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' The Grail ' contents...

Posted: Tue Sep 24, 2013 5:49 pm
by GUITARIDOL5682
I seen this in an Andrew Klein interview some interested stuff here...

There is a 4 song demo (Crazy Train, Mr. Crowley, Goodbye to Romance, Looking at you, looking at me), recorded with another drummer named Dixie Lee. They hadn't yet met Lee K. Those versions are so cool.

For Crazy Train, instead of starting with the bass and drums intro, the first thing you hear is Ozzy's voice. He shouts, "All aboard you fucking punks" - and then Randy slides in with the main riff. Fucking great.

Goodbye to Romance is more acoustic oriented, less electric guitar. I personally like the demo version better than what's on BOO.

On the first day of recording at Ridge, they were doing a mic test. Max asked the band to jam something. They jammed the blues. It was slow and moody like 'Riders on the Storm' (Doors). Ozzy was singing improv. Randy rips to no end. Its about 15 minutes long. As a joke they named it, "Wally Bodger and the Fabulous Flaps."

Finally, its loaded with all the writing sessions. You can hear the birth and maturation of every song. Bob recorded EVERYTHING including all the conversations when they weren't playing. All the rehearsals were recorded as well. Lee is singing lead vocals on many songs on the days Ozzy never showed up.

Randy experimenting with his pedal board for the first time trying to get sounds. Ozzy asked him how much it cost and Randy told him "200 quid." Ozzy said, "I don't think it was worth it." Randy said, "Oh, I do." This stuff doesn't exist anywhere but on Bob's tapes.

Ozzy played a bigger role in the writing than people realize. He was right there working on everything with Bob and Randy. Ozzy made a huge contribution to the arrangement of 'Believer'. The song is nothing like what it started out to be. Ozzy may not have written lyrics, but he made a huge contribution.

Bob has recordings of the songs from the albums, without the singing. Max gave him copies so that he could take them to his room to write lyrics. However, some of these contain alternative guitar leads that were recorded before the final take. Ozzy instructed Max on day 1 to keep everything Randy records, no matter how many times he does a take. They still have all of it.

There are also songs recorded that never made the records. One of them is super heavy. A precursor to the style of heavy metal music that would soon grow to be popular in the 80s. The funny thing about that one is, Ozzy is singing the lyrics to Steal Away. When they scrapped the song, they saved the lyrics.

There you have it - the Holy Grail exists.

Re: ' The Grail ' contents...

Posted: Tue Sep 24, 2013 6:03 pm
by CanuckRhoadsFan
Very interesting. It's too bad these moments most likely won't see the light of day. :(

Re: ' The Grail ' contents...

Posted: Tue Sep 24, 2013 6:06 pm
by Stewie
I want to hear this... SO BAD

Re: ' The Grail ' contents...

Posted: Tue Sep 24, 2013 6:41 pm
by stealaway
"The Holy Grail" would fill up a huge box-set... I would flip, if I´d hear any of that stuff!!! The demo-version/rehearsal (whatever) of "Suicide Solution" was great, even if it had a shitty quality. It showed that there was something really great coming up already. I´m reading last pages of Bob Daisley´s book. I´m trying to slow down a bit and suck it all in. Was thinking of getting the Klein-book... The price is bit high tho´... :)

Re: ' The Grail ' contents...

Posted: Tue Sep 24, 2013 7:08 pm
by Paul Wolfe
GUITARIDOL5682 wrote:There you have it - the Holy Grail exists.
Geez, I've known that for ages

Image

Re: ' The Grail ' contents...

Posted: Tue Sep 24, 2013 7:45 pm
by rokket
Add the 'Suicide Solution' demo to the list....although really bad quality, it's also recorded without Lee.

Re: ' The Grail ' contents...

Posted: Tue Sep 24, 2013 9:08 pm
by mojopin70
GUITARIDOL5682 wrote:I seen this in an Andrew Klein interview some interested stuff here...

There is a 4 song demo (Crazy Train, Mr. Crowley, Goodbye to Romance, Looking at you, looking at me), recorded with another drummer named Dixie Lee. They hadn't yet met Lee K. Those versions are so cool.

For Crazy Train, instead of starting with the bass and drums intro, the first thing you hear is Ozzy's voice. He shouts, "All aboard you fucking punks" - and then Randy slides in with the main riff. Fucking great.

Goodbye to Romance is more acoustic oriented, less electric guitar. I personally like the demo version better than what's on BOO.

On the first day of recording at Ridge, they were doing a mic test. Max asked the band to jam something. They jammed the blues. It was slow and moody like 'Riders on the Storm' (Doors). Ozzy was singing improv. Randy rips to no end. Its about 15 minutes long. As a joke they named it, "Wally Bodger and the Fabulous Flaps."

Finally, its loaded with all the writing sessions. You can hear the birth and maturation of every song. Bob recorded EVERYTHING including all the conversations when they weren't playing. All the rehearsals were recorded as well. Lee is singing lead vocals on many songs on the days Ozzy never showed up.

Randy experimenting with his pedal board for the first time trying to get sounds. Ozzy asked him how much it cost and Randy told him "200 quid." Ozzy said, "I don't think it was worth it." Randy said, "Oh, I do." This stuff doesn't exist anywhere but on Bob's tapes.

Ozzy played a bigger role in the writing than people realize. He was right there working on everything with Bob and Randy. Ozzy made a huge contribution to the arrangement of 'Believer'. The song is nothing like what it started out to be. Ozzy may not have written lyrics, but he made a huge contribution.

Bob has recordings of the songs from the albums, without the singing. Max gave him copies so that he could take them to his room to write lyrics. However, some of these contain alternative guitar leads that were recorded before the final take. Ozzy instructed Max on day 1 to keep everything Randy records, no matter how many times he does a take. They still have all of it.

There are also songs recorded that never made the records. One of them is super heavy. A precursor to the style of heavy metal music that would soon grow to be popular in the 80s. The funny thing about that one is, Ozzy is singing the lyrics to Steal Away. When they scrapped the song, they saved the lyrics.

There you have it - the Holy Grail exists.

Two things first there are obviously some lies or false information.Randys pedalboard cost 1100 quid not 200, two its obvious Klein would say that Ozzy had a massive hand in the writing AFTER the horrible saga that went on with the documentary that seems like a thinly veiled attack on Bobs version of events.....

Re: ' The Grail ' contents...

Posted: Tue Sep 24, 2013 9:43 pm
by The Flying Dutchman
Interesting stuff there, so the Grail exists! 8)

Re: ' The Grail ' contents...

Posted: Tue Sep 24, 2013 10:28 pm
by dannyahansen
Interesting for sure. One day it will come out. Probably not very soon though. I think hearing more about the creative aspects of these albums would be the real treat.

Re: ' The Grail ' contents...

Posted: Tue Sep 24, 2013 10:31 pm
by rokket
Just too bad the O's won't allow it's release, unless Bob sells it to Sharon, and that doesn't mean it would be released, she could just throw the tapes in a box and do nothing with them. She won't want to release them because then she would have to pay Bob and Lee a royalty....ha...thats never going to happen. The only other way would be for Bob to load them up to youtube or give copies away for free, which I wouldn't do, and wouldn't expect Bob to either. The O's won't sign off to allow Bob to release them, so...chances are...they'll probably never see the light of day. You can't just edit out any Ozzy vocals, the O's own the music as well.

Re: ' The Grail ' contents...

Posted: Wed Sep 25, 2013 12:25 am
by Paul Wolfe
Now if Sharon and Ozzy would just go up in a small plane and buzz a bus... or go shopping in Nairobi... we could get them out of the way and get our hands on this stuff...

Re: ' The Grail ' contents...

Posted: Wed Sep 25, 2013 12:26 am
by Paul Wolfe
Yeah, that was out of line but, c'mon, I made a Python joke and nobody even smirked!!

Re: ' The Grail ' contents...

Posted: Wed Sep 25, 2013 12:35 am
by Tito
lmfao!!!!!!!!i just saw this paul!!!!i got it!!!!as pc as you are you still have that old school wicked sense of humor!!!!i almost choked reading that!!

Re: ' The Grail ' contents...

Posted: Wed Sep 25, 2013 8:17 am
by Sky
I seen this in an Andrew Klein interview some interested stuff here...
Thanks for posting that Shaun but Klein heard snippets of the tapes on one occasion and where his memory has failed, he's made things up... so I've stuck my oar in..:-)
There is a 4 song demo (Crazy Train, Mr. Crowley, Goodbye to Romance, Looking at you, looking at me), recorded with another drummer named Dixie Lee. They hadn't yet met Lee K. Those versions are so cool.


That demo was recorded at a studio in Birmingham before they found Lee. They didn't do 'Crowley' on the studio demo, the fourth song was 'I Don't Know'.
For Crazy Train, instead of starting with the bass and drums intro, the first thing you hear is Ozzy's voice. He shouts, "All aboard you fucking punks" - and then Randy slides in with the main riff. Fucking great.
No, on the Birmingham studio demo Ozzy doesn't say that. There's no recording of Ozzy saying that. Bob has a tape of a rehearsal/writing session from Monmouth where Ozzy starts 'CT' with, "All abooaard, ya cunts!"
Goodbye to Romance is more acoustic oriented, less electric guitar. I personally like the demo version better than what's on BOO.
It's actually very similar to the final recording, except for the tempo.
On the first day of recording at Ridge, they were doing a mic test. Max asked the band to jam something. They jammed the blues. It was slow and moody like 'Riders on the Storm' (Doors). Ozzy was singing improv. Randy rips to no end. Its about 15 minutes long. As a joke they named it, "Wally Bodger and the Fabulous Flaps."
It wasn't the 'blues', it was a chord progression that Bob came up with that Randy followed. It had a '60s 'Doors' vibe. The song itself wasn't named anything, they called themselves 'Wally Bodger & the 4 Fabulous Flaps'.
Finally, its loaded with all the writing sessions. You can hear the birth and maturation of every song. Bob recorded EVERYTHING including all the conversations when they weren't playing. All the rehearsals were recorded as well. Lee is singing lead vocals on many songs on the days Ozzy never showed up.
Lee sang lead vocals on some of the songs, I wouldn't say 'many'.
Randy experimenting with his pedal board for the first time trying to get sounds. Ozzy asked him how much it cost and Randy told him "200 quid." Ozzy said, "I don't think it was worth it." Randy said, "Oh, I do." This stuff doesn't exist anywhere but on Bob's tapes.


That was at Clearwell Castle, Randy actually told Ozzy, "It cost eleven hundred pounds..." Can anyone here imagine Randy saying '200 quid'?
Ozzy played a bigger role in the writing than people realize. He was right there working on everything with Bob and Randy. Ozzy made a huge contribution to the arrangement of 'Believer'. The song is nothing like what it started out to be. Ozzy may not have written lyrics, but he made a huge contribution.
Ozzy definitely made a contribution to the arrangement of Believer, when he was there that is, but not 'huge' though. They can all be heard discussing the song on the tapes.
Bob has recordings of the songs from the albums, without the singing. Max gave him copies so that he could take them to his room to write lyrics. However, some of these contain alternative guitar leads that were recorded before the final take. Ozzy instructed Max on day 1 to keep everything Randy records, no matter how many times he does a take. They still have all of it.
No, Bob got out-takes from Max just to hear the band's performance, nothing to do with writing lyrics. Every time that Bob wrote lyrics it was to Ozzy's guide vocal, so that he'd know how to phrase the lines.
There are also songs recorded that never made the records. One of them is super heavy. A precursor to the style of heavy metal music that would soon grow to be popular in the 80s. The funny thing about that one is, Ozzy is singing the lyrics to Steal Away. When they scrapped the song, they saved the lyrics.
Klein is talking about the first writing sessions at Monmouth and most of what he says here is fabrication. He heard the beginning of a song that was never developed into a song. Ozzy sang the words 'Steal Away' and other improvised words that bear no resemblance to the final lyrics of that song. There weren't any lyrics to 'Steal Away' at that stage, other than the title line. Bob wrote the lyrics to that song later at Ridge Farm about Yvonne the barmaid at the Plough Inn.

Re: ' The Grail ' contents...

Posted: Wed Sep 25, 2013 8:26 am
by rokket
Cheers for clearing all that up Sky....!! Hopefully one day there will be a way to release the Grail Tapes.....I'll keep the thinking cap on and keep suggesting ideas, who knows....one day I might hit the nail on the head.....or Ozzy...which ever comes first....!!!! LOL.