Meh.
Meh
The song Black Sabbath is pretty fucking cool. The rest is meh, though.
I like Sabbath, but
[spoiler]I agree, and feel that their first two albums are very lack luster metal albums due to lack of riffs thus coming off as kinda lame but a bit heavy blues rock[/spoiler]
GOAT
bretty gud
>first two
>Paranoid
>lack of riffs
The title track and Planet Caravan are the only ones to which that could apply.
>implying The Wizard isn't the best track on the album
Iron Man as well. And maybe War Pigs, too since it repeats the same damn thing for too long.
Iron Man has a ton of riffs.
>War Pigs
>repeats the same damn thing for too long
how
There's the main riff, then the second riff, then the faster bit, that's it.
The song spends way way too much time on the start-stop riff then the one after it which really gets exacerbated because it's repeated again. Not a lot happening for a seven minute long track
Warning is the best track, desu.
Kawaii Sabbath :3
Call their s/t lackluster if you wish, but not Paranoid. Also both albums are full of riffs, that was standard procedure for them from the beginning.
First album has the title track, which starts with a minimal but powerfully dark guitar riff, and later develops into a more climactic outro riff. Next I think is the Wizard, which - despite featuring a harmonica, admittedly not very metal - has a thick & driving guitar/bass riff underneath. Then NIB is somewhere after that, and that's one of their more iconic riffs.
It totally bewilders me that you failed to find sufficient riffs in Paranoid.
Compare those entire albums, not just the one or two tracks with a ton of riffs, to Master Of Reality, Sabbath Bloody Sabbath, or Heaven And Hell.
this is actually a pro-christian album and it goes hard af
All of their albums are full of riffs, they were one of the quintessential riff makers (On a side note, I believe much of the songwriting credits goes to Geezer). They may have developed as writers over the years and wrote more complex riffs/song structures, but riffs were always the foundation.
if you want more christian trad doom try trouble's early stuff
But the first two records have so few riffs they are not as engaging because of it and honestly just sound closer to hard rock with a thick tone.
Yea.
A lot of people miss out on the central point of 60s and 70s rock because they don't have any back ground in the blues. All these rock bands from the 60s and 70s are essentially still responding to Blind Lemon Jefferson.