![]() Ted was a fan, but the major influence on him was Ronnie James Dio, and me too, as far as the mood and vibe. Judas Priest was a major influence on Fifth Angel. Edgar and Johnny Winter, and The Alice Cooper Band were important. Greg Allman of the Allman Brothers Band, and guitarist Allen Collins of Lynyrd Skynyrd. I really liked the songs and guitar playing style of Ted Nugent, but not his style so much. Richie Blackmore and Deep Purple, Jimi Hendrix, to a lesser degree, was an influence. ![]() some quotes to give you insight to which area the Dio era (and Dio's band) hit hard, the pacific northwest.Įd Archer (Fifth Angel): Jimmy Page was a huge influence along with the rest of the band. bands like Manowar, Queensryche/The Mob, Fates Warning, Heir Apparent, Fifth Angel, Solitude Aeturnus, Heathen, Omen, Vicious Rumors, Virgin Steel, Anthrax, Metal Church, Jag Panzer, Titan Force, Tyrant, Helstar, Warlock, Hellion, Chastain, Shok Paris, Lizzy Borden and on and on. the 80's would prove to be Metal's creative golden age and expansion, the Dio era itself would be that generation's Black Sabbath and those would be upcoming bands. when Heaven and Hell and Mob Rules released in the early 80s, it was not just the rebirth of Sabbath but also Metal's comeback with whole wave of new bands after metal's decline in the late 70's. I think sabbath did influence punk in some way, bands like Black Flag, Misfits, Discharge, Bauhaus.ĭio Era: what has the Dio Era of Black Sabbath influenced? perhaps the whole landscape of metal in the 1980s, you can find trace amounts of Dio Sabbath in Trad metal, USPM, EUPM, Prog Metal, Epic Metal, Thrash, Speed, Epic Doom Metal, NWOTHM. some other Doom bands to look into aside of the one i've mention are Cathedral, Confessor, Sleep, Electric Wizard, Count Raven, Cirith Ungol, Obsessed, Coventry, Memento Mori.ħ0's Sabbath influence other genres I am not that familiar with I think someone with more experience can answer that. you'll find plenty of Doom bands paying tribute to Sabbath within Doom Metal. In the 70s you didn't really have any heavily influenced 70's Sabbath bands making an impact but that would change in 1982 when Pagan Altar and Witchfinder General put out their debut albums and in 1984 Pentagram, Trouble, Saint Vitus, Nemesis/Candlemass would define what the Doom metal sub genre is. Sabbath, Led Zep and Deep purple would be the key big 3 influences on up coming bands in the 70s, like Elf, Judas priest, Rush, Queen and so on.īut the bands directly influenced by sabbath in the 70s were buried in the underground, bands like Iron Claw, Camelot, Grind, Heatwave, Lucifer, Pony, Sardonicus, Shado, Sioux, Tonge, Unicorn, Wooden Lion, Yellow, Supernaut, Buffalo, Flower Travellin' Band and Pentagram's 70s output. Ozzy Era: we credit Black Sabbath with birthing the metal genre but in the 70s any heavy rock band fell under that umbrella of "heavy metal", only later in the mid 80s when metal came into it's own and expanding into sub genres would we draw a line to what is and isn't heavy metal. ![]() ![]() If you wanna hear a band that sounds like Dio's solo band and Ozzy's solo band mixed together. Ozzy's Solo band is another one that I'd not count, I honestly don't hear much Sabbath at all in Ozzy's solo band, musically I think it follows Metal/Heavy Rock traditions made popular by Quiet Riot, Van Halen, Uriah Heep, Scorpions etc. some bands I'd not count here is Dio's solo band which is the sum of all Dio's experiences in Rainbow and Sabbath plus Jimmy Bain and Campbell's influence with bands like Thin Lizzy, Wild Horses and Sweet Savage but the Dio band can be looked at as kinda continuation of Dio era Sabbath. I figured it'd be interesting to look at Sabbath impact on music and looking at bands directly influenced or notably influenced by Black Sabbath.
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