

1Anno Mundi6:12 2The Law Maker3:53 3Jerusalem3:59 4The Sabbath Stones6:46 5The Battle Of Tyr1:08 6Odin's Court2:42 7Valhalla4:41 8Feels Good To Me5:44 9Heaven In Black4:05 Phonographic Copyright ℗ – I.R.S. Records Ltd. Copyright – I.R.S. Records Ltd. Manufactured By – EMI Records Ltd. Pressed By – EMI Swindon Recorded At – Rockfield Studios Mixed At – Rockfield Studios Recorded At – Woodcray Studios Mixed At – Woodcray Studios Mastered At – The Town House Published By – Intersong Music Ltd. Artwork By, Design – Satori (14) Bass – Neil Murray Engineer – Sean Lynch Engineer [Assistant At Rockfield] – Paul (82), Simon (47) Engineer [Assistant At Woodcray] – Doug (14), Phil (44) Keyboards, Musician – Geoff Nicholls Mastered By – Tony Cousins Mixed By – Leif Mases Music By, Arranged By – Black Sabbath Photography By – Andie Airfix Producer, Drums – Cozy Powell Producer, Guitar – Tony Iommi Vocals, Lyrics By – Tony Martin ℗ 1990 IRS Records Ltd. 1990 IRS Records Ltd. Barcode (Text): 5 015557 009920 Barcode (Scanned): 5015557009920 Rights Society: BIEM/MCPS Matrix / Runout (Variant 1): EIRSACD 1038 1:1:2. EMI SWINDON Matrix / Runout (Variant 2): EIRSACD 1038 1:1;:3 EMI SWINDON Review: Excelleny Ozzy Album - Excelleny Ozzy Album Review: Mastyrpiece - An underrated gem from the end of the wonderfully bombastic and very uncool 80s period of heavy metal and hard rock. Many classic albums were forged in the decade; this will rightly never be classed as such but it began the troublesome and musically sterile 90s well. And it stands up pretty well today. As a fan of the Tony Martin era of Sabbath I am slightly biased but while never reaching the heady heights of much of their back catalogue it is a cohesive and serious collection of well written tracks. 'Anno Mundi' kicks it all off perfectly. I first heard this on a friend's sister's stereo in 1990 when I was still a wee teenager and the album was 'new'. Nobody at the time seemed to like it but the very chunky opener clinched it for me and I rushed out to buy the cassette (which was the preferred form of print back in the olden days). It's a classic in my eyes. 'The Lawmaker' on the other hand is not as good. It's ok but there are no hooks or anything outstanding to make it worth future listens. 'Jurusalem' is another strong contender for personal classic. It is catchy and heavy and perfectly 80s sounding. 'The Sabbath Stones' goes on a bit and is slightly better than just ok. 'The Battle of Tyr' is more of an interlude but it adds to the tone of the album which is consistent throughout. It's great theatre. 'Odin's Court' is a lovely 'kind-of' ballad, very short but again keeps the tone of the album well. And it segues straight into the awesome monster that is 'Valhalla'. This is another of the outstanding tracks here, but it is sadly the last. 'Feels Good to Me' is a nice little mid-paced rocker but it's not excellent. And 'Heaven in Black' is very good but lacks something that should have moved it into classic territory, especially with such a great title. As a whole I'll give it 5 stars as it's more of a personal favourite, but as a piece of music it still stands up very well and is probably a 3 star effort on its own merits. But I love it. Just a short (!) N.B. concerning the price of the different issues by different sellers (at the time of writing November 2010). The edition I purchased was the 1990 but there is also a more recent 2008 version. The price I paid was reasonable for an out of print CD but still fairly high, but I REALLY wanted it and I was lucky as the used copy I received was in excellent condition. I would not have paid the £50 plus that others are charging for the 2008 edition. If you are thinking of purchasing, wait for a seller to charge between £10 or £20 as this is sufficient.
| ASIN | B000000QFV |
| Best Sellers Rank | 117,642 in CDs & Vinyl ( See Top 100 in CDs & Vinyl ) 7,494 in Heavy Metal 7,824 in Classic British Rock 47,281 in Pop |
| Customer reviews | 4.7 4.7 out of 5 stars (354) |
| Is discontinued by manufacturer | No |
| Label | Emd/I.R.S. |
| Manufacturer | Emd/I.R.S. |
| Manufacturer reference | 022071304924 |
| Number of discs | 1 |
T**G
Excelleny Ozzy Album
Excelleny Ozzy Album
K**H
Mastyrpiece
An underrated gem from the end of the wonderfully bombastic and very uncool 80s period of heavy metal and hard rock. Many classic albums were forged in the decade; this will rightly never be classed as such but it began the troublesome and musically sterile 90s well. And it stands up pretty well today. As a fan of the Tony Martin era of Sabbath I am slightly biased but while never reaching the heady heights of much of their back catalogue it is a cohesive and serious collection of well written tracks. 'Anno Mundi' kicks it all off perfectly. I first heard this on a friend's sister's stereo in 1990 when I was still a wee teenager and the album was 'new'. Nobody at the time seemed to like it but the very chunky opener clinched it for me and I rushed out to buy the cassette (which was the preferred form of print back in the olden days). It's a classic in my eyes. 'The Lawmaker' on the other hand is not as good. It's ok but there are no hooks or anything outstanding to make it worth future listens. 'Jurusalem' is another strong contender for personal classic. It is catchy and heavy and perfectly 80s sounding. 'The Sabbath Stones' goes on a bit and is slightly better than just ok. 'The Battle of Tyr' is more of an interlude but it adds to the tone of the album which is consistent throughout. It's great theatre. 'Odin's Court' is a lovely 'kind-of' ballad, very short but again keeps the tone of the album well. And it segues straight into the awesome monster that is 'Valhalla'. This is another of the outstanding tracks here, but it is sadly the last. 'Feels Good to Me' is a nice little mid-paced rocker but it's not excellent. And 'Heaven in Black' is very good but lacks something that should have moved it into classic territory, especially with such a great title. As a whole I'll give it 5 stars as it's more of a personal favourite, but as a piece of music it still stands up very well and is probably a 3 star effort on its own merits. But I love it. Just a short (!) N.B. concerning the price of the different issues by different sellers (at the time of writing November 2010). The edition I purchased was the 1990 but there is also a more recent 2008 version. The price I paid was reasonable for an out of print CD but still fairly high, but I REALLY wanted it and I was lucky as the used copy I received was in excellent condition. I would not have paid the £50 plus that others are charging for the 2008 edition. If you are thinking of purchasing, wait for a seller to charge between £10 or £20 as this is sufficient.
J**"
One Of Sabbath's Best
Enter Black Sabbath's 3rd Studio Album featuring the massively Underrated Lead Singer Tony Martin. After Sabbath's previous Masterpiece "Headless Cross" showing everybody that Sabbath were still around and that Tony Martin deserved to be there. This album is the complete opposite to its predecessor, instead of Satanic Themes its much into Norse Mythology which doesn't sound right for Sabbath, BUT WAIT! It works. Cozy Powell returns on Drums and does brilliantly (as usual) Neil Murray is back on Bass though not as good as Geezer but still contributes a good sound, and of course the man himself Tony Iommi the Riff Legend delivers some fantastic riffs on this album. TYR was my first Tony Martin Era Album I bought and I'm very glad I did not only is it one of my favortite Black Sabbath Albums but its a fantastic Metal Album and one of the best of the 90's. Best songs to listen to on this album are... Well all of them I'd say there is no filler on here. If your a Black Sabbath Fan or a Metal Fan who wants to hear New Bands and Haven't come across Black Sabbath yet this is an essential album of theirs to get (well get all of Sabbath's Albums) don't listen to the haters who are Ozzy only or Dio Only Sabbath this is SO UNTRUE there was a Sabbath after Them and they bloody ROCKED! Go on have a listen you won't regret it
M**.
I like the 'Old School' Sounds from this Album
I liked Tony Martin as the vocalist in this rare album, from the 1990's, he shares a good long slow vocal pitch with guitarist Tony lommi. So if you are an old school Sabbath rocker like me! you will like this Album!
S**E
Iommi, Powell, Martin
Well over the course of 40 years Black Sabbath have had more singers than Courtney Love has had men... well okay maybe they haven't had THAT much. From the obviously legendary Ozzy Osbourne, to the Godly Ronnie J Dio and to the forgotten Tony Martin as prime examples. What these silly sods don't realise is that Martin spent more time in the band than Ozzy Osbourne originally did in the 70s. Any way onto the album. It kicks off with an eerie keyboard solo from Geoff Nicholes and burst into reality with a smoking riff and some seriously heavy drums from sticks legend Cozy Powell. The sound is more reminiscent of Early Rainbow than Black Sabbath but who gives a toss because it sounds bloody good. "Anno Mundi" is easily one of Black Sabbaths most criminally underrated songs. Alongside songs like "jerusalem" and "Valhalla", 70's Sabbath did not write a song nearly half as catchy as these monsters. They just ooze with raw power and force as this super line up blast the heavens with heavy metal. Give credit where it is due, Tony Martin has one incredible voice. His vocal range is just as high as Dio and can handle the creepy vibes that Ozzy sang 15 years before him. If you can except anything past the orignal line up than this is a place to start. The third album from the criminally forgotten Martin Era is extremely hard to find and is in need of remastering. It really makes the album sound more dated then it deserves. However it is worth finding just for collectors sake. Great art work and great music, how can you go wrong?
A**O
Obra prima do Sabbath com Martin nos vocais
紀**林
何故かアメリカ盤まで買ってしまった 本当に良い時代にデジタルリマスターで出直してよかったと思う一枚 それまで大昔の輸入盤を後生大事に取って置いてずっと聴いてた(輸入盤がジャケット代わりの紙箱に入ってた時代) 当時はコージーにニールが居るってだけで購入対象だったけど前作含めて両方傑作だよ (後年この二人はブライアンメイバンドのリズム隊になるから余計に好き) レーベルもマイナーだった暗黒期の様な時代が今じゃメジャーから再販なんて涙なしじゃ語れんな
K**N
Exactly what I wanted for a reasonable price
V**R
Q decir de este disco....un clásico del metal y una maravilla!
J**T
Bei einigen germanischen Stämme (darunter die Sachsen) war Tyr der oberste Himmelsgott, Gott des Krieges und als göttlicher Vorsitzender des Thing auch des Rechts. Doch seit dem schicksalsträchtigen Tag, als Tyr während der Fesselung des Wolfes Fenris/Fenrir seine rechte Schwurhand einbüßte, übernahm Wotan/Odin die Rolle des obersten Gotts und Allvaters. Tyr dagegen blieb der Gott des Krieges. Allerdings schien Tyr bei den ach so kriegerischen Nordgermanen/Wikingern kaum oder gar keine Rolle gespielt zu haben (da Odin eigentlich als Kriegsgott verehrt wurde). Auch in der Lieder- und Prosa-Edda erscheint Tyr allzuoft nur wie eine Randfigur/Randnotiz. Dennoch: 1990 Anno Domini widmeten BLACK SABBATH dem Tyr dieses Album hier, obwohl nur in losen Zusammenhängen, sodass man nicht von einem Konzeptalbum sprechen kann - schade, da die Band durchaus das Potential eines majästetischen Konzeptalbums gehabt hätte! "TYR" bietet interessanten Hardrock - mitunter auch progressiven Elementen - und einer Ladung an Blues. Abgesegnet von der charismatischen wie markanten Stimme des angelsächsischen Waldschrates Tony Martin. Schon der Opener "Anno Mundi" sorgt für eine prickelnde Gänsehaut. Wobei es hier für mich keinen Schwachen Song gibt! - Das 6-seitige CD-Booklet wurde stimmungsvoll gestaltet (das Album im allgemeinem), Songtexte sind abgedruckt, aber über ein Bandfoto hätte ich mich doch gefreut! - Ich lehne mich jetzt mal gaaanz weit aus dem Fenster (ja ich weiß, dass die germanischen Langhäuser keine Fenster hatten!) und behaupte, dass "TYR" nach der legendären Ozzy-Ära das beste BLACK SABBATH-Album ever ist (dickes fettes Sorry an alle Dio-Fans)! Bei Tyr, ich schwöre, dass ich dieses Album immer verehren und jederzeit gegen die invasorischen Römer-Legionen verteidigen werde - mein Sax dürstet schon nach Blut!