Zakk Wylde's Quick Move to Help Ozzy During Final Show

0
663

Watch Zakk Wylde Make Quick Move to Help Ozzy During Back to the Beginning Concert

Watch Zakk Wylde Help Ozzy Osbourne Out During Back to the Beginning Concert
Ethan Miller / Dia Dipasupil, Getty Images

A fan-shot video from Ozzy Osbourne’s final performance shows the moment guitarist Zakk Wylde rearranged his stage setup to help his boss deliver with the vocals on “Mama, I’m Coming Home.”

In the clip below, Wylde has moved away from his vocal mic so that his acoustic guitar can be picked up by a second mic. He’s still wearing his electric instrument underneath.
He appears to look raound for help before he temporarily stops playing and moves the acoustic mic closer to the vocal mic. He then starts playing again, while singing along too.

The guitarist spoke about the moment last month, saying: “Oz’s voice was having trouble at certain notes. I was like, ‘I need to make sure I’m always there so I can double him.’

“I was like three feet away from the microphone when I started playing the song. I was like, ‘I gotta get near the microphone,’ so I had to almost stop playing, lift the guitar up and put it over the mic.”

READ MORE: The Text Message Ozzy Sent Zakk Wylde After Back to the Beginning Show in Birmingham

He joked: “It was like juggling balls or chainsaws while being on a skateboard. It was actually pretty funny… It’s supposed to be the most important show ever, but everything’s on the fly!”

Ozzy's raw vocal from the Back to the Beginning performance of "Mama, I'm Coming Home" went viral not long after the farewell concert had ended. While he struggled, it came after an extremely emotional moment where the metal legend told the crowd about his health problems and years-long desire to return to the stage. That performance, in tandem with the poignant lyrics, left fans in tears.

Watch Zakk Wylde Help Ozzy Osbourne Sing ‘Mama, I’m Coming Home’

About "Mama, I'm Coming Home"

“Mama, I’m Coming Home” was co-written by Wylde and Osbourne, with lyrics by Motorhead legend Lemmy Kilmister. It appeared on Osbourne’s 1991 album No More Tears and, when released as a single, reached No.28 on the Billboard Hot 100 and No.2 on the Mainstream Rock chart.

It was the only song performed during Osbourne’s final set that hadn’t originally appeared on his debut solo album Blizzard of Ozz.

The Setlist For 26 Big Rock + Metal Bands’ Final Show

Some were planned while others were shockingly unexpected. More often than not, music fans never know when their favorite band is going to play their final note. Relive the final sets from these 26 acts.

Gallery Credit: Rob Carroll

More From Loudwire

Buscar
Categorías
Read More
Science
Who Was Buried At Cave Of Salome: A Female Disciple, Jesus' Midwife, Or A Princess?
Who Was Buried At Cave Of Salome: A Female Disciple, Jesus' Midwife, Or A Princess?A...
By test Blogger3 2025-07-07 16:00:10 0 1K
Technology
Save over $300 on the Hisense Canvas TV at Amazon
Best TV deal: Save over $300 on the Hisense Canvas TV TV...
By Test Blogger7 2025-06-11 10:00:16 0 2K
Technology
Subscriptions are overrated — own Microsoft Office Pro 2021 for life for just A$76
Microsoft Office Pro 2021 TL;DR: Grab Microsoft...
By Test Blogger7 2025-08-12 18:00:16 0 567
Technology
The retro-looking Nothing Headphone (1) launch globally, and for a lot less than other flagship headphones
The retro Nothing Headphone (1) ANC headphones launch globally...
By Test Blogger7 2025-07-15 16:00:18 0 948
Directorio
Crash and Burn: The 15 Biggest Financial Disasters in History
Crash and Burn: The 15 Biggest Financial Disasters in History - History Collection...
By Test Blogger2 2025-09-17 13:00:07 0 254