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3 of the Best Black Sabbath Guitar Riffs Ever Recorded

Thereโ€™s a reason guitarist Tony Iommi has been called the Godfather of Heavy Metal. His band Black Sabbath helped pioneer the genre by transforming blues rock into its dark, heavy, gloomy iteration. Iommi, the lord of riffs, created blueprints for future legends such as Metallica, Soundgarden, Alice In Chains, Rage Against The Machine, and others. Here are three of his best.

โ€œSabbath Bloody Sabbathโ€

Tuned down to the key of doom, the title track to Black Sabbathโ€™s fifth studio album features a multitude of classic riffs. It begins with minimalist power chords that helped Iommi overcome writerโ€™s block. โ€œWe came to England and toured and all the rest of the stuff, and then we were due to make another album. We went back to the [LA] house again, to do Sabbath Bloody Sabbath, and I got writerโ€™s block. It just went dead,โ€ he said. This six-minute deluge of epic riffs proves the drought was over.

โ€œWar Pigsโ€

One of my favorite things about Black Sabbath jams is how they often contain what could have been several songs within a single arrangement. This anti-war anthem features one of Ozzy Osbourneโ€™s finest vocal performances. Meanwhile, Iommi punctuates the madness with sporadic blues licks between the power chords. โ€œWar Pigsโ€ contains a deep groove, highlighting the importance of bassist Geezer Butler and drummer Bill Wardโ€”one of rockโ€™s great rhythm sectionsโ€”to Iommiโ€™s timeless inventions.

โ€œParanoidโ€

Itโ€™s tough to choose only three riffs by Iommi. However, echoes of โ€œParanoidโ€ have been heard in Black Sabbathโ€™s most well-known descendants. When Osbourne went solo and discovered Randy Rhoads, the young virtuoso blended Iommiโ€™s blueprints with classical music, which his successors, Jake E. Lee and Zakk Wylde, continued. But many grunge hits were also built atop Iommiโ€™s phrasing. Check out Soundgardenโ€™s Southern Gothic classic, โ€œRusty Cageโ€, as an example of this evolution.

Metallica had increased the tempo of Black Sabbath, transforming heavy metal into its thrash variant in the Bay Area. But the Seattle bands slowed things down, perhaps taking lessons from the J Mascis school of ear-bleeding country.

Photo by Chris Walter/WireImage