Black Sabbath "War Pigs" Analysis Reaction

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  • Опубликовано: 10 июн 2024
  • Okay, super leery about this one. I try to keep things as positive and upbeat on this channel as possible, but Black Sabbath's "War Pigs" has been consistently requested so much so that I had to do a bit more of a deeper dive. Now, we chose a version of the remastered audio dubbed over a film called "Motherland" just for a bit more visuals to add additional context (though there were no great live performances we could find). I hope this hits!
    Join professional opera singer Elizabeth Zharoff, as she listens to Black Sabbath performing "War Pigs" for the first time.
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    Written and Performed by Black Sabbath
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    I definitely recommend watching the original video without interruptions. Here's the link: • Black Sabbath ~ War Pigs
    Show Black Sabbath some love: / @blacksabbath
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    WE HAVE MERCH! Check-out the full line-up here: thecharismaticmerch.com
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    🎧 Elizabeth’s favorite headphones 🎧 : imp.i114863.net/zayoEM
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    WANT MY CHAIR? I don’t blame you…and here’s a link to make it even sweeter:
    secretlab.co/?rfsn=4692958.b2...
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    🎙️Podcast: thecharismaticvoice.com/podcast/
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    Elizabeth Zharoff is an international opera singer and voice coach, with 3 degrees in voice, opera, and music production. She's performed in 18 languages throughout major venues in Europe, America, and Asia. Currently based somewhere between Los Angeles and Tucson, Arizona, Elizabeth spends her days researching voice, singing, teaching, writing music, and recording TONS. She also plays Diablo and Dungeons & Dragons.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    We have a sister channel: THE SINGING HOLE. Join us there to examine how ordinary creatures create extraordinary sounds. / @thesinginghole
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    Copyright Disclaimer Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for "fair use" for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing.
    Non-profit, educational, or personal use tips the balance in favor of fair use.
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    #blacksabbath #Reaction #TheCharismaticVoice
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Комментарии • 6 тыс.

  • @Hichamvanborm
    @Hichamvanborm Год назад +4552

    Being anti war is not political, it is just basic decency.

    • @willieboy3011
      @willieboy3011 Год назад +140

      Where is the basic decency against Communism, which was totalitarian and has killed 100 million? Where are those songs?

    • @dickwaffle468
      @dickwaffle468 Год назад +146

      @@willieboy3011 Doesn't SOAD song - Hypnotize reference Tiananmen Square? That'd be a song against left-wing authoritarianism. Also saying "communism killed 100 million people" is weird because how'd you count it? And yeah capitalism and neo-liberalism is also leading to millions of preventable deaths in its own way?

    • @catdubh4787
      @catdubh4787 Год назад +254

      @@willieboy3011 If you watched this installment of TCV, you've just listened to one.
      It's blisteringly clear that Sabbath wasn't just calling out the US for the Vietnam war. They were calling-out everyone involved in perpetuating it. That's the entire message of the song, and it's how it was understood at the time.

    • @dickwaffle468
      @dickwaffle468 Год назад +46

      Yeah it was pretty odd of her to say.. especially after featuring SOAD a lot who are openly far-left band. People tend to think of things that are 'non-controversial' as the same thing as 'non-political'.

    • @chaptermasterpedrokantor1623
      @chaptermasterpedrokantor1623 Год назад

      @ Capitalism killed a hell of a lot less people. Corporate greed does, but even so called anti-capitalists today use smartphones and electric cars made with rare earth minerals stripmined under appalling conditions in Africa. As it stands capitalism lifted and is still lifting billions of people out of poverty even today, whereas communism only brought poverty and death to the billion of people unfortunate enough to live under it. And a lot of the capitalism is evil rhetoric comes from communists, who all live comfortable lives thanks to capitalism. Rant over: What I think willieboy meant was that sometimes war is the only course of action. When you are faced with a regime of insurmountable evil you should be willing to go to war with it in order to protect you, instead of avoiding conflict at all cost and offer appeasement, or worse, surrender. Either that or yes, he was off on a rant too.

  • @michaelmignone5869
    @michaelmignone5869 10 месяцев назад +739

    Ozzy is the only human where you can clearly hear what he sings but can't understand a damn word when he talks 😂

    • @AiXeLsyD13
      @AiXeLsyD13 6 месяцев назад +7

      Nah, Tim Armstrong from Rancid may have him beat.

    • @kgaming9455
      @kgaming9455 6 месяцев назад +19

      Sounds great live in his seventies still singing great, but can barely form a straight sentence irl 😂 god I love Ozzy

    • @jbucktheman
      @jbucktheman 5 месяцев назад +12

      Ozzy is one of those people where you can only hear two words when you hear him say a sentence. But it’s the two most important words in the sentence.

    • @DM0407
      @DM0407 5 месяцев назад +2

      The Gallagher brothers.

    • @misterschubert3242
      @misterschubert3242 5 месяцев назад +8

      There's also Mel Tillis and Jim Nabors...

  • @marcies3789
    @marcies3789 4 месяца назад +174

    There's a reason this song is so very legendary. It rails against war, it rails against human suffering, it cries out for it to stop. As relevant today as any other time in history.

    • @Windykun
      @Windykun 2 месяца назад +2

      Idk why some people that support no war think metal is evil, some is but Black Sabbath is not underlying-ly evil, it’s dark but it’s it’s not evil, it’s basically conquering darkness with darkness

    • @salvadormonella8953
      @salvadormonella8953 21 день назад

      NOT EVEN. Your sentiment is nice, but a little soft headed. Black Sabbath aren't known as great thinkers, extolling virtue, or having any sort of philosophical or moral supremacy. This song is popular because of the music. It's a fun tune to listen to and play. The lyrics to WP changed dramatically over the song's development. Osborne had a basic conceptual premise, and worked to fill in the lyrical blanks with vaguely relevant notions.

  • @maxhames499
    @maxhames499 3 месяца назад +39

    After 54 years of listening to this song it still holds as an honest depiction of our times.

    • @salvadormonella8953
      @salvadormonella8953 21 день назад

      It holds true when the same political party that brought us the Vietnam War (and 80% of all U.S. wars, WWI, WWII, Korea, Afghanistan, U.S. Civil War, the war of 1812, etc.) is now supporting and encouraging Palestine v. Israel and Russia v. Ukraine. "Good job" D's. NOT. Same today as it ever was, and will forever be.

  • @cwize
    @cwize Год назад +2508

    I know that Elizabeth does these videos to analyze the vocals primarily, but I feel the need to call for appreciation of the absolute clinic of iconic rock drum fills throughout this masterpiece.

    • @Erndog67
      @Erndog67 Год назад +131

      Bill Ward is, to me, the greatest drummer of all time.

    • @saschaoswald480
      @saschaoswald480 Год назад +50

      Yes, yes, yes! Can't believe she was able to sit relatively still without ANY air drumming. I couldn't do that while listening to this song...😁

    • @AKJACKAL99709
      @AKJACKAL99709 Год назад +32

      @Ernie S I wouldn't go as far as the best ever, but I would agree that he was often underrated and deserved to be in the discussion.

    • @ChippyL93
      @ChippyL93 Год назад +59

      If you've never heard it, I'd massively recommend finding Sabbath live in Paris in around 1970. Bill Ward on the drums for War Pigs in that performance is monstrous

    • @chairmanofthebored6860
      @chairmanofthebored6860 Год назад +63

      Not even mentioning that amazing bass line.

  • @cgsweat
    @cgsweat Год назад +853

    "Why should politicians go out to fight.... they leave that all to the poor!"
    That line holds up just as well today as it did over 50 years ago.

    • @gafferton1912
      @gafferton1912 Год назад

      why dont presidents fight the war? why do they always send the poor? a nice call back from SOAD BYOB

    • @whenisdinner2137
      @whenisdinner2137 Год назад +62

      Holds up just the same as it did 3,000 years ago as it will 3,000 years in the future.

    • @sneakytown
      @sneakytown Год назад +39

      and that is why "war pigs" is the best anti war rock anthem ever

    • @4matt21
      @4matt21 Год назад +9

      War and evil are timeless

    • @user-ld9tf4td8s
      @user-ld9tf4td8s Год назад +5

      ​@@4matt21War. War never changes

  • @poldy100
    @poldy100 10 месяцев назад +307

    This is pure raw doom. Heard it live twice with Ozzy. I'd argue this isn't political but sociology and philosophy. One of the most important songs ever recorded.

    • @chrismack3327
      @chrismack3327 8 месяцев назад

      More relevant today than ever! Especially with the internet allowing for information to flow to the masses unfiltered. The line "Evil minds that plot destruction" resonates when its heard.

    • @QuikVidGuy
      @QuikVidGuy 4 месяца назад +10

      Oh, it's squarely political. You don't talk about war being a racket the politicians play with the poor and pretend it's not political.

    • @enisylo
      @enisylo 4 месяца назад +2

      @@QuikVidGuyI've found people LOVE to say that things explicitly delivering a message of class struggle isn't "politics", it's "sociology". No - it's political. It's not 'party-political', because the vast majority of parties (particularly in 'Western' culture) are post-cold-war Neo Liberal nightmares that have removed themselves from explicit class struggle framing.

    • @bareakon
      @bareakon 4 месяца назад +4

      Politics is both philosophical and sociological.
      I don't know why people are so hesitant to say things are political. Especially given that almost everything has a political element to it.

    • @bareakon
      @bareakon 4 месяца назад +3

      ​@@enisyloYeah people totally use political to mean partisan or controversial.
      But it's more useful as a term for political philosophy.
      I remember playing a gig and being told "let's not get political" when I made a (affirming) joke about gender identity. This was 10 minutes after we'd covered Rage Against The Machine.

  • @seanmorgan2781
    @seanmorgan2781 7 месяцев назад +66

    I would listen to Elizabeth break down a Chunky Soup commercial. Her joy for music and the human voice is infectious.

  • @johndrake2147
    @johndrake2147 Год назад +1120

    I recall a documentary where the drummer Bill Ward spoke about playing this song back in the 70's and many of the crowd were Vietnam veterans. He was haunted by how they stood up (in some cases were lifted out of wheelchairs) when they heard the song

    • @andywalker9646
      @andywalker9646 Год назад +104

      Christ that statement brings tears to my eyes. Love Bill Ward's drumming, surely one of the most underrated stickmen out there. As for the video with the cameras watching our every move and the people being dominated - welcome to the British government's wet dream of the 21st century.

    • @barrytdrake
      @barrytdrake Год назад +10

      Thank you. I'll have to look for that documentary.

    • @XilehNori
      @XilehNori Год назад +67

      “We Have Met the Enemy and He Is Us”

    • @Greg-io1ip
      @Greg-io1ip Год назад

      Of course this is a song from aftermath of Hitler's white nationalist agenda to take over the world. It may have been triggered by JFK's Vietnam distraction, but in England, the Brit Bands understand cover-up by Royal Monarchy is what is at the root of all the evil. Prince Wilhelm was given an ultimatum by Queen Elizabeth's father King George to convert German peasants into the ruling class of Germany, a satellite territory of British Royals that Prince Wilhelm was tasked to 'Get More Anglo'. Jewish merchants and bankers doing well in the GLOBAL RECESSION (triggered by USA 1929 stock market crash), was unpleasant to King George's white nationalist eyeballs. So understanding the Rupert Murdoch white nationalist connections are pretty easy to understand when you understand Prince Wilhelm went too far endorsing Hitler, and British Royals waited too long to correct their error because they feared Soviet Union as well, they thought / hoped Hitler would only focus on Soviet Union's expanding powers. This is a lesson we haven't learned. These British rockers born into meddling Royal Family cover-ups regarding Holocaust survivors sent into war in Palestine (to try again to silence the Jewish VICTIMS) are singing about The Royals and the wealthy. 'They always start the wars, leave the fighting up to the poor.' BOTH Palestinian tribal peoples and Holocaust survivors were placed in a fabricated war. Still ongoing. To cover King George's orders and Queen Elizabeth's Apartheid inaction (until Lady Di called her out, which cost her).

    • @Greg-io1ip
      @Greg-io1ip Год назад

      @@andywalker9646 Bingo! This is totally about Queen Elizabeth's daddy wanting a ruling class of German peasants and giving Prince Wilhelm the agenda to be rid of Jewish merchants and bankers in Nazi Germany. Which was literally 'King George's Germany'. His daughter was an expert manipulator of crime syndicates and cover-ups. Prince Andrew cover-up was her smallest crime. And it delivered Russian asset Cadet TwinkySpurs to top office of humanity. Simps too racist and simplistic to understand nobody near Robert Maxwell nor his successor Rupert Murdoch were any good. Lady Di was trying to out them all. She got pregnant with Dodi's Muslim child and became disposable. We all fell for it. China was the VICTIM paying for the cover-ups that blamed "Wuhan Virus!" on them, yet obviously China wouldn't gain anything from destroying the Wuhan event venue they spent probably a $Trillion Dollars US to update to host global events. Why would China toss that all away midway through 2019 'Grand Opening ' of Wuhan? Well NO VALUE ADDED British banks being kicked out of Hong Kong running Shipping Transactions Skimming Operations wanted USA blood and treasure in a proxy over Taiwan, who was taken over within by Rupert Murdoch's Falun Gong criminals trying to move British banks to Taiwan with MOST HATED PERSON IN TAIWAN BY TAIWAN CITIZENS: London trained Cambridge Analytica Mossad spy embed Tsai Ing-Wen. Understand that KMT supermajority Buddhist Mandarin Taiwanese civilians are 80% of the ELIGIBLE VOTERS in Taiwan, and they will never forget nor forgive TaiMed Biologics lab SARS leak. Look it up. You believe that, it is like believing Rupert Murdoch could be elected POTUS, or Natural Born Canadian Citizen Ted Cruz could somehow be put on ballots illegally by Mannatech crime syndicate and nobody would remember Ted Cruz was on Canadian Citizen healthcare his entire life, signing affidavits to Canadian government he is a "Natural Born Canadian Citizen and wants his whole family on Canadian Citizen healthcare coverage". And still Mannatech Russian money laundering operation of NRA laughing at stupidity of MagaDumps.

  • @soulbearer6214
    @soulbearer6214 11 месяцев назад +560

    The whole paranoid album is a masterpiece. An album way before its time.

    • @thegrumpypapa5549
      @thegrumpypapa5549 10 месяцев назад +7

      I wish that I could like the thumbs up more than once for this statement.

    • @seed_drill7135
      @seed_drill7135 10 месяцев назад +9

      It definitely holds up, but being late Vietnam era, it was also very much of its time.

    • @colleenmcclurg2010
      @colleenmcclurg2010 9 месяцев назад +3

      Well said! I practically wore out my first record in a couple months! Major, major piece of work! Hats off to everybody involved on this album!

    • @catw6998
      @catw6998 8 месяцев назад +1

      So many of Ozzy’s songs turns one into an instant head banger 👍😎🤭😎😎😎😎🦊

    • @ronfitzhenry3726
      @ronfitzhenry3726 5 месяцев назад

      It was for its time.

  • @jantje155
    @jantje155 7 месяцев назад +68

    Love this song. Such powerful lyrics. My favorite line is "Begging mercy for their sins. Satan, laughing, spreads his wings."

    • @FleshWound42
      @FleshWound42 5 месяцев назад +7

      "No more war pigs have the power" "Hand of God has struck the hour"

  • @jamesnation9889
    @jamesnation9889 6 месяцев назад +30

    A few weeks ago, 5 of us were on a road trip, cranking tunes etc. through Croatia...4 guys (ages 22, 36,,55 and 60) and a woman in her early 30's. The 60 year-old (a very handsome, vaguely dangerous-looking character) requested this song from the 22 year-old's Spotify account.
    Every person in the car knew the lyrics.

  • @purpleelephantdebh
    @purpleelephantdebh Год назад +619

    the irony of Ozzy's diction while singing as opposed to how he sounds while speaking is one of the most amazing linguistic flips i know of.

    • @paulriddle7818
      @paulriddle7818 Год назад +13

      Its an act. His diction is very good when speaking.

    • @guen4413
      @guen4413 Год назад +53

      @@paulriddle7818I don’t think it’s an act. I think it’s just his accent. Accents often go away when singing

    • @Sygma6
      @Sygma6 Год назад +43

      There is a difference between sober Ozzy and not-sober Ozzy.

    • @grahamnunn8998
      @grahamnunn8998 Год назад +48

      There is a difference between years of drugs and a very young Ozzy when this was recorded. Not so great by Never Say Die.

    • @hunam3876
      @hunam3876 Год назад +10

      @@grahamnunn8998 bingo!

  • @jcparker500
    @jcparker500 Год назад +389

    I'm going to toss my hat in the ring for "You really need to watch the live version from Paris, 1970." It's pretty amazing and you get to see the band putting their hearts into it.

    • @Aakarsh1068
      @Aakarsh1068 Год назад +1

      My favorite version of War Pugs along with the one at The End.

    • @usedscar
      @usedscar Год назад +2

      Often there is just 'that version' she should analyze.

    • @vikingrock4662
      @vikingrock4662 Год назад +3

      I agree, that is one of the best Sabbath clips out there!

    • @ochocabra1542
      @ochocabra1542 Год назад +13

      Bill Ward dominates that entire performance

    • @richards2920
      @richards2920 Год назад +9

      Missed a trick by not reacting to the live video in Paris.. Bill Wards drumming was sublime

  • @enericm
    @enericm 7 месяцев назад +37

    I remember other metal bands talking about Black Sabbath and a common observation was that they had a very heavy sound without needing to be super fast or producing a wall of noise.

  • @jasonsangwin4006
    @jasonsangwin4006 9 месяцев назад +51

    The key to playing Black Sabbath is to lay right back, it's very grove oriented. The energy is in the intensity rather than the speed. This is also one of the many Black Sabbath songs where you realise that Ozzy is an incredible singer.

    • @adamronald89
      @adamronald89 3 месяца назад +3

      The end jam in symptom of the universe is ozzys greatest moment

  • @ytcomment4242
    @ytcomment4242 Год назад +275

    The most underrated part of this song is how they rhyme "masses" with "masses".

    • @BigChuckMeister
      @BigChuckMeister Год назад +9

      lol

    • @johnh.blevins5927
      @johnh.blevins5927 Год назад +20

      So true, I grew up with this song but never gave any thought to the fact the word was just sung the previous line! The way Ozzy emphasizes black before singing ‘masses’ again so soon makes it new!

    • @troystaunton254
      @troystaunton254 Год назад +18

      Same word different connotations so not really the same word.

    • @derekmartin2054
      @derekmartin2054 Год назад +13

      Saying you can't rhyme a word to itself ever is just a cheap analysis of poetry/lyricism

    • @Fallen2spring
      @Fallen2spring Год назад +9

      Yes it’s like Motörhead. Particularly killed by death it’s so stupid you realize, duh, there’s more to this. In the simplicity lies the brilliance. It’s simultaneously hilarious and deep, innit?

  • @russellsawyer1397
    @russellsawyer1397 Год назад +182

    I am an old-ish Black Sabbath fan and recall that the core concept of the band, at their launch, was to make frightening music. They wanted to try to address uncomfortable subjects uncomfortably. They wanted to unsettle people with their music. Judging by your analysis it worked.

    • @turnthepaigebrooklyn2951
      @turnthepaigebrooklyn2951 Год назад

      Politics in all shapes - forms and excuses to have them needed to be abolished. It’s the government’s with their twisted goals and agendas that insisted upon War. The people of these Countries would get along fine but were pushed towards this. The politicians needed to personally back
      up what they wanted

  • @christopherkrueger5948
    @christopherkrueger5948 5 месяцев назад +32

    Ozzy’s performance here is more than just singing, it’s a chant, it’s a prayer.

  • @randal_scandal
    @randal_scandal 10 месяцев назад +36

    The drumming is incredible and under appreciated. Amazing song!

    • @frightenedsoul
      @frightenedsoul 2 месяца назад +1

      This is the song that got me to become a drummer

  • @colrhodes377
    @colrhodes377 Год назад +326

    I think really we should be giving a big nod to Geezer Butler for writing the actual lyrics

    • @rigel2112
      @rigel2112 Год назад +10

      Thank you. People don't realize Ozzy was not very useful off stage and didn't write much.

    • @colrhodes377
      @colrhodes377 Год назад +17

      @@rigel2112 Ozzy could barely write his shopping list. Geezer Butler and Bob Daisley wrote the majority of songs attributed to Ozzy.

    • @mikegibbons7763
      @mikegibbons7763 Год назад +36

      And Geezer was absolutely destroying the bass part on this song. The guy is an incredible musician

    • @datisalaee4693
      @datisalaee4693 Год назад +4

      WOW! Thanks for sharing. I did not know that!

    • @mrsteel250
      @mrsteel250 Год назад +4

      @@mikegibbons7763 yeah listening to bass covers gave me a real appreciation for how great the bass is throughout the entire song

  • @iamvangarnett
    @iamvangarnett Год назад +323

    The saddest fact in the world is that there has never been a time in human history where this song hasn't been true or relevant.

    • @DaemonKeido
      @DaemonKeido Год назад +5

      And it likely never will not be relevant.

    • @troystaunton254
      @troystaunton254 Год назад +4

      I guess a positive is that it’s never been less relevant despite what mass media portrays the world. We’ve never been this peaceful.

    • @chrisrogers553
      @chrisrogers553 Год назад

      Thank you for having intelligence. People always want to talk about politics but the same story is repeated throughout history when are people going to stop it and stand up, it doesn't matter your political beliefs unless you're making money off politics and if you're one of those people you're definitely not fighting in any war.😢❤

    • @provalone
      @provalone Год назад

      ‘If You Want a Picture of the Future, Imagine a Boot Stamping on a Human Face - for Ever’ from George Orwell’s 1949 novel, Nineteen Eighty-Four.
      Some things will never change, and it is by opposing the inevitable, we are able to find purpose.

    • @TheOvalOwl
      @TheOvalOwl 11 месяцев назад

      I mean that's not entirely true... The rich went to war in ancient times up to medieval. They were the only ones that could afford the gear and the only ones to care about the glory.

  • @thebilldozer7970
    @thebilldozer7970 10 месяцев назад +14

    I come from an Army family and served myself, veterans know songs like this are important. Also Black Sabbath is the best!

  • @rossferguson6504
    @rossferguson6504 5 месяцев назад +13

    Ozzie Osborne, is so underrated, with regards to his singing.
    War Pigs, is a, friggin, classic and so beautiful.
    His voice is stunning and extremely smooth and precise.
    Perfect, for this, song.

    • @maxpower6576
      @maxpower6576 5 месяцев назад +1

      Is that you, Sharon? ;)

  • @Cadinho93
    @Cadinho93 Год назад +318

    War Pigs is one of the best songs of all time. The composition, guitars, drums, bass, vocals, everything really astounding individually, but also complements each other so good as a whole.
    It's a timeless song and showcases why Black Sabbath are head of their time.

    • @metalmark1214
      @metalmark1214 Год назад +17

      It's a good song musically, but for me, it's the lyrical content that made the biggest impact, especially for it's time.

    • @davido5496
      @davido5496 Год назад +2

      Its so fucking good still

    • @FrazerJones71
      @FrazerJones71 Год назад +12

      Great to see you analyse this classic anti-war song, yes it was written in reaction to the Vietnam War but it's message still resonates today. If you felt a little disturbed listening to it today then it's still doing its job in making people question conflict and it's effects.

    • @HenritheHorse
      @HenritheHorse Год назад +4

      @@metalmark1214 Timeless lyrics, since war is a business and needs to go on.

    • @scottzappa9314
      @scottzappa9314 Год назад +1

      @@FrazerJones71 This applies to any war, IMO. Including psycho Putin's hijinks.

  • @spencerfoster5303
    @spencerfoster5303 11 месяцев назад +244

    This song came out in 1968. Their were a lot of people/bands putting out anti-war songs at the time. Black Sabbath was in a league of their own back then. The godfathers of metal. This particular song never ages. It's just as relevant now as it was back then.

    • @larryweaver1729
      @larryweaver1729 10 месяцев назад +35

      1970

    • @ansfridaeyowulfsdottir8095
      @ansfridaeyowulfsdottir8095 9 месяцев назад +20

      *_"This song came out in 1968."_*
      1970.
      Both of the first two albums were released in 1970.
      {:o:O:}

    • @demagreg
      @demagreg 8 месяцев назад +6

      On the subject of the date the song was released, that was 25-ish years after the German bombings. If the band doesn't remember, they grew up hearing about it from their parents

    • @sparkyjackson8479
      @sparkyjackson8479 8 месяцев назад +2

      And years later today its so relevent

    • @johnphilipfosterdobson551
      @johnphilipfosterdobson551 8 месяцев назад +5

      1970, I know because I was a Sabbath fan aged 9 in 1970, including the first album.

  • @m1sterpunch
    @m1sterpunch 3 месяца назад +5

    One of my favorite parts of this channel is seeing your organic reaction to some of the most iconic moments of rock and just music history for the first time. It's amazing to see these songs again for the first time through your eyes (and ears).

  • @JohnDoe-ls1vd
    @JohnDoe-ls1vd 9 месяцев назад +20

    Black Sabbath was rock n Roll. Ozzy was metal. War pigs is the best Sabbath song, and still means so much today.

  • @robertkennedy5414
    @robertkennedy5414 Год назад +133

    While a lot of people unfamiliar with heavy metal think of it as only being fast, aggressive and loud, Sabbath were the first to define it in terms of mood, emotion and sound. Tony's guitar sound and the band's songwriting became the blueprint for what is now called doom metal and sludge metal. True pioneers in music.

    • @cavetoad1678
      @cavetoad1678 Год назад

      Thanks Robert, blew your mind and the CIA's too, didn't it?

    • @daletris
      @daletris Год назад +11

      Sabbath was the first to define it, period. Heavy metal started (with Sabbath) as moody and atmospheric, and then evolved and somewhat merged with hard rock and became a lot more fast paced. I get the confusion if you're only familiar with Dio era Sabbath or Ozzy's solo stuff, which is much faster and much harder. But Ozzy era Sabbath is a lot slower and atmospheric.

    • @cavetoad1678
      @cavetoad1678 Год назад +3

      @@daletris Agreed. But, Sabbath just riffed deeper off blues than a Led Zepplin did, there's a ton of examples who didn't make it but made amazing music in that era... Some stole blues, some like Black Sabbath made their own.

    • @Zeqhrox
      @Zeqhrox Год назад +1

      I swear to God. If you're calling Black Sabbath sludge metal

    • @mr.puckerie4800
      @mr.puckerie4800 Год назад +1

      In all actuality, Black Sabbath found the "heavy metal" label offensive as a band.

  • @richardwilliams5387
    @richardwilliams5387 Год назад +202

    There's a live version from the 70's where Ward and Iommi absolutely kill it. Ward in particular is such an underrated drummer.

    • @motorpsykler
      @motorpsykler Год назад +10

      Bill Ward just PUNISHES his drums like no one I’ve ever seen. To say he hits hard is an understatement.

    • @ochocabra1542
      @ochocabra1542 Год назад +2

      he's the best.

    • @thomaswebster5060
      @thomaswebster5060 Год назад +2

      Bill Ward is amazing... no doubt

    • @noobslayer7564
      @noobslayer7564 Год назад

      @@motorpsykler you can hear it so well with his snare. A sound that could cut through a jet's engine

    • @melissadavis5513
      @melissadavis5513 Год назад +1

      BILL WARD IS THE BEST DRUMMER EVER !!!

  • @johnbsouth1
    @johnbsouth1 10 месяцев назад +7

    I don’t think I could’ve ever imagined that someone reviewing a song that is so close to my heart, and my history could make me love it even more. RESPECT

  • @jdlech
    @jdlech 7 месяцев назад +13

    Nobody seems to notice how Bill Ward is just pounding away on the drums all through the song. Then you hear him keep time for everyone during the quiet parts.

    • @dennis8309
      @dennis8309 2 месяца назад +1

      Nope, nobody noticed but you...wow you're observant...
      .

  • @vjordan1709
    @vjordan1709 Год назад +215

    So glad that you listened to this. It's not meant to be pretty. It's not meant to be kind. It's meant to show the truth. They killed it, both lyrically and musically. ✌️

    • @ThePhoenixAscendant
      @ThePhoenixAscendant Год назад +11

      This song is most definitely a raw one to listen to, and her discomfort shows that the message is getting across.

    • @Kings_Quest
      @Kings_Quest Год назад +2

      Doing BYOB and then this is brave

    • @ThePhoenixAscendant
      @ThePhoenixAscendant Год назад +1

      @@Kings_Quest Amen to that.

    • @Kings_Quest
      @Kings_Quest Год назад +4

      ​@@ThePhoenixAscendantIf she now does some Rage Against The Machine, it'll be complete. (Elizabeth if you see this do Know Your Enemy)

    • @vjordan1709
      @vjordan1709 Год назад

      @jerry gilbert Sunday Bloody Sunday comes to mind, Pride in the Name of Love (? Not sure if that's the correct title) were both social commentary songs that hit hard.

  • @Murdo2112
    @Murdo2112 Год назад +169

    The main thing about Ozzy's vocals in this song is that he means every word, completely and utterly.
    That's worth more than all the technique in the world.

    • @livingmirror888
      @livingmirror888 Год назад +3

      🤘💯

    • @brheinfeldt
      @brheinfeldt Год назад +2

      I completely agree! 🎤🎶

    • @gerarddion4859
      @gerarddion4859 Год назад +9

      And these are Geezer Butler’s great lyrics!

    • @cavetoad1678
      @cavetoad1678 Год назад +4

      At times, she really needs to listen to the message of the lyrics. Often some she gets recommended she misses why they win her choice; it's not only the song but the message.
      This song is amazing because of the message and how it continues to be true.
      Hopefully soon she'll realize who's behind it and get rid of the demon and octopus in the background.
      Funny how she is bothered by Ozzy's call against witches. At best you'd think she'd say not all are black witches.
      Make your choice now. The time to repent is running short.

    • @DarthMajora
      @DarthMajora Год назад +7

      ​@Cave Toad oh for Lucifer's sake, get off of it.

  • @ShelbyKirkpatrick-bq9lu
    @ShelbyKirkpatrick-bq9lu 4 месяца назад +1

    I love how the drums sound like a ticking time bomb in the first verse

  • @TaurusChef
    @TaurusChef 3 месяца назад +1

    I'm so glad you did this song!!!! Black Sabbath's best song in my books.
    I really enjoy your reactions, and your interpretations of songs. ( your expressions are the absolute best!!) And reacting to this song does not disappoint:) for the 1000's of times I've heard this song, I have never seen the video for it. Which is true for a lot of the songs you do actually, your first hearing it, my first watching it lol! What is even more awesome you make me appreciate the song even more, or look at it in a new light. I play the bass and often get caught in a "tunnel vision" when listening to songs I know. You always seem to point out something musically that I never noticed before and for that reason amd many others I love your reactions!

  • @glennkirchens7970
    @glennkirchens7970 Год назад +118

    53 year old song. Still pulls at your soul, still makes you think, still makes you want to bang your head into a neck snapping crescendo. The Sab4 are so misunderstood and criminally under rated.

    • @sheridaducky-xk6lx
      @sheridaducky-xk6lx Год назад

      So well said

    • @georgemaranville3305
      @georgemaranville3305 Год назад +1

      When Metallica opened for Ozzy years and years ago and Ozzy heard Sabbath playing on Metallica’s bus or in their backstage (can’t remember which) Ozzy thought they were making fun of him. They were and still are underrated.

    • @pfer644
      @pfer644 Год назад +1

      That lyrics in that song are just as relevant today as they were when the song was written.

  • @user-ux8wd2zo8q
    @user-ux8wd2zo8q Год назад +96

    "I've never met a military man who didn't like this song" This is what Jani Lane of Warrant said to a an audience of U.S. troops at a USO show on Okinawa circa 1999 as they closed out their show by covering this song. And trust me, the crowd went freakin' insane. Sabbath absolutely nailed it here. The tempo, the tone, the lyrics...An absolute masterpiece. Love your breakdown of how Ozzy uses his voice to tie everything together! Fantastic analysis!

    • @troypeck4128
      @troypeck4128 Год назад +1

      To be honest, I loved his song before I was in the military.

    • @silentcalling
      @silentcalling Год назад +2

      There are very few who went to war that don't come out a pacifist. War is an atrocity worse than hell.

    • @Dragondoc4
      @Dragondoc4 Год назад +3

      ​@@silentcalling I don't think I can agree with this sentiment. Most that I served with couldn't wait to wreck 💩. We just love to fight. The problem is the politicians and senior officers setting rules of engagement that handicap you. This leads to unnecessary pain, injuries, and deaths. You're left wondering why you are there and the theater becomes a meat grinder. So we don't become pacifists but we definitely don't like politicians.

    • @RCAvhstape
      @RCAvhstape Год назад

      It's because once you've served you realize how you get used.

    • @JahanMisra
      @JahanMisra Год назад

      i used to be in a music program and one of the parents got this song banned from it because he was offended by the “anti troop” message. not the sharpest tool in the shed

  • @TiberiusWallace
    @TiberiusWallace 5 месяцев назад +2

    What makes the Ozzy vocal choice soooooo good in this song is that he does it with such indifference and ends the verses with "oh lord yeah!" with subtle horror, giving some shock and emotion to suddenly realising.

  • @williamtownsend3279
    @williamtownsend3279 6 месяцев назад +2

    This song is more applicable today than it was then.

  • @sanandaallsgood673
    @sanandaallsgood673 Год назад +263

    As a person who experienced the Viet Nam war and its ridiculous purpose, this song holds special meaning to me. A funny thing about this song. When I was in technical school (in the military) I went to a dance on base and someone had enough guts to play this at the dance. This was in 1972. I believe this song came out in '71 on the Paranoid album. No one actually objected to the song and it played all the way through. I was amazed.

    • @hunam3876
      @hunam3876 Год назад +4

      Funny how you're not mentioning who committed the atrocities back then... I guess "it's ok when we do it".

    • @40kedge
      @40kedge Год назад +35

      As an Afghan vet… I’d say all wars are “ ridiculous in its purpose .

    • @phil2756
      @phil2756 Год назад +7

      1970

    • @CodeeXD
      @CodeeXD Год назад +14

      ​@@hunam3876 he didn't mention any of the atrocities committed by either side. But yeah war sucks, and nah it's not really ok when either side does anything. alternatively next time one of our allies asks for help we should what? Tell them to piss off?

    • @wonderboy13579
      @wonderboy13579 Год назад

      ​@Hunam until you know the details of a specific person you should probably stfu and not assume you know anything about the actions they took. What if he just drove a truck the whole time? Still going to talk about atrocities? Grow up loser, or try to defend your comment that would be more entertaining

  • @lukemanion2
    @lukemanion2 Год назад +152

    The recording of this from their final show is just insane, Ozzy up there on stage muttering incoherently then they launch into this song and its like the real Ozzy wakes up and forgets its not the 70s anymore

    • @desmoheli
      @desmoheli Год назад +16

      Agree, the Live recording from the Tour "The End" is beyond amazing! But btw. for Ozzy it might still be the 70s ;)

    • @sheridaducky-xk6lx
      @sheridaducky-xk6lx Год назад

      He's just something else. Amazing

    • @BrentTharp
      @BrentTharp Год назад +1

      Absolutely true. He sings this song like he's in his 20s.

    • @phoneguy7589
      @phoneguy7589 Год назад +9

      He can barely shuffle across the stage but man he can still sing!!!

    • @aazjproperties6426
      @aazjproperties6426 Год назад +4

      Damm haters, ozzy doesn't get enough credit. Carrying melodies is a true talent

  • @jaysinlsavage50
    @jaysinlsavage50 3 месяца назад

    I love watching you listen to my favorite singers. Literally touches my soul in amazing ways.

  • @richardjohanson2481
    @richardjohanson2481 Год назад +94

    Such an iconic song. Bill Ward is a beast. It always surprises me how overlooked Geezer is on this song. The bass line is epic and gives Bill and Tony the ability to do what they do best.

    • @gerarddion4859
      @gerarddion4859 Год назад +8

      Geezer and Bill are one of the greatest rhythm sections in all of rock!

    • @PSA78
      @PSA78 Год назад +1

      Ozzy have even talked about it. 🙂

    • @knightyyz
      @knightyyz Год назад +3

      Bill Ward is top ten in my book. Along with Peart, Rich, Bonham, Krupa to name a few

  • @Michael-----
    @Michael----- Год назад +285

    I feel like these fan made videos only serve to distract Elizabeth from actual song and music. She totally blew by the "Satan Laughing Spreads His Wings" line. One of the best vocal and lyric moments of the piece.

    • @pillarhood471
      @pillarhood471 Год назад +82

      Yup. This is video is great - but every single reactor I’ve seen that has used this video always ends up paying too much attention to the video rather than the actual song.

    • @turgidity_city3204
      @turgidity_city3204 Год назад +83

      The video sucks! Definitely takes away from the song. I'm happy you feel that way too

    • @sanny8716
      @sanny8716 Год назад +32

      This is also a pretty bad video

    • @leonmisselhorn1831
      @leonmisselhorn1831 Год назад +59

      Have to agree that the video doesn't add to the song. War pigs should be listened to, not watched. But maybe that's just me.

    • @rextside
      @rextside Год назад +17

      So Frustrating.

  • @calli.catastrophe
    @calli.catastrophe 3 месяца назад +1

    amazing how similar B.Y.O.B. by System of a Down, and War Pigs by Black Sabbath are....in topic...delivery, lyricism, in so many ways....listen to what Serj and Ozzy get passionate about....notice how their pitch elevates in a similar fashion.....i've never thought to compare the 2 before...and now I can't unhear it. This is truly something beautiful. War Pigs is by far one of my favorite Black Sabbath songs, and has been for some time....I suppose now I can see why...eye-opening to say the very least. Kudos to them both. All the respect...and even more to Five Finger Death Punch, who unironically gut punches you with what sacrifice and patriotism means for, and to, so many veterans like myself, my husband, and both our families. My heart goes out to all veterans. Know you are seen, heard, you are not guilty for following the commands of crooked politicians. You were doing your job, but know that the rest of us understand how you feel, what it took for those that made it home alive to do so, and the sacrifice those that didn't make it home alive were willing to make for the rest of us and the entire country. Your heart is in us all. Once a soldier, always a soldier. Hooah, Oohrah, Semper Fi, Aim High, Oohah, and all the others I may be forgetting. This country has a funny way of showing it, but we thank you all. From the battlefield back home, into the ground, and up in the skies. We love you, and we thank you.

  • @jimfortner9585
    @jimfortner9585 5 месяцев назад +2

    You have to remember, Ozzie and most of the early British rock band members were born close to or just after WW2… In a war torn country which is where this song has its roots

  • @ricelaker
    @ricelaker Год назад +178

    My cousin was killed in Vietnam. His mother went totally antiwar. A book and movie was made of her and her family's ordeal fighting the Pentagon to find out he was killed by friendly fire. His name is Mike Mullen and his Mom was Peg Mullen. The book and movie was called "Friendly Fire" Peg wrote a later book called "Unfriendly Fire." I graduated from high school with Mike's sister. This song always brings back memories of Mike and the Mullen family.

    • @H4FF
      @H4FF Год назад +5

      That's an incredible story, albeit a sad one. Loss of a loved one is never easy, and the way in which you and your relatives lost your cousin only only compounds that. Thank you for sharing this, I may have to look into the book and film.

    • @Zathren
      @Zathren Год назад +5

      I can only imagine how the friendly felt if he knew he caused the death of his fellow worrier. My prayers to all involved. May they know peace.

    • @tompinnef6331
      @tompinnef6331 Год назад +5

      I had friends that went over and fought. Some made it back, others made it back but still there. I was lucky being young enough to just miss the draft as it ended my senior year of high school.

    • @sonofsalmon56
      @sonofsalmon56 11 месяцев назад +1

      So sad times those were for many…..all of the young brave soldiers that were involved in combat in that conflict never actually made it home!

    • @cwize
      @cwize 10 месяцев назад +1

      I remember some about this, remember the book. I’ll try to find the movie now. Always a good to refresh the memory of the sacrifices made out of loyalty to country, even when the country isn’t loyal to you.

  • @hudsonhollow
    @hudsonhollow Год назад +271

    I was 'lucky" enough to get into a car wreck and have a steel pin put into my right femur three days before I graduated high school and therefore not eligible for the draft during the Vietnam era. Lots of my friends weren't so "lucky". They either came back with PTSD or didn't come back at all. This song always makes my eyes water. At some point I was naive enough to think maybe the Age of Aquarius was finally upon us. Now I'm 73 and have seen war raging somewhere all of my life. I have given up hope of war being replaced with negotiation. Actually communicating with each other. It seems that violence is actually increasing instead of abating. I cannot watch this video with dry eyes.

    • @Templar451
      @Templar451 Год назад +9

      The war ended 2 1/2 yrs before my 18th birthday. My older brother had his draft card but wasn't called up. My brother lost friends. I knew them all.

    • @kentmont
      @kentmont Год назад +4

      Crazy how things work out for the better

    • @craig2347
      @craig2347 Год назад

      Can I suggest two books for you on Vietnam that add a lot of insights, Daniel Ellsberg "Secrets" and "When Presidents Lie" by Eric Alterman. One is a firsthand story of the real war, the other the best I've seen on LBJ's choice to go to war.

    • @uh8myzen
      @uh8myzen Год назад +24

      My father fought in the Dutch army at Rotterdam until the Dutch surrendered and then was part of the resistance for the rest of WWII. After the war he emigrated to Canada where he lived on the border with the US and during the Vietnam war, he helped US draft dodgers escape the US and settle in Canada. He said that having survived a war, he would always do everything in his power to help others avoid having to experience it.

    • @macm3081
      @macm3081 Год назад

      ​@@uh8myzen very nice. 🙂

  • @jonallen1985
    @jonallen1985 7 месяцев назад +2

    I saw Black Sabbath in concert back in 2013 for their 13 album and getting to here this song live and in person was definitely a privilege considering I’ve been listening to them since I was a baby.

  • @brentn2288
    @brentn2288 4 месяца назад

    I see your response to songs like this and I am torn between happiness that you are shocked by war and sadness that so many aren't shielded from its horrors. I truly appreciate the view you give me for some of the greatest music of all time.

  • @kdbadk
    @kdbadk Год назад +60

    It was two separate guitar lines by Tony Iommi, layered. He pioneered the twin lead guitar setup, even though there was only one of him. Sabbath's influence is incalculable.

    • @terrylandess6072
      @terrylandess6072 Год назад +5

      Many miss the same thing with Geezers basslines during that part.

  • @Bman-xy2vh
    @Bman-xy2vh Год назад +222

    Ozzy's foghorn vocals, Tony's amazing riffs, geezer's funky fast bass lines and billy wards bombastic drumming. Some of the best of sabbath on display.👍🤘🔥

    • @broadsword6650
      @broadsword6650 11 месяцев назад

      Foghorns are very low pitched, deep, resonant. Doesn't sound like the clean, clear, piercing vocals of Ozzy.

    • @jontraz5993
      @jontraz5993 10 месяцев назад +5

      ​@@broadsword6650I'd refer to Ozzy as the air siren 🚨 in this context!

  • @taleteller02
    @taleteller02 6 месяцев назад +1

    You are correct about Ozzy's voice, perfect for a protest. He does this again on a solo album: The Ultimate Sin. The song: Killer of the Giants. A beautiful, somewhat orchestral opening.

  • @tomyocum1087
    @tomyocum1087 7 месяцев назад

    I love watching your reactions to these songs I grew up on. You can feel the power in it and it brings me back to when I first heard it. When I first heard it, it was the guitar that got me into the music then the vocals.

  • @madmex2k
    @madmex2k Год назад +46

    Love your reaction! I remember long about 1978, as a teen, me and my buddy riding bikes down the street, my friend was wearing a Black Sabbath t-shirt. A youth pastor stopped us to try to get us to come to his church. He saw the shirt, started in on how the band were devil worshippers, etc., citing the one lyric about "Satan laughing spreads his wings". I told him he must not have listened to the whole song and it was a war protest song. He says, "Viet Nam? That wasn't a war." I said the song was a protest for all wars. He began talkng bout KISS, the whole Knights In Satan's Service, or however that went, and about playing Stairway to Heaven backwards you could hear them worship the devil, etc. My friend said playing your record backwards just ruins the needle and the record, and sounds better the other way. He was not happy with either of us and told us Satan had taken our hearts and we need to come to church. My friend asked if there were any cute girls there. We laughed and left. I didn't like most church people who showed up at my house much after that.

    • @jeph33
      @jeph33 Год назад +1

      I worked backstage in catering @ a Sabbath show. Knocked on their door, waited, no answer. So, I quietly opened the door and left their drinks. The room was pitch black, and 4 men (roadies?) were chanting around a candle. Ward may have been there, but not the others. Anyway, I'm pretty sure they don't worship the devil! As for that 'preacher', please don't think that's representative of all Christians. We're not all ignorant and unloving

    • @MickH60
      @MickH60 Год назад

      @@jeph33 There is neither a god or a devil, fairy stories used to control men, usually by politicians...

  • @bryandraughn9830
    @bryandraughn9830 Год назад +113

    I can't stress enough how much Ozzy was in touch with our greatest fears.
    We were lost.
    The world didn't make any sense, and the grownups seemed to be oblivious.
    Ozzy said "I understand, im here, im your friend."
    He cared about the world and everyone in it. Even if he was looney as a baboon bazooka.

    • @HoryTB
      @HoryTB Год назад +2

      "Let my Mother Live"

    • @doublebassman123
      @doublebassman123 Год назад +19

      Geezer wrote the lyrics.

    • @mattt2581
      @mattt2581 Год назад +6

      @@doublebassman123 More people need to know that.

    • @sheridaducky-xk6lx
      @sheridaducky-xk6lx Год назад +3

      Was... is

    • @markistler1033
      @markistler1033 Год назад +2

      Grownups today are oblivious i know gen Z are watching I hope for the sake of mankind they are up to the task I bought this album for my twelfth birthday it ain’t got no better since then

  • @Kurtthecarguy
    @Kurtthecarguy 6 месяцев назад +4

    As someone who has heard this intro played at SO MANY concerts over the years, I can safely that War Pigs is the Most Powerful song I have every heard 15,000 people sing at once!

  • @sgtdevildogdavethesilentwars
    @sgtdevildogdavethesilentwars Год назад +47

    Thank you Elizabeth for having the courage to expertly present this subject matter covered in an iconic song. I am a veteran, I have my combat awards and ribbons. I can now discern 30+ years later, just as I was able to discern and understand in real time in a real war zone the perspective that Black Sabbath expresses in War Pigs. Paz y Amor amiga 🤘😑✌

    • @Black_Cat.666...01
      @Black_Cat.666...01 Год назад +2

      Eu adoro essa canção.
      Agradeço Elizabeth pelos comentários 💕♥️💕♥️💕♥️
      Aqui fã brasileira.🇧🇷😸😻😻😻😻

    • @Black_Cat.666...01
      @Black_Cat.666...01 Год назад +2

      Elisabeth Faz análise da Janis Joplin tray💕💕💕💕💕💕💕💕💕💕💕
      Amo seu canal e espero ansiosa cada vídeo seu 😻💕😸

  • @DoNuT_1985
    @DoNuT_1985 Год назад +52

    It's the definitive Sabbath masterpiece... Tony Iommi's guitar parts are such a joy to listen to, there's not a single boring second in this song... how it meanders, picks up speed and tension, slows back down. One of the finest classic metal songs, everybody is nailing it on this monster of a track.

  • @ramshackleshack751
    @ramshackleshack751 6 месяцев назад +7

    My favorite guitar riff is at the end. Using minor 5ths. Just moves up and down the neck. Toni really knew how to make the most of the fewest notes. And make it spooky . Makes me feel like Jack Black does every day 😂

  • @danielasalomao3258
    @danielasalomao3258 6 месяцев назад +2

    Ozzy loves Blues, he got the best he could from the genre and got it into the creation of metal

  • @ivo215
    @ivo215 Год назад +100

    There's a 40 minute live performance of Black Sabbath on YT, live in Paris (1970), and they're absolutely killing it. I recommend it. The band is in really good form there. The video has been upscaled, but the sound is original. It's a pretty good recording for a live performance from 1970.

    • @marvintpandroid2213
      @marvintpandroid2213 Год назад +2

      This

    • @DrSkeff
      @DrSkeff Год назад +4

      Totally support this recommendation, although it is from the Paris Theatre in Brussels, Belgium.

    • @chaptermasterpedrokantor1623
      @chaptermasterpedrokantor1623 Год назад +3

      Sadly unless it was on TV, a local TV crew was present at a show, or the band was called Pink Floyd and they actually filmed in Pompeii, almost no good live material on video survives from before the 80's. Film cameras were hard to sneak into concerts and those that were small often had no sound recording, and until the advent of home VCR and a demand for entertainment on video cassette there was no impetus to film live shows. There probably exists less live film footage of the classic era of rock in the 60's and 70's in total then appears on YT of a random concert today. I want a time machine just to go back in time with a smartphone to film these amazing bands live.

    • @random666777
      @random666777 Год назад +2

      Bill Ward murders a drumset

  • @secessioncycles1357
    @secessioncycles1357 Год назад +126

    As a Marine and war veteran, I can assure you that most of us agree with much of the sentiment of the lyrics - the people who start the wars aren't the ones who go and fight them. Eisenhower warned us against the War Pigs, aka the military-industrial complex.
    That said, we all agree that this song rocks. \m/
    Please note: Most of my peers may not know what lugubrious means. We snack on crayons after all ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
    Semper fi, Elizabeth! Keep on rockin'!

    • @ialsoagree1634
      @ialsoagree1634 10 месяцев назад +4

      An interesting fact I think a lot of Americans don't realize.
      When World War 2 started in the early 1930's, the US military (Navy and Army) was around 200,000 - 400,000 in total. Within 10 years, we had millions of soldiers and had won wars on two fronts.
      Today, the US military is about 4 million including reservists. Not saying we should go back to the levels we had during WW2, but we've proven that we can win wars on multiple fronts with less than a quarter of our current military size.

    • @jakeg7033
      @jakeg7033 10 месяцев назад +3

      Fellow combat vet here and I can confirm...

    • @AndrewWiscombemusic
      @AndrewWiscombemusic 9 месяцев назад +2

      Army combat vet. Completely agree

    • @fletchermorgan5970
      @fletchermorgan5970 6 месяцев назад

      Thank-you for your service, sir. 🙏🥰

    • @cynthiariley6866
      @cynthiariley6866 6 месяцев назад

      So many docs about the industrial war complex, Eisenhower warned us all about this and kennedy died because of it!

  • @malagastehlaate230
    @malagastehlaate230 7 месяцев назад +2

    This entire album is amazing... start to finish... tons of great music... and some truly thoughtful and disturbingly harsh but still great. Glad you listened.

  • @chrisinkster3270
    @chrisinkster3270 5 месяцев назад +4

    It was definitely about Vietnam, BUT also they all were born pre & post WW2 so they grew up in rubble and it tells a story about what they lived through in their early years growing everyone forgets that little tid bid of info which is important to them writing many and such great anti war songs

  • @craigsurette3438
    @craigsurette3438 Год назад +117

    The air raid sirens are especially poignant to anyone alive during the Cold War, because we all were expecting that sound to be the last sound we would ever hear, because those in power would get us all killed in a nuclear blast, and there was nothing we could do about it
    This paralyzing fear and dread along with helpless frustrated nihilism in the youth of the time was the cultural zeitgeist Ozzy was speaking to, that made this song so effective.

    • @troystaunton254
      @troystaunton254 Год назад +14

      Bet it made more sense to those in Britain in 1940-45

    • @jhetteman1
      @jhetteman1 11 месяцев назад +6

      I agree with @troystaunton254, the bombers and air raid sirens are definitely an inference to “The Blitz” that England suffered in WWII. That said it was a warning as well. Black Sabbath formed in 1968, just 23 years after WWII but also just a few years into the Vietnam War as it was really heating up. 1968 was the year of the TeT offensive by Vietnam. This was also the 1st war to have near time video broadcast to the nations of the world.
      War was now in everyones living room, the pain and horror and filth and futility of war on the news everyday. The draft was in effect for America a few allies, the war was deeply unpopular, riots were breaking out across America and other countries, those riots were put down hard.
      This song, in my opinion, was both a stark reminder of the wreckage of WWII and a protest against what could easily have become WWIII.

    • @johnmathieu3430
      @johnmathieu3430 11 месяцев назад

      I was glad when the stupidity and craziness was over, can't believe that we're going back to it, by choice. And this time they're pretending that we can win a nuclear war. I wish that we could put everyone responsible in prison for life.

    • @scottgalbraith7461
      @scottgalbraith7461 10 месяцев назад

      At 1pm, one Saturday a month when they test the tornado siren, I poop a little.

    • @christopherwhite1648
      @christopherwhite1648 10 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@troystaunton254for the German people from 1940 to 1945 it meant the same.

  • @TroublesomeOwl
    @TroublesomeOwl Год назад +104

    So little love in the comments for how genius Geezer's bass part is in this song. it's like a solo the whole way through the song. Dude's a genius. Not to mention, i'm pretty sure he wrote the lyrics

    • @alexseelow
      @alexseelow Год назад +22

      Geezer wrote like 99% of Sabbaths lyrics. His bass playing is amazing

    • @can2mar
      @can2mar Год назад +2

      Exactly!

    • @widespreadcranic
      @widespreadcranic Год назад +6

      Yeah Ozzy got a song writing credit but that was a gift. Ozzy is great and Sabbath would be on rocks Mt Rushmore but Ozzy wrote very little if any at all.

    • @lordslothrop365
      @lordslothrop365 Год назад +2

      @@widespreadcranic Sad, but unfortunately true.

    • @Sanderteeuwen
      @Sanderteeuwen Год назад +3

      Yes I’ve always loved the bass on this. Especially on their reunion live album I really like the bass on this song.

  • @TB-zw7dt
    @TB-zw7dt 5 месяцев назад +1

    It should make you shiver. That was the message.

  • @steveisaac2328
    @steveisaac2328 8 месяцев назад +3

    Being involved in this genre back in the day... I think it's appropriate to say that this song... is the Mother of metal music.

  • @closey2112
    @closey2112 Год назад +66

    “Politicians hide themselves away
    They only started the war
    Why should they go out to fight?
    They leave that role to the poor, yeah
    Time will tell on their power minds
    Making war just for fun
    Treating people just like pawns in chess
    Wait till their judgement day comes, yeah!”
    These two verses have always hit home for me.

  • @OLDSCHOOLROGUE
    @OLDSCHOOLROGUE Год назад +168

    Elizabeth…..I’m so happy that you did a video of this classic! I’m a Sabbath fanatic of 40+ years, so here is my critique of your review. Music videos weren’t around when they recorded this, this song, as most of their music is best appreciated when not watching a video. Simply listen to the songs and let the music and vocals create the story in your mind! Write your own personal “video”, this is how their music was meant. Don’t let someone else interpret the lyrics for you. This is true for all of the masterpieces they created. The entire Black Sabbath catalog writes it’s own video in your mind. Their collection is full of songs that tell a story of not being in control of your destiny, unless you take control! They were the original Heavy Metal band. They tried to enlighten us all, you simply need to listen😊

    • @user-lc7sl3ls5x
      @user-lc7sl3ls5x Год назад +16

      i couldn"t agree with you more < i listened to this song for years and imagined to my own storyline , and as a side note , nothing has changed , its as relevant today as it was back when it was released

    • @garyjenkins7249
      @garyjenkins7249 Год назад +6

      Every time I listen to Iron Man I get a mini movie in my head

    • @hw2508
      @hw2508 Год назад +6

      I second that.
      If you listen to Sabbath for the first time. Just the record. The opening of the first record or this song: It is so powerful and they tell stories that instantly paint a picture in your mind. Like The Wizard, Iron Man, N.I.B., Fairies wear boots, Hand of Doom.

    • @markknight6267
      @markknight6267 Год назад +4

      So well put 👍🏻

    • @CorwinYoutube
      @CorwinYoutube Год назад +5

      Excellent comment! I agree and find this true for all music. Listen and let the music and lyrics paint the picture for you. Or watch a video of a live performace.

  • @ryanmcmahon8386
    @ryanmcmahon8386 3 месяца назад

    I have been listening to this song for the majority of the 52 years I have been alive and have never seen the, clearly recent, video. It is interesting to see the reaction of someone who only knows them together. Great reaction video.

  • @rickh9069
    @rickh9069 2 месяца назад

    Love your breakdowns, gives me new appreciation for old favorites and new discoveries, even when it is just from me listening anew. This is the first time I viscerally felt the absolute disgust Ozzy puts into the word "minds" in "power minds." Thanks for making things new again

  • @rcairnut
    @rcairnut Год назад +112

    I was only 17, this was 1970, Vietnam was still a very 'hot' war, nukes and cold war turning hot was a real deal. It was September I would register for the draft soon so this song got me! With all the bad news of the day a band released an album; this one. This group and album started a new style of rock, very heavy, gritty, no sweet love songs, a slap in the face of the Pop music of the day and a dare to the hard rock of the day. This album represented my confusion about the turmoil of the time. I still like this album with songs like "War Pigs", "Paranoid" and "Iron Man" these made me a fan of there early work forever.
    I think the song is more powerful with out the video because I was watching the body counts of my generation on the evening news.

  • @travisbosco8469
    @travisbosco8469 Год назад +55

    All philosophy is a footnote to Plato, all metal is a footnote to Black Sabbath.
    War Pigs is a masterpiece, as are the rest of their first five albums. They were pioneers and the founders of the entire genre. The more you listen to Sabbath, the more your appreciation will grow.

    • @ThePapaja1996
      @ThePapaja1996 Год назад +3

      And the heven and hell album

    • @ShamanWS6
      @ShamanWS6 Год назад +1

      @@ThePapaja1996 Live Evil is excellent.

    • @ferox965
      @ferox965 Год назад +2

      ​@Steve C They're coming out with a Live Evil boxset in June, I believe. I'm all over it.

    • @matthewskanes7074
      @matthewskanes7074 Год назад

      PERFECTLY said.

    • @EnoVarma
      @EnoVarma Год назад

      Black Sabbath is a footnote to Led Zeppelin.

  • @kitsygirl
    @kitsygirl 7 месяцев назад +10

    The dichotomy between Ozzy's singing/stage voice and his regular speaking voice is staggering.

    • @theant9821
      @theant9821 6 месяцев назад

      Thats the brummie accent for you.

    • @lucretialee3691
      @lucretialee3691 6 месяцев назад

      @@theant9821 Believe me Brummies are a lot easier to understand than Ozzy, just like his music, his speaking is in a league of it's own.

    • @lucretialee3691
      @lucretialee3691 6 месяцев назад

      It's been a long time joke, that if you want to understand what Ozzie's saying, ask him to sing it.

    • @spriken
      @spriken 5 месяцев назад

      @@lucretialee3691 The modern Brummie accent has softened a bit and isn't the same as the old people had. Ozzy has also had a stutter since childhood and the combination is really hard for a lot of people. He was born to factory worker parents in a bombed-out town just a few years after WW2, so I doubt there was much help at the time for his language.

    • @mountainguyed67
      @mountainguyed67 5 месяцев назад

      @@theant9821 You Brits crack me up. You like to pick apart what we say as not adding up, it would be more accurate to say it another way. All the while you do the same thing and don’t see it. He’s not from Brummingham, he’s from Birmingham. So it should be Birmmies, not Brummies.
      Carry on.

  • @bengorniak2721
    @bengorniak2721 6 месяцев назад +1

    His voice is cutting, like a snarl, seemingly intended to increase one's heart rate to light the match of revolution.

  • @Sarigar
    @Sarigar Год назад +83

    Once you know that "War Pigs" and "Deck the Halls" can be sung to each other's melodies, you'll never un-know it. Though it can make for an extra-festive holiday season. 😄

    • @drewshine627
      @drewshine627 Год назад +10

      I've had my coworkers sing them interchangeably wearing Santa hats.

    • @Geo-wc7jc
      @Geo-wc7jc Год назад

      gonna sing that next time im at a karaoke bar

  • @trfatman
    @trfatman Год назад +32

    Elizabeth, I consider this one of the most iconic songs of all time. Originally Geezer Butler had titled the song "Walpurgis" and the lyrics were even darker. Walpurgis is the Christian/Pagan holiday (Apr 30 - May 1) which according to folklore was the night the witches gathered for a black mass. Geezer has been quoted, "Walpurgis was like a satanic Christmas. I felt there is nothing more Satanic than war." The song opens their second album, which I believe the band wanted to name "Walpurgis", but the label felt it was too dark. So they named the album "Paranoid" and Geezer rewrote the lyrics and renamed the song "War Pigs".
    I know a lot of fans want you to react to the 1970 live performance, and when you do, take notice that Ozzy sings some of the original "Walpurgis" lyrics in that performance.
    "War Pigs" speaks out against politicians who start wars in order to increase their own power, causing death and destruction to the people, but in the end they will face God's judgment, and there will be no mercy. I remember hearing this song for the first time when I was about 11 years old (1974). I grew up in a very religious and patriotic household, so Black Sabbath and "War Pigs" were considered evil and dangerous. I'll keep my comments apolitical, so let's just say my viewpoint changed over time and I have grown to believe "War Pigs" is one of the most powerful anti-war songs ever. Every generation should hear and understand the message of this song.

    • @derekbowbrick6233
      @derekbowbrick6233 Год назад +5

      This is the story I grew up with, and I'm old enough to have bought Master of Reality when it was released.

    • @edwardmunoz7853
      @edwardmunoz7853 Год назад +1

      The band has more talent in their little toes in that performance than everything playing in the radio combined. Nothing but raw talent 💯🔥🤘

  • @Gazzatron51
    @Gazzatron51 2 месяца назад

    G'day Elizabeth, another Aussie fan here new to the channel. Loving your reactions to iconic rock songs and Aussie legends of rock.
    Rediscovering some awesome music and bands. Thank you.

  • @user-sw4us2to3k
    @user-sw4us2to3k 6 месяцев назад +3

    This song is so Prophetic.

  • @Sam-xn7zp
    @Sam-xn7zp Год назад +23

    The guitar work Tony Iommi put in this track adds to the ominous feeling you get from Ozzys vocals. The layering of solos adds to the chaos perfectly.

  • @brianloy7856
    @brianloy7856 10 месяцев назад +109

    There is a 45 year gap between the recording of the song and the video you are watching. Some of you youngsters don’t realize this. I like the fact that you were taken aback by this song. Ozzy was a very unique singer. He could sing almost perfectly on pitch without any waiver or vibrato in his youth before age and drugs took their toll. This made him, like the Beatles, a perfect candidate for double and triple tracking his voice on separate tracks and then blending those tracks together for the final lead vocal. The same is approximated today with outboard digital equipment. With Ozzy it is uncannily pristine, precise, perfect and “cutting.” It hits you squarely between the ears above the chacophony of the band. I’m glad you experienced this!

    • @charleswettish8701
      @charleswettish8701 4 месяца назад +1

      All musicians read this and know you're not a musician.
      BTW, tons of awesome vibrato in Ozzy's voice in this song. But you're saying he has none, as if that's a good thing. Stop talking about sht you don't know, OK?
      4:50 THAT is vibrato, and quite a lot of it!

    • @dangitsbilly5411
      @dangitsbilly5411 3 месяца назад +1

      53*

    • @UlfMTG
      @UlfMTG 3 месяца назад

      I've always wondered to myself, what it is about Ozzy's voice that just sounds so good to me, but you explained it perfectly!

    • @charleswettish8701
      @charleswettish8701 3 месяца назад +1

      @@UlfMTG He explained it wrong. He's using words he doesn't understand.
      Ozzy IS amazing and part of the reason is that he uses "vibrato" very well.
      This dude saying Ozzy doesn't have vibrato is simply wrong.
      "Generals gathered in their masses..."
      "Masses" is thick with very well controlled, perfect, vibrato. Many or most of the end of phrases in that song have vibrato. Intentional, musical, awesome vibrato. NOT the lack of it, like brianloy7856 incorrectly claims.
      The quality he is trying to describe is the strong frontal face control that delivers the strong mid-range over-tones, of the primary pitch, that make his tone very defined.
      Not even sure wtf he's talking about with "outboard digital equipment".

    • @richardjosephus6802
      @richardjosephus6802 3 месяца назад +3

      This video is more about WW2, the song was more about Vietnam.

  • @mmaaddict78
    @mmaaddict78 7 месяцев назад +1

    Sabbath is timeless. This message has been trying to make it to the people since the 1400's in America. Probably earlier in other countries.

  • @satansamael666
    @satansamael666 10 месяцев назад +1

    Watching her reaction brings me back to the day I first heard the song. I was stunned and impressed at the musical spread and just how heavy it gets. Ozzy truly is the grandfather of heavy metal.

  • @grilledspaghetti
    @grilledspaghetti Год назад +35

    Yes, I've always felt that Ozzy wanted people to understand every, single, word that he was singing here. He knew this was a document.

    • @rigel2112
      @rigel2112 Год назад +6

      Don't forget Geezer who wrote it for Ozzy to sing.

    • @grilledspaghetti
      @grilledspaghetti Год назад +3

      @@rigel2112 I know, but ozzy felt the poignancy.

  • @blinkin7795
    @blinkin7795 Год назад +34

    i think one of the most interesting aspects of this version of the song is that it doesn't offer any closure. it just gives this sense of spiraling out of control at the end, no peace or comfort just the message.

    • @WitnessingTyranny
      @WitnessingTyranny Год назад

      It always reminded me of the sound of a rewinding vcr or cassette tape. To start all over again.

    • @questioneverything1682
      @questioneverything1682 Год назад

      The last verse uses religious imagery to evoke hopes for the war pigs to be claimed by Satan even as he laughs because they do his bidding. The ending does just "spiral out of control" and is disorienting and without closure. It was written in dark times when lots of young men were dying for a conflict with no closure.

  • @dlpasco
    @dlpasco 5 месяцев назад +1

    you're reactions are all solid. the imagery may have been something they had in mind back in the day, but I'm certain it was realized a very long time after this song was released.
    I'm gearing up to do a one-off gig as the front man for a Black Sabbath show and I've never listened as hard to their songs as I have in the last few days. I found this video while looking for some input on Ozzy's vocals and the songs and am happy, as always, to get a chance to hear your take on this. I think you're totally on point, as always.

  • @johnnybgood1288
    @johnnybgood1288 10 месяцев назад

    This is the first video of yours that I’ve watched. I don’t have the vocabulary or musical intellect that you have for analyzing the song, I just love Ozzy and Black Sabbath. I’ve heard this song 100 and it’s never given me the chills until hearing and watching you describe the song and video.

  • @matthaft2048
    @matthaft2048 Год назад +32

    One time in the car this song came on the radio. My mom said rhetorically “Who ever told him he could sing?”
    I now tell people i was orphaned at birth

  • @jackalope5589
    @jackalope5589 Год назад +73

    I absolutely love how tonny iommi’s note bending in his leads are almost sickening to such a trained ear as hers when that’s exactly what first attracted me to them as a young man . I often describe his playing especially in this song like the sound of angry bees. You may be the charismatic voice but you’re also the empathetic ear

    • @ironrose2672
      @ironrose2672 Год назад +5

      "I often describe his playing especially in this song like the sound of angry bees."
      I've always thought of it like he'd picked up a live wire. Or he had a dragon by the tail...

    • @ktrusswell3296
      @ktrusswell3296 Год назад +1

      George Orwell 1984

    • @jeffreydale2286
      @jeffreydale2286 Год назад +1

      I am an empath, it is hard to consume this energy and not shed a tear😢
      It is what it is, a mind blower for sure!

    • @jackalope5589
      @jackalope5589 Год назад +1

      @@jeffreydale2286 I guess I would consider myself a dark empath if there is such a thing. I’ve always been attracted to the darker things in life even from a young age like Halloween and horror movies.
      The first band i fell in love with was kiss wich led me to sabbath.
      If you think about the music that was popular at the time this song came out it was mostly positive things love and dancing. Sabbath’s message was that you also need to be aware of the darkness in the world like war and drug addiction. None of their songs celebrate these things mind you they just bring awareness
      As a long time fan of sabbath I don’t really care for the video though. I mean it fits the song well enough I suppose. I just prefer to conjure my own imagery in my head.

    • @jeffreydale2286
      @jeffreydale2286 Год назад

      @@jackalope5589 The balancing of oneself, allows for less of a complete darkness to exist, I truly believe a heaven on earth is in it’s beginning stages! Thank you and wishing all souls the best on their paths!
      ❤️ & 💡to you Jack Alope!

  • @Chris-oj2jr
    @Chris-oj2jr 10 месяцев назад +2

    I’m so thankful for younger appreciation of this timeless art👍

  • @williamkrieger7932
    @williamkrieger7932 3 месяца назад

    Seeing Ozzy, Tony, Geezer and Ward perform this live is one of my top concertgoing experiences out of 100s and 100s of shows.

  • @Cliff_Anderson
    @Cliff_Anderson Год назад +97

    Despite the video background (which didn't exist when this song was written), it's important to note that if you listen closely, the "war pigs" get their come-uppance at the end and this is what lends the "moral to the story" effect that the band was trying to achieve. With most of Black Sabbath's tunes, at first glance they seem to glorify the dark aspects of life, but in almost every case, they are cautionary tales and have a warning embedded, rather than glorifying the behaviors that most people tend to focus on. Love the fact that you aren't afraid to explore their music with an open mind.

    • @ericfielding2540
      @ericfielding2540 Год назад +2

      Interesting perspective from a classical singer. The voice of Ozzy is very effective in this song. Tony Iommi’s guitar is powerful also. It might be a slow tempo but this is as heavy as metal gets in my mind.

    • @alphasixty1316
      @alphasixty1316 Год назад +5

      I am not familiar with this video, it is quite well done, but the art style is well over 40 years into the future of this 1970 song.

    • @KrasszTV
      @KrasszTV Год назад +4

      It's a fan video, it's not an official music video.

    • @sheets75
      @sheets75 Год назад +3

      At the time Black Sabbath was building up steam, hippie rock critics hated them. They were considered "too Christian" because their songs were all downers that people felt were raining on their free love parades.

    • @dreggymon
      @dreggymon Год назад +1

      Yes. Respectfully, I think this video distracted from the music. Bill ward's drumming needed a little attention. Great work, nonetheless.

  • @enriquepina9829
    @enriquepina9829 9 месяцев назад +1

    Hell yeah!!! Awesome Black Sabbath!!!!!!!! I'm 70 still Rock n Roll!!!!!!!!! Great Era !!!! Of Heavy Rock!!!!!!!!!

  • @virus640
    @virus640 Год назад +47

    I've heard this song hundreds of times. I started hearing it from my dad's records in the late 80s. I've sung it when at concerts with thousands of other people around me. I still have goosebumps every time I hear it. Such a powerful song.

    • @WOODLASE
      @WOODLASE Год назад +1

      Got it on vinyl from the early 1970's along with a couple other albums. CLASSIC!!

  • @SnikkBoy
    @SnikkBoy 2 месяца назад

    This song has the greatest breakdown of all time. Any genre. Never gets old even after hearing it for decades.

  • @timpike4515
    @timpike4515 8 месяцев назад +16

    I am not a metal fan, but this IS the best war protest song I've ever heard - lyrically, musically, artistically, and every word of the lyrics ring true. This video is not an official music video for the record, but is a masterpiece worthy of such an amazing song. Yes, the song came out during the Vietnam War, 1970 I think. You mentioned Ozzy's perfect diction, it amazes me that it is so perfect when he sings, but non-existent when he speaks.

    • @philosopher0076
      @philosopher0076 7 месяцев назад +1

      Not so amazing that he sings with better diction than he speaks. Many singers have done the same. Sinatra spoke with often sloppy, colloquial, Northern New Jersey accented speech, yet when he sang a ballad, his enunciation, diction, clarity, vowel sounds, were impeccable...pristine in fact. Such singers, Ozzy included, take their vocal art form seriously. It is their passion, their life...their honest expression to the world.

    • @jdlech
      @jdlech 7 месяцев назад +1

      "There is another."
      -- Yoda
      Iron Maiden did a war protest song that was meant to fill you with outrage. "2 minutes to midnight" was so effective at sparking outrage that it was banned in a few countries and a lot of radio networks.

    • @theant9821
      @theant9821 6 месяцев назад +2

      Its good but Child in Time by deep purple is in a class of its own in my opinion.
      Wait, for, the ric-o-chet.

  • @mikeburns703
    @mikeburns703 Год назад +90

    Bill Ward is one of the most iconic drummers of this era. Geezer Butlers bass lines are incredible. And lets not forget Tony Iomi, whose amazing guitar talent does so much to set the dystopian tone. Ozzy's vocals are epic and the lyrics powerful, and damning of the senselessness and corruption and greed that drives the "war machine".

    • @electricalarachnid
      @electricalarachnid Год назад +3

      It's beautiful how they kind of recreate the chaos of battle during the instrumental as the bass, drums, and guitar all kind of go their own directions and tie back together again.

    • @hustler3of4culture3
      @hustler3of4culture3 11 месяцев назад

      Capitalism runs on blood. Or so I've heard

    • @doznoff
      @doznoff 9 месяцев назад

      I'm thinking Toni has finger tips cut off and has some prosthetic finger tips

    • @twistedoperator4422
      @twistedoperator4422 9 месяцев назад

      Well said