Bill Ward
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Bill Ward | ||
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Background information | ||
Birth name | William Ward | |
Born | May 5, 1948 (age 58) Aston, Birmingham, England |
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Genre(s) | Heavy Metal, Hard Rock | |
Occupation(s) | Musician, Performer | |
Instrument(s) | Drums, Percussion | |
Years active | 1968 - present | |
Associated acts |
Black Sabbath Ward One |
Bill Ward (born William Ward, May 5, 1948, Aston, Birmingham, England), is the drummer for the British heavy metal band Black Sabbath.
In addition to playing drums, Ward sang lead vocals for two Black Sabbath songs; "It's Alright" (from Technical Ecstasy), and "Swinging The Chain" (from Never Say Die!).
Ward's distinctive drumming often closely doubles the rhythms of the bass and guitar riffs, producing a powerful combined effect. An example of this is the song "Iron Man" off the Paranoid album. He is also characterized by playing quick drum rolls in between riffs and his powerful groove. ("Symptom of the Universe" is a good example of his unique style.)
Contents |
[edit] Biography
Prior to the formation of Black Sabbath, Bill Ward and guitarist Tony Iommi played in a band called "Mythology", and joined vocalist Ozzy Osbourne and bassist Geezer Butler, who had played in a band together called "Rare Breed".
Between 1969 and 1980, Ward played drums on every Sabbath album. He left the band for personal reasons in August 1980 during a tour for the album Heaven and Hell. He sat out one album (1981's Mob Rules) before returning for 1983's Born Again. He once again left the band following the recording of that album, due to ill-health. He was officially back in the band again in the summer of 1984, but the band did not record or tour then.
Before the full-blown reunion, Bill Ward and the original Sabbath had re-united twice for short sets, firstly for Live Aid in 1985 and then at a Costa Mesa, California Ozzy Osbourne show on November 15th, 1992. Sabbath, with ex-Judas Priest singer Rob Halford replacing the recently-departed Ronnie James Dio, opened the show for Ozzy in honor of it being his last show ever. Then the Ozzy Osbourne band (Ozzy, Zakk Wylde, Mike Inez, Randy Castillo and John Sinclair) did a full set before Ozzy was reunited with Tony, Geezer and Bill for four numbers.
Ward made a brief return to the band for a South American tour in 1994, before finally rejoining the band for the two shows at the Birmingham NEC, England on December 4th and 5th 1997, which made up the 'Reunion' album. (When what was billed as the original line-up reunited for the Ozzfest tour in 1997 Mike Bordin played drums.) Ward then had to skip all but the last two band appearances in 1998 while he recovered from a heart-attack suffered during the tour rehearsals that May. As was the case in 1980, he was again replaced at short-notice by Vinny Appice, although this time it was always intended to be a temporary absence for Ward, health allowing. Thankfully he was well enough to return for good in 1999 and has remained with Sabbath ever since.
In October 2006 news leaked that Ward would be reuniting with Tony Iommi, Geezer Butler and Ronnie James Dio for a tour though under the moniker 'Heaven and Hell', however, Ward later decided not to participate in the tour, but that he would participate in the tour and new album of the original Black Sabbath lineup in late 2007[1].
[edit] Discography
[edit] 1970s
- 1970 - Black Sabbath - Black Sabbath
- 1970 - Black Sabbath - Paranoid
- 1971 - Black Sabbath - Master of Reality
- 1972 - Black Sabbath - Volume 4
- 1973 - Black Sabbath - Sabbath Bloody Sabbath
- 1975 - Black Sabbath - Sabotage
- 1975 - Rinky Dink & The Crystal - Cameo Roles
- 1975 - Black Sabbath - We Sold Our Soul for Rock 'n' Roll
- 1976 - Black Sabbath - Technical Ecstasy
- 1978 - Black Sabbath - Never Say Die!
- 1978 - Dean Friedman - Well Well Said the Rocking Chair
[edit] 1980s
- 1980 - Black Sabbath - Heaven and Hell
- 1980 - Black Sabbath - Live At Last
- 1982 - Dean Friedman - Rumpled Romeo
- 1983 - Black Sabbath - Born Again
[edit] 1990s
- 1990 - Bill Ward - Ward One: Along the Way
- 1993 - Ozzy Osbourne - Live and Loud
- 1994 - Nativity In Black: A Tribute To Black Sabbath
- 1996 - Black Sabbath - The Sabbath Stones
- 1997 - Bill Ward - When the Bough Breaks
- 1997 - Ozzy Osbourne - The Ozzman Cometh
- 1998 - Black Sabbath - Reunion
[edit] 2000s
- 2000 - Tony Iommi - Iommi
- 2002 - Black Sabbath - Past Lives
- 2002 - Bill Ward - Straws (single)
- 2002 - Black Sabbath - Symptom of the Universe: The Original Black Sabbath 1970-1978
- 2003 - Dio - Stand Up and Shout: The Dio Anthology
- 2004 - Black Sabbath - Black Box: The Complete Original Black Sabbath (1970-1978)
- 2006 - Black Sabbath - Greatest Hits 1970-1978
- 2007 - Black Sabbath - The Dio Years
- (TBA) - Bill Ward - Beyond Aston
[edit] Trivia
- On the short-lived Comedy Central show TV Funhouse, there was a joke cartoon called "The Black Sabbath Show", making fun of rock band based cartoons, like the one with The Beatles, or The Jackson 5. In the cartoon, Bill is depicted as being completely incomprehensible, due to his constant drinking; he speaks in British-sounding gibberish.