Black — Sabbath Dehumanizer Demos

The rare opportunity to hear Cozy Powell and Geezer Butler playing together, a rhythmic powerhouse that never made it to a finished studio LP during this era. If you'd like to explore this further, I can help you: complete tracklist of the most common Dehumanizer Compare the Tony Martin vs. Ronnie James Dio versions of these songs. Identify which demos were officially released on the 2011 Deluxe Edition How would you like to continue your deep dive

The (recorded 1991–1992) represent a fascinatng, "what-if" era of Black Sabbath, captured during the chaotic reunion of the Mob Rules lineup. The sessions are most notable for featuring legendary drummer Cozy Powell before he was forced out by a freak horse-riding accident, and for including unreleased tracks that never made the final album. Key Unreleased Tracks black sabbath dehumanizer demos

Demos from 1986 reveal that "Computer God" and "Master of Insanity" were originally Geezer Butler solo tracks featuring vocalist Carl Sentance. The rare opportunity to hear Cozy Powell and

These demos prove one thing: when Tony Iommi tunes down to C# and Geezer lets the bass fuzz bleed... the apocalypse follows. Identify which demos were officially released on the

The rare opportunity to hear Cozy Powell and Geezer Butler playing together, a rhythmic powerhouse that never made it to a finished studio LP during this era. If you'd like to explore this further, I can help you: complete tracklist of the most common Dehumanizer Compare the Tony Martin vs. Ronnie James Dio versions of these songs. Identify which demos were officially released on the 2011 Deluxe Edition How would you like to continue your deep dive

The (recorded 1991–1992) represent a fascinatng, "what-if" era of Black Sabbath, captured during the chaotic reunion of the Mob Rules lineup. The sessions are most notable for featuring legendary drummer Cozy Powell before he was forced out by a freak horse-riding accident, and for including unreleased tracks that never made the final album. Key Unreleased Tracks

Demos from 1986 reveal that "Computer God" and "Master of Insanity" were originally Geezer Butler solo tracks featuring vocalist Carl Sentance.

These demos prove one thing: when Tony Iommi tunes down to C# and Geezer lets the bass fuzz bleed... the apocalypse follows.