Black Sabbath’s Entire 2012 Lollapalooza Set Surfaces Via Fan Video
If you weren’t at Lollapalooza, you missed one of only a handful of performances that Black Sabbath are playing this year. Three-fourths of the original band have booked only a handful of dates while Tony Iommi recovers from cancer treatments earlier in the year, and now fan-shot video footage (courtesy of Jason Jude as branded on the clips) from the entire Lollapalooza performance has found its way online.
The group headlined the opening night festivities on Aug. 3 at Chicago’s Grant Park, with Tommy Clufetos sitting in on drums while Bill Ward holds out over a contract dispute. The set was an electric one for those in attendance. Whether it was Ozzy Osbourne‘s harp playing on ‘The Wizard,’ Clufetos’ drum solo or just the skill and mastery of Iommi and bassist Geezer Butler throughout the entire set, it was definitely a night to remember.
The band all seemed in good spirits during the set, with Osbourne having a laugh while bounding over to the woman doing sign language at the side of the stage to give her a kiss just prior to launching into ‘Iron Man.’
Watch the first eight songs below, then click on the button at the bottom of this story to visit our companion site Ultimate Classic Rock for the remaining videos.
Watch Black Sabbath’s ‘Black Sabbath’ from Lollapalooza 2012
Watch Black Sabbath’s ‘The Wizard’ from Lollapalooza 2012
Watch Black Sabbath’s ‘Beyond the Wall of Sleep’ from Lollapalooza 2012
Watch Black Sabbath’s ‘N.I.B.’ from Lollapalooza 2012
Watch Black Sabbath’s ‘Into the Void’ from Lollapalooza 2012
Watch Black Sabbath’s ‘Under the Sun’ from Lollapalooza 2012
Watch Black Sabbath’s ‘Snow Blind’ from Lollapalooza 2012
Watch Black Sabbath’s ‘War Pigs’ from Lollapalooza 2012
Black Sabbath’s Lollapalooza 2012 Set List
‘Black Sabbath’
‘The Wizard’
‘Beyond the Wall of Sleep’
‘N.I.B.’
‘Into the Void’
‘Under the Sun’
‘Snow Blind’
‘War Pigs’
‘Electric Funeral’
‘Sweet Leaf’
Symptom of the Universe’ / ‘Drum Solo’
‘Iron Man’
‘Fairies Wear Boots’
‘Dirty Women’
‘Children of the Grave’
‘Paranoid’