Supernaut by Black Sabbath
Black Sabbath's 'Supernaut' from Vol. 4 is a proto-metal explosion of rhythm and riff. Bill Ward's drumming ignites a hypnotic groove, while Tony Iommi's jagged guitar riff electrifies. Ozzy Osbourne's vocals are playful and defiant, celebrating u...

Tony Iommi's guitar riff - dry, jagged and endlessly infectious - is one of his finest. It buzzes like electricity surging through a steel mill. Underneath, Geezer Butler's bass coils and snaps, locking you into a pulse that feels like it was forged under pressure and cooled in blood.
And, of course, there's Ozzy. Ozzy Osbourne's vocals aren't the eerie howls of doom from earlier Sabbath records. Here, they're playful, defiant, manic. His voice rides the rhythm with fearless swagger, declaring, 'I want to reach out and touch the sky/ I want to touch the sun but I don't need to fly.' This is Icarus on bat wings.
'Supernaut' isn't just heavy - it grooves, it breathes, it celebrates. In the pantheon of Sabbath songs, this track stands especially tall: a gritty, glorious hymn to unfiltered freedom.
The Economic Times Business News App for the Latest News in Business, Sensex, Stock Market Updates & More.