Legendary heavy metal band
BLACK SABBATH has set
"13" as the title of its much-anticipated new album. The group's first LP with
Ozzy Osbourne since 1978 will be released in June via
Vertigo/
Universal Republic in the U.S. and
Vertigo in all other territories. The drum tracks on the CD were laid down by
RAGE AGAINST THE MACHINE sticksman
Brad Wilk following original drummer
Bill Ward's decision to bow out of the reunion.
Osbourne,
Tony Iommi (guitar) and
Geezer Butler (bass) recorded the album primarily in Los Angeles with producer
Rick Rubin.
In advance of the CD's release,
BLACK SABBATH will head to New Zealand, Australia and Japan for live performances. Additional tour plans will be revealed in the coming months.
Iommi,
Osbourne and
Butler discussed their new album in a video interview posted at
NME.com. Asked how
Rubin influenced the band's approach to writing together again,
Butler explained, "He sat us down, put the first album on and said 'listen to this', imagine it's 1969, you've just done that, what would you do next?"
Iommi added, "It's taken on the flavor of the old stuff in the way we put things together, but with a different look on it."
Back in August,
Butler said
SABBATH had recorded 15 tracks, with 12 making the final cut, including a song entitled
"God Is Dead".
Ward in May 2012 announced again that he was declining to join his former bandmates for its scheduled 2012 dates, as well as the recording of a new album, due to a contractual dispute.
He also allegedly had his lawyers direct
SABBATH to remove him from photos of the band posted at the official
BLACK SABBATH web site "so as to not give the public the wrong impression about his involvement in the current
BLACK SABBATH lineup," according to a statement issued by the band's publicist.
Butler issued a lengthy retort at his own web site, writing that
Ward "hadn't told any one of us he was having contractual problems, and frankly those things are worked out between our representatives, and never between the four of us, let alone in public."
Until now,
Iommi told
The Pulse Of Radio a while back that the members of
SABBATH stayed friendly even when there were legal or other issues going on. "We've always been talking. We've always been in touch with each other," he said. "There might be a lawsuit in the thing between us, but we still talk to each other like nothing's happened, you know."
Asked if there is any chance of
Ward rejoining the band,
Iommi said last October, "We'll always have a heart for
Bill, but I think it's gone past that now, because it's gone on so long that I don't see that happening at the moment. Maybe at some point we might [play together again]."
Iommi,
Osbourne and
Butler performed live together for the first time in seven years on May 19, 2012, playing an intimate show at the 3,800-person O2 Academy in
SABBATH's hometown of Birmingham, England. The concert, which served as a warm-up for the group's appearance at the following month's
Download festival, was laced with emotion and drama: it was the first live appearance for
Iommi since being diagnosed with cancer, and it was the first with stand-in drummer
Tommy Clufetos, making the split official between
Ward and the rest of
SABBATH.
BLACK SABBATH took part in a photo shoot on November 30, 2012 with famed British photographer/artist
Sam Taylor-Wood.
