*** Tony Iommi
IOMMI
(Divine/Priority)
Any guitarist whose style spawns an entire school of players qualifies as a giant.
As for Tony Iommi, his résumé includes founding Black Sabbath but, until now, no
solo albums. Here Iommi plays beautifully throughout. His rich down-tuned tone,
slow-squeezed melodies, and throbbing single-note progressions invoke the best of
old-school metal — daring, individual, with a blues backbone to provide emotional heft.
Yet as a non-singer he’s somewhat at the mercy of his guest vocalists. Some call
down fire. Ozzy Osbourne’s turn on “Who’s Fooling Who” flexes the Sabbath muscles; Henry
Rollins flexes his own in a return to hardcore howl ’n’ growl called “Laughing Man
(In the Devil Mask).” Dave Grohl brings a prickly pop sensibility to “Goodbye Lament.
” But the best is Skunk Anansie’s Skin, whose soaring “Meat” proves this needn’t be a
boys’ club. Pantera’s Phil Anselmo founders, as does ’80s-metal punch line Ian Astbury.
And Billy Corgan’s croaking may never work outside his own arrangements. But as an
affirmation for the great granddaddy of new metal, this album rocks.
— Ted Drozdowski
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