just because it was heavy and loud and doomy. It just hit a spot with
everybody."
Rollins included. "I'm such a
fan, I had him sign my lyric sheet," the tattoo-clad vocalist said.
"He means a lot, and his band and his music have meant a lot to people for
decades. Black Sabbath is one of the most universally spoken languages in
music."
In addition to the singers who
brought their own lexicon to Iommi's solo project, guests included Pearl Jam
drummer Matt Cameron (who was reunited with ex-Soundgarden bandmate, bassist Ben
Shepherd) and Queen guitarist Brian May.
"There's no way you could have
done this in the '70s," said Iommi, who remembers catching flak from his
Sabbath mates for appearing on a solo record by Procol Harum's Bobby Harrison
that even tapped horns from Tower of Power. "Everybody was into their own
band, and if you ventured out of that band, you were a traitor."
Things are different now — apart
from the timeless sound of Iommi's Gibson SG. "The original guitar I kept
under lock and key, and it will remain there unless somebody offers me $100,000
for it, and then it will go away," Iommi said, before reconsidering.
"No, I'll keep that. That's my history there."
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