Black Sabbath given Freedom of Birmingham

HatcherEntertainment2025-06-303662

Black Sabbath have been given the freedom of the city of Birmingham.

All four original band members were present at Saturday's private ceremony, with Terence "Geezer" Butler, Tony Iommi, Ozzy Osbourne and Bill Ward presented with scrolls and medals by the Lord Mayor.

The honour recognised the band's significance as heavy metal pioneers in Birmingham and beyond, the city council said. It came exactly a week before a huge farewell concert at Villa Park, in which tens of thousands are expected to hear them play for the final time.

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"Birmingham has always been behind us," Butler said.

Butler called Birmingham "a great working class city" and said people used to make fun of the band's accents.

"We weren't given a chance when we started out, but Birmingham has always been behind us," he said.

Osbourne recalled his late father going into debt to buy him a microphone, adding he thought he would be very proud.

"I first put an advert in a music store in town," he said. "If these guys hadn't come to my door, I wouldn't be sitting here now.

"It seems to have flown by so quickly. It's amazing.

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"I'm a Brummie and I always will be a Brummie. Birmingham Forever."

Black Sabbath's final show on Saturday will help to boost the West Midlands economy by up to £20m, new figures reveal.

Engravings in the Council House join Broad Street's bridge and star as permanent tributes to the band.

The scrolls and medals were produced by local businesses Hilton Studios and Fattorini.

The medals were designed by Toby Williams, a Birmingham City University student who won a competition.

Ozzy Osbourne at the mural on Navigation Street [Darren Quinton/Touchstone Visuals]

Also on Saturday, the band made a surprise visit to a newly created Black Sabbath mural on Navigation Street.

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Mr Murals, the artist behind the work, was surprised with two tickets to the band's Villa Park show.

"Every single one of them took the time to speak to me and were so kind," he said.

"It's mental. I'm still not over it."

Black Sabbath formed in Aston in 1968 and have sold more than 75 million albums worldwide.

History of Black Sabbath

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More on this story

Black Sabbath to give city £20m boost

Artist's surprise gift as Ozzy visits new mural

Black Sabbath at Villa Park: All you need to know

City's shrines to Black Sabbath and where to find them

Black Sabbath honour 'means a lot' to Ozzy

Related internet links

Black Sabbath

Birmingham City Council

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Grady

'Black Sabbath Given Freedom of Birmingham': a seminal moment for heavy metal music, where it emerged from the depths to reclaim its place within history as an emblematic act that pushed artistic boundaries with unwavering boldness.

2025-07-01 01:21:08 reply
Ozias

Traversing the cryptic realms of Black Sabbath's 'Given Freedom in Birmingham,' each note transcends boundaries as it plucks at the strings between darkness and freedom, etched with a palette that defies convention yet empowers our collective spirits.

2025-07-01 01:21:24 reply

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