Geezer Butler albums to be rereleased

While the majority of Geezer Butler’s musical output has had the label “Black Sabbath” on it, not all of it was.  Over the years, he’s put out three “solo” albums.  Also over the years, the three of them have gone out of print.  Well, no more, all three of them are being  re-released this fall.

BMG is re-releasing all three albums (Plastic Planet, Black Science, & Ohmwork) on compact disc & vinyl on 30 October, 2020.   These were already re-released digitally back in March via iTunes, Spotify, and the like.  But this fall is the physical re-release.

Earlier today, Geezer released the news about the three albums, which was cool.  I did some digging around to find some stuff that wasn’t mentioned in the original press release.  Here’s some facts about the re-releases..

  • All three albums are now branded as “Geezer Butler” vs the individual names they had originally (G//Z/R, Geezer, & GZR respectively).
  • All three albums have redesigned artwork to go with the naming rebranding.
  • All three are being released on vinyl for the first time – none were released on vinyl originally.
  • All three are being released on CD again.
  • None of the three albums are remastered.  My label contact said the “Audio is mastered for vinyl”, but they didn’t use original tapes.
  • These are the original track listings.  Any additional Japanese tracks from back in the day are not here.
  • This release is for everywhere EXCEPT USA/North America.  I do not have any info on a later release date for these in the United States.  I have asked, but no info.

Ordering Info

My Discography Links

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Press Release

BLACK SABBATH BASSIST GEEZER BUTLER TO REISSUE THREE SOLO ALBUMS

‘PLASTIC PLANET’ (1995), ‘BLACK SCIENCE’ (1997), ‘OHMWORK’ (2005) TO BE 

MADE AVAILABLE ON VINYL FOR THE FIRST TIME!

VINYL AND CD OUT OCTOBER 30TH VIA BMG

The nineties were a testing time for many of rock’s iconic leaders of the seventies. The nostalgia era that is now an industry of its own had yet to really come to prominence and many of the musicians who were there at rock’s dawn were left floundering as the new decade rolled around and an innovative and fresh wave of ‘alternative’ rock dominated the music world.

None of this phased Black Sabbath bassist Geezer Butler however, who, as chief master of the heavy metal originators heavyweight bottom-end and the lyrics that gave voice to the monolithic riffs that the band made their trademark, didn’t rest on his laurels and created three solo albums of forward-thinking new music throughout those years.  

1995 saw the release of his first solo album, ‘Plastic Planet’, followed in 1997 by ‘Black Science’, with ‘Ohmwork’ completing the trilogy in 2005. All three albums are now being made available for the first time ever on vinyl, with both CD and LP using newly updated cover artwork and all will be available via BMG on October 30th.

Plastic Planet’ was originally released under the name g/z/r and featured Burton C. Bell of Californian industrial/groove metal pioneers Fear Factory on vocals and is considered a classic of 90s metal. The album perfectly melded Geezer’s roots in doomy blues rock to the industrial influenced metal sound that was a key element in pushing the genre forward in the nineties.

Alongside Bell for this recording was a long-time collaborator of Geezer’s, Peter Howse (nicknamed ‘Pedro’ by Butler, from a character in the TV show ‘Four Feather Falls’), Howse was a founding member of the Geezer Butler Band in 1985, and has written and played in all versions of GZR/Geezer. Drums were handled by Deen Castronovo, providing the pounding rhythms that propel the heavy grooves and mechanical metallic edge on ‘Plastic Planet’. Lyrically, Butler channelled technological, sci-fi and dystopian subjects mixed with the social issues tackled on ‘Drive Boy, Shooting’ and ‘The Invisible’; themes that perfectly matched the then futuristic sounds within.

Returning in 1997 with ‘Black Science’ and originally released this time under the name Geezer, this album saw Butler once again working with drummer Deen Castronovo and guitarist Pedro Howse, and like ‘Plastic Planet’, was produced by Butler and Paul Northfield (Rush, Alice Cooper, Suicidal Tendencies, Dream Theater etc). Bell was unable to provide vocals this time due to commitments with Fear Factory, but his industrial boots were more than adequality filled by the then completely unknown Clark Brown who stepped up to the plate and delivered an impressively powerful vocal performance over the album’s high-energy and heavy power grooves.

It wouldn’t be until 2005 that Geezer would get the chance to continue his solo explorations, having returned to Sabbath for the 1997 edition of Ozzfest, remaining in the band ever since, but in 2005 he

released ‘Ohmwork’, this time under the name GZR. Once again the recording was undertaken with Clark Brown on vocals and Pedro Howse on guitar, the difference this time being that drum duties were handled by Chad E Smith (the veteran St. Louis drummer, not the Red Hot Chili Peppers percussionist of the same name).

With ‘Ohmwork’, gone were the industrial metal influences of the previous decade, but Butler still steadfastly refused to hark back to the past and kept everything contemporary, drawing on influences, as a keen follower of music, on everything that was happening in rock at the time. From the pedal to the metal of ‘Aural Sects’ to the epic, neo-psychedelia of ‘I Believe’, ‘Ohmwork’ was a fitting finale to Geezer’s solo album trilogy.

Find Geezer Butler online at:

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Comments

  1. I’m assuming booklets containing lyrics etc will be included with the redesigned CD releases?

  2. On the subject of Geezer’s solo work – are there any other CD releases (other than promo CD’s) that have been released (official releases). I am not aware of any but, maybe, I’ve missed something along the way?

    • Aaron McMahon says

      The only thing I can think of there from the G//Z/R, Geezer, GZR period, was some bonus tracks on Plastic Planet for the Japanese release (there’s some live tracks), a bonus track called “Beach Skeleton” on some versions of Black Science, and a track called “Outworld”, which was recorded and included on the soundtrack album “Mortal Kombat: More Kombat” .

  3. Any word on the original Geezer Butler Band music?

  4. Steve Moss says

    I have a live recording on cassette tape of the Geezer Butler Band live at the Marquee, London, England, 1985. I will get round to putting it on Youtube one day.

  5. Aaron McMahon says

    Having pre-ordered the vinyl release of the three albums, I can confirm from having seen the track listing that the bonus Japanese tracks for Plastic Planet and the bonus track “Beach Skeleton” from Black Science aren’t included on them. I don’t know about the cd re-releases, but I imagine they’d be the same as the vinyl releases.

  6. David Bayliss says

    The CD’s sound very good (doesn’t say if they’ve been remastered) and non of the rare tracks listed by other comments are included. The covers are BMG and the CD’s are BMG/Sanctuary. It was a good opportunity to included the rare tracks and once again a record company has cocked it up!!

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