Mob Rules Black Sabbath

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Vinyl LP - Remastered

  • Release Date: 03/17/2009
  • Original Release: 1981
  • Sales Rank: 59,432
  • Label: RHINO / WEA
  • UPC: 081227990787
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CD - Remastered$9.59
CD$52.99

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  • Overview
  • Tracks
  • Editorial Reviews
  • Customer Reviews
  • Details & Credits
Track List
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Mob Rules

1LISTENTurn Up the Night 3:42
2LISTENVoodoo 4:32
3LISTENThe Sign of the Southern Cross 7:47
4LISTENE5150 2:51
5LISTENThe Mob Rules 3:15
6LISTENCountry Girl 4:02
7LISTENSlipping Away 3:46
8LISTENFalling off the Edge of the World 5:03
9LISTENOver and Over 5:29

About this Artist

Editorial Reviews

1981's Mob Rules was the second Black Sabbath album to feature vertically challenged singer Ronnie James Dio, whose powerful pipes and Dungeons and Dragons lyrics initially seemed like the perfect replacement for the recently departed and wildly popular Ozzy Osbourne. In fact, all the ingredients which had made their first outing, Heaven and Hell, so successful are re-utilized on this album, including legendary metal producer Martin Birch (Deep Purple, Whitesnake, etc.) and supporting keyboard player Geoff Nichols. And while it lacks some of its predecessor's inspired songwriting, Mob Rules was given a much punchier, in-your-face mix by Birch, who seemed re-energized after his work on New Wave of British Heavy Metal upstarts Iron Maiden's Killers album. Essentially, Mob Rules is a magnificent record, with the only serious problem being the sequencing of the material, which mirrors Heaven and Hell's almost to a tee. In that light, one can't help but compare otherwise compelling tracks like "Turn Up the Night" and "Voodoo" to their more impressive Heaven and Hell counterparts, "Neon Knights" and "Children of the Sea." This unhappy streak is finally snapped by the unconventional "E5150," a synthesizer-driven instrumental. Then, the unbelievably heavy, seven-minute epic "The Sign of the Southern Cross" delivers one of the album's best moments before unleashing the roaring title track. Side two is less consistent, hiding the awesome "Falling off the Edge of the World" (perhaps the most overlooked secret gem to come from the Dio lineup) amongst rather average tracks like "Slipping Away" and "Over and Over." Over the next year, the sh*t would hit the fan for Black Sabbath, and Dio's exit would mark Mob Rules as the last widely respected studio release of the band's storied career. Eduardo Rivadavia, All Music Guide

Customer Reviews

not bad at allby Anonymous

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July 11, 2008: Im not an ozzy fan at all so it might explain why this is the only black sabbath cd i have. the lyrics and musical compositions are the most original i heard out of all the 80's metal i heard. plus no ozzy. the only reason i gave it 3 stars is that it think this album could really be remixed and remastered hopefully it will a lot albums are of late. other than that everything on this album is A-Ok.

This review was written about the CD edition.

One of the Best Metal Albums I've ever heard!by Anonymous

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August 19, 2007: This album is what inspired a lot of dark imagery in my art and music. The songs are great, even my least favorite (Turn Up The Night) is a great jam. This is metal at it's finest! Strangely there is no swearing, but "mom" still finds it offensive which makes it that much better

This review was written about the CD edition.


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