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Paranoid
Users Say
132 ratings
Album Reviews: 11
Album: Paranoid
Artist: Black Sabbath
Genre: Rock/Pop
Tags: metal, xd

Paranoid was not only Black Sabbath's most popular record (it was a number one smash in the U.K., and "Paranoid" and "Iron Man" both scraped the U.S. charts despite virtually nonexistent radio play), it also stands as one of the greatest and most influential heavy metal albums of all time.... [+] Expand

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Paranoid by Black Sabbath!

Recent User Reviews

The best Black Sabbath album, and one of the best metal albums that exists!
FULL REVIEW
posted Mar 21, 2007
hell ya!
FULL REVIEW
posted Oct 2, 2004
posted Nov 24, 2004
It started here.
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posted Dec 25, 2004
posted Jan 20, 2005
ZeeDeevel1 person agrees
Black Sabbath's Paranoid spawned some of the bands more mainstream hits, as well as some incredible material. It's undoubtedly one of the strongest records in Black Sabbath's discography.
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posted May 29, 2006
war pigs
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posted Jun 16, 2005
Clįssico
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posted May 30, 2006
A solid piece of rock n' roll gold!
FULL REVIEW
posted May 1, 2008
posted May 23, 2007

Critic's Review

5.0 out of 5 stars Steve Huey, All Music Guide
Paranoid was not only Black Sabbath's most popular record (it was a number one smash in the U.K., and "Paranoid" and "Iron Man" both scraped the U.S. charts despite virtually nonexistent radio play), it also stands as one of the greatest and most influential heavy metal albums of all time. Paranoid refined Black Sabbath's signature sound -- crushingly loud, minor-key dirges loosely based on heavy blues-rock -- and applied it to a newly consistent set of songs with utterly memorable riffs, most of which now rank as all-time metal classics. Where the extended, multi-sectioned songs on the debut sometimes felt like aimless jams, their counterparts on Paranoid have been given focus and direction, lending an epic drama to now-standards like "War Pigs" and "Iron Man" (which sports one of the most immediately identifiable riffs in metal history). The subject matter is unrelentingly, obsessively dark, covering both supernatural/sci-fi horrors and the real-life traumas of death, war, nuclear annihilation, mental illness, drug hallucinations, and narcotic abuse. Yet Sabbath makes it totally convincing, thanks to the crawling, muddled bleakness and bad-trip depression evoked so frighteningly well by their music. Even the qualities that made critics deplore the album (and the group) for years increase the overall effect -- the technical simplicity of Ozzy Osbourne's vocals and Tony Iommi's lead guitar vocabulary; the spots when the lyrics sink into melodrama or awkwardness; the lack of subtlety and the infrequent dynamic contrast. Everything adds up to more than the sum of its parts, as though the anxieties behind the music simply demanded that the band achieve catharsis by steamrolling everything in its path, including its own limitations. Monolithic and primally powerful, Paranoid defined the sound and style of heavy metal more than any other record in rock history.
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