Black Sabbath - Mob Rules (1981) Reviews Black Sabbath - Mob Rules (1981) Reviews

Sonny Sonny / June 04, 2025 / Comments 0 / 0

At the time of its release and for a good while after I thought of Mob Rules as the younger sibling of the transformative Heaven and Hell, forever living in the shadow of its older brother. For me though, the years have been kinder to it and it is now my preferred post-Ozzy release. I think at the time Heaven and Hell was so much better than the last couple of Ozzy albums that it was revered as having pulled Sabbath back from the brink, with RJD breathing new life into the band, like a diminutive emergency paramedic. But I actually feel that Mob Rules is a bit more subtle than HnH and has more depth with a song like "Sign of the Southern Cross" possessing more emotional resonance. I don't think Mob Rules experiences the quality dips that HnH does either. In all honesty, "Lady Evil", "Wishing Well" and "Walk Away" aren't exactly classic Sabbath are they, except when compared to what had come during the previous three or four years, whereas even the weaker tracks on Mob Rules are still pretty damn good to me. Throw in a couple of uptempo crackers like Turn Up the Night and the title track, which give off Symptom of the Universe vibes, alongside the best non-Ozzy Sabbath track the forlornly epic, "Falling Off the Edge of the World", and we have an album approaching the quality of the first six.

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