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Bark at the Moon |  | Artist: Ozzy Osbourne Label: Sony Category: Music
List Price: $7.98 Buy New: $6.95 as of 2/9/2010 19:50 EST details You Save: $1.03 (13%)
New (4) Used (1) from $6.95
Seller: randys_records Rating: 96 reviews Sales Rank: 431696
Format: Original recording remastered Media: Audio Cassette
UPC: 074646723845 EAN: 0074646723845 ASIN: B000002B7T
Release Date: August 22, 1995 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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| Tracks:
| • | Bark at the Moon | | • | You're No Different | | • | Now You See It (Now You Don't) | | • | Rock 'N' Roll Rebel | | • | Centre of Eternity | | • | So Tired | | • | Slow Down | | • | Waiting for Darkness | | • | Spiders in the Night [*] |
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| Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 1-5 of 96
Remix of CD is cohesive and modern,but is it what fans want? February 22, 2003 Bill M. (MA, USA) 66 out of 67 found this review helpful
The 2002 remastered "Bark at the Moon" CD is actually more of a remix than a remaster. Needless to say, a side by side comparison will show that the music itself (not just the tonal quality) sounds different from all previous releases of this album. If you're a young fan who's brand new to Ozzy's music and thus have never really heard the "Bark at the Moon" album, you might like this somewhat modern-sounding remix. Otherwise, if you're a long-time fan who knows the original album inside and out, you may be totally repulsed by the difference in the CD's music.
Ozzy re-re-released his first two solo albums on CD in 2002, but without any mention on the outside packaging that they were actually RE-RECORDINGS done with different musicians! In an attempt to get out of paying royalties to the musicians who played on the original album, Ozzy had the original bass and drum tracks re-recorded by his current band mates. (Quite an insulting way to treat the remaining band who not only made the late Randy Rhodes' a legend, but also helped bring Ozzy out of Black Sabbath's shadow -- if not reverse that situation entirely.)
The 2002 "Bark at the Moon" CD is essentially a remix of the 1983 original, not a re-recording. But you'd have no way of knowing from reading the outside packaging or even the CD booklet. In and of itself, the remixed album admittedly sounds rather good in places. Although in a few other places it sounds like Ozzy's singing behind a wall (which is not an uncommon side effect found on badly produced metal albums). Overall the CD music is very cohesive sounding, unlike what you get when you, oh say, try to re-record drums. Here there's a little more boominess, different guitar and drum fills, more rhythm guitar and less keyboards. It's now a somewhat modern-sounding metal album.
But is this what people expect when they buy a "remaster"? For the long-time Ozzy fans: please be aware that this simply isn't the same "Bark at the Moon" you bought in the 80s! If, like me, you've become very familiar with "Bark at the Moon" after years of listening, then listening to the remixed album might come as a shock. Not that it's been remixed as a dance album or anything extreme like that, but gone are all those little fills and solos your ears have come to learn. The bell tolling at the start of "Center of Eternity" sounds like it's been shifted down an octave, like somebody throwing a rock at a pot of water.
If you still need a replacement for your scratchy vinyl or warbled cassette copy of "Bark At The Moon", try to get the 1995 remaster instead. It will sound like what a remastered CD should sound like: just as you remembered it musically, but with superior audio quality.
Bark At The Moon "Remaster" April 10, 2004 Christopher Fama (Chicago, IL USA) 32 out of 34 found this review helpful
This review is of the second Bark At The Moon remaster, released in 2002 along side the rest of Ozzy's catalog predating Down To Earth. Though Blizzard and Diary feature new drum and bass parts, Bark At The Moon was completely remastered using the original session tapes. Or was it...? I bought Bark At The Moon when it came out, and it was a great recording and very influential in it's time. But Bruce Dickerson's remix is missing major signature solos in Rock N' Roll Rebel, both in the opening licks, and in the breaks. This is one of the most renowned tracks from Bark, delivered in an incomplete state on this "remaster!" The only explanation is that Jake E. Lee recorded his solos over the stereo master in the final hour, and they couldn't be extracted. But it gets worse: You're No Different" was full of keyboards on the original recording, but they are super loud on this CD, drowning out the drums and guitar. It's as if Dickerson just ran the session tapes without checking the volume of individual instruments. It defies explanation, truly. If you haven't heard Bark At The Moon before, you may not notice these omissions. You'll just think it's a record made on the rebound of Randy's death by a weaker band. But Jake E. Lee held his own with Ozzy, and if you dig for earlier releases of this recording, you'll discover an album that stands up to Blizzard and Diary. This is sonething else...
WARNING!!! This is *NOT* the original recording!!! June 27, 2002 17 out of 17 found this review helpful
Ozzy and Sony have done it again. Another 5-star album has been ruined! This reissue was remixed with some guitar parts deleted (for example, the first half of the intro solo to "Rock 'n' Roll Rebel" has been eliminated.) The keyboards in the beginning of "Waiting for Darkness" have been boosted up so loud that you can barely hear the churning guitar riff below. These are just two of the things that have been changed. "Bark at the Moon" has been drastically altered. "Centre of Eternity" has been drastically altered. I can't believe they would have done this after the fiasco with the Blizzard and Diary reissues. Once again, there has been no mention of the altering on the CD's sticker or advertising. No, Sir, I don't like it.
Shame on Sharon/Poor Old Ozzy October 8, 2005 Jesse Nelson (Tucson, AZ USA) 14 out of 15 found this review helpful
Yoko Ono multiplied by a thousand? Meet Sharon Osbourne. Was the TV show amusing? Sure, make Ozzy the Al Bundy of heavy metal music. What comes next? Removing drum and bass tracks so you don't have to pay the original musicians? A new low and a new lame. Sharon Osbourne pulling the plug on Iron Maiden during the Ozzfest, or staging hecklers? May Eddie sodomize Sharon in hell, where she'll assuredly be headed. She's turned Ozzy into a joke. Tell her to take all these "reissues" and stuff them. By the way, the Ultimate Sin album still exists, no matter how much you try to ignore it, Sharon. What, was Ozzy coked out and cheating on you then, so you want to bury that material, or is it simply you want to stiff a whole other set of musicians?
Rock n' Roll Rebel December 12, 1999 9 out of 10 found this review helpful
What can I say? Other than that there is a notable difference about this album from the rest, although it's not necessarily a bad one. That difference , of course, is the introduction of Jake E. Lee as Ozzy's lead guitarist. In contrast to the first two albums, Ozzy is given much more room to shine next to Lee than he was next to Randy Rhoads. It's not that Lee isn't a capable guitarist, it's just that his playing isn't as fluidic as Rhoads' was. Since, in my opinion Lee's guitar style is definitley more definitive in its chords and its momentous riffs than Rhoads' complex playing style, Ozzy is able to be more pronounced in his singing. These things aren't bad, and don't detract from the album any, but what does is the introduction of the keyboard. Ozzy's music is noted for being tough, heavy, and spiteful of traditional values, but the keyboard just brings the music down a little. It's an interesting introduction, but a completely unnecessary one. "Bark at The Moon", "Rock n' Roll Rebel", "Centre of Eternity", and "Waiting for Darkness" are the better songs on this album, but "Now You See It, Now You Don't" and "So Tired" help balance out this album and provide a truly diverse album with different writing techniques by Ozzy. This album represents a pinnacle in Ozzy's career, and is a necessity to any Ozzy fan's collection.
Showing reviews 1-5 of 96
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